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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 158,
+February 11, 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, Volume 158, February 11, 1920
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: July 30, 2005 [EBook #16394]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 158.
+
+
+
+February 11th, 1920.
+
+
+
+
+CHARIVARIA.
+
+"If a burglar broke into my house," says Lady BEECHAM, "I should use the
+telephone to summon help." Lady BEECHAM seems to have a sanguine
+temperament.
+
+* * *
+
+Asked how she would act in case a burglar broke into her house, Miss IRIS
+HOEY said she would stand before him and recite SHAKSPEARE. If anybody else
+had said this we should have suspected a cruel nature.
+
+* * *
+
+A libel action arising, out of the representation by a German artist of the
+ex-CROWN PRINCE as a baboon is to be heard shortly. It is not yet known who
+is to prosecute on behalf of the local Society for the Prevention of
+Cruelty to Animals.
+
+* * *
+
+Nine thousand officials have been appointed to control the food supplies in
+Petrograd. English Government officials regard this arrangement as the work
+of an amateur.
+
+* * *
+
+It is said that the exchange crisis is regarded by Mr. C.B. COCHRAN as a
+deliberate attempt to divert attention from the DEMPSEY contest.
+
+* * *
+
+The rumour that CARPENTIER and DEMPSEY, in order to avoid further fuss and
+publicity, have decided to fight it out privately, appears to have no
+foundation.
+
+* * *
+
+Wrexham Education Committee is reconsidering its decision against teaching
+Welsh in the elementary schools. The pathetic case of a local man who was
+recently convicted of stealing a leg of beef owing to his being unable to
+give his evidence in Welsh is thought to have something to do with it.
+
+* * *
+
+A domestic servants' union has been formed and an advertisement for a good
+plain shop stewardess (two in family; policeman kept) will, we understand,
+shortly appear in _The Morning Post_.
+
+* * *
+
+During the recent gales on the West Coast of Ireland the anemometer
+registered the unprecedented velocity of one hundred-and-ten miles per
+hour. A number of cases of anemonia are reported from the Phoenix Park
+district.
+
+* * *
+
+According to _Men's Wear_, silk hats are to be increased in price by at
+least thirty per cent. Is it by this process, we wonder, that they hope to
+drive Mr. CHURCHILL out of business?
+
+* * *
+
+A pig and sty constituted first prize at a recent whist drive at Bishop's
+Waltham. We understand that a difference of opinion between the winner and
+the pig as regards the user of the sty has ended fatally for the latter.
+
+* * *
+
+It is reported that the Victory badge now being worn extensively in New
+York is to be replaced by another bearing the inscription, "We did them."
+
+* * *
+
+"I intend to tour England," says a Prohibition lecturer, "and I will not be
+hurried." We recommend the railway.
+
+* * *
+
+A Tralee man charged with shooting a neighbour said he had no desire to
+break the law. It seems that he mistook the man for a policeman.
+
+* * *
+
+A French physician declares that a gift for yawning is one of the most
+valuable health-assets. This should be good news for revue-producers.
+
+* * *
+
+"Honesty," says Dr. INGRAM, "is the best policy after all." All the same
+some of our profiteers seem to get along pretty well, thank you.
+
+* * *
+
+The egg-laying competition promoted by _The Daily Mail_ has proved a great
+success. It is most gratifying to learn that the hens have done their best
+for "the paper that got us the shells."
+
+* * *
+
+"The influenza microbe," announces a medical journal, "has made its
+appearance in many parts of the country and is slowly but surely making its
+way towards London." With any other Government than ours a simple
+suggestion that the sign-posts _en route_ should be reversed would have
+been at once adopted.
+
+* * *
+
+During the last four weeks exactly four hundred and ninety-nine rats have
+been destroyed in a small town in South Bedfordshire. It is hoped that as
+soon as these figures are published a sporting rodent will give itself up
+in order to complete the fifth century.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "WHY HAVEN'T YOU GOT ON SPURS?"
+
+"I WAS GOING TO SPEAK ABOUT THAT, SIR. I REGRET I ACCIDENTALLY OMITTED TO
+PUT THEM ON THIS MORNING, AND CONSEQUENTLY HAVE CAUGHT COLD. SO I WAS GOING
+TO ASK YOU TO BE KIND ENOUGH TO GRANT ME LEAVE UNTIL--"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A champagne support was provided in the lower hall."--_Local Paper._
+
+Very sustaining, we feel sure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The paper supports the proposed formation of a first army of 'shock
+ troops,' which would be capable of preventing the mobilisation of a
+ great Germy army."--_Evening Paper._
+
+Anything to keep the influenza at bay.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The times for the incubation of the eggs of various birds are as
+ under:--
+
+ Ostrich 41 days.
+ Gnu 49 days."--_Poultry-Keeping._
+
+"Gnus, indeed!" said the Emu.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO AMERICA
+
+(_deferentially hinting how others see her and what they think of her
+threatened repudiation of her PRESIDENT'S pledges_).
+
+ When you refuse to sign the Peace
+ Except with various "reservations,"
+ And prophesy a swift decease
+ Impinging on the League of Nations;
+ When you whose arms (we've understood)
+ Settled the War and wiped the Bosch out
+ Regard the whole world's brotherhood
+ As just a wash-out;
+
+ You say, in terms a little blunt,
+ "This scheme that you are advertising
+ Was all along a private stunt
+ Of WILSON'S singular devising;
+ His game we weren't allowed to know;
+ Under a misty smile he masked it;
+ We never gave him leave to go
+ (He never asked it).
+
+ "And you, poor credulous Allies,
+ Found in this fellow, self-appointed,
+ The worth he had in his own eyes
+ And let him pose as God's anointed;
+ Taking no sort of pains to see
+ Whether or not he had a mandate,
+ Like puppy-dogs the other Three
+ Out of his hand ate."
+
+ But how if _we_ had queered his claim
+ Or questioned his credentials, saying,
+ "Who is this WOODROW What's-his-name?
+ And what's the _rōle_ he thinks he's playing?
+ Is he a Methodist divine?
+ Or does he boom Chicago bacon?"--
+ I think that I can guess the line
+ You would have taken.
+
+ "Behold a Man," I hear you say,
+ "Of peerless wit and ripe instruction,
+ Elect of Heaven and U.S.A.--
+ Surely an ample introduction;
+ He comes to put Creation right;
+ He brings no chits--he doesn't need 'em;
+ Who doubts his faith will have to fight
+ The Bird of Freedom!"
+
+ O.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"SMALL ADS."
+
+"Where do you get servants from?" I asked.
+
+"From small ads.," said Phyllis promptly.
+
+I picked up the paper from the floor where I had thrown it in the morning.
+My wife is one of those rare women who always leave things where you put
+them. It is this trait that endears her to me. I ran my trained eye over an
+ad. column.
+
+"Got it at once," I said with pardonable pride. "How's this?--'General
+(genuine), stand any test trd. £70 possess. s. hands yrs. s.a.v.'"
+
+"I like genuine people," said Phyllis thoughtfully. "And under the
+circumstances"--(here she looked hard at me, as if I were a circumstance)--
+"under the circumstances I think we ought to have one that will stand any
+test. Seventy pounds is out of the question, of course, but she might come
+for less when she sees how small we are. What does 's. hands yrs.' stand
+for?"
+
+"I don't know," I said; "I can only think of 'soft hands for years.'"
+
+"I should like her," said Phyllis. "Their hands are the one thing against
+Generals. She must be a nice girl to take such care of them. Think how
+careful she'd be with the china. What's 'trd.'?"
+
+"I'm afraid it must mean tired," I said.
+
+"Oh, she'd soon get rested here," said Phyllis; "I don't think that need be
+against her. She's probably been in a hard place lately. Are there any
+more?"
+
+"Plenty," I said. "How does this one strike you?--'General. no bacon.
+possess. 2 rms. £45 wky. s.a.v.'"
+
+"I like that one," said Phyllis. "She must be an awfully unselfish girl to
+go without bacon. I don't see how we are going to spare two rooms, though,
+unless she's willing to count the kitchen as one. Forty-five pounds a week
+must be a printer's error. But we can easily afford forty-five pounds a
+year."
+
+"It may mean that she's 'weakly,'" I suggested.
+
+"That wouldn't matter much," said Phyllis; "and I like her the better for
+being honest about it."
+
+"'Wky.' _might_ stand for 'whisky,'" I hinted darkly.
+
+Phyllis blanched. "Then she's no good," she said; "I simply couldn't stand
+one that drinks. What's the next one like?"
+
+I read on: "Domestic oil no risk. 6 dys. trd. s. hands 10 yrs. s.a.v."
+
+"I wonder whether that means that she _can_ cook on an oil-stove or that
+she _can't_ cook on any other kind? And does the 'no risk' refer to her or
+the stove? It's not very clear. I don't think we'll take up this one's
+references. Besides I shouldn't like one that was tired for six days."
+
+"Out of every seven," I added, "and the seventh day would be the Sabbath,
+and her day off."
+
+"Go on to the next," said Phyllis firmly.
+
+The next one merely said; "General. Kilburn tkg. £40 1 rm. s.a.v."
+
+"It would be nice to have a taking sort of girl," I thought (unfortunately
+aloud).
+
+"We won't think of her, the hussy!" said Phyllis. "Pass me the paper,
+please."
+
+"They all seem to want 's.a.v.,'" she said. "What do you suppose it means?
+I wish they wouldn't use so many abbreviations. 'S.a.' stands for Sunday
+afternoon, of course, but I can't think what the 'v.' is for. Of course
+we'll give them Sunday afternoons free, if that's what it means. I only
+wonder they don't want an evening off in the week as well. I call them most
+reasonable. And there are so many to choose from. I always understood from
+mother that they're so hard to get."
+
+Then she turned the paper over.
+
+"Oh, you are stupid!" she said. "You've been looking at the 'Shops and
+Businesses for Sale' column."
+
+"So've you," I snapped.
+
+And then I regret to say we had our first quarrel.
+
+I told Phyllis firmly that she is not at all tkg., nor would she stand any
+test; that no one could engage her, much less marry her, without taking
+risks; that she hadn't had s. hands for yrs., that _she_ wouldn't go
+without her bacon for anyone, and that I should be jolly thankful if she
+would take every blessed s.a.v.
+
+I admit that Phyllis was more dignified. She merely sailed out of the room,
+remarking that I made her trd.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"OUR INVINCIBLE NAVY."
+
+In continuation of a paragraph in his last issue, Mr. Punch expresses his
+regret if the article which appeared under the above title in these pages
+on January 14th has unwittingly given offence to any one of his readers
+through others having connected him with the character of _Reginald
+McTaggart_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE CONSCIENTIOUS BURGLAR.
+
+PAISLEY HUMANITARIAN. "IF I COULD ONLY BE QUITE SURE THAT I SHOULDN'T BE
+DISCOURAGING HIM FROM SAVING."
+
+[Mr. ASQUITH has pronounced himself cautiously in favour of a Capital Levy,
+on the condition, amongst others, that it must not be allowed to discourage
+the habit of saving.]]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: JULIUS CĘSAR ON THE LINKS.
+
+_Actor_ (_whose knowledge of SHAKSPEARE is greater than his golf_). "'O,
+PARDON ME, THOU BLEEDING PIECE OF EARTH.'"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RINGS FROM SATURN.
+
+(_Extracted from various issues of "The Daily Mandate."_)
+
+I.
+
+_To the Editor of "The Daily Mandate."_
+
+SIR,--For a number of years I have been experimenting in wireless telephony
+with my installation on the heights of Lavender Hill. On several occasions
+recently I have been puzzled by mysterious ringings of the bell attached to
+the instrument, which have obviously been set up by long-distance waves. On
+taking up the receiver, however, I have been unable to make out any
+coherent message, but only a succession of irregular squeaks, although once
+I distinctly, heard a word which I can only transcribe as "Gurroo." I have
+no doubt in my own mind that one of the more advanced planets is trying to
+get in touch with us by means of wireless telephony, and that once we have
+deciphered the code we shall be able to converse freely with its
+inhabitants. I myself incline to the belief that these rings emanate from
+Saturn, which, in spite of its great distance from the earth, is just as
+likely to wish to communicate with us as any other planet.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+DIOGENES DOTTLE, F.R.S.
+
+II.
+
+Mr. Dottle's remarkable letter, published in our issue of yesterday,
+suggesting that inhabitants of Saturn have been endeavouring to communicate
+with the earth by means of wireless telephony, has created profound
+excitement in scientific and other circles. To a representative of _The
+Daily Mandate_ a number of well-known men expressed their views on the
+matter, which will undoubtedly stimulate further investigation into the
+momentous possibilities of this epoch-making revelation. The opinions
+advanced, which are, on the whole, highly favourable to Mr. Dottle's
+theory, are as follows:--
+
+_Sir Potiphar Shucks, the famous astronomer_: "The possibility that Saturn
+is inhabited is one that, in the absence of incontrovertible evidence
+either way, should not lightly be set aside. Assuming that it is inhabited,
+that its people are skilled in the use of wireless telephony and that it is
+possible to set up waves of sufficient intensity to travel all the way from
+Saturn to us, I see no reason why communications of the nature suggested by
+Mr. Dottle should not at some future date become an accomplished fact."
+
+_Mr. Artesian Pitts, the well-known imaginative historian_: "I have long
+held the belief that Saturn is inhabited by a type of being possessing a
+cylinder-like body composed of an unresisting pulp, a high dome-shaped head
+filled with gas, and long tentacles, bristling with electricity, through
+which all sensations are emitted and received. These tentacles would act as
+an ideal telephonic apparatus, so that there is every likelihood of Mr.
+Dottle's having actually received a message from Saturn. I take 'Gurroo' to
+be Saturnian for 'Hello.'"
+
+_Signor Tromboni, the pioneer of wireless telephony_: "We are making
+arrangements to test Mr. Dottle's interesting theory, and for this purpose
+are erecting a special installation on the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro, which is
+several thousand feet higher than Lavender Hill. At our own stations we
+have frequently noticed mysterious ringings, which we have hitherto
+ascribed to carelessness on the part of operators; but Mr. Dottle's letter
+opens up a new world of possibilities. _The Daily Mandate_ is to be
+congratulated on the prominence it has given to the subject, which has
+already had the effect of sending Tromboni shares up several points."
+
+_Mr. G. Shawburn_: "It is an insult to Creation to assume that ours is the
+only populated planet. Of course Saturn is inhabited, but, unlike our own
+world, by people of intelligence. In the matter of mental advancement
+Saturn can make rings round the earth. All the same I don't for one moment
+suppose that Mr. Dottle knows what he's talking about."
+
+_The POSTMASTER-GENERAL_: "Nothing is known in the Department under my
+control of telephone calls having been received from Saturn or the
+neighbourhood. I do not propose for the present to take any steps in the
+matter."
+
+_The LORD MAYOR_: "Saturn is a long way off."
+
+III.
+
+(_Extract from leading article._)
+
+"... Again we ask, 'What is the Government doing?' For several days now our
+columns have been ringing with the world-wide acclamation of this
+stupendous discovery, beside the potentialities of which the wildest
+efforts of imaginative literature are reduced to pallid and uninspired
+commonplaces. Even so cautious a scientist as Sir Potiphar Shucks has
+declared that the idea of Saturn being inhabited is one that 'should not
+lightly be set aside,' and has announced his conviction that under
+favourable conditions communication with that planet should in the near
+future become 'an accomplished fact.' Other eminent leaders of thought and
+action, including Signor Tromboni, are even more enthusiastic in their
+reception of the great theory first given to the world by Mr. Diogenes
+Dottle in a letter to _The Daily Mandate_. But the POSTMASTER-GENERAL is
+content to treat the question with the airy scepticism and obstructive
+complacency that have rendered the London Telephone service a byword of
+inefficiency, and refuses even to make a grant in aid of the work of
+investigation.
+
+"In these circumstances the proprietors of _The Daily Mandate_ have much
+pleasure in announcing that they will pay the sum of ten thousand pounds to
+the first man, woman or child in the British Empire who can produce
+evidence of having received an intelligible telephonic message from Saturn,
+and a further sum of one hundred thousand pounds to the first person to
+send a message to that planet and receive a clear reply. The services of a
+Board of distinguished experts are being engaged for the purpose of testing
+and adjudicating all claims.
+
+"_Meanwhile the POSTMASTER-GENERAL must go._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Indignant Egoist._ "BE CAREFUL UP THERE WHAT YOU'RE
+DROPPING. THAT PRECIOUS NEARLY HIT ME!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "It may safely be said that there are more millionaires to the square
+ yard in Bradford than in any other city in the country, not even
+ excepting London or New York."--_Daily Paper._
+
+The news that Britain has annexed the United States will comfort those who
+thought it was the other way about.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The incessant singing of a cricket in a London church compelled the
+ preacher to shorten his sermon."--_The Children's Newspaper._
+
+We may now expect increased enthusiasm for the "Sunday Cricket" movement.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A VERMIN OFFENSIVE.
+
+There was a faint scuffling sound behind the wainscot.
+
+"There it is again," said Araminta.
+
+"Not a doubt of it," I replied, turning pale.
+
+Thrusting on my hat I rushed up the hill to the Town Hall and asked to see
+the Clerk of the Borough Council immediately.
+
+"I have reason to suspect," I said in a hoarse low whisper, as soon as I
+was shown into the man's presence, "that our premises are in imminent
+danger of being infested. Counsel me as to what I should do."
+
+"It is your duty as a good citizen to take such steps as may from time to
+time be necessary and reasonably practicable to destroy the vermin," he
+said in a rather weary and mechanical tone.
+
+"I hope I am not one to take my civic duties lightly," I replied with some
+_hauteur_, "but observe that I merely said I had reason to suspect the
+imminence of the peril. I should like to know the legal definition of
+infestment, if you please. I cannot definitely say that house-breaking has
+taken place as yet. I do not know that there has even been petty larceny.
+There may have been merely loitering with felonious intent."
+
+"What is the size of your premises?" he inquired.
+
+"It is more a messuage than a premises," I explained. "About twelve feet by
+ten, I should say--speaking without the lease."
+
+"And how many vermin do you expect it to be about to harbour?"
+
+"None have actually hove in sight at present," I said reassuringly, "but
+there is a sound of one in the offing--in the wainscoting, I mean."
+
+"In a residence of your size I should say that a single mouse would
+constitute infestation within the meaning of the Act, so soon as it forces
+an ingress. It will then be your bounden duty to demolish it. How about
+purchasing a trap?"
+
+"You are sure that is better than hiding behind the arras and hitting it
+over the head with a pole-axe?" I inquired anxiously, "or proffering it a
+bowl of poisoned wine?"
+
+"Poison is no longer supplied free," he answered coldly, and I went out.
+
+Very luckily, as I hastened up the hill, I had observed a building with the
+words, "Job Masters. Traps for Hire," written upon a wooden board. I went
+inside and found an elderly man sitting at a desk in a small office. He
+looked extremely patient. "Are you Job?" I asked breathlessly. "I have come
+to buy a mouse-trap."
+
+Appearances, of course, are quite often deceptive. They were in this case.
+The elderly man was very much annoyed. When he had explained matters
+forcibly to me I went on down the hill and entered an ironmonger's.
+
+"I wish to buy a trap to catch a mouse," I said to the assistant behind the
+counter.
+
+"Certainly, Sir. What size?" said the lad politely.
+
+"Small to medium," I replied, rather baffled. "It has only a medium-sized
+scratch."
+
+He showed me a peculiar apparatus made of wire and wood containing
+apparently a vestibule, two reception rooms, staircase and first-floor
+lobby, with an open window and a diving-board. Underneath the window was a
+small swimming tank.
+
+"I don't want a hydropathic exactly," I explained. "I propose to
+exterminate this rodent, not to foster longevity in it. How does it work?"
+
+He pointed out that, after examining the various apartments, the animal
+would be allured by the fragrance of a small portion of cheese placed above
+the diving-board; overbalancing, it would then be projected into the water,
+where it would infallibly drown. "It is a thoroughly humane instrument," he
+assured me, "and used in the best 'omes."
+
+I bought it and went on to a cheese foundry. Araminta was rather scornful
+of the sanatorium when I came home with it and set it, loaded and trained,
+on the dining-room floor; but the children were delighted. It ranked only a
+little lower than the pantomime, and if only we could have secured an
+outside visitor to it I believe that it would have defeated the Zoo. To
+visit it with a sort of wistful hope became the principal treat of the day.
+But, alas, the mansion remained untenanted. Sometimes during a lull in
+conversation we would hear the faint scuffling again, but after about six
+days I became convinced, by kneeling down and placing my ear to the carpet
+like an Indian, that the noise was even fainter than it had been at first.
+A terrible suspicion seized me. I dashed out and rang the bell of the flat
+next door.
+
+"It is just as I feared," I said to Araminta on returning a few moments
+later. "We are not going to be infested after all. The vermin has been
+sighted in No. 140B."
+
+"We must make the best of it," she said, trying to speak cheerfully,
+"though it _is_ hard on the children, poor dears."
+
+"I wasn't thinking of the children," I replied bitterly; "I was thinking of
+the expense. If we had been living in a house instead of a flat we could at
+least have deducted it from the rates."
+
+I sat down and made out a bill as follows to the Clerk of the Borough
+Council, heading it:--
+
+ _On Account of Spurious Infestment._
+ s. d.
+ To one Mouse Institute and Aquarium 5 6
+ " Cheese 0 6
+ " Labour at 2/6 per hour 0 7-1/2
+ ---------
+ Total 6 7-1/2
+
+The man replied coldly that the householder was responsible for all
+expenditure incurred in precautionary measures and that the Council was in
+no way liable for the costs resulting from an offensive that failed to
+materialize. He ended with the rather rude postscript, "What kind of cheese
+did you use?"
+
+This was a bit sickening. However, by threatening to lay information
+against him, I have at last succeeded in inducing the occupier of 140B to
+take over the abattoir at a very satisfactory valuation. It was between
+that and buying his mouse.
+
+EVOE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO NIGHTMARES.
+
+ [_Dreamed after reading in a daily paper that "any style of dress that
+ lessens one's self-confidence should be tabooed" (sic)._]
+
+ I travelled from the Sussex hills
+ With confidence divine,
+ Full of the conscious power that thrills
+ My heart when life is mine,
+ And strode to Lady Fancy Frills
+ With whom I was to dine.
+
+ Her guests had come from Clubs and Courts
+ And Halls of wealthy Jews;
+ As they surveyed my running shorts
+ I felt my courage ooze,
+ While conscious power, grown out of sorts,
+ Leaked through my canvas shoes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Then I re-travelled South by West
+ Inflated with a joy
+ Which in the suit I called my best
+ No buffet could destroy;
+ I may remark I'd come full-dressed
+ From lunch at the Savoy.
+
+ But when the hills began to shout
+ I coloured to the roots,
+ And when the valleys cried, "Get out!"
+ To the last word in suits,
+ My joy, displaced by sudden doubt,
+ Leaked through my spatted boots.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of the mysterious Marconigrams:--
+
+ "They may be the effort of sentiment beings in some neighbouring planet
+ to communicate with us."--_Evening Paper._
+
+Can we have broken in on a conversation between _Venus_ and _Mars_?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MANNERS AND MODES.
+
+PROFITEERING IN THE WEST END COMPELS MAYFAIR TO PUT ON ANY OLD RAGS AND DO
+ITS SHOPPING IN SHOREDITCH.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: BEHIND THE SCENES IN CINEMA-LAND.
+
+"WILL YOU STAND BACK, SIR? YOU'RE SPOILING THE PICTURE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CONFLICT OF EMOTIONS.
+
+(_With the British Army in France._)
+
+"I've seen rivetters at New York pie-foundries and stew-specialists on
+North Sea trawlers," said Percival severely, "but I never realised how
+monotonous feeding could be till I got into a Mess controlled by Binnie."
+
+Binnie puffed his pipe severely, being of the tough fibre which enables
+Mess Presidents to endure. Frederick, who had been silent, rose from his
+seat, heaved a distressing sigh and left the room.
+
+"There's the moral that adorns the tale, you--you public danger!" continued
+Percival, indicating Frederick's retreating figure. "Look to what a
+condition that once bright youth has been brought by your endless stews and
+curries."
+
+"Not a bit of it," answered Binnie lightly. "Frederico could eat patent
+breakfast food and toasted doormats without taxing his digestion. His
+complaint is the tender passion. I recognise the symptoms."
+
+"It looks like an acute attack, anyhow," said Percival, rising, "and prompt
+counter-irritants are indicated. But I'll confirm your diagnosis first."
+
+Inside Frederick's quarters the sound of regular and sustained sighing
+suggested that the sufferer was in the throes of a spasm of melancholy.
+Percival entered and narrowly escaped being drawn into the vortex of a
+particularly powerful inspiration.
+
+"Freddy, old pard," he said kindly, "why so _triste_? If the trouble's
+financial, my cheque-book is unreservedly at your service. Havin' no
+balance at the bank I've no use for it myself."
+
+"It's not that--at least not worse than usual," groaned Frederick.
+
+"Then tell me all about it."
+
+"It's a long story," commenced Frederick.
+
+"Let me off with a synopsis," interrupted Percival.
+
+"Once upon a time," continued Frederick, "there was a big war, which made
+quite a stir in the daily papers and was a common subject of discussion in
+the clubs. There were many casualties, amongst them being a blithe young
+laddy who came down to the Base with a fractured maxilla caused by nibbling
+an M. and V. ration without previously removing the outside tin--or
+something of the sort. He was sent to hospital and devotedly tended by a
+Sister of exquisite beauty--such a figure and such hair! It wasn't exactly
+auburn and not exactly burnished bronze--"
+
+"And it wasn't pale puce and it wasn't ultramarine," broke in Percival
+impatiently. "Tell me what it was, not what it wasn't."
+
+"I can't. It baffled description. Well, they drifted apart; but often
+afterwards, when that young laddy was studying his Manual of Military Law
+in his lonely dug-out, the image of Sister Carruthers glowed on the printed
+page. But I never met her again until the other day, when I was having a
+gentle toddle round Quelquepart and saw her gliding along the quay.
+Something gripped me by the heart; I took my courage in both hands and
+spoke to her.
+
+"'Don't you remember me, Sister?' I said. 'It was you who nursed me in No.
+99 General.'
+
+"She looked at me coldly.
+
+"'As you are the third young officer who has adopted a similar method of
+introduction this afternoon,' she said, 'you must forgive me if I ask for
+some confirmation.'
+
+"'Surely you haven't forgotten?' I cried. 'You drew me a sweet little
+design in dots and dashes to hang over my bed. When I was evacuated to
+England I wanted to thank you, to ask if we might meet again, but you
+thrust a clinical thermometer between my teeth and told me not to speak
+till you gave me permission. Then you left me, and I was whisked away to
+the boat clinging grimly to the thermometer, inarticulate and heartbroken.'
+
+"'And I presume your object in speaking to me to-day is to return the
+thermometer?' she said primly.
+
+"That's where I took the full count," continued Frederick, sadly. "If I
+could have produced any old thing in the thermometer line my _bona fides_
+would have been established an' I could have gone ahead like cotton-mill
+shares. Instead of which, she'd said Good-day and gone while I was thinkin'
+out explanations. Since that time I've been parading Quelquepart simply
+bristling with thermometers, but I've never met her again."
+
+"The old Army fault of unpreparedness," remarked Percival. "You ought to go
+to hospital."
+
+"Don't be juvenile! What have hospitals to do with heartache?"
+
+"Everything, if you go to the right one--the one where your ministering
+angel ministrates, for instance."
+
+"Percival, old ace," said Frederick, with admiration, "you'll rank among
+the world's great thinkers yet. Turn on the current again and tell me what
+is my complaint."
+
+"Digestive trouble," said Percival promptly. "There's already been rumours
+about, and you'll be doing a public service by going to dock with
+dyspepsia. Binnie will be so stricken by remorse that he'll at once start
+providing the Mess with decent food."
+
+"Then for your sakes I'll rehearse the symptoms. But my curse will be on
+your head if I get to the wrong hospital."
+
+It was unfortunate that the M.O. was in an unsympathetic mood next morning.
+He thumped Frederick on the lower chest and pooh-poohed the idea of
+hospital. "All you want is a few of these tablets," he said, "and you'll be
+fit as nails in a day or two."
+
+Frederick crawled away dispiritedly to confide in Percival. That sapient
+youth counselled perseverance.
+
+"You must go right off your feed," he said. "Let the doc. see you feebly
+pecking and he'll soon get alarmed. In the meantime I'm off to give Binnie
+critical accounts of your appetite and send him to market right away."
+
+Only a burning passion and stealthy bars of chocolate could have sustained
+Frederick through the next few days. To sit down to breakfast with a
+healthy appetite and refuse his egg and rasher put the biggest possible
+strain on his constancy. His task was made doubly difficult by the scheming
+of Percival, who was constantly inciting Binnie to procure fresh
+delicacies.
+
+"You've crocked poor Freddy," he said; "and there will be others going the
+same way if you don't improve the messing. Now I saw some nice plump
+chickens to-day in the...."
+
+Thus harried, that evening Binnie provided a dinner that almost reduced
+Frederick to breaking-point. Only the fact that the M.O. was sitting
+opposite gave him strength to refuse the soup and fish, to trifle with the
+chicken and turn wearily from the sweet. As the savoury was being served he
+caught a scrap of conversation across the table.
+
+"... to the boat to see her off for demob.," the M.O. was saying to the
+Padre. "Jolly nice girl--Jim Carruthers' daughter, you know."
+
+Frederick pricked up his ears.
+
+"I remember," said the Padre. "She used to be at 99 General."
+
+There was no doubt who was the girl referred to. Frederick sat back in his
+chair with a heavy sense of disappointment and loss. He felt acutely sorry
+for himself. But presently above the pain in his heart there arose a
+stronger and more compelling feeling.
+
+"Corporal," he said, "I think after all I'll try one of those crab patties.
+Or you might tell the waiter to bring in _two_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Conversationalist._ "EXTRAORDINARY CRIME WAVE WE'RE
+HAVING--ER--AH--FOR THE TIME OF YEAR."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PICTURES.
+
+ "Some likes picturs o' women" (said Bill) "an' some likes 'orses best,"
+ As he fitted a pair of fancy shackles on to his old sea-chest;
+ "But I likes picturs o' ships" (said he), "an' you can keep the rest.
+
+ "An' if I was a ruddy millionaire with dollars to burn that way,
+ Instead of a dead-broke sailorman as never saves his pay,
+ I'd go to some big paintin' guy, an' this is what I'd say:--
+
+ "'Paint me _The Cutty Sark_' (I'd say) 'or the old _Thermopylę_,
+ Or _The Star of Peace_ as I sailed in once in my young days at sea,
+ Shipshape an' Blackwall fashion too, as a clipper ought to be.
+
+ "'An' you might do 'er outward bound, with a sky full o' clouds,
+ An' the tug just droppin' astern an' gulls flyin' in crowds,
+ An' the decks shiny-wet with rain an' the wind shakin' the shrouds.
+
+ "'Or else racin' up-Channel with a sou'-wester blowin',
+ Stuns'ls set aloft and alow an' a hoist o' flags showin',
+ An' a white bone between her teeth, so's you can see she's goin'.
+
+ "'Or you might do 'er off Cape Stiff in the 'igh latitudes yonder,
+ With her main-deck a smother of white an' her lee-rail dipping under,
+ And the big greybeards drivin' by an' breakin' aboard like thunder.
+
+ "'Or I'd like old Tuskar somewhere around--or Sydney 'eads, maybe,
+ Or Bar Light, or the Tail o' the Bank, or a glimp o' Circular Quay,
+ Or a junk or two, if she's tradin' East, to show it's the China Sea.
+
+ "'Nor I don't want no dabs o' paint as you can't tell what they are,
+ Whether they're shadders or fellers' faces or blocks or blobs o' tar,
+ But I want gear as looks like gear an' a spar that's like a spar.
+
+ "'An' I don't care if it's North or South, the Trades or the China Sea,
+ Shortened down or everythin' set, close-hauled or runnin' free;
+ You paint me a ship as is _like_ a ship an' that'll do for me.'"
+
+ C.F.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Old-fashioned Aunt._ "GOOD HEAVENS, CHILD! YOU'RE NOT GOING
+OUT LIKE THAT? YOU LOOK LIKE A CHORUS-GIRL."
+
+_Modern Maiden._ "OH, COME, AUNT! I DON'T LOOK AS HORRIBLY RESPECTABLE AS
+THAT, SURELY?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EGYPTIAN DARKNESS.
+
+ "Several letters have appeared in the native Press in some of which
+ they ask Minindirect way, as they have done, but in a indirect way they
+ have done but in a clear clear manner which cannot be interpreted two
+ ways."--_Egyptian Gazette._
+
+Or, so far as we are concerned, even one way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ANOTHER "RESERVATION."
+
+STARVING EUROPE. "GOD HELP ME!"
+
+AMERICA. "VERY SAD CASE. BUT I'M AFRAID SHE AIN'T TRYING."
+
+["Relief would be found in the resumption of industrial life and activity
+and the imposition of adequate taxation. The American people should not be
+called upon to finance the requirements of Europe in so far as they result
+from failure to take these necessary steps."--_Mr. CARTER GLASS, Secretary
+of the United States Treasury._]]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BIG-GAME CURE.
+
+ [In common with everything else, wild animals have risen considerably
+ in price.]
+
+ In other times I might have made
+ For those wild lands where growls the grisly,
+ Have tracked him (with some native aid)
+ And held a broken-hearted Bisley;
+ Now that my Maud has murmured, "Nay,"
+ Shrinking from matrimony's tight knot,
+ I might have acted thus, I say
+ (Contrariwise, I might not).
+
+ In any case to-day I shrink
+ From thus evading Sorrow's trammels;
+ A sense of duty bids me think
+ How costly are the larger mammals;
+ To kill them just to soothe my mind
+ Would seem to savour of the wasteful,
+ A thing all patriot poets find
+ Exceedingly distasteful.
+
+ Not mine the immemorial cure;
+ The voice of conscience warns me off it;
+ I'll leave the following of the spoor
+ To those who follow it for profit;
+ I feel they would not thank me for
+ Turning the jungle to a shambles,
+ Who speculate in lions or
+ Have elephantine gambles.
+
+ And so this poet will not roam;
+ Remaining on his native heath, he
+ Will seek an anodyne at home,
+ Nor look beyond the Thames for Lethe;
+ And if he fades away, denied
+ The usual balm in cardiac crises,
+ Say only this of him, "He died
+ A prey to soaring prices."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE RETURN OF THE PRODIGAL.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOW TO ACT IN EMERGENCIES.
+
+_The Weekly Dispatch_ symposium, in which various celebrities discuss the
+way to act in the event of a burglar being found in the house, shows the
+need for a little advice in case of emergencies. We append the following
+very helpful hints:--
+
+The old plan of offering a burglar a cigarette and asking him to take a
+chair while you telephone to the police is not now so successful as in the
+past. The best plan is to tackle the fellow right away. For this purpose
+you should step behind him, take hold of his coat and force it over his
+face. Then tie his left arm to his right leg across the back. Properly
+carried out, this method rarely fails.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To attract the attention of the young lady behind a post-office counter,
+fire a revolver three times in succession, using blank cartridges. After
+first aid has been rendered to the attendants step up to the counter and
+purchase your stamp.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If you should be knocked down by a taxi, don't be alarmed and try to creep
+out from under the thing. And don't blame the driver. Apologise to him,
+and, as you are being carried away, shake hands and tell him that while it
+was his cab it was your fault. Treated in this manner, drivers are not
+nearly so offensive when they knock you down the next time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Should the telephone-bell ring in your house, don't get excited. Keep calm.
+Remember General GRANT. Remove the women and children to a place of safety,
+lift off the receiver and say, "Good Heavens! Whoever can it be?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let us suppose that you are being attacked by a man with a chopper. Wait
+until the weapon is well poised over your head. Just as he begins the down
+stroke step aside smartly. The hatchet will then be found buried in the
+ground. This means that bygones are bygones.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "ARE THEY RISING THE DAY, SIR?"
+
+"NO."
+
+"AH, WEEL, JUST BIDE A WEE. THEY AYE TAK BEST IN THE COOL OF THE EVENING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PETER AND JUDY.
+
+Except for the fact that they had different sets of parents and were born
+some hundred miles apart, Peter and Judy are practically twins.
+Consequently, after an interval of three months, strenuous efforts were
+made by the two young mothers to bring about a proper introduction between
+the two wonders.
+
+The occasion was to be one of great importance, for it was Judy's very
+first tea-party, marking, as it were, the dawn of her social career. For
+days the post-office wrestled with the correspondence necessary to bring
+about the meeting. The mothers, both in person and by proxy, had scoured
+the precincts of Kensington and Oxford Street respectively for the
+necessary adornments to do their offspring justice, changing their minds so
+often that the assistants came to take as much interest in the party as if
+they were going to it themselves.
+
+And yet, when the great moment arrived and the strong silent man was borne
+into the room, round-eyed and expectant, he found his hostess already tired
+out with her first tea-party and fast asleep. He could scarcely believe his
+eyes; nor could Judy's scandalised father.
+
+Peter was very good about it. He bore this chilly reception stoically,
+deprecating any desire to wake the sleeping beauty--deprecating, in fact,
+any interest in her or her cot whatsoever. Ignoring the efforts of the Big
+People to fix his attention by pointing him directly at the main object of
+the tea-party (they should have known that babies like looking the _other_
+way always) he remained passively interested in a fascinating brass knob,
+the while getting his gloves into a satisfactory state of succulence before
+the Big People should take it on themselves to remove them.
+
+At last his patience is rewarded. The hostess, sighing sleepily, is
+beginning to show signs of realising her responsibilities. Two immense
+arms, two enormous fistfuls of fingers gather her up and she is borne
+through the air triumphantly.... Peter and Judy are introduced.
+
+I doubt whether any two people in this world ever displayed greater
+indifference. Solemnly they turn their eyes upon every other object in the
+room except each other. It is not until the number of permutations in which
+two people can look at everything is exhausted mathematically that their
+eyes meet at last.
+
+Then they cut each other dead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Side by side they recline on the couch. Judy, pouting with sleep, is
+buffeting her face with her little white boxing-gloves, while Peter stares
+fascinated at the fire, quite sure that social functions are not in his
+line. "O-o!"
+
+With only three months' experience, Judy has not yet attained complete
+mastery of the art of manipulating difficult things like limbs.
+Inadvertently, and in excess of zeal to kick higher than any other baby,
+she has landed out a beautiful backhander and caught Peter hard in the
+tummy. Peter's eyes open wide. Creases appear on his face and widen. A
+cavern opens and a roar follows:--
+
+"Ya--o-o!"
+
+"Hullo!" (Judy looks up in amazement, for there is only one noise in the
+house like that, and she has the sole rights of it). "Hullo, is that me? I
+didn't know I was doing it"--(the roars from Peter continue)--"but I
+suppose I am. I must be. Let's have a lot more of this very good noise I am
+making--Ya--o-o!"
+
+The duet produces a crescendo astounding to them both, for there has never
+been a noise so wonderful as this in all their experience. Then to Judy a
+very strange thing happens. She pauses for breath, but the noise goes on.
+"This is amazing--how do I do it?..."
+
+She joins in again--and then Peter stops. He too is puzzled vaguely.
+However, bother introspection, the concert proceeds, both artists doing
+their level best. Now one of them pauses, now the other, and at length
+serious doubts begin to creep in. There is something queer afoot--
+something....
+
+The matter resolves itself. Turning suddenly they behold each other, both
+yelling splendidly. Amazement! Cavern confronts cavern! Face to face they
+roar their hardest, demanding the reason for this strange phenomenon, "this
+other me who does when I don't."
+
+They pause--their mouths remain agape. Slowly they close and smiles
+succeed. Joy! A _reasonable_-sized face at last. What a relief after the
+enormous faces, the great mouths, the Cyranese noses of the Big People who
+are wont to come and peer. Here at last is a true face, a face that--no,
+they both agree not to dwell unduly on the discovery.
+
+Indifferent to each other once again they regard the special objects of
+their attention, their hands waving gently in the air, seeking the fairies
+that babies' hands are always trying to catch.
+
+Ha! their hands have met.
+
+"Hoo! It's a _reasonable_ hand. It's got proper fingers, not stumps of
+bananas."
+
+"Moreover," says Peter politely, "if you care to take advantage of my offer
+you will find that it is properly moistened, succulent and suitable to a
+baby's taste. You needn't mind; I prepared it myself."
+
+"Goo! Gool-gur!" All is peace and chuckles. Hand-in-hand they survey their
+mothers. "_Our_ mothers, yours--mine. Ha, ha--he, he--goo!"
+
+The inner thoughts of the two babies may be hidden from me (I accept the
+punishment), but I know--I _know_ what the two mothers are thinking of.
+Twenty years hence, a paragraph in _The Times_: "Peter--Judy--" Oh, you
+fatuous mothers!
+
+L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Public interest remains unabated in the remarkable occurrences at the
+ poultry-house farm at Brickendon, where spirit rappings in the morse
+ code have been heard for weeks past.... One question put to the spirit
+ last night was 'How many people are outside?' And the reply was
+ 'Rorty,' which proved to be correct."--_Liverpool Paper._
+
+And possibly furnishes some clue to the identity of the spirit concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Officer._ "WHAT HAVE YOU GOT THERE?"
+
+_Lighterman._ "COAL."
+
+_Officer._ "I CAN SEE THAT. WHAT KIND OF COAL?"
+
+_Lighterman._ "BLACK COAL."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MORE INTENSIVE PRODUCTION.
+
+ When first I learned to play the fool
+ In various (unaccepted) verses
+ There was, I found, one golden rule
+ For poets who would line their purses.
+ "If ye," it ran, "to wealth would mount,
+ For silk attire would change your tatters,
+ Mere quantity will never count;
+ Quality is the thing that matters."
+
+ Broadly this precept, too, was laid
+ On grosser forms of human labour;
+ _E.g._, on Jones's antique trade,
+ Or Brown, the sausage-man, his neighbour;
+ Until of late, throughout a land
+ Reeling from strikes and "reconstruction,"
+ A cry was heard on every hand,
+ A clamour for "Increased Production."
+
+ While "makers," then, gird on their might
+ And merchants buzz like bees in clover;
+ When Jones is sawing day and night
+ And Brown shows twice his last turnover;
+ Shall I not follow where they've led
+ And, at the PREMIER'S invitation,
+ Double my output, Mr. Ed.?--
+ I look for your co-operation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "'Oh, to be in England now that Noel's near.'
+
+ So, one might adapt one of Kipling's lines."--_Indian Paper._
+
+What do they know of BROWNING who only KIPLING know?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "LADY wishes to travel in exquisite lingerie."--_Daily Paper._
+
+By all means; but why should she be content to wear an inferior quality
+when she is stationary?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AT THE PLAY.
+
+"MR. TODD'S EXPERIMENT."
+
+A new terror--or else a new attraction--has been added to the British
+Drama. Mr. WALTER HACKETT has brought the scent of the cinema across the
+footlights. When he wants to inform you of certain episodes in the hero's
+past career, or let you know what he is doing when he is out of sight, he
+throws the main stage into darkness and lights up a smaller one on which he
+gives you as many as six little tabloid plays within the play.
+
+Such a scheme has its obvious conveniences for the playwright, and should
+greatly simplify the difficulties of stage-craft. Those introductory
+statements which are required to explain the opening conditions and need
+such adroit handling will no longer be necessary. You just put everybody
+wise by a series of _tableaux parlants_. No longer need the author worry
+about the best way of conveying to his audience the details of any action
+that takes place off the stage; he just turns on a playlet and there it is.
+Altogether, with a couple of the unities disposed of, he ought to have a
+much easier time.
+
+On the other hand he is going to have trouble with his principal stage and
+put his actors to the inconvenience of playing in a painfully congested
+area. Thus, in _Mr. Todd's Experiment_, the permanent scene was the hall of
+a house, with a large tapestry occupying more than half of the wall.
+Lurking behind this tapestry was the stage for the tabloids, and the
+general company had to crowd themselves into the remainder or wander
+forlornly about in the space in front of the tapestry. The playlets again
+are almost bound to be just concentrated episodes, probably elemental in
+theme and certainly elementary in treatment.
+
+The excuses for their interpolation in _Mr. Todd's Experiment_ were not
+marked by a very great subtlety. There was really none for the first three,
+which simply relieved _Mr. Todd_ of the tedious recital of the hero's
+disillusionments in love. The next two were introduced by way of
+illustrating his alleged gift of clairvoyance; and the last served frankly
+to fill in the interval while the rest of the company was away at dinner.
+The general effect of all these desultory little _Guignols_ was perhaps
+rather cheap, and not very complimentary to the intelligence of those of us
+who had outgrown a childish _penchant_ for peep-shows.
+
+[Illustration: _Willoughby Todd_ (_Mr. HOLMAN CLARK_). "BE YOUR OLD TRUE
+SELF. MAKE THE WOMEN ADORE YOU."
+
+_Arthur John Carrington_ (_Mr. OWEN NARES_). "YOUR ADVICE IS GOOD. I WILL
+NOW TAKE OFF MY BEARD AND BE OWEN NARES ONCE MORE."]
+
+_Mr. Todd's Experiment_ (for I have spoken only of Mr. HACKETT'S) was to
+restore a _blasé_ and valetudinarian young man of thirty to a proper state
+of energy by recalling the memories of his past loves and so reviving in
+him a desire to stand well in the eyes of the sex. For this purpose he
+produces (1) a bunch of wood-violets to suggest (through the nose) the
+environment of his first passion; (2) a specially-tipped brand of
+cigarettes to revive (through the mouth) the sentiment of his second; and a
+gramophone record to recover (through the ear) the associations of his
+third.
+
+So well does he succeed that the hero pulls himself together, shaves off
+his beard, becomes our OWEN NARES again, and sallies forth, habited for
+conquest, to pay calls on all the three. From all the three he retires
+disillusioned, having found them as egoistic as himself, and in the end
+finds solace rather shamelessly, in the love of a devoted slave who might
+have been his for the taking any time in the last several years.
+
+The matter was pleasant enough, but its interest must, I think, have left
+us indifferent if it had not been for the diversion afforded by the
+playlets. While the idea was original, the presentation of it seemed to
+have a touch of amateurishness, though I would not go so far as to agree
+with the old fogey, played by Mr. FRED KERR, who pronounced the scheme to
+be "all Tommy rot." With the exception of one character--the devoted
+slave--the lightness of the dialogue, mildly cynical, was due not so much
+to its wit as to the absence of ponderable stuff. The easy trick, so
+popular with the modern playwright, of letting the audience down in the
+middle of a serious situation was illustrated by the hero when, being in
+deadly earnest, he tells every woman in turn that she is the only woman he
+has ever loved.
+
+As _Mr. Todd_, Mr. HOLMAN CLARK was as fresh as he always is; but Mr. OWEN
+NARES could hardly hope to satisfy the exigent demands of adoration in the
+part of young _Carrington_. Who, indeed, could sustain his reputation as a
+figure of romance when addressed as "Arthur-John"? Mr. FRED KERR, who
+played _Martin Carrington_, the cantankerous uncle, cannot help being
+workmanlike; but he was asked to repeat himself too much. The best
+performance was that of Miss MARION LORNE, in the part of the hero's one
+devout lover, _Fancy Phipps_; her quiet sense of humour, salted with a
+slight American tang, kept the whole play together.
+
+O.S.
+
+"TEA FOR THREE."
+
+Playwright Mr. ROI COOPER-MEGRUE, and principal players Miss FAY COMPTON,
+the wife; Mr. STANLEY LOGAN, the friend, and Mr. A.E. MATTHEWS, the
+husband, made a first-rate thing of two-thirds of _Tea for Three_.
+
+The wife is without blemish physically or morally. The husband is faithful
+with a single-minded fidelity in thought, word and deed that looks (and, I
+am assured by equally innocent victims, is) positively deadly. The friend
+"frits and flutters" about in a distinctly casual, not to say polygamous,
+mood, but has one sacred place in his untidy heart in which the wife is
+enshrined. He can manage to sustain life so long as he may come to
+triangular tea on Thursdays. But the faithful husband puts his foot on
+that.
+
+Hence the stolen lunch for two with which the play opens. Philosophy there
+is, and very good philosophy too, from the flutterer and fritter, and such
+love-making as every virtuous woman (at heart a minx) allows. She is sorry,
+doubtless, for the suffering she causes, but (this is my gloss, not, I
+think, the author's) is really enjoying it like anything and taking jolly
+good care to look her best. Then follow little lies and as little and as
+needless and quite innocent indiscretions; and the jealous husband on the
+rampage.
+
+All this excellently put together, seasoned with wisdom and wit and most
+capably played; Miss FAY COMPTON, admirable example of a pretty actress who
+won't let herself be captured by stage tricks, making everything explicable
+except her continued love for her intolerable bore (and Turk) of a husband;
+Mr. A.E. MATTHEWS handling a desperately unsympathetic part, which was
+already beginning to look impossible, with great adroitness; and Mr.
+STANLEY LOGAN, though badly hampered by a shocking cold and fighting a
+coughing audience, carrying the bulk of the good talk and lifting it gently
+over the few difficult places with a brilliant and well-concealed art.
+
+Thus till towards the end of the Second Act. Then a bad, a very bad, fairy
+stuffed into Mr. MEGRUE'S head the idea of the suicide lottery. The
+infuriated husband, finding his wife in her friend's room at 7 P.M.
+(frightfully improper hour), sternly offers his bowler (or Derby) hat, in
+which are two cards. The one marked with a cross is drawn by the flutterer
+and means that he is for it. He is to kill himself within twenty-four
+hours.... And all this with perfect seriousness.
+
+You will see how the Third Act of a comedy which had tied itself in this
+kind of a knot simply could not be played. The author had completely
+sacrificed plausibility, and it was not uninteresting to see him twisting
+and turning, hedging and bluffing to save it; and a little uncomfortable to
+note the conviction oozing away out of the performers.... Queer also that
+it isn't more generally recognised that to come to the theatre with a loud
+persistent cough is a form of premeditated robbery with violence.
+
+T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A NEW LEAGUE OF NATIONS.
+
+The latest development in connection with the International Brotherhood
+movement is the establishment of a College of Correct Cosmopolitan
+Pronunciation. The need of such an institution has long been clamant, and
+the visit of the Ukrainian choir has brought matters to a crisis. At their
+concert last week several strong women wept like men at their inability to
+pronounce the title of one of the most beautiful items on the programme--
+"Shtchedryk." Again, as Mr. SMILLIE must have bitterly reflected, how can
+we possibly render justice to the cause of Bolshevism so long as we are
+unable to pronounce the names of its leaders correctly? The same remark
+applies to the Russian Ballet; the Yugo-Slav handbell-ringers; the
+vegetarian Indian-club swingers from the Karakoram Himalayas; the
+polyphonic gong-players from North Borneo; the synthetic quarter-tone
+quartette from San Domingo; the anthropophagous back-chat comedians from
+the Solomon Islands; not to mention a host of other interesting companies,
+troupes, corroborees and pow-wows which are now in our midst for the
+purpose of cementing the confraternity of nations.
+
+Suitable premises for the College have been secured in the heart of Mayfair
+and a competent staff of instructors has already been appointed, who, with
+the aid of gramophones, will be able to train the students to perfection in
+the requisite command of the most explosive gutturals, labials and
+sibilants. Doctor Prtnkeivitchsvtnshchitzky will be the director of the
+College; Dr. SETON WATSON and Mr. WICKHAM STEED have kindly undertaken to
+supervise the Yugo-Slav section, and the list of patrons and patronesses
+includes the names of the Prince of Prinkipo; Madame KARSAVINA, so long a
+victim of the mispronunciation of her melodious surname; Dr. DOUGLAS HYDE,
+the famous Irish scholar; Prenk-Bib-Doda, the Albanian chieftain; Sir
+RABINDRANATH TAGORE; Lord PARMOOR; Sir THOMAS BEECHAM and the Dowager Begum
+of BHOPAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MORE ADVENTURES OF A POST-WAR SPORTSMAN.
+
+HE DETERMINES TO MASTER THE ART OF CRACKING A WHIP.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEGASUS AT POLO.
+
+ "The following teams have entered for the Lahore Polo Tournament:--4th
+ Cavalry, 17th Cavalry, 21st Lancers, 33rd Cavalry, 39th Central India
+ Horse, Lahore, the Fox-hunters from Meerut, and the Royal Air Horse
+ from Delhi."--_Civil and Military Gazette._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN UP-TO-DATE COSTUME.
+
+ "For your evening dress I advise you simply to buy a piece of broad
+ silver ribbon, pass it twice round the waist and knot it at the side,
+ with a little bunch of berries and leaves caught into the knot."--
+ _Ladies' Paper._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REVOLT OF THE SUPER-GEORGIANS.
+
+WILD SCENES AT A MEETING OF PROTEST.
+
+An Indignation Meeting, to protest against the outrageous attacks levelled
+against Georgian writers and critics by Professor NOYES in his recent
+lecture at the Royal Institution and by Mr. A.D. GODLEY in an article in
+the current _Nineteenth Century_, was held last Saturday evening at the
+Klaxon Hall. The chair was taken by Mr. EDWARD MARSH, C.M.G., who was
+supported on the platform by a compact bevy of Georgian bards; but at an
+early stage of the meeting it became apparent that a majority of those
+present in the body of the hall were extremists of violent type, and
+eventually, as will be seen, the proceedings ended in something
+approximating to a free fight.
+
+Mr. MARSH began by a frank confession. He had taken a First Class in the
+Cambridge Classical Tripos. But the days in which he had been steeped to
+the lips in Latin and Greek were long past, never to return. For many years
+he had not composed hexameters, elegiacs or iambics. He had thrown in his
+lot with insurgent youth, not as a competitor or rival, but as an advocate,
+an admirer and an adviser. Indeed, if he might venture to say so, he
+sometimes acted as a brake on the wheels of the triumphal Chariot of Free
+Verse. He was not an adherent of the fantastic movement known as "Dada." He
+had no desire to abolish the family, morality, logic, memory, archęology,
+the law and the prophets. A little madness was a splendid thing, but it
+must be methodic. Still, for the rest he was a Georgian, heart and soul,
+and it pained him when men who ought to know better raised the standard of
+reaction and sought to discredit the achievements of his _protégés_. These
+attacks could not be passed over in silence, and the meeting had been
+convened to consider how they should be met, whether by a reasoned protest
+or by retaliation.
+
+Miss Messalina Stoot, who punctuated her remarks with the clashing of a
+pair of cymbals, observed that as a thorough-going Dadaist she had no
+sympathy with the half-hearted attitude of the Chairman. It was a battle
+between Dada and Gaga, and emphatically Dada must win.
+
+Mr. Mimram Stoot, who accompanied himself on the sarrusophone, endorsed the
+iconoclastic views of his sister. The only poetry that counted was that
+which caused spinal chills and issued from husky haughty lips. The moanings
+of medięval molluscs were of no avail, though they might excite the
+crustacean fossils of Oxford, the home of lost causes.
+
+Mr. Seumas O'Gambhaoil wished to protest against Mr. NOYES' statement that
+there were ten thousand Bolshevist poets in our midst. This was a shameless
+underestimate of the total, which was at least twice that figure. Mr.
+GODLEY'S offence, however, was much worse, as he was an Irishman, though of
+the self-expatriated type to which GOLDSMITH and MOORE belonged. The rest
+of Mr. O'Gambhaoil's speech was delivered in Irish, but he was understood
+to advocate a repatriation of all Irish renegades to be tried and dealt
+with by the Sinn Fein Republic.
+
+Mr. Caradoc Cramp applauded the sentiments of the last speaker, but
+considered that he avoided the real issue. The Chairman had declared
+himself a Georgian, but that was not enough. The worst enemies of Free
+Verse were to be found in that camp. In technique and even in thought there
+was little to choose between many so-called Georgians and the most effete
+and reactionary Victorians. He alluded to the War poets, or rather the
+"Duration" poets, most of whom were already back-numbers. Between these and
+the Post-war poets, the true super-Georgians or paulo-post-Georgians, it
+was necessary to make a clean cut. To protest against Messrs. GODLEY and
+NOYES was a mere waste of time and energy. They might just as well protest
+against the existence of an extinct volcano or the skeleton of the
+brontosaurus. The real danger to be faced was the intrinsic subjectivity of
+the early and mid-Georgian poets, of whom the Chairman had been so powerful
+and consistent a supporter. He accordingly called for volunteers to storm
+the platform, and, a large number having responded to his appeal, Mr. MARSH
+was dislodged from the Chair after a gallant fight. A resolution of
+adherence to the principles of "Dada" having been passed by a large
+majority, the meeting broke up to the strains of the famous song--
+
+ a e ou o youyouyou i e ou o
+ youyouyou
+ drrrrdrrrrdrrrrgrrrrgrrrrrgrrrrrrrr
+ beng bong beng bang
+ boumboum boumboum boumboum.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Gentleman, Interested in Tattooing and largely covered, would like to
+ hear from other enthusiasts to compare notes."--_Times._
+
+We trust the "bare-back" mode is not going to spread to the more modest
+sex.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From a "stores" circular:--
+
+ "THIS WEEK'S ECONOMY OFFERS.
+
+ Honey in Sections, each 3/9, three for 14/0."
+
+The economy consists, of course, in buying them one at a time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WATER-BABIES.
+
+ In a limbo of desolate waters,
+ In the void of a flood-stricken plain,
+ You will find them--the sons and the daughters
+ Of tropical rain.
+
+ For when rivers are one with the ocean,
+ When the ricefields and roads are no more,
+ There's a feeling of magic, a notion
+ Of fairyland lore;
+
+ And the babies of Burma can revel
+ In a nursery of whirlpool and slime,
+ Where it thunders and rains like the devil
+ For weeks at a time.
+
+ They paddle their rafts through the jungle;
+ They swim through a network of leaves;
+ They clamber with never a bungle
+ To dive from the eaves.
+
+ 'Tis an orgy of goblins, an image
+ Of nudity flouting the flood,
+ Of shorn-headed brownies who scrimmage
+ And splash in the mud.
+
+ As we row neath a tamarind, one'll
+ Roll off with a gesture of fright,
+ Bobbing up like a cork at our gunwale
+ And gurgling delight.
+
+ But never a stanza shall measure
+ The joy of that desperate crew
+ Of four-year-olds scouring for treasure
+ Astride a bamboo.
+
+ Their fathers smoke, huddled in sorrow,
+ Their mothers chew betel and fret,
+ And the pariahs howl for a morrow
+ Which shall not be wet;
+
+ The plovers wheel o'er them complaining,
+ And it's only the babies who pray
+ That the skies may be raining and raining
+ For ever and aye.
+
+
+ J.M.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANOTHER MESOPOTAMIAN SCANDAL.
+
+ "The commodious and fast ss. 40 will leave Basrah for Baghdad and all
+ intermediate ports on Saturday morning at 9 A.M. Passengers will embark
+ at 10 A.M."--_Basrah Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "END OF COTTON SUIT.
+
+ DRAMATIC COLLAPSE."--_Daily Paper._
+
+We are more than ever convinced of the superior wearing qualities of
+woollen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The Government of the Commonwealth of Australia agrees to the
+ admission on passport of Indian merchants, students, tourests, with
+ there irrespective wives."--_Indian Paper._
+
+But ought any Government to encourage this sort of thing?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Dancing Man_ (_at Galleries of New Primitive Art Society_).
+"ONE WOULD HAVE THOUGHT, WITH SUCH A GOOD FLOOR, THEY MIGHT HAVE PUT UP
+SOME BETTER PICTURES."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks._)
+
+Following the iconoclastic spirit of the age, Mr. BARRY PAIN has essayed in
+_The Death of Maurice_ (SKEFFINGTON) the revolutionary experiment of a
+murder mystery tale that does not contain (_a_) a love interest, (_b_) a
+wrongly suspected hero, (_c_) a baffled inspector, (_d_) an amateur, but
+inspired, detective. It would be a grateful task to add that the result
+proves the superfluity of these time-worn accessories. But the cold fact is
+that, to me at least, the proof went the other way. From the first I was
+painfully aware of a lack of snap about the whole business, and I am more
+than suspicious that the author himself may have shared my unwilling
+indifference. _Maurice_ was an artistic bachelor, a landowner, a
+manufacturer of jam, a twin (with a bogie gift of knowing at any moment the
+relative position of his other half, which might have been worked for far
+more effect than is actually obtained from it), and a reputation of making
+enemies. He had also an unusual neighbour, in the person of a young woman
+whose unconventionality led her to perambulate the common at midnight,
+playing the first bars of _Solveig's Song_ upon the flute. One night, at
+the close of the first chapter, a gun was heard. But you are wrong to
+suppose (however naturally) that the flute-player was the victim. It was
+_Maurice_. And of course the problem was, who did it. I have told you my
+own experience of the working out; nothing written by Mr. BARRY PAIN can
+ever be really dull, just as no story starting with a mysterious murder can
+lack a certain intrigue; but the fact remains that my wish, heroically
+resisted, to look on to the last chapter was prompted more often by
+impatience than by any compelling curiosity. Others may be happier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The author of _A Journal of Small Things_ has done much to make us
+understand the sufferings of stricken France and the more intimate sorrows
+of war. _Chill Hours_ (MELROSE) deals with that dark period before the end,
+when, to some, it seemed all but certain that the will to victory must
+fail. Of the three parts of this gracious little book the first consists of
+six sketches of life behind the lines, life both gentle and simple, as
+affected by war. "Odette in Pink Taffeta," an episode of bereavement, is in
+particular exquisitely visualised. "Their Places" and "The Second Hay"
+treat, with a quiet intensity of conviction, of the absolutely deadening
+absorption, by overwork and anxiety, of peasant wives and children left to
+carry on in the absence of their men. The third part is a series of
+hospital vignettes. They do not attempt to be too cheery, but they have the
+stamp of realised truth. "Nostalgia," the second part, is in another
+mood--recalled memories of the beauties of a loved land and of dear common
+things affectionately seen. To those who dare look at war with open eyes
+and who take pleasure in sincere and beautifully-phrased writing I commend
+Mrs. HELEN MACKAY'S book without reserve.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Somewhere in Christendom_ (ALLEN AND UNWIN) is somewhat embarrassing to a
+reviewer, for it has the theme of a great book with the manner of a trivial
+one. It is the history of a very much smaller nation, Ethuria, left
+despoiled and starving at the end of a nine-years' war, in which its great
+neighbours have used it as a battle-ground. Revolution begins, but a woman
+prophet steps in and switches it off in an unusual direction. The Ethurians
+perfect among themselves that fellowship which is the nice ideal behind
+many nasty manifestations in the real world, and, when next they are
+invaded by neighbouring nations anxious to use them as an excuse for
+belligerency, they resolutely stick to their guns (only the metaphor is
+most unsuitable), refuse to find any cause of quarrel with their "foreign
+brothers," and finally persuade them to abandon the ideals of war, so that
+peace on earth becomes a reality at last. Here is the book's theme; its
+working out allows for a boxing match between the President of Hygeia and
+the Foreign Secretary of Tritonia as the minimum of hostilities; a wicked
+newspaper lord, who pulls strings in both countries, and a faithful butler
+to the Royal Family, who becomes assistant state nursemaid and cleans
+silver as a hobby. Though I quite agree with Miss EVELYN SHARP and the
+Ethurians that it _is_ love that makes the world go round, I am not so sure
+that either hers or theirs is the best way of advocating their common
+cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may remember an original and striking book of papers about the theatre
+under the title of _Buzz-Buzz_. Its author, JAMES E. AGATE, has now
+followed it with another, called, rather grimly, _Responsibility_
+(RICHARDS). You will be absolutely correct in guessing that this is not a
+treatise on revue, being indeed an autobiographical novel of (I feel bound
+to add) precisely the same calibre as, in the sister realm of drama, made
+the name of Manchester at one period a word of awe. Why do these young
+Mancunians recollect to such stupendous purpose? Here is Mr. AGATE, with an
+introduction of forty-four pages, all about time and infinity, before he
+can get his protagonist so much as started anywhere at all. It is a little
+like one of those demon-scenes out of the pantomimes he describes so
+lovingly--"_Do so! May safety and success attend on Crusoe._" But of course
+the subsequent action is more responsible. I imagine Mr. AGATE'S picture of
+young-man life in the Manchester of the nineties to be very much like the
+real thing. Relaxation was not wholly remote from it. Cotton and
+commandments were broken with equal facility. Also you may be impressed by
+the number of Germans in it. Finally, after telling us, sometimes
+engagingly, sometimes verbosely, all he can remember about Lancashire, Mr.
+AGATE brings his hero to Town, levers him along, year after year, and gets
+(almost on his last page) to his big situation. I won't spoil it.
+_Responsibility_, which might better have been called "Garrulity," is a
+novel containing boredom and charm in about equal proportions; not to
+mention promise for the days when its author has learned to discipline his
+too-ready pen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the early part of 1915 until the end of 1917 Admiral Sir REGINALD
+BACON commanded at Dover, and from the preface to _The Dover Patrol_
+(HUTCHINSON) we can gather that he is smarting under a considerable sense
+of injustice and injury. Of the merits of his case--he frankly describes
+his dismissal as brutal--I do not pretend to judge, but can safely assume
+that the other side have something to say for themselves, if they care to.
+However, you are not to suppose that this is a bitter book. Most generous
+are the praises which the Admiral bestows upon his subordinates; his venom
+he reserves for just the chosen few who, no doubt, can bear it. Apart from
+personal recriminations, of which some of us must be more than tired, these
+two portly volumes are of real historical value. You will find in them not
+only a record of actual achievements, often carried out under desperately
+difficult conditions, but also of projects which for one reason or another
+were never fulfilled. "Why don't we try to land on the Belgian coast?" was
+a question our amateur strategists were never weary of asking. Well, here
+is their answer. Here, too, are countless photographs, charts, plans and
+diagrams--a really wonderful collection. Even if you are not in the least
+interested in Sir REGINALD'S grievances you will find him a writer who has
+a lot of useful things to say and knows how to say them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN EFFECT OF THE CRIME WAVE.
+
+[Illustration: _Both._ "HM! HE _LOOKS_ RESPECTABLE--]
+
+[Illustration: --_STILL_, ONE NEVER KNOWS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The normal average amount of clothing required in a temperate climate
+ such as ours is: _One pound weight of clothing to every one stone
+ weight of the body_.... Thus the clothes of a child weighing 3 stones
+ should be 3lb., and for a man or woman weighing 10 stones the clothes
+ should weigh 10lb. This is a definite statement; at any rate, disprove
+ it who can."--_Sir JAMES CANTLIE in "The Daily Mail."_
+
+We gave instructions to our Mathematical specialist to work out the
+figures, and his report is that he finds them substantially correct.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+158, February 11, 1920, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
+
+ <title>Punch, February 11th, 1920.</title>
+
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
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+ p.center {text-align: center;}
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+ {position: absolute; left: 1%; right: 91%; font-size: 8pt; text-indent: 0;}
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+ {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem p.i2 {margin-left: 1em;}
+ .poem p.i4 {margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem p.i6 {margin-left: 3em;}
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 158,
+February 11, 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, Volume 158, February 11, 1920
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: July 30, 2005 [EBook #16394]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>PUNCH,<br />
+ OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. 158.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h2>February 11th, 1920.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>[pg 101]</span>
+
+<h2>CHARIVARIA.</h2>
+
+ <p>"If a burglar broke into my house," says Lady <font
+ class="sc">Beecham</font>, "I should use the telephone to summon help."
+ Lady <font class="sc">Beecham</font> seems to have a sanguine
+ temperament.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Asked how she would act in case a burglar broke into her house, Miss
+ <font class="sc">Iris Hoey</font> said she would stand before him and
+ recite <font class="sc">Shakspeare</font>. If anybody else had said this
+ we should have suspected a cruel nature.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A libel action arising, out of the representation by a German artist
+ of the ex-<font class="sc">Crown Prince</font> as a baboon is to be heard
+ shortly. It is not yet known who is to prosecute on behalf of the local
+ Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Nine thousand officials have been appointed to control the food
+ supplies in Petrograd. English Government officials regard this
+ arrangement as the work of an amateur.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>It is said that the exchange crisis is regarded by Mr. <font
+ class="sc">C.B. Cochran</font> as a deliberate attempt to divert
+ attention from the <font class="sc">Dempsey</font> contest.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The rumour that <font class="sc">Carpentier</font> and <font
+ class="sc">Dempsey</font>, in order to avoid further fuss and publicity,
+ have decided to fight it out privately, appears to have no
+ foundation.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Wrexham Education Committee is reconsidering its decision against
+ teaching Welsh in the elementary schools. The pathetic case of a local
+ man who was recently convicted of stealing a leg of beef owing to his
+ being unable to give his evidence in Welsh is thought to have something
+ to do with it.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A domestic servants' union has been formed and an advertisement for a
+ good plain shop stewardess (two in family; policeman kept) will, we
+ understand, shortly appear in <i>The Morning Post</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>During the recent gales on the West Coast of Ireland the anemometer
+ registered the unprecedented velocity of one hundred-and-ten miles per
+ hour. A number of cases of anemonia are reported from the Ph&#339;nix
+ Park district.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>According to <i>Men's Wear</i>, silk hats are to be increased in price
+ by at least thirty per cent. Is it by this process, we wonder, that they
+ hope to drive Mr. <font class="sc">Churchill</font> out of business?</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A pig and sty constituted first prize at a recent whist drive at
+ Bishop's Waltham. We understand that a difference of opinion between the
+ winner and the pig as regards the user of the sty has ended fatally for
+ the latter.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>It is reported that the Victory badge now being worn extensively in
+ New York is to be replaced by another bearing the inscription, "We did
+ them."</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"I intend to tour England," says a Prohibition lecturer, "and I will
+ not be hurried." We recommend the railway.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A Tralee man charged with shooting a neighbour said he had no desire
+ to break the law. It seems that he mistook the man for a policeman.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A French physician declares that a gift for yawning is one of the most
+ valuable health-assets. This should be good news for revue-producers.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"Honesty," says Dr. <font class="sc">Ingram</font>, "is the best
+ policy after all." All the same some of our profiteers seem to get along
+ pretty well, thank you.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The egg-laying competition promoted by <i>The Daily Mail</i> has
+ proved a great success. It is most gratifying to learn that the hens have
+ done their best for "the paper that got us the shells."</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"The influenza microbe," announces a medical journal, "has made its
+ appearance in many parts of the country and is slowly but surely making
+ its way towards London." With any other Government than ours a simple
+ suggestion that the sign-posts <i>en route</i> should be reversed would
+ have been at once adopted.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>During the last four weeks exactly four hundred and ninety-nine rats
+ have been destroyed in a small town in South Bedfordshire. It is hoped
+ that as soon as these figures are published a sporting rodent will give
+ itself up in order to complete the fifth century.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/096.png"><img width="100%" src="images/096.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <p>"<font class="sc">Why haven't you got on spurs?</font>"</p>
+
+ <p>"<font class="sc">I was going to speak about that, Sir. I regret I
+ accidentally omitted to put them on this morning, and consequently have
+ caught cold. So I was going to ask you to be kind enough to grant me
+ leave until</font>&mdash;"</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"A champagne support was provided in the lower hall."&mdash;<i>Local
+ Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Very sustaining, we feel sure.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The paper supports the proposed formation of a first army of 'shock
+ troops,' which would be capable of preventing the mobilisation of a great
+ Germy army."&mdash;<i>Evening Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Anything to keep the influenza at bay.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The times for the incubation of the eggs of various birds are as
+ under:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Ostrich 41 days.</p>
+ <p>Gnu 49 days."&mdash;<i>Poultry-Keeping.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>"Gnus, indeed!" said the Emu.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span>
+
+<h2>TO AMERICA</h2>
+
+ <p>(<i>deferentially hinting how others see her and what they think of
+ her threatened repudiation of her <font class="sc">President's</font>
+ pledges</i>).</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>When you refuse to sign the Peace</p>
+ <p class="i2">Except with various "reservations,"</p>
+ <p>And prophesy a swift decease</p>
+ <p class="i2">Impinging on the League of Nations;</p>
+ <p>When you whose arms (we've understood)</p>
+ <p class="i2">Settled the War and wiped the Bosch out</p>
+ <p>Regard the whole world's brotherhood</p>
+ <p class="i6">As just a wash-out;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>You say, in terms a little blunt,</p>
+ <p class="i2">"This scheme that you are advertising</p>
+ <p>Was all along a private stunt</p>
+ <p class="i2">Of <font class="sc">Wilson's</font> singular devising;</p>
+ <p>His game we weren't allowed to know;</p>
+ <p class="i2">Under a misty smile he masked it;</p>
+ <p>We never gave him leave to go</p>
+ <p class="i4"> (He never asked it).</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"And you, poor credulous Allies,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Found in this fellow, self-appointed,</p>
+ <p>The worth he had in his own eyes</p>
+ <p class="i2">And let him pose as God's anointed;</p>
+ <p>Taking no sort of pains to see</p>
+ <p class="i2">Whether or not he had a mandate,</p>
+ <p>Like puppy-dogs the other Three</p>
+ <p class="i6">Out of his hand ate."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But how if <i>we</i> had queered his claim</p>
+ <p class="i2">Or questioned his credentials, saying,</p>
+ <p>"Who is this <font class="sc">Woodrow</font> What's-his-name?</p>
+ <p class="i2">And what's the <i>rōle</i> he thinks he's playing?</p>
+ <p>Is he a Methodist divine?</p>
+ <p class="i2">Or does he boom Chicago bacon?"&mdash;</p>
+ <p>I think that I can guess the line</p>
+ <p class="i6">You would have taken.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Behold a Man," I hear you say,</p>
+ <p class="i2">"Of peerless wit and ripe instruction,</p>
+ <p>Elect of Heaven and U.S.A.&mdash;</p>
+ <p class="i2">Surely an ample introduction;</p>
+ <p>He comes to put Creation right;</p>
+ <p class="i2">He brings no chits&mdash;he doesn't need 'em;</p>
+ <p>Who doubts his faith will have to fight</p>
+ <p class="i4"> The Bird of Freedom!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i16">O.S.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>"SMALL ADS."</h2>
+
+ <p>"Where do you get servants from?" I asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"From small ads.," said Phyllis promptly.</p>
+
+ <p>I picked up the paper from the floor where I had thrown it in the
+ morning. My wife is one of those rare women who always leave things where
+ you put them. It is this trait that endears her to me. I ran my trained
+ eye over an ad. column.</p>
+
+ <p>"Got it at once," I said with pardonable pride. "How's
+ this?&mdash;'General (genuine), stand any test trd. £70 possess. s. hands
+ yrs. s.a.v.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"I like genuine people," said Phyllis thoughtfully. "And under the
+ circumstances"&mdash;(here she looked hard at me, as if I were a
+ circumstance)&mdash;"under the circumstances I think we ought to have one
+ that will stand any test. Seventy pounds is out of the question, of
+ course, but she might come for less when she sees how small we are. What
+ does 's. hands yrs.' stand for?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know," I said; "I can only think of 'soft hands for
+ years.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should like her," said Phyllis. "Their hands are the one thing
+ against Generals. She must be a nice girl to take such care of them.
+ Think how careful she'd be with the china. What's 'trd.'?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm afraid it must mean tired," I said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, she'd soon get rested here," said Phyllis; "I don't think that
+ need be against her. She's probably been in a hard place lately. Are
+ there any more?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Plenty," I said. "How does this one strike you?&mdash;'General. no
+ bacon. possess. 2 rms. £45 wky. s.a.v.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"I like that one," said Phyllis. "She must be an awfully unselfish
+ girl to go without bacon. I don't see how we are going to spare two
+ rooms, though, unless she's willing to count the kitchen as one.
+ Forty-five pounds a week must be a printer's error. But we can easily
+ afford forty-five pounds a year."</p>
+
+ <p>"It may mean that she's 'weakly,'" I suggested.</p>
+
+ <p>"That wouldn't matter much," said Phyllis; "and I like her the better
+ for being honest about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"'Wky.' <i>might</i> stand for 'whisky,'" I hinted darkly.</p>
+
+ <p>Phyllis blanched. "Then she's no good," she said; "I simply couldn't
+ stand one that drinks. What's the next one like?"</p>
+
+ <p>I read on: "Domestic oil no risk. 6 dys. trd. s. hands 10 yrs.
+ s.a.v."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder whether that means that she <i>can</i> cook on an oil-stove
+ or that she <i>can't</i> cook on any other kind? And does the 'no risk'
+ refer to her or the stove? It's not very clear. I don't think we'll take
+ up this one's references. Besides I shouldn't like one that was tired for
+ six days."</p>
+
+ <p>"Out of every seven," I added, "and the seventh day would be the
+ Sabbath, and her day off."</p>
+
+ <p>"Go on to the next," said Phyllis firmly.</p>
+
+ <p>The next one merely said; "General. Kilburn tkg. £40 1 rm. s.a.v."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would be nice to have a taking sort of girl," I thought
+ (unfortunately aloud).</p>
+
+ <p>"We won't think of her, the hussy!" said Phyllis. "Pass me the paper,
+ please."</p>
+
+ <p>"They all seem to want 's.a.v.,'" she said. "What do you suppose it
+ means? I wish they wouldn't use so many abbreviations. 'S.a.' stands for
+ Sunday afternoon, of course, but I can't think what the 'v.' is for. Of
+ course we'll give them Sunday afternoons free, if that's what it means. I
+ only wonder they don't want an evening off in the week as well. I call
+ them most reasonable. And there are so many to choose from. I always
+ understood from mother that they're so hard to get."</p>
+
+ <p>Then she turned the paper over.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, you are stupid!" she said. "You've been looking at the 'Shops and
+ Businesses for Sale' column."</p>
+
+ <p>"So've you," I snapped.</p>
+
+ <p>And then I regret to say we had our first quarrel.</p>
+
+ <p>I told Phyllis firmly that she is not at all tkg., nor would she stand
+ any test; that no one could engage her, much less marry her, without
+ taking risks; that she hadn't had s. hands for yrs., that <i>she</i>
+ wouldn't go without her bacon for anyone, and that I should be jolly
+ thankful if she would take every blessed s.a.v.</p>
+
+ <p>I admit that Phyllis was more dignified. She merely sailed out of the
+ room, remarking that I made her trd.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h4>"Our Invincible Navy."</h4>
+
+ <p>In continuation of a paragraph in his last issue, Mr. Punch expresses
+ his regret if the article which appeared under the above title in these
+ pages on January 14th has unwittingly given offence to any one of his
+ readers through others having connected him with the character of
+ <i>Reginald McTaggart</i>.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/098.png"><img width="100%" src="images/098.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <h3>THE CONSCIENTIOUS BURGLAR.</h3>
+
+ <p><font class="sc">Paisley Humanitarian.</font> "IF I COULD ONLY BE
+ QUITE SURE THAT I SHOULDN'T BE DISCOURAGING HIM FROM SAVING."</p>
+
+ <p>[Mr. <font class="sc">Asquith</font> has pronounced himself
+ cautiously in favour of a Capital Levy, on the condition, amongst
+ others, that it must not be allowed to discourage the habit of
+ saving.]</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>[pg 104]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/099.png"><img width="100%" src="images/099.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <h3>JULIUS CĘSAR ON THE LINKS.</h3>
+
+ <p class="center"><i>Actor</i> (<i>whose knowledge of <font
+ class="sc">Shakspeare</font> is greater than his golf</i>). "'<font
+ class="sc">O, pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth.</font>'"</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h2>RINGS FROM SATURN.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>Extracted from various issues of "The
+Daily Mandate."</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="center">I.</p>
+
+ <p><i>To the Editor of "The Daily Mandate."</i></p>
+
+ <p><font class="sc">Sir,</font>&mdash;For a number of years I have been
+ experimenting in wireless telephony with my installation on the heights
+ of Lavender Hill. On several occasions recently I have been puzzled by
+ mysterious ringings of the bell attached to the instrument, which have
+ obviously been set up by long-distance waves. On taking up the receiver,
+ however, I have been unable to make out any coherent message, but only a
+ succession of irregular squeaks, although once I distinctly, heard a word
+ which I can only transcribe as "Gurroo." I have no doubt in my own mind
+ that one of the more advanced planets is trying to get in touch with us
+ by means of wireless telephony, and that once we have deciphered the code
+ we shall be able to converse freely with its inhabitants. I myself
+ incline to the belief that these rings emanate from Saturn, which, in
+ spite of its great distance from the earth, is just as likely to wish to
+ communicate with us as any other planet.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Yours faithfully,</p>
+
+<p class="author"><font class="sc">Diogenes Dottle</font>, F.R.S.</p>
+
+<p class="center">II.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Dottle's remarkable letter, published in our issue of yesterday,
+ suggesting that inhabitants of Saturn have been endeavouring to
+ communicate with the earth by means of wireless telephony, has created
+ profound excitement in scientific and other circles. To a representative
+ of <i>The Daily Mandate</i> a number of well-known men expressed their
+ views on the matter, which will undoubtedly stimulate further
+ investigation into the momentous possibilities of this epoch-making
+ revelation. The opinions advanced, which are, on the whole, highly
+ favourable to Mr. Dottle's theory, are as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Sir Potiphar Shucks, the famous astronomer</i>: "The possibility
+ that Saturn is inhabited is one that, in the absence of incontrovertible
+ evidence either way, should not lightly be set aside. Assuming that it is
+ inhabited, that its people are skilled in the use of wireless telephony
+ and that it is possible to set up waves of sufficient intensity to travel
+ all the way from Saturn to us, I see no reason why communications of the
+ nature suggested by Mr. Dottle should not at some future date become an
+ accomplished fact."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. Artesian Pitts, the well-known imaginative historian</i>: "I
+ have long held the belief that Saturn is inhabited by a type of being
+ possessing a cylinder-like body composed of an unresisting pulp, a high
+ dome-shaped head filled with gas, and long tentacles, bristling with
+ electricity, through which all sensations are emitted and received. These
+ tentacles would act as an ideal telephonic apparatus, so that there is
+ every likelihood of Mr. Dottle's having actually received a message from
+ Saturn. I take 'Gurroo' to be Saturnian for 'Hello.'"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Signor Tromboni, the pioneer of wireless telephony</i>: "We are
+ making <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>[pg
+ 105]</span> arrangements to test Mr. Dottle's interesting theory, and for
+ this purpose are erecting a special installation on the top of Mt.
+ Kilimanjaro, which is several thousand feet higher than Lavender Hill. At
+ our own stations we have frequently noticed mysterious ringings, which we
+ have hitherto ascribed to carelessness on the part of operators; but Mr.
+ Dottle's letter opens up a new world of possibilities. <i>The Daily
+ Mandate</i> is to be congratulated on the prominence it has given to the
+ subject, which has already had the effect of sending Tromboni shares up
+ several points."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Mr. G. Shawburn</i>: "It is an insult to Creation to assume that
+ ours is the only populated planet. Of course Saturn is inhabited, but,
+ unlike our own world, by people of intelligence. In the matter of mental
+ advancement Saturn can make rings round the earth. All the same I don't
+ for one moment suppose that Mr. Dottle knows what he's talking
+ about."</p>
+
+ <p><i>The <font class="sc">Postmaster-General</font></i>: "Nothing is
+ known in the Department under my control of telephone calls having been
+ received from Saturn or the neighbourhood. I do not propose for the
+ present to take any steps in the matter."</p>
+
+ <p><i>The <font class="sc">Lord Mayor</font></i>: "Saturn is a long way
+ off."</p>
+
+<p class="center">III.</p>
+
+ <p>(<i>Extract from leading article.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>"... Again we ask, 'What is the Government doing?' For several days
+ now our columns have been ringing with the world-wide acclamation of this
+ stupendous discovery, beside the potentialities of which the wildest
+ efforts of imaginative literature are reduced to pallid and uninspired
+ commonplaces. Even so cautious a scientist as Sir Potiphar Shucks has
+ declared that the idea of Saturn being inhabited is one that 'should not
+ lightly be set aside,' and has announced his conviction that under
+ favourable conditions communication with that planet should in the near
+ future become 'an accomplished fact.' Other eminent leaders of thought
+ and action, including Signor Tromboni, are even more enthusiastic in
+ their reception of the great theory first given to the world by Mr.
+ Diogenes Dottle in a letter to <i>The Daily Mandate</i>. But the <font
+ class="sc">Postmaster-General</font> is content to treat the question
+ with the airy scepticism and obstructive complacency that have rendered
+ the London Telephone service a byword of inefficiency, and refuses even
+ to make a grant in aid of the work of investigation.</p>
+
+ <p>"In these circumstances the proprietors of <i>The Daily Mandate</i>
+ have much pleasure in announcing that they will pay the sum of ten
+ thousand pounds to the first man, woman or child in the British Empire
+ who can produce evidence of having received an intelligible telephonic
+ message from Saturn, and a further sum of one hundred thousand pounds to
+ the first person to send a message to that planet and receive a clear
+ reply. The services of a Board of distinguished experts are being engaged
+ for the purpose of testing and adjudicating all claims.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Meanwhile the <font class="sc">Postmaster-General</font> must
+ go.</i>"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:66%;">
+ <a href="images/100.png"><img width="100%" src="images/100.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <p><i>Indignant Egoist.</i> "<font class="sc">Be careful up there what
+ you're dropping. That precious nearly hit me!</font>"</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"It may safely be said that there are more millionaires to the square
+ yard in Bradford than in any other city in the country, not even
+ excepting London or New York."&mdash;<i>Daily Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>The news that Britain has annexed the United States will comfort those
+ who thought it was the other way about.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The incessant singing of a cricket in a London church compelled the
+ preacher to shorten his sermon."&mdash;<i>The Children's
+ Newspaper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>We may now expect increased enthusiasm for the "Sunday Cricket"
+ movement.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span>
+
+<h2>A VERMIN OFFENSIVE.</h2>
+
+ <p>There was a faint scuffling sound behind the wainscot.</p>
+
+ <p>"There it is again," said Araminta.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a doubt of it," I replied, turning pale.</p>
+
+ <p>Thrusting on my hat I rushed up the hill to the Town Hall and asked to
+ see the Clerk of the Borough Council immediately.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have reason to suspect," I said in a hoarse low whisper, as soon as
+ I was shown into the man's presence, "that our premises are in imminent
+ danger of being infested. Counsel me as to what I should do."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is your duty as a good citizen to take such steps as may from time
+ to time be necessary and reasonably practicable to destroy the vermin,"
+ he said in a rather weary and mechanical tone.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope I am not one to take my civic duties lightly," I replied with
+ some <i>hauteur</i>, "but observe that I merely said I had reason to
+ suspect the imminence of the peril. I should like to know the legal
+ definition of infestment, if you please. I cannot definitely say that
+ house-breaking has taken place as yet. I do not know that there has even
+ been petty larceny. There may have been merely loitering with felonious
+ intent."</p>
+
+ <p>"What is the size of your premises?" he inquired.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is more a messuage than a premises," I explained. "About twelve
+ feet by ten, I should say&mdash;speaking without the lease."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how many vermin do you expect it to be about to harbour?"</p>
+
+ <p>"None have actually hove in sight at present," I said reassuringly,
+ "but there is a sound of one in the offing&mdash;in the wainscoting, I
+ mean."</p>
+
+ <p>"In a residence of your size I should say that a single mouse would
+ constitute infestation within the meaning of the Act, so soon as it
+ forces an ingress. It will then be your bounden duty to demolish it. How
+ about purchasing a trap?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You are sure that is better than hiding behind the arras and hitting
+ it over the head with a pole-axe?" I inquired anxiously, "or proffering
+ it a bowl of poisoned wine?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Poison is no longer supplied free," he answered coldly, and I went
+ out.</p>
+
+ <p>Very luckily, as I hastened up the hill, I had observed a building
+ with the words, "Job Masters. Traps for Hire," written upon a wooden
+ board. I went inside and found an elderly man sitting at a desk in a
+ small office. He looked extremely patient. "Are you Job?" I asked
+ breathlessly. "I have come to buy a mouse-trap."</p>
+
+ <p>Appearances, of course, are quite often deceptive. They were in this
+ case. The elderly man was very much annoyed. When he had explained
+ matters forcibly to me I went on down the hill and entered an
+ ironmonger's.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish to buy a trap to catch a mouse," I said to the assistant
+ behind the counter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly, Sir. What size?" said the lad politely.</p>
+
+ <p>"Small to medium," I replied, rather baffled. "It has only a
+ medium-sized scratch."</p>
+
+ <p>He showed me a peculiar apparatus made of wire and wood containing
+ apparently a vestibule, two reception rooms, staircase and first-floor
+ lobby, with an open window and a diving-board. Underneath the window was
+ a small swimming tank.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't want a hydropathic exactly," I explained. "I propose to
+ exterminate this rodent, not to foster longevity in it. How does it
+ work?"</p>
+
+ <p>He pointed out that, after examining the various apartments, the
+ animal would be allured by the fragrance of a small portion of cheese
+ placed above the diving-board; overbalancing, it would then be projected
+ into the water, where it would infallibly drown. "It is a thoroughly
+ humane instrument," he assured me, "and used in the best 'omes."</p>
+
+ <p>I bought it and went on to a cheese foundry. Araminta was rather
+ scornful of the sanatorium when I came home with it and set it, loaded
+ and trained, on the dining-room floor; but the children were delighted.
+ It ranked only a little lower than the pantomime, and if only we could
+ have secured an outside visitor to it I believe that it would have
+ defeated the Zoo. To visit it with a sort of wistful hope became the
+ principal treat of the day. But, alas, the mansion remained untenanted.
+ Sometimes during a lull in conversation we would hear the faint scuffling
+ again, but after about six days I became convinced, by kneeling down and
+ placing my ear to the carpet like an Indian, that the noise was even
+ fainter than it had been at first. A terrible suspicion seized me. I
+ dashed out and rang the bell of the flat next door.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is just as I feared," I said to Araminta on returning a few
+ moments later. "We are not going to be infested after all. The vermin has
+ been sighted in No. 140<font class="sc">b</font>."</p>
+
+ <p>"We must make the best of it," she said, trying to speak cheerfully,
+ "though it <i>is</i> hard on the children, poor dears."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wasn't thinking of the children," I replied bitterly; "I was
+ thinking of the expense. If we had been living in a house instead of a
+ flat we could at least have deducted it from the rates."</p>
+
+ <p>I sat down and made out a bill as follows to the Clerk of the Borough
+ Council, heading it:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <pre>
+ <i>On Account of Spurious Infestment.</i>
+ <i>s. d.</i>
+ To one Mouse Institute and Aquarium 5 6
+ " Cheese 0 6
+ " Labour at 2/6 per hour 0 71/2
+ ------
+ Total 6 71/2
+ </pre>
+
+ <p>The man replied coldly that the householder was responsible for all
+ expenditure incurred in precautionary measures and that the Council was
+ in no way liable for the costs resulting from an offensive that failed to
+ materialize. He ended with the rather rude postscript, "What kind of
+ cheese did you use?"</p>
+
+ <p>This was a bit sickening. However, by threatening to lay information
+ against him, I have at last succeeded in inducing the occupier of
+ 140<font class="sc">b</font> to take over the abattoir at a very
+ satisfactory valuation. It was between that and buying his mouse.</p>
+
+<p class="author"><font class="sc">Evoe.</font></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>TWO NIGHTMARES.</h3>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[<i>Dreamed after reading in a daily paper that "any style of dress
+ that lessens one's self-confidence should be tabooed" (sic).</i>]</p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>I travelled from the Sussex hills</p>
+ <p class="i2">With confidence divine,</p>
+ <p>Full of the conscious power that thrills</p>
+ <p class="i2">My heart when life is mine,</p>
+ <p>And strode to Lady Fancy Frills</p>
+ <p class="i2">With whom I was to dine.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Her guests had come from Clubs and Courts</p>
+ <p class="i2">And Halls of wealthy Jews;</p>
+ <p>As they surveyed my running shorts</p>
+ <p class="i2">I felt my courage ooze,</p>
+ <p>While conscious power, grown out of sorts,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Leaked through my canvas shoes.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Then I re-travelled South by West</p>
+ <p class="i2">Inflated with a joy</p>
+ <p>Which in the suit I called my best</p>
+ <p class="i2">No buffet could destroy;</p>
+ <p>I may remark I'd come full-dressed</p>
+ <p class="i2">From lunch at the Savoy.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But when the hills began to shout</p>
+ <p class="i2">I coloured to the roots,</p>
+ <p>And when the valleys cried, "Get out!"</p>
+ <p class="i2">To the last word in suits,</p>
+ <p>My joy, displaced by sudden doubt,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Leaked through my spatted boots.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <p>Of the mysterious Marconigrams:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"They may be the effort of sentiment beings in some neighbouring
+ planet to communicate with us."&mdash;<i>Evening Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Can we have broken in on a conversation between <i>Venus</i> and
+ <i>Mars</i>?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>[pg 107]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/102.png"><img width="100%" src="images/102.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <h3>MANNERS AND MODES.</h3>
+
+ <p>PROFITEERING IN THE WEST END COMPELS MAYFAIR TO PUT ON ANY OLD RAGS
+ AND DO ITS SHOPPING IN SHOREDITCH.</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/103.png"><img width="100%" src="images/103.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <h3>BEHIND THE SCENES IN CINEMA-LAND.</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">"<font class="sc">Will you stand back, Sir? You're
+ spoiling the picture.</font>"</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h2>A CONFLICT OF EMOTIONS.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>With the British Army in France.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>"I've seen rivetters at New York pie-foundries and stew-specialists on
+ North Sea trawlers," said Percival severely, "but I never realised how
+ monotonous feeding could be till I got into a Mess controlled by
+ Binnie."</p>
+
+ <p>Binnie puffed his pipe severely, being of the tough fibre which
+ enables Mess Presidents to endure. Frederick, who had been silent, rose
+ from his seat, heaved a distressing sigh and left the room.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's the moral that adorns the tale, you&mdash;you public danger!"
+ continued Percival, indicating Frederick's retreating figure. "Look to
+ what a condition that once bright youth has been brought by your endless
+ stews and curries."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a bit of it," answered Binnie lightly. "Frederico could eat
+ patent breakfast food and toasted doormats without taxing his digestion.
+ His complaint is the tender passion. I recognise the symptoms."</p>
+
+ <p>"It looks like an acute attack, anyhow," said Percival, rising, "and
+ prompt counter-irritants are indicated. But I'll confirm your diagnosis
+ first."</p>
+
+ <p>Inside Frederick's quarters the sound of regular and sustained sighing
+ suggested that the sufferer was in the throes of a spasm of melancholy.
+ Percival entered and narrowly escaped being drawn into the vortex of a
+ particularly powerful inspiration.</p>
+
+ <p>"Freddy, old pard," he said kindly, "why so <i>triste</i>? If the
+ trouble's financial, my cheque-book is unreservedly at your service.
+ Havin' no balance at the bank I've no use for it myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's not that&mdash;at least not worse than usual," groaned
+ Frederick.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then tell me all about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a long story," commenced Frederick.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me off with a synopsis," interrupted Percival.</p>
+
+ <p>"Once upon a time," continued Frederick, "there was a big war, which
+ made quite a stir in the daily papers and was a common subject of
+ discussion in the clubs. There were many casualties, amongst them being a
+ blithe young laddy who came down to the Base with a fractured maxilla
+ caused by nibbling an M. and V. ration without previously removing the
+ outside tin&mdash;or something of the sort. He was sent to hospital and
+ devotedly tended by a Sister of exquisite beauty&mdash;such a figure and
+ such hair! It wasn't exactly auburn and not exactly burnished
+ bronze&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"And it wasn't pale puce and it wasn't ultramarine," broke in Percival
+ impatiently. "Tell me what it was, not what it wasn't."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can't. It baffled description. Well, they drifted apart; but often
+ afterwards, when that young laddy was studying his Manual of Military Law
+ in his lonely dug-out, the image of Sister Carruthers glowed on the
+ printed page. But I never met her again until the other day, when I was
+ having a gentle toddle round Quelquepart and saw her gliding along the
+ quay. Something gripped me by the heart; I took my courage in both hands
+ and spoke to her.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Don't you remember me, Sister?' I said. 'It was you who nursed me in
+ No. 99 General.'</p>
+
+ <p>"She looked at me coldly.</p>
+
+ <p>"'As you are the third young officer who has adopted a similar method
+ of introduction this afternoon,' she said, 'you must forgive me if I ask
+ for some confirmation.'</p>
+
+ <p>"'Surely you haven't forgotten?' I cried. 'You drew me a sweet little
+ design in dots and dashes to hang over my bed. When I was evacuated to
+ England I wanted to thank you, to ask if we might meet again, but you
+ thrust a clinical thermometer between my teeth and told me not to speak
+ till you gave me permission. Then you left me, and I was whisked away to
+ the boat clinging grimly to the thermometer, inarticulate and
+ heartbroken.'</p>
+
+ <p>"'And I presume your object in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109"
+ id="page109"></a>[pg 109]</span> speaking to me to-day is to return the
+ thermometer?' she said primly.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's where I took the full count," continued Frederick, sadly. "If
+ I could have produced any old thing in the thermometer line my <i>bona
+ fides</i> would have been established an' I could have gone ahead like
+ cotton-mill shares. Instead of which, she'd said Good-day and gone while
+ I was thinkin' out explanations. Since that time I've been parading
+ Quelquepart simply bristling with thermometers, but I've never met her
+ again."</p>
+
+ <p>"The old Army fault of unpreparedness," remarked Percival. "You ought
+ to go to hospital."</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't be juvenile! What have hospitals to do with heartache?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Everything, if you go to the right one&mdash;the one where your
+ ministering angel ministrates, for instance."</p>
+
+ <p>"Percival, old ace," said Frederick, with admiration, "you'll rank
+ among the world's great thinkers yet. Turn on the current again and tell
+ me what is my complaint."</p>
+
+ <p>"Digestive trouble," said Percival promptly. "There's already been
+ rumours about, and you'll be doing a public service by going to dock with
+ dyspepsia. Binnie will be so stricken by remorse that he'll at once start
+ providing the Mess with decent food."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then for your sakes I'll rehearse the symptoms. But my curse will be
+ on your head if I get to the wrong hospital."</p>
+
+ <p>It was unfortunate that the M.O. was in an unsympathetic mood next
+ morning. He thumped Frederick on the lower chest and pooh-poohed the idea
+ of hospital. "All you want is a few of these tablets," he said, "and
+ you'll be fit as nails in a day or two."</p>
+
+ <p>Frederick crawled away dispiritedly to confide in Percival. That
+ sapient youth counselled perseverance.</p>
+
+ <p>"You must go right off your feed," he said. "Let the doc. see you
+ feebly pecking and he'll soon get alarmed. In the meantime I'm off to
+ give Binnie critical accounts of your appetite and send him to market
+ right away."</p>
+
+ <p>Only a burning passion and stealthy bars of chocolate could have
+ sustained Frederick through the next few days. To sit down to breakfast
+ with a healthy appetite and refuse his egg and rasher put the biggest
+ possible strain on his constancy. His task was made doubly difficult by
+ the scheming of Percival, who was constantly inciting Binnie to procure
+ fresh delicacies.</p>
+
+ <p>"You've crocked poor Freddy," he said; "and there will be others going
+ the same way if you don't improve the messing. Now I saw some nice plump
+ chickens to-day in the...."</p>
+
+ <p>Thus harried, that evening Binnie provided a dinner that almost
+ reduced Frederick to breaking-point. Only the fact that the M.O. was
+ sitting opposite gave him strength to refuse the soup and fish, to trifle
+ with the chicken and turn wearily from the sweet. As the savoury was
+ being served he caught a scrap of conversation across the table.</p>
+
+ <p>"... to the boat to see her off for demob.," the M.O. was saying to
+ the Padre. "Jolly nice girl&mdash;Jim Carruthers' daughter, you
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>Frederick pricked up his ears.</p>
+
+ <p>"I remember," said the Padre. "She used to be at 99 General."</p>
+
+ <p>There was no doubt who was the girl referred to. Frederick sat back in
+ his chair with a heavy sense of disappointment and loss. He felt acutely
+ sorry for himself. But presently above the pain in his heart there arose
+ a stronger and more compelling feeling.</p>
+
+ <p>"Corporal," he said, "I think after all I'll try one of those crab
+ patties. Or you might tell the waiter to bring in <i>two</i>."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/104.png"><img width="100%" src="images/104.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <i>Conversationalist.</i> "<font class="sc">Extraordinary crime wave
+ we're having&mdash;er&mdash;ah&mdash;for the time of year.</font>"
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>[pg 110]</span>
+
+<h2>PICTURES.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Some likes picturs o' women" (said Bill) "an' some likes 'orses best,"</p>
+ <p>As he fitted a pair of fancy shackles on to his old sea-chest;</p>
+ <p>"But I likes picturs o' ships" (said he), "an' you can keep the rest.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"An' if I was a ruddy millionaire with dollars to burn that way,</p>
+ <p>Instead of a dead-broke sailorman as never saves his pay,</p>
+ <p>I'd go to some big paintin' guy, an' this is what I'd say:&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'Paint me <i>The Cutty Sark</i>' (I'd say) 'or the old <i>Thermopylę</i>,</p>
+ <p>Or <i>The Star of Peace</i> as I sailed in once in my young days at sea,</p>
+ <p>Shipshape an' Blackwall fashion too, as a clipper ought to be.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'An' you might do 'er outward bound, with a sky full o' clouds,</p>
+ <p>An' the tug just droppin' astern an' gulls flyin' in crowds,</p>
+ <p>An' the decks shiny-wet with rain an' the wind shakin' the shrouds.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'Or else racin' up-Channel with a sou'-wester blowin',</p>
+ <p>Stuns'ls set aloft and alow an' a hoist o' flags showin',</p>
+ <p>An' a white bone between her teeth, so's you can see she's goin'.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'Or you might do 'er off Cape Stiff in the 'igh latitudes yonder,</p>
+ <p>With her main-deck a smother of white an' her lee-rail dipping under,</p>
+ <p>And the big greybeards drivin' by an' breakin' aboard like thunder.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'Or I'd like old Tuskar somewhere around&mdash;or Sydney 'eads, maybe,</p>
+ <p>Or Bar Light, or the Tail o' the Bank, or a glimp o' Circular Quay,</p>
+ <p>Or a junk or two, if she's tradin' East, to show it's the China Sea.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'Nor I don't want no dabs o' paint as you can't tell what they are,</p>
+ <p>Whether they're shadders or fellers' faces or blocks or blobs o' tar,</p>
+ <p>But I want gear as looks like gear an' a spar that's like a spar.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'An' I don't care if it's North or South, the Trades or the China Sea,</p>
+ <p>Shortened down or everythin' set, close-hauled or runnin' free;</p>
+ <p>You paint me a ship as is <i>like</i> a ship an' that'll do for me.'"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i16">C.F.S.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/105.png"><img width="100%" src="images/105.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <p><i>Old-fashioned Aunt.</i> "<font class="sc">Good heavens, child!
+ You're not going out like that? You look like a
+ chorus-girl.</font>"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Modern Maiden.</i> "<font class="sc">Oh, come, Aunt! I don't look
+ as horribly respectable as that, surely?</font>"</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h4>Egyptian Darkness.</h4>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"Several letters have appeared in the native Press in some of which
+ they ask Minindirect way, as they have done, but in a indirect way they
+ have done but in a clear clear manner which cannot be interpreted two
+ ways."&mdash;<i>Egyptian Gazette.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Or, so far as we are concerned, even one way.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>[pg 111]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/106.png"><img width="100%" src="images/106.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <h3>ANOTHER "RESERVATION."</h3>
+
+ <div class="i16">
+ <p><font class="sc">Starving Europe</font>. "GOD HELP ME!"</p>
+
+ <p><font class="sc">America</font>. "VERY SAD CASE. BUT I'M AFRAID SHE
+ AIN'T TRYING."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>["Relief would be found in the resumption of industrial life and
+ activity and the imposition of adequate taxation. The American people
+ should not be called upon to finance the requirements of Europe in so
+ far as they result from failure to take these necessary steps."&mdash;
+ <i>Mr. <font class="sc">Carter Glass</font>, Secretary of the United
+ States Treasury.</i>]</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>[pg 113]</span>
+
+<h3>THE BIG-GAME CURE.</h3>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>[In common with everything else, wild animals have risen considerably
+ in price.]</p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>In other times I might have made</p>
+ <p class="i2">For those wild lands where growls the grisly,</p>
+ <p>Have tracked him (with some native aid)</p>
+ <p class="i2">And held a broken-hearted Bisley;</p>
+ <p>Now that my Maud has murmured, "Nay,"</p>
+ <p class="i2">Shrinking from matrimony's tight knot,</p>
+ <p>I might have acted thus, I say</p>
+ <p class="i2">(Contrariwise, I might not).</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>In any case to-day I shrink</p>
+ <p class="i2">From thus evading Sorrow's trammels;</p>
+ <p>A sense of duty bids me think</p>
+ <p class="i2">How costly are the larger mammals;</p>
+ <p>To kill them just to soothe my mind</p>
+ <p class="i2">Would seem to savour of the wasteful,</p>
+ <p>A thing all patriot poets find</p>
+ <p class="i2">Exceedingly distasteful.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Not mine the immemorial cure;</p>
+ <p class="i2">The voice of conscience warns me off it;</p>
+ <p>I'll leave the following of the spoor</p>
+ <p class="i2">To those who follow it for profit;</p>
+ <p>I feel they would not thank me for</p>
+ <p class="i2">Turning the jungle to a shambles,</p>
+ <p>Who speculate in lions or</p>
+ <p class="i2">Have elephantine gambles.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And so this poet will not roam;</p>
+ <p class="i2">Remaining on his native heath, he</p>
+ <p>Will seek an anodyne at home,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Nor look beyond the Thames for Lethe;</p>
+ <p>And if he fades away, denied</p>
+ <p class="i2">The usual balm in cardiac crises,</p>
+ <p>Say only this of him, "He died</p>
+ <p class="i2">A prey to soaring prices."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/107.png"><img width="100%" src="images/107.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <h3>THE RETURN OF THE PRODIGAL.</h3>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h3>HOW TO ACT IN EMERGENCIES.</h3>
+
+ <p><i>The Weekly Dispatch</i> symposium, in which various celebrities
+ discuss the way to act in the event of a burglar being found in the
+ house, shows the need for a little advice in case of emergencies. We
+ append the following very helpful hints:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>The old plan of offering a burglar a cigarette and asking him to take
+ a chair while you telephone to the police is not now so successful as in
+ the past. The best plan is to tackle the fellow right away. For this
+ purpose you should step behind him, take hold of his coat and force it
+ over his face. Then tie his left arm to his right leg across the back.
+ Properly carried out, this method rarely fails.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>To attract the attention of the young lady behind a post-office
+ counter, fire a revolver three times in succession, using blank
+ cartridges. After first aid has been rendered to the attendants step up
+ to the counter and purchase your stamp.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>If you should be knocked down by a taxi, don't be alarmed and try to
+ creep out from under the thing. And don't blame the driver. Apologise to
+ him, and, as you are being carried away, shake hands and tell him that
+ while it was his cab it was your fault. Treated in this manner, drivers
+ are not nearly so offensive when they knock you down the next time.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Should the telephone-bell ring in your house, don't get excited. Keep
+ calm. Remember General <font class="sc">Grant</font>. Remove the women
+ and children to a place of safety, lift off the receiver and say, "Good
+ Heavens! Whoever can it be?"</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Let us suppose that you are being attacked by a man with a chopper.
+ Wait until the weapon is well poised over your head. Just as he begins
+ the down stroke step aside smartly. The hatchet will then be found buried
+ in the ground. This means that bygones are bygones.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>[pg 114]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/108.png"><img width="100%" src="images/108.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <div class="i16">
+ <p>"<font class="sc">Are they rising the day, Sir?</font>"</p>
+
+ <p>"<font class="sc">No.</font>"</p>
+
+ <p>"<font class="sc">Ah, weel, just bide a wee. They aye tak best in
+ the cool of the evening.</font>"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h2>PETER AND JUDY.</h2>
+
+ <p>Except for the fact that they had different sets of parents and were
+ born some hundred miles apart, Peter and Judy are practically twins.
+ Consequently, after an interval of three months, strenuous efforts were
+ made by the two young mothers to bring about a proper introduction
+ between the two wonders.</p>
+
+ <p>The occasion was to be one of great importance, for it was Judy's very
+ first tea-party, marking, as it were, the dawn of her social career. For
+ days the post-office wrestled with the correspondence necessary to bring
+ about the meeting. The mothers, both in person and by proxy, had scoured
+ the precincts of Kensington and Oxford Street respectively for the
+ necessary adornments to do their offspring justice, changing their minds
+ so often that the assistants came to take as much interest in the party
+ as if they were going to it themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>And yet, when the great moment arrived and the strong silent man was
+ borne into the room, round-eyed and expectant, he found his hostess
+ already tired out with her first tea-party and fast asleep. He could
+ scarcely believe his eyes; nor could Judy's scandalised father.</p>
+
+ <p>Peter was very good about it. He bore this chilly reception stoically,
+ deprecating any desire to wake the sleeping beauty&mdash;deprecating, in
+ fact, any interest in her or her cot whatsoever. Ignoring the efforts of
+ the Big People to fix his attention by pointing him directly at the main
+ object of the tea-party (they should have known that babies like looking
+ the <i>other</i> way always) he remained passively interested in a
+ fascinating brass knob, the while getting his gloves into a satisfactory
+ state of succulence before the Big People should take it on themselves to
+ remove them.</p>
+
+ <p>At last his patience is rewarded. The hostess, sighing sleepily, is
+ beginning to show signs of realising her responsibilities. Two immense
+ arms, two enormous fistfuls of fingers gather her up and she is borne
+ through the air triumphantly.... Peter and Judy are introduced.</p>
+
+ <p>I doubt whether any two people in this world ever displayed greater
+ indifference. Solemnly they turn their eyes upon every other object in
+ the room except each other. It is not until the number of permutations in
+ which two people can look at everything is exhausted mathematically that
+ their eyes meet at last.</p>
+
+ <p>Then they cut each other dead.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Side by side they recline on the couch. Judy, pouting with sleep, is
+ buffeting her face with her little white boxing-gloves, while Peter
+ stares fascinated at the fire, quite sure that social functions are not
+ in his line. "O-o!"</p>
+
+ <p>With only three months' experience, Judy has not yet attained complete
+ mastery of the art of manipulating difficult things like limbs.
+ Inadvertently, and in excess of zeal to kick higher than any other baby,
+ she has landed out a beautiful backhander and caught Peter hard in the
+ tummy. Peter's eyes open wide. Creases appear on his face and widen. A
+ cavern opens and a roar follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Ya&mdash;o-o!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Hullo!" (Judy looks up in amazement, for there is only one noise in
+ the house like that, and she has the sole rights of it). "Hullo, is that
+ me? I didn't know I was doing it"&mdash;(the roars from Peter
+ continue)&mdash;"but I suppose I am. I must be. Let's have a lot more of
+ this very good noise I am making&mdash;Ya&mdash;o-o!" <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>[pg 115]</span></p>
+
+ <p>The duet produces a crescendo astounding to them both, for there has
+ never been a noise so wonderful as this in all their experience. Then to
+ Judy a very strange thing happens. She pauses for breath, but the noise
+ goes on. "This is amazing&mdash;how do I do it?..."</p>
+
+ <p>She joins in again&mdash;and then Peter stops. He too is puzzled
+ vaguely. However, bother introspection, the concert proceeds, both
+ artists doing their level best. Now one of them pauses, now the other,
+ and at length serious doubts begin to creep in. There is something queer
+ afoot&mdash;something....</p>
+
+ <p>The matter resolves itself. Turning suddenly they behold each other,
+ both yelling splendidly. Amazement! Cavern confronts cavern! Face to face
+ they roar their hardest, demanding the reason for this strange
+ phenomenon, "this other me who does when I don't."</p>
+
+ <p>They pause&mdash;their mouths remain agape. Slowly they close and
+ smiles succeed. Joy! A <i>reasonable</i>-sized face at last. What a
+ relief after the enormous faces, the great mouths, the Cyranese noses of
+ the Big People who are wont to come and peer. Here at last is a true
+ face, a face that&mdash;no, they both agree not to dwell unduly on the
+ discovery.</p>
+
+ <p>Indifferent to each other once again they regard the special objects
+ of their attention, their hands waving gently in the air, seeking the
+ fairies that babies' hands are always trying to catch.</p>
+
+ <p>Ha! their hands have met.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hoo! It's a <i>reasonable</i> hand. It's got proper fingers, not
+ stumps of bananas."</p>
+
+ <p>"Moreover," says Peter politely, "if you care to take advantage of my
+ offer you will find that it is properly moistened, succulent and suitable
+ to a baby's taste. You needn't mind; I prepared it myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Goo! Gool-gur!" All is peace and chuckles. Hand-in-hand they survey
+ their mothers. "<i>Our</i> mothers, yours&mdash;mine. Ha, ha&mdash;he,
+ he&mdash;goo!"</p>
+
+ <p>The inner thoughts of the two babies may be hidden from me (I accept
+ the punishment), but I know&mdash;I <i>know</i> what the two mothers are
+ thinking of. Twenty years hence, a paragraph in <i>The Times</i>:
+ "Peter&mdash;Judy&mdash;" Oh, you fatuous mothers!</p>
+
+<p class="author">L.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"Public interest remains unabated in the remarkable occurrences at the
+ poultry-house farm at Brickendon, where spirit rappings in the morse code
+ have been heard for weeks past.... One question put to the spirit last
+ night was 'How many people are outside?' And the reply was 'Rorty,' which
+ proved to be correct."&mdash;<i>Liverpool Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>And possibly furnishes some clue to the identity of the spirit
+ concerned.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:66%;">
+ <a href="images/109.png"><img width="100%" src="images/109.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <div class="i16">
+ <p><i>Officer.</i> "<font class="sc">What have you got
+ there?</font>"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Lighterman.</i> "<font class="sc">Coal.</font>"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Officer.</i> "<font class="sc">I can see that. What kind of
+ coal?</font>"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Lighterman.</i> "<font class="sc">Black coal.</font>"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h3>MORE INTENSIVE PRODUCTION.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>When first I learned to play the fool</p>
+ <p class="i2">In various (unaccepted) verses</p>
+ <p>There was, I found, one golden rule</p>
+ <p class="i2">For poets who would line their purses.</p>
+ <p>"If ye," it ran, "to wealth would mount,</p>
+ <p class="i2">For silk attire would change your tatters,</p>
+ <p>Mere quantity will never count;</p>
+ <p class="i2">Quality is the thing that matters."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Broadly this precept, too, was laid</p>
+ <p class="i2">On grosser forms of human labour;</p>
+ <p><i>E.g.</i>, on Jones's antique trade,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Or Brown, the sausage-man, his neighbour;</p>
+ <p>Until of late, throughout a land</p>
+ <p class="i2">Reeling from strikes and "reconstruction,"</p>
+ <p>A cry was heard on every hand,</p>
+ <p class="i2">A clamour for "Increased Production."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>While "makers," then, gird on their might</p>
+ <p class="i2">And merchants buzz like bees in clover;</p>
+ <p>When Jones is sawing day and night</p>
+ <p class="i2">And Brown shows twice his last turnover;</p>
+ <p>Shall I not follow where they've led</p>
+ <p class="i2">And, at the <font class="sc">Premier's</font> invitation,</p>
+ <p>Double my output, Mr. Ed.?&mdash;</p>
+ <p class="i2">I look for your co-operation.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"'Oh, to be in England now that Noel's near.'</p>
+
+ <p>So, one might adapt one of Kipling's lines."&mdash;<i>Indian
+ Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>What do they know of <font class="sc">Browning</font> who only <font
+ class="sc">Kipling</font> know?</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"<font class="sc">Lady</font> wishes to travel in exquisite
+ lingerie."&mdash;<i>Daily Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>By all means; but why should she be content to wear an inferior
+ quality when she is stationary?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>[pg 116]</span>
+
+<h2>AT THE PLAY.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">"MR. TODD'S EXPERIMENT."</p>
+
+ <p>A new terror&mdash;or else a new attraction&mdash;has been added to
+ the British Drama. Mr. <font class="sc">Walter Hackett</font> has brought
+ the scent of the cinema across the footlights. When he wants to inform
+ you of certain episodes in the hero's past career, or let you know what
+ he is doing when he is out of sight, he throws the main stage into
+ darkness and lights up a smaller one on which he gives you as many as six
+ little tabloid plays within the play.</p>
+
+ <p>Such a scheme has its obvious conveniences for the playwright, and
+ should greatly simplify the difficulties of stage-craft. Those
+ introductory statements which are required to explain the opening
+ conditions and need such adroit handling will no longer be necessary. You
+ just put everybody wise by a series of <i>tableaux parlants</i>. No
+ longer need the author worry about the best way of conveying to his
+ audience the details of any action that takes place off the stage; he
+ just turns on a playlet and there it is. Altogether, with a couple of the
+ unities disposed of, he ought to have a much easier time.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand he is going to have trouble with his principal stage
+ and put his actors to the inconvenience of playing in a painfully
+ congested area. Thus, in <i>Mr. Todd's Experiment</i>, the permanent
+ scene was the hall of a house, with a large tapestry occupying more than
+ half of the wall. Lurking behind this tapestry was the stage for the
+ tabloids, and the general company had to crowd themselves into the
+ remainder or wander forlornly about in the space in front of the
+ tapestry. The playlets again are almost bound to be just concentrated
+ episodes, probably elemental in theme and certainly elementary in
+ treatment.</p>
+
+ <p>The excuses for their interpolation in <i>Mr. Todd's Experiment</i>
+ were not marked by a very great subtlety. There was really none for the
+ first three, which simply relieved <i>Mr. Todd</i> of the tedious recital
+ of the hero's disillusionments in love. The next two were introduced by
+ way of illustrating his alleged gift of clairvoyance; and the last served
+ frankly to fill in the interval while the rest of the company was away at
+ dinner. The general effect of all these desultory little <i>Guignols</i>
+ was perhaps rather cheap, and not very complimentary to the intelligence
+ of those of us who had outgrown a childish <i>penchant</i> for
+ peep-shows.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright" style="width:33%;">
+ <a href="images/110.png"><img width="100%" src="images/110.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <p><i>Willoughby Todd</i> (<i>Mr. <font class="sc">Holman
+ Clark</font></i>). "<font class="sc">Be your old true self. Make the
+ women adore you.</font>"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Arthur John Carrington</i> (<i>Mr. <font class="sc">Owen
+ Nares</font></i>). "<font class="sc">Your advice is good. I will now
+ take off my beard and be Owen Nares once more.</font>"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p><i>Mr. Todd's Experiment</i> (for I have spoken only of Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Hackett's</font>) was to restore a <i>blasé</i> and
+ valetudinarian young man of thirty to a proper state of energy by
+ recalling the memories of his past loves and so reviving in him a desire
+ to stand well in the eyes of the sex. For this purpose he produces (1) a
+ bunch of wood-violets to suggest (through the nose) the environment of
+ his first passion; (2) a specially-tipped brand of cigarettes to revive
+ (through the mouth) the sentiment of his second; and a gramophone record
+ to recover (through the ear) the associations of his third.</p>
+
+ <p>So well does he succeed that the hero pulls himself together, shaves
+ off his beard, becomes our <font class="sc">Owen Nares</font> again, and
+ sallies forth, habited for conquest, to pay calls on all the three. From
+ all the three he retires disillusioned, having found them as egoistic as
+ himself, and in the end finds solace rather shamelessly, in the love of a
+ devoted slave who might have been his for the taking any time in the last
+ several years.</p>
+
+ <p>The matter was pleasant enough, but its interest must, I think, have
+ left us indifferent if it had not been for the diversion afforded by the
+ playlets. While the idea was original, the presentation of it seemed to
+ have a touch of amateurishness, though I would not go so far as to agree
+ with the old fogey, played by Mr. <font class="sc">Fred Kerr</font>, who
+ pronounced the scheme to be "all Tommy rot." With the exception of one
+ character&mdash;the devoted slave&mdash;the lightness of the dialogue,
+ mildly cynical, was due not so much to its wit as to the absence of
+ ponderable stuff. The easy trick, so popular with the modern playwright,
+ of letting the audience down in the middle of a serious situation was
+ illustrated by the hero when, being in deadly earnest, he tells every
+ woman in turn that she is the only woman he has ever loved.</p>
+
+ <p>As <i>Mr. Todd</i>, Mr. <font class="sc">Holman Clark</font> was as
+ fresh as he always is; but Mr. <font class="sc">Owen Nares</font> could
+ hardly hope to satisfy the exigent demands of adoration in the part of
+ young <i>Carrington</i>. Who, indeed, could sustain his reputation as a
+ figure of romance when addressed as "Arthur-John"? Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Fred Kerr</font>, who played <i>Martin Carrington</i>, the
+ cantankerous uncle, cannot help being workmanlike; but he was asked to
+ repeat himself too much. The best performance was that of Miss <font
+ class="sc">Marion Lorne</font>, in the part of the hero's one devout
+ lover, <i>Fancy Phipps</i>; her quiet sense of humour, salted with a
+ slight American tang, kept the whole play together.</p>
+
+<p class="author">O.S.</p>
+
+<p class="center">"<font class="sc">Tea for Three.</font>"</p>
+
+ <p>Playwright Mr. <font class="sc">Roi Cooper-Megrue</font>, and
+ principal players Miss <font class="sc">Fay Compton</font>, the wife; Mr.
+ <font class="sc">Stanley Logan</font>, the friend, and Mr. <font
+ class="sc">A.E. Matthews</font>, the husband, made a first-rate thing of
+ two-thirds of <i>Tea for Three</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>The wife is without blemish physically or morally. The husband is
+ faithful with a single-minded fidelity in thought, word and deed that
+ looks (and, I am assured by equally innocent victims, is) positively
+ deadly. The friend "frits and flutters" about in a distinctly casual, not
+ to say polygamous, mood, but has one sacred place in his untidy heart in
+ which the wife is enshrined. He can manage to sustain life so long as he
+ may come to triangular tea on Thursdays. But the faithful husband puts
+ his foot on that.</p>
+
+ <p>Hence the stolen lunch for two with which the play opens. Philosophy
+ there is, and very good philosophy too, from the flutterer and fritter,
+ and such love-making as every virtuous woman (at heart a minx) allows.
+ She is sorry, doubtless, for the suffering she causes, but (this is my
+ gloss, not, I think, the author's) is really enjoying it like anything
+ and taking jolly good care to look her best. Then follow little lies and
+ as little and as needless and quite innocent indiscretions; and the
+ jealous husband on the rampage.</p>
+
+ <p>All this excellently put together, seasoned with wisdom and wit and
+ most capably played; Miss <font class="sc">Fay Compton</font>, admirable
+ example of a pretty actress who won't let herself be captured by stage
+ tricks, making everything explicable except her continued love for her
+ intolerable bore (and Turk) of a husband; Mr. <font class="sc">A.E.
+ Matthews</font> <span class="pagenum"><a name="page117"
+ id="page117"></a>[pg 117]</span> handling a desperately unsympathetic
+ part, which was already beginning to look impossible, with great
+ adroitness; and Mr. <font class="sc">Stanley Logan</font>, though badly
+ hampered by a shocking cold and fighting a coughing audience, carrying
+ the bulk of the good talk and lifting it gently over the few difficult
+ places with a brilliant and well-concealed art.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus till towards the end of the Second Act. Then a bad, a very bad,
+ fairy stuffed into Mr. <font class="sc">Megrue's</font> head the idea of
+ the suicide lottery. The infuriated husband, finding his wife in her
+ friend's room at 7 <font class="sc">p.m.</font> (frightfully improper
+ hour), sternly offers his bowler (or Derby) hat, in which are two cards.
+ The one marked with a cross is drawn by the flutterer and means that he
+ is for it. He is to kill himself within twenty-four hours.... And all
+ this with perfect seriousness.</p>
+
+ <p>You will see how the Third Act of a comedy which had tied itself in
+ this kind of a knot simply could not be played. The author had completely
+ sacrificed plausibility, and it was not uninteresting to see him twisting
+ and turning, hedging and bluffing to save it; and a little uncomfortable
+ to note the conviction oozing away out of the performers.... Queer also
+ that it isn't more generally recognised that to come to the theatre with
+ a loud persistent cough is a form of premeditated robbery with
+ violence.</p>
+
+<p class="author">T.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>A NEW LEAGUE OF NATIONS.</h3>
+
+ <p>The latest development in connection with the International
+ Brotherhood movement is the establishment of a College of Correct
+ Cosmopolitan Pronunciation. The need of such an institution has long been
+ clamant, and the visit of the Ukrainian choir has brought matters to a
+ crisis. At their concert last week several strong women wept like men at
+ their inability to pronounce the title of one of the most beautiful items
+ on the programme&mdash;"Shtchedryk." Again, as Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Smillie</font> must have bitterly reflected, how can we
+ possibly render justice to the cause of Bolshevism so long as we are
+ unable to pronounce the names of its leaders correctly? The same remark
+ applies to the Russian Ballet; the Yugo-Slav handbell-ringers; the
+ vegetarian Indian-club swingers from the Karakoram Himalayas; the
+ polyphonic gong-players from North Borneo; the synthetic quarter-tone
+ quartette from San Domingo; the anthropophagous back-chat comedians from
+ the Solomon Islands; not to mention a host of other interesting
+ companies, troupes, corroborees and pow-wows which are now in our midst
+ for the purpose of cementing the confraternity of nations.</p>
+
+ <p>Suitable premises for the College have been secured in the heart of
+ Mayfair and a competent staff of instructors has already been appointed,
+ who, with the aid of gramophones, will be able to train the students to
+ perfection in the requisite command of the most explosive gutturals,
+ labials and sibilants. Doctor Prtnkeivitchsvtnshchitzky will be the
+ director of the College; Dr. <font class="sc">Seton Watson</font> and Mr.
+ <font class="sc">Wickham Steed</font> have kindly undertaken to supervise
+ the Yugo-Slav section, and the list of patrons and patronesses includes
+ the names of the Prince of Prinkipo; Madame <font
+ class="sc">Karsavina</font>, so long a victim of the mispronunciation of
+ her melodious surname; Dr. <font class="sc">Douglas Hyde</font>, the
+ famous Irish scholar; Prenk-Bib-Doda, the Albanian chieftain; Sir <font
+ class="sc">Rabindranath Tagore</font>; Lord <font
+ class="sc">Parmoor</font>; Sir <font class="sc">Thomas Beecham</font> and
+ the Dowager Begum of <font class="sc">Bhopal</font>.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:66%;">
+ <a href="images/111.png"><img width="100%" src="images/111.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <h3>MORE ADVENTURES OF A POST-WAR SPORTSMAN.</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">HE DETERMINES TO MASTER THE ART OF CRACKING A
+ WHIP.</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h4>Pegasus at Polo.</h4>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The following teams have entered for the Lahore Polo
+ Tournament:&mdash;4th Cavalry, 17th Cavalry, 21st Lancers, 33rd Cavalry,
+ 39th Central India Horse, Lahore, the Fox-hunters from Meerut, and the
+ Royal Air Horse from Delhi."&mdash;<i>Civil and Military Gazette.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<h4>An Up-to-date Costume.</h4>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"For your evening dress I advise you simply to buy a piece of broad
+ silver ribbon, pass it twice round the waist and knot it at the side,
+ with a little bunch of berries and leaves caught into the
+ knot."&mdash;<i>Ladies' Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>[pg 118]</span>
+
+<h2>REVOLT OF THE SUPER-GEORGIANS.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><font class="sc">Wild Scenes at a Meeting of
+Protest.</font></p>
+
+ <p>An Indignation Meeting, to protest against the outrageous attacks
+ levelled against Georgian writers and critics by Professor <font
+ class="sc">Noyes</font> in his recent lecture at the Royal Institution
+ and by Mr. A.D. <font class="sc">Godley</font> in an article in the
+ current <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, was held last Saturday evening at the
+ Klaxon Hall. The chair was taken by Mr. <font class="sc">Edward
+ Marsh</font>, C.M.G., who was supported on the platform by a compact bevy
+ of Georgian bards; but at an early stage of the meeting it became
+ apparent that a majority of those present in the body of the hall were
+ extremists of violent type, and eventually, as will be seen, the
+ proceedings ended in something approximating to a free fight.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. <font class="sc">Marsh</font> began by a frank confession. He had
+ taken a First Class in the Cambridge Classical Tripos. But the days in
+ which he had been steeped to the lips in Latin and Greek were long past,
+ never to return. For many years he had not composed hexameters, elegiacs
+ or iambics. He had thrown in his lot with insurgent youth, not as a
+ competitor or rival, but as an advocate, an admirer and an adviser.
+ Indeed, if he might venture to say so, he sometimes acted as a brake on
+ the wheels of the triumphal Chariot of Free Verse. He was not an adherent
+ of the fantastic movement known as "Dada." He had no desire to abolish
+ the family, morality, logic, memory, archęology, the law and the
+ prophets. A little madness was a splendid thing, but it must be methodic.
+ Still, for the rest he was a Georgian, heart and soul, and it pained him
+ when men who ought to know better raised the standard of reaction and
+ sought to discredit the achievements of his <i>protégés</i>. These
+ attacks could not be passed over in silence, and the meeting had been
+ convened to consider how they should be met, whether by a reasoned
+ protest or by retaliation.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Messalina Stoot, who punctuated her remarks with the clashing of
+ a pair of cymbals, observed that as a thorough-going Dadaist she had no
+ sympathy with the half-hearted attitude of the Chairman. It was a battle
+ between Dada and Gaga, and emphatically Dada must win.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Mimram Stoot, who accompanied himself on the sarrusophone,
+ endorsed the iconoclastic views of his sister. The only poetry that
+ counted was that which caused spinal chills and issued from husky haughty
+ lips. The moanings of medięval molluscs were of no avail, though they
+ might excite the crustacean fossils of Oxford, the home of lost
+ causes.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Seumas O'Gambhaoil wished to protest against Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Noyes</font>' statement that there were ten thousand
+ Bolshevist poets in our midst. This was a shameless underestimate of the
+ total, which was at least twice that figure. Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Godley's</font> offence, however, was much worse, as he was an
+ Irishman, though of the self-expatriated type to which <font
+ class="sc">Goldsmith</font> and <font class="sc">Moore</font> belonged.
+ The rest of Mr. O'Gambhaoil's speech was delivered in Irish, but he was
+ understood to advocate a repatriation of all Irish renegades to be tried
+ and dealt with by the Sinn Fein Republic.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Caradoc Cramp applauded the sentiments of the last speaker, but
+ considered that he avoided the real issue. The Chairman had declared
+ himself a Georgian, but that was not enough. The worst enemies of Free
+ Verse were to be found in that camp. In technique and even in thought
+ there was little to choose between many so-called Georgians and the most
+ effete and reactionary Victorians. He alluded to the War poets, or rather
+ the "Duration" poets, most of whom were already back-numbers. Between
+ these and the Post-war poets, the true super-Georgians or
+ paulo-post-Georgians, it was necessary to make a clean cut. To protest
+ against Messrs. <font class="sc">Godley</font> and <font
+ class="sc">Noyes</font> was a mere waste of time and energy. They might
+ just as well protest against the existence of an extinct volcano or the
+ skeleton of the brontosaurus. The real danger to be faced was the
+ intrinsic subjectivity of the early and mid-Georgian poets, of whom the
+ Chairman had been so powerful and consistent a supporter. He accordingly
+ called for volunteers to storm the platform, and, a large number having
+ responded to his appeal, Mr. <font class="sc">Marsh</font> was dislodged
+ from the Chair after a gallant fight. A resolution of adherence to the
+ principles of "Dada" having been passed by a large majority, the meeting
+ broke up to the strains of the famous song&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i4">a e ou o youyouyou i e ou o</p>
+ <p class="i12">youyouyou</p>
+ <p class="i2">drrrrdrrrrdrrrrgrrrrgrrrrrgrrrrrrrr</p>
+ <p class="i8">beng bong beng bang</p>
+ <p>boumboum boumboum boumboum.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"Gentleman, Interested in Tattooing and largely covered, would like to
+ hear from other enthusiasts to compare notes."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>We trust the "bare-back" mode is not going to spread to the more
+ modest sex.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>From a "stores" circular:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"<font class="sc">This Week's Economy Offers.</font></p>
+
+ <p>Honey in Sections, each 3/9, three for 14/0."</p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>The economy consists, of course, in buying them one at a time.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>WATER-BABIES.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>In a limbo of desolate waters,</p>
+ <p class="i2">In the void of a flood-stricken plain,</p>
+ <p>You will find them&mdash;the sons and the daughters</p>
+ <p class="i8">Of tropical rain.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>For when rivers are one with the ocean,</p>
+ <p class="i2">When the ricefields and roads are no more,</p>
+ <p>There's a feeling of magic, a notion</p>
+ <p class="i8">Of fairyland lore;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And the babies of Burma can revel</p>
+ <p class="i2">In a nursery of whirlpool and slime,</p>
+ <p>Where it thunders and rains like the devil</p>
+ <p class="i8">For weeks at a time.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>They paddle their rafts through the jungle;</p>
+ <p class="i2">They swim through a network of leaves;</p>
+ <p>They clamber with never a bungle</p>
+ <p class="i8">To dive from the eaves.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>'Tis an orgy of goblins, an image</p>
+ <p class="i2">Of nudity flouting the flood,</p>
+ <p>Of shorn-headed brownies who scrimmage</p>
+ <p class="i8">And splash in the mud.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>As we row neath a tamarind, one'll</p>
+ <p class="i2">Roll off with a gesture of fright,</p>
+ <p>Bobbing up like a cork at our gunwale</p>
+ <p class="i8">And gurgling delight.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But never a stanza shall measure</p>
+ <p class="i2">The joy of that desperate crew</p>
+ <p>Of four-year-olds scouring for treasure</p>
+ <p class="i8">Astride a bamboo.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Their fathers smoke, huddled in sorrow,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Their mothers chew betel and fret,</p>
+ <p>And the pariahs howl for a morrow</p>
+ <p class="i8">Which shall not be wet;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The plovers wheel o'er them complaining,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And it's only the babies who pray</p>
+ <p>That the skies may be raining and raining</p>
+ <p class="i8">For ever and aye.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i16">J.M.S.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h4>Another Mesopotamian Scandal.</h4>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The commodious and fast ss. 40 will leave Basrah for Baghdad and all
+ intermediate ports on Saturday morning at 9 <font class="sc">a.m.</font>
+ Passengers will embark at 10 <font
+ class="sc">a.m.</font>"&mdash;<i>Basrah Times.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"END OF COTTON SUIT.</p>
+
+ <p>DRAMATIC COLLAPSE."&mdash;<i>Daily Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>We are more than ever convinced of the superior wearing qualities of
+ woollen.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The Government of the Commonwealth of Australia agrees to the
+ admission on passport of Indian merchants, students, tourests, with there
+ irrespective wives."&mdash;<i>Indian Paper.</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>But ought any Government to encourage this sort of thing?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>[pg 119]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/113.png"><img width="100%" src="images/113.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <p><i>Dancing Man</i> (<i>at Galleries of New Primitive Art
+ Society</i>). "<font class="sc">One would have thought, with such a
+ good floor, they might have put up some better pictures.</font>"</p>
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+<h2>OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>Following the iconoclastic spirit of the age, Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Barry Pain</font> has essayed in <i>The Death of Maurice</i>
+ (<font class="sc">Skeffington</font>) the revolutionary experiment of a
+ murder mystery tale that does not contain (<i>a</i>) a love interest,
+ (<i>b</i>) a wrongly suspected hero, (<i>c</i>) a baffled inspector,
+ (<i>d</i>) an amateur, but inspired, detective. It would be a grateful
+ task to add that the result proves the superfluity of these time-worn
+ accessories. But the cold fact is that, to me at least, the proof went
+ the other way. From the first I was painfully aware of a lack of snap
+ about the whole business, and I am more than suspicious that the author
+ himself may have shared my unwilling indifference. <i>Maurice</i> was an
+ artistic bachelor, a landowner, a manufacturer of jam, a twin (with a
+ bogie gift of knowing at any moment the relative position of his other
+ half, which might have been worked for far more effect than is actually
+ obtained from it), and a reputation of making enemies. He had also an
+ unusual neighbour, in the person of a young woman whose unconventionality
+ led her to perambulate the common at midnight, playing the first bars of
+ <i>Solveig's Song</i> upon the flute. One night, at the close of the
+ first chapter, a gun was heard. But you are wrong to suppose (however
+ naturally) that the flute-player was the victim. It was <i>Maurice</i>.
+ And of course the problem was, who did it. I have told you my own
+ experience of the working out; nothing written by Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Barry Pain</font> can ever be really dull, just as no story
+ starting with a mysterious murder can lack a certain intrigue; but the
+ fact remains that my wish, heroically resisted, to look on to the last
+ chapter was prompted more often by impatience than by any compelling
+ curiosity. Others may be happier.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The author of <i>A Journal of Small Things</i> has done much to make
+ us understand the sufferings of stricken France and the more intimate
+ sorrows of war. <i>Chill Hours</i> (<font class="sc">Melrose</font>)
+ deals with that dark period before the end, when, to some, it seemed all
+ but certain that the will to victory must fail. Of the three parts of
+ this gracious little book the first consists of six sketches of life
+ behind the lines, life both gentle and simple, as affected by war.
+ "Odette in Pink Taffeta," an episode of bereavement, is in particular
+ exquisitely visualised. "Their Places" and "The Second Hay" treat, with a
+ quiet intensity of conviction, of the absolutely deadening absorption, by
+ overwork and anxiety, of peasant wives and children left to carry on in
+ the absence of their men. The third part is a series of hospital
+ vignettes. They do not attempt to be too cheery, but they have the stamp
+ of realised truth. "Nostalgia," the second part, is in another
+ mood&mdash;recalled memories of the beauties of a loved land and of dear
+ common things affectionately seen. To those who dare look at war with
+ open eyes and who take pleasure in sincere and beautifully-phrased
+ writing I commend Mrs. <font class="sc">Helen Mackay's</font> book
+ without reserve.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p><i>Somewhere in Christendom</i> (<font class="sc">Allen and
+ Unwin</font>) is somewhat <span class="pagenum"><a name="page120"
+ id="page120"></a>[pg 120]</span> embarrassing to a reviewer, for it has
+ the theme of a great book with the manner of a trivial one. It is the
+ history of a very much smaller nation, Ethuria, left despoiled and
+ starving at the end of a nine-years' war, in which its great neighbours
+ have used it as a battle-ground. Revolution begins, but a woman prophet
+ steps in and switches it off in an unusual direction. The Ethurians
+ perfect among themselves that fellowship which is the nice ideal behind
+ many nasty manifestations in the real world, and, when next they are
+ invaded by neighbouring nations anxious to use them as an excuse for
+ belligerency, they resolutely stick to their guns (only the metaphor is
+ most unsuitable), refuse to find any cause of quarrel with their "foreign
+ brothers," and finally persuade them to abandon the ideals of war, so
+ that peace on earth becomes a reality at last. Here is the book's theme;
+ its working out allows for a boxing match between the President of Hygeia
+ and the Foreign Secretary of Tritonia as the minimum of hostilities; a
+ wicked newspaper lord, who pulls strings in both countries, and a
+ faithful butler to the Royal Family, who becomes assistant state
+ nursemaid and cleans silver as a hobby. Though I quite agree with Miss
+ <font class="sc">Evelyn Sharp</font> and the Ethurians that it <i>is</i>
+ love that makes the world go round, I am not so sure that either hers or
+ theirs is the best way of advocating their common cause.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>You may remember an original and striking book of papers about the
+ theatre under the title of <i>Buzz-Buzz</i>. Its author, <font
+ class="sc">James E. Agate</font>, has now followed it with another,
+ called, rather grimly, <i>Responsibility</i> (<font
+ class="sc">Richards</font>). You will be absolutely correct in guessing
+ that this is not a treatise on revue, being indeed an autobiographical
+ novel of (I feel bound to add) precisely the same calibre as, in the
+ sister realm of drama, made the name of Manchester at one period a word
+ of awe. Why do these young Mancunians recollect to such stupendous
+ purpose? Here is Mr. <font class="sc">Agate</font>, with an introduction
+ of forty-four pages, all about time and infinity, before he can get his
+ protagonist so much as started anywhere at all. It is a little like one
+ of those demon-scenes out of the pantomimes he describes so
+ lovingly&mdash;"<i>Do so! May safety and success attend on Crusoe.</i>"
+ But of course the subsequent action is more responsible. I imagine Mr.
+ <font class="sc">Agate's</font> picture of young-man life in the
+ Manchester of the nineties to be very much like the real thing.
+ Relaxation was not wholly remote from it. Cotton and commandments were
+ broken with equal facility. Also you may be impressed by the number of
+ Germans in it. Finally, after telling us, sometimes engagingly, sometimes
+ verbosely, all he can remember about Lancashire, Mr. <font
+ class="sc">Agate</font> brings his hero to Town, levers him along, year
+ after year, and gets (almost on his last page) to his big situation. I
+ won't spoil it. <i>Responsibility</i>, which might better have been
+ called "Garrulity," is a novel containing boredom and charm in about
+ equal proportions; not to mention promise for the days when its author
+ has learned to discipline his too-ready pen.</p>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>From the early part of 1915 until the end of 1917 Admiral Sir <font
+ class="sc">Reginald Bacon</font> commanded at Dover, and from the preface
+ to <i>The Dover Patrol</i> (<font class="sc">Hutchinson</font>) we can
+ gather that he is smarting under a considerable sense of injustice and
+ injury. Of the merits of his case&mdash;he frankly describes his
+ dismissal as brutal&mdash;I do not pretend to judge, but can safely
+ assume that the other side have something to say for themselves, if they
+ care to. However, you are not to suppose that this is a bitter book. Most
+ generous are the praises which the Admiral bestows upon his subordinates;
+ his venom he reserves for just the chosen few who, no doubt, can bear it.
+ Apart from personal recriminations, of which some of us must be more than
+ tired, these two portly volumes are of real historical value. You will
+ find in them not only a record of actual achievements, often carried out
+ under desperately difficult conditions, but also of projects which for
+ one reason or another were never fulfilled. "Why don't we try to land on
+ the Belgian coast?" was a question our amateur strategists were never
+ weary of asking. Well, here is their answer. Here, too, are countless
+ photographs, charts, plans and diagrams&mdash;a really wonderful
+ collection. Even if you are not in the least interested in Sir <font
+ class="sc">Reginald's</font> grievances you will find him a writer who
+ has a lot of useful things to say and knows how to say them.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>AN EFFECT OF THE CRIME WAVE.</h3>
+
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/114a.png"><img width="100%" src="images/114a.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ <i>Both.</i> "<font class="sc">Hm! He <i>looks</i>
+ respectable</font>&mdash;
+ </div>
+ <div class="figcenter" style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/114b.png"><img width="100%" src="images/114b.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ &mdash;<font class="sc"><i>still</i>, one never knows.</font>"
+ </div>
+<hr />
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The normal average amount of clothing required in a temperate climate
+ such as ours is: <i>One pound weight of clothing to every one stone
+ weight of the body</i>.... Thus the clothes of a child weighing 3 stones
+ should be 3lb., and for a man or woman weighing 10 stones the clothes
+ should weigh 10lb. This is a definite statement; at any rate, disprove it
+ who can."&mdash;<i>Sir <font class="sc">James Cantlie</font> in "The
+ Daily Mail."</i></p>
+
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>We gave instructions to our Mathematical specialist to work out the
+ figures, and his report is that he finds them substantially correct.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+158, February 11, 1920, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
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+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 158,
+February 11, 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, Volume 158, February 11, 1920
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: July 30, 2005 [EBook #16394]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 158.
+
+
+
+February 11th, 1920.
+
+
+
+
+CHARIVARIA.
+
+"If a burglar broke into my house," says Lady BEECHAM, "I should use the
+telephone to summon help." Lady BEECHAM seems to have a sanguine
+temperament.
+
+* * *
+
+Asked how she would act in case a burglar broke into her house, Miss IRIS
+HOEY said she would stand before him and recite SHAKSPEARE. If anybody else
+had said this we should have suspected a cruel nature.
+
+* * *
+
+A libel action arising, out of the representation by a German artist of the
+ex-CROWN PRINCE as a baboon is to be heard shortly. It is not yet known who
+is to prosecute on behalf of the local Society for the Prevention of
+Cruelty to Animals.
+
+* * *
+
+Nine thousand officials have been appointed to control the food supplies in
+Petrograd. English Government officials regard this arrangement as the work
+of an amateur.
+
+* * *
+
+It is said that the exchange crisis is regarded by Mr. C.B. COCHRAN as a
+deliberate attempt to divert attention from the DEMPSEY contest.
+
+* * *
+
+The rumour that CARPENTIER and DEMPSEY, in order to avoid further fuss and
+publicity, have decided to fight it out privately, appears to have no
+foundation.
+
+* * *
+
+Wrexham Education Committee is reconsidering its decision against teaching
+Welsh in the elementary schools. The pathetic case of a local man who was
+recently convicted of stealing a leg of beef owing to his being unable to
+give his evidence in Welsh is thought to have something to do with it.
+
+* * *
+
+A domestic servants' union has been formed and an advertisement for a good
+plain shop stewardess (two in family; policeman kept) will, we understand,
+shortly appear in _The Morning Post_.
+
+* * *
+
+During the recent gales on the West Coast of Ireland the anemometer
+registered the unprecedented velocity of one hundred-and-ten miles per
+hour. A number of cases of anemonia are reported from the Phoenix Park
+district.
+
+* * *
+
+According to _Men's Wear_, silk hats are to be increased in price by at
+least thirty per cent. Is it by this process, we wonder, that they hope to
+drive Mr. CHURCHILL out of business?
+
+* * *
+
+A pig and sty constituted first prize at a recent whist drive at Bishop's
+Waltham. We understand that a difference of opinion between the winner and
+the pig as regards the user of the sty has ended fatally for the latter.
+
+* * *
+
+It is reported that the Victory badge now being worn extensively in New
+York is to be replaced by another bearing the inscription, "We did them."
+
+* * *
+
+"I intend to tour England," says a Prohibition lecturer, "and I will not be
+hurried." We recommend the railway.
+
+* * *
+
+A Tralee man charged with shooting a neighbour said he had no desire to
+break the law. It seems that he mistook the man for a policeman.
+
+* * *
+
+A French physician declares that a gift for yawning is one of the most
+valuable health-assets. This should be good news for revue-producers.
+
+* * *
+
+"Honesty," says Dr. INGRAM, "is the best policy after all." All the same
+some of our profiteers seem to get along pretty well, thank you.
+
+* * *
+
+The egg-laying competition promoted by _The Daily Mail_ has proved a great
+success. It is most gratifying to learn that the hens have done their best
+for "the paper that got us the shells."
+
+* * *
+
+"The influenza microbe," announces a medical journal, "has made its
+appearance in many parts of the country and is slowly but surely making its
+way towards London." With any other Government than ours a simple
+suggestion that the sign-posts _en route_ should be reversed would have
+been at once adopted.
+
+* * *
+
+During the last four weeks exactly four hundred and ninety-nine rats have
+been destroyed in a small town in South Bedfordshire. It is hoped that as
+soon as these figures are published a sporting rodent will give itself up
+in order to complete the fifth century.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "WHY HAVEN'T YOU GOT ON SPURS?"
+
+"I WAS GOING TO SPEAK ABOUT THAT, SIR. I REGRET I ACCIDENTALLY OMITTED TO
+PUT THEM ON THIS MORNING, AND CONSEQUENTLY HAVE CAUGHT COLD. SO I WAS GOING
+TO ASK YOU TO BE KIND ENOUGH TO GRANT ME LEAVE UNTIL--"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A champagne support was provided in the lower hall."--_Local Paper._
+
+Very sustaining, we feel sure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The paper supports the proposed formation of a first army of 'shock
+ troops,' which would be capable of preventing the mobilisation of a
+ great Germy army."--_Evening Paper._
+
+Anything to keep the influenza at bay.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The times for the incubation of the eggs of various birds are as
+ under:--
+
+ Ostrich 41 days.
+ Gnu 49 days."--_Poultry-Keeping._
+
+"Gnus, indeed!" said the Emu.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO AMERICA
+
+(_deferentially hinting how others see her and what they think of her
+threatened repudiation of her PRESIDENT'S pledges_).
+
+ When you refuse to sign the Peace
+ Except with various "reservations,"
+ And prophesy a swift decease
+ Impinging on the League of Nations;
+ When you whose arms (we've understood)
+ Settled the War and wiped the Bosch out
+ Regard the whole world's brotherhood
+ As just a wash-out;
+
+ You say, in terms a little blunt,
+ "This scheme that you are advertising
+ Was all along a private stunt
+ Of WILSON'S singular devising;
+ His game we weren't allowed to know;
+ Under a misty smile he masked it;
+ We never gave him leave to go
+ (He never asked it).
+
+ "And you, poor credulous Allies,
+ Found in this fellow, self-appointed,
+ The worth he had in his own eyes
+ And let him pose as God's anointed;
+ Taking no sort of pains to see
+ Whether or not he had a mandate,
+ Like puppy-dogs the other Three
+ Out of his hand ate."
+
+ But how if _we_ had queered his claim
+ Or questioned his credentials, saying,
+ "Who is this WOODROW What's-his-name?
+ And what's the _role_ he thinks he's playing?
+ Is he a Methodist divine?
+ Or does he boom Chicago bacon?"--
+ I think that I can guess the line
+ You would have taken.
+
+ "Behold a Man," I hear you say,
+ "Of peerless wit and ripe instruction,
+ Elect of Heaven and U.S.A.--
+ Surely an ample introduction;
+ He comes to put Creation right;
+ He brings no chits--he doesn't need 'em;
+ Who doubts his faith will have to fight
+ The Bird of Freedom!"
+
+ O.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"SMALL ADS."
+
+"Where do you get servants from?" I asked.
+
+"From small ads.," said Phyllis promptly.
+
+I picked up the paper from the floor where I had thrown it in the morning.
+My wife is one of those rare women who always leave things where you put
+them. It is this trait that endears her to me. I ran my trained eye over an
+ad. column.
+
+"Got it at once," I said with pardonable pride. "How's this?--'General
+(genuine), stand any test trd. L70 possess. s. hands yrs. s.a.v.'"
+
+"I like genuine people," said Phyllis thoughtfully. "And under the
+circumstances"--(here she looked hard at me, as if I were a circumstance)--
+"under the circumstances I think we ought to have one that will stand any
+test. Seventy pounds is out of the question, of course, but she might come
+for less when she sees how small we are. What does 's. hands yrs.' stand
+for?"
+
+"I don't know," I said; "I can only think of 'soft hands for years.'"
+
+"I should like her," said Phyllis. "Their hands are the one thing against
+Generals. She must be a nice girl to take such care of them. Think how
+careful she'd be with the china. What's 'trd.'?"
+
+"I'm afraid it must mean tired," I said.
+
+"Oh, she'd soon get rested here," said Phyllis; "I don't think that need be
+against her. She's probably been in a hard place lately. Are there any
+more?"
+
+"Plenty," I said. "How does this one strike you?--'General. no bacon.
+possess. 2 rms. L45 wky. s.a.v.'"
+
+"I like that one," said Phyllis. "She must be an awfully unselfish girl to
+go without bacon. I don't see how we are going to spare two rooms, though,
+unless she's willing to count the kitchen as one. Forty-five pounds a week
+must be a printer's error. But we can easily afford forty-five pounds a
+year."
+
+"It may mean that she's 'weakly,'" I suggested.
+
+"That wouldn't matter much," said Phyllis; "and I like her the better for
+being honest about it."
+
+"'Wky.' _might_ stand for 'whisky,'" I hinted darkly.
+
+Phyllis blanched. "Then she's no good," she said; "I simply couldn't stand
+one that drinks. What's the next one like?"
+
+I read on: "Domestic oil no risk. 6 dys. trd. s. hands 10 yrs. s.a.v."
+
+"I wonder whether that means that she _can_ cook on an oil-stove or that
+she _can't_ cook on any other kind? And does the 'no risk' refer to her or
+the stove? It's not very clear. I don't think we'll take up this one's
+references. Besides I shouldn't like one that was tired for six days."
+
+"Out of every seven," I added, "and the seventh day would be the Sabbath,
+and her day off."
+
+"Go on to the next," said Phyllis firmly.
+
+The next one merely said; "General. Kilburn tkg. L40 1 rm. s.a.v."
+
+"It would be nice to have a taking sort of girl," I thought (unfortunately
+aloud).
+
+"We won't think of her, the hussy!" said Phyllis. "Pass me the paper,
+please."
+
+"They all seem to want 's.a.v.,'" she said. "What do you suppose it means?
+I wish they wouldn't use so many abbreviations. 'S.a.' stands for Sunday
+afternoon, of course, but I can't think what the 'v.' is for. Of course
+we'll give them Sunday afternoons free, if that's what it means. I only
+wonder they don't want an evening off in the week as well. I call them most
+reasonable. And there are so many to choose from. I always understood from
+mother that they're so hard to get."
+
+Then she turned the paper over.
+
+"Oh, you are stupid!" she said. "You've been looking at the 'Shops and
+Businesses for Sale' column."
+
+"So've you," I snapped.
+
+And then I regret to say we had our first quarrel.
+
+I told Phyllis firmly that she is not at all tkg., nor would she stand any
+test; that no one could engage her, much less marry her, without taking
+risks; that she hadn't had s. hands for yrs., that _she_ wouldn't go
+without her bacon for anyone, and that I should be jolly thankful if she
+would take every blessed s.a.v.
+
+I admit that Phyllis was more dignified. She merely sailed out of the room,
+remarking that I made her trd.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"OUR INVINCIBLE NAVY."
+
+In continuation of a paragraph in his last issue, Mr. Punch expresses his
+regret if the article which appeared under the above title in these pages
+on January 14th has unwittingly given offence to any one of his readers
+through others having connected him with the character of _Reginald
+McTaggart_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE CONSCIENTIOUS BURGLAR.
+
+PAISLEY HUMANITARIAN. "IF I COULD ONLY BE QUITE SURE THAT I SHOULDN'T BE
+DISCOURAGING HIM FROM SAVING."
+
+[Mr. ASQUITH has pronounced himself cautiously in favour of a Capital Levy,
+on the condition, amongst others, that it must not be allowed to discourage
+the habit of saving.]]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: JULIUS CAESAR ON THE LINKS.
+
+_Actor_ (_whose knowledge of SHAKSPEARE is greater than his golf_). "'O,
+PARDON ME, THOU BLEEDING PIECE OF EARTH.'"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RINGS FROM SATURN.
+
+(_Extracted from various issues of "The Daily Mandate."_)
+
+I.
+
+_To the Editor of "The Daily Mandate."_
+
+SIR,--For a number of years I have been experimenting in wireless telephony
+with my installation on the heights of Lavender Hill. On several occasions
+recently I have been puzzled by mysterious ringings of the bell attached to
+the instrument, which have obviously been set up by long-distance waves. On
+taking up the receiver, however, I have been unable to make out any
+coherent message, but only a succession of irregular squeaks, although once
+I distinctly, heard a word which I can only transcribe as "Gurroo." I have
+no doubt in my own mind that one of the more advanced planets is trying to
+get in touch with us by means of wireless telephony, and that once we have
+deciphered the code we shall be able to converse freely with its
+inhabitants. I myself incline to the belief that these rings emanate from
+Saturn, which, in spite of its great distance from the earth, is just as
+likely to wish to communicate with us as any other planet.
+
+Yours faithfully,
+
+DIOGENES DOTTLE, F.R.S.
+
+II.
+
+Mr. Dottle's remarkable letter, published in our issue of yesterday,
+suggesting that inhabitants of Saturn have been endeavouring to communicate
+with the earth by means of wireless telephony, has created profound
+excitement in scientific and other circles. To a representative of _The
+Daily Mandate_ a number of well-known men expressed their views on the
+matter, which will undoubtedly stimulate further investigation into the
+momentous possibilities of this epoch-making revelation. The opinions
+advanced, which are, on the whole, highly favourable to Mr. Dottle's
+theory, are as follows:--
+
+_Sir Potiphar Shucks, the famous astronomer_: "The possibility that Saturn
+is inhabited is one that, in the absence of incontrovertible evidence
+either way, should not lightly be set aside. Assuming that it is inhabited,
+that its people are skilled in the use of wireless telephony and that it is
+possible to set up waves of sufficient intensity to travel all the way from
+Saturn to us, I see no reason why communications of the nature suggested by
+Mr. Dottle should not at some future date become an accomplished fact."
+
+_Mr. Artesian Pitts, the well-known imaginative historian_: "I have long
+held the belief that Saturn is inhabited by a type of being possessing a
+cylinder-like body composed of an unresisting pulp, a high dome-shaped head
+filled with gas, and long tentacles, bristling with electricity, through
+which all sensations are emitted and received. These tentacles would act as
+an ideal telephonic apparatus, so that there is every likelihood of Mr.
+Dottle's having actually received a message from Saturn. I take 'Gurroo' to
+be Saturnian for 'Hello.'"
+
+_Signor Tromboni, the pioneer of wireless telephony_: "We are making
+arrangements to test Mr. Dottle's interesting theory, and for this purpose
+are erecting a special installation on the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro, which is
+several thousand feet higher than Lavender Hill. At our own stations we
+have frequently noticed mysterious ringings, which we have hitherto
+ascribed to carelessness on the part of operators; but Mr. Dottle's letter
+opens up a new world of possibilities. _The Daily Mandate_ is to be
+congratulated on the prominence it has given to the subject, which has
+already had the effect of sending Tromboni shares up several points."
+
+_Mr. G. Shawburn_: "It is an insult to Creation to assume that ours is the
+only populated planet. Of course Saturn is inhabited, but, unlike our own
+world, by people of intelligence. In the matter of mental advancement
+Saturn can make rings round the earth. All the same I don't for one moment
+suppose that Mr. Dottle knows what he's talking about."
+
+_The POSTMASTER-GENERAL_: "Nothing is known in the Department under my
+control of telephone calls having been received from Saturn or the
+neighbourhood. I do not propose for the present to take any steps in the
+matter."
+
+_The LORD MAYOR_: "Saturn is a long way off."
+
+III.
+
+(_Extract from leading article._)
+
+"... Again we ask, 'What is the Government doing?' For several days now our
+columns have been ringing with the world-wide acclamation of this
+stupendous discovery, beside the potentialities of which the wildest
+efforts of imaginative literature are reduced to pallid and uninspired
+commonplaces. Even so cautious a scientist as Sir Potiphar Shucks has
+declared that the idea of Saturn being inhabited is one that 'should not
+lightly be set aside,' and has announced his conviction that under
+favourable conditions communication with that planet should in the near
+future become 'an accomplished fact.' Other eminent leaders of thought and
+action, including Signor Tromboni, are even more enthusiastic in their
+reception of the great theory first given to the world by Mr. Diogenes
+Dottle in a letter to _The Daily Mandate_. But the POSTMASTER-GENERAL is
+content to treat the question with the airy scepticism and obstructive
+complacency that have rendered the London Telephone service a byword of
+inefficiency, and refuses even to make a grant in aid of the work of
+investigation.
+
+"In these circumstances the proprietors of _The Daily Mandate_ have much
+pleasure in announcing that they will pay the sum of ten thousand pounds to
+the first man, woman or child in the British Empire who can produce
+evidence of having received an intelligible telephonic message from Saturn,
+and a further sum of one hundred thousand pounds to the first person to
+send a message to that planet and receive a clear reply. The services of a
+Board of distinguished experts are being engaged for the purpose of testing
+and adjudicating all claims.
+
+"_Meanwhile the POSTMASTER-GENERAL must go._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Indignant Egoist._ "BE CAREFUL UP THERE WHAT YOU'RE
+DROPPING. THAT PRECIOUS NEARLY HIT ME!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "It may safely be said that there are more millionaires to the square
+ yard in Bradford than in any other city in the country, not even
+ excepting London or New York."--_Daily Paper._
+
+The news that Britain has annexed the United States will comfort those who
+thought it was the other way about.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The incessant singing of a cricket in a London church compelled the
+ preacher to shorten his sermon."--_The Children's Newspaper._
+
+We may now expect increased enthusiasm for the "Sunday Cricket" movement.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A VERMIN OFFENSIVE.
+
+There was a faint scuffling sound behind the wainscot.
+
+"There it is again," said Araminta.
+
+"Not a doubt of it," I replied, turning pale.
+
+Thrusting on my hat I rushed up the hill to the Town Hall and asked to see
+the Clerk of the Borough Council immediately.
+
+"I have reason to suspect," I said in a hoarse low whisper, as soon as I
+was shown into the man's presence, "that our premises are in imminent
+danger of being infested. Counsel me as to what I should do."
+
+"It is your duty as a good citizen to take such steps as may from time to
+time be necessary and reasonably practicable to destroy the vermin," he
+said in a rather weary and mechanical tone.
+
+"I hope I am not one to take my civic duties lightly," I replied with some
+_hauteur_, "but observe that I merely said I had reason to suspect the
+imminence of the peril. I should like to know the legal definition of
+infestment, if you please. I cannot definitely say that house-breaking has
+taken place as yet. I do not know that there has even been petty larceny.
+There may have been merely loitering with felonious intent."
+
+"What is the size of your premises?" he inquired.
+
+"It is more a messuage than a premises," I explained. "About twelve feet by
+ten, I should say--speaking without the lease."
+
+"And how many vermin do you expect it to be about to harbour?"
+
+"None have actually hove in sight at present," I said reassuringly, "but
+there is a sound of one in the offing--in the wainscoting, I mean."
+
+"In a residence of your size I should say that a single mouse would
+constitute infestation within the meaning of the Act, so soon as it forces
+an ingress. It will then be your bounden duty to demolish it. How about
+purchasing a trap?"
+
+"You are sure that is better than hiding behind the arras and hitting it
+over the head with a pole-axe?" I inquired anxiously, "or proffering it a
+bowl of poisoned wine?"
+
+"Poison is no longer supplied free," he answered coldly, and I went out.
+
+Very luckily, as I hastened up the hill, I had observed a building with the
+words, "Job Masters. Traps for Hire," written upon a wooden board. I went
+inside and found an elderly man sitting at a desk in a small office. He
+looked extremely patient. "Are you Job?" I asked breathlessly. "I have come
+to buy a mouse-trap."
+
+Appearances, of course, are quite often deceptive. They were in this case.
+The elderly man was very much annoyed. When he had explained matters
+forcibly to me I went on down the hill and entered an ironmonger's.
+
+"I wish to buy a trap to catch a mouse," I said to the assistant behind the
+counter.
+
+"Certainly, Sir. What size?" said the lad politely.
+
+"Small to medium," I replied, rather baffled. "It has only a medium-sized
+scratch."
+
+He showed me a peculiar apparatus made of wire and wood containing
+apparently a vestibule, two reception rooms, staircase and first-floor
+lobby, with an open window and a diving-board. Underneath the window was a
+small swimming tank.
+
+"I don't want a hydropathic exactly," I explained. "I propose to
+exterminate this rodent, not to foster longevity in it. How does it work?"
+
+He pointed out that, after examining the various apartments, the animal
+would be allured by the fragrance of a small portion of cheese placed above
+the diving-board; overbalancing, it would then be projected into the water,
+where it would infallibly drown. "It is a thoroughly humane instrument," he
+assured me, "and used in the best 'omes."
+
+I bought it and went on to a cheese foundry. Araminta was rather scornful
+of the sanatorium when I came home with it and set it, loaded and trained,
+on the dining-room floor; but the children were delighted. It ranked only a
+little lower than the pantomime, and if only we could have secured an
+outside visitor to it I believe that it would have defeated the Zoo. To
+visit it with a sort of wistful hope became the principal treat of the day.
+But, alas, the mansion remained untenanted. Sometimes during a lull in
+conversation we would hear the faint scuffling again, but after about six
+days I became convinced, by kneeling down and placing my ear to the carpet
+like an Indian, that the noise was even fainter than it had been at first.
+A terrible suspicion seized me. I dashed out and rang the bell of the flat
+next door.
+
+"It is just as I feared," I said to Araminta on returning a few moments
+later. "We are not going to be infested after all. The vermin has been
+sighted in No. 140B."
+
+"We must make the best of it," she said, trying to speak cheerfully,
+"though it _is_ hard on the children, poor dears."
+
+"I wasn't thinking of the children," I replied bitterly; "I was thinking of
+the expense. If we had been living in a house instead of a flat we could at
+least have deducted it from the rates."
+
+I sat down and made out a bill as follows to the Clerk of the Borough
+Council, heading it:--
+
+ _On Account of Spurious Infestment._
+ s. d.
+ To one Mouse Institute and Aquarium 5 6
+ " Cheese 0 6
+ " Labour at 2/6 per hour 0 7-1/2
+ ---------
+ Total 6 7-1/2
+
+The man replied coldly that the householder was responsible for all
+expenditure incurred in precautionary measures and that the Council was in
+no way liable for the costs resulting from an offensive that failed to
+materialize. He ended with the rather rude postscript, "What kind of cheese
+did you use?"
+
+This was a bit sickening. However, by threatening to lay information
+against him, I have at last succeeded in inducing the occupier of 140B to
+take over the abattoir at a very satisfactory valuation. It was between
+that and buying his mouse.
+
+EVOE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO NIGHTMARES.
+
+ [_Dreamed after reading in a daily paper that "any style of dress that
+ lessens one's self-confidence should be tabooed" (sic)._]
+
+ I travelled from the Sussex hills
+ With confidence divine,
+ Full of the conscious power that thrills
+ My heart when life is mine,
+ And strode to Lady Fancy Frills
+ With whom I was to dine.
+
+ Her guests had come from Clubs and Courts
+ And Halls of wealthy Jews;
+ As they surveyed my running shorts
+ I felt my courage ooze,
+ While conscious power, grown out of sorts,
+ Leaked through my canvas shoes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Then I re-travelled South by West
+ Inflated with a joy
+ Which in the suit I called my best
+ No buffet could destroy;
+ I may remark I'd come full-dressed
+ From lunch at the Savoy.
+
+ But when the hills began to shout
+ I coloured to the roots,
+ And when the valleys cried, "Get out!"
+ To the last word in suits,
+ My joy, displaced by sudden doubt,
+ Leaked through my spatted boots.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of the mysterious Marconigrams:--
+
+ "They may be the effort of sentiment beings in some neighbouring planet
+ to communicate with us."--_Evening Paper._
+
+Can we have broken in on a conversation between _Venus_ and _Mars_?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MANNERS AND MODES.
+
+PROFITEERING IN THE WEST END COMPELS MAYFAIR TO PUT ON ANY OLD RAGS AND DO
+ITS SHOPPING IN SHOREDITCH.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: BEHIND THE SCENES IN CINEMA-LAND.
+
+"WILL YOU STAND BACK, SIR? YOU'RE SPOILING THE PICTURE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CONFLICT OF EMOTIONS.
+
+(_With the British Army in France._)
+
+"I've seen rivetters at New York pie-foundries and stew-specialists on
+North Sea trawlers," said Percival severely, "but I never realised how
+monotonous feeding could be till I got into a Mess controlled by Binnie."
+
+Binnie puffed his pipe severely, being of the tough fibre which enables
+Mess Presidents to endure. Frederick, who had been silent, rose from his
+seat, heaved a distressing sigh and left the room.
+
+"There's the moral that adorns the tale, you--you public danger!" continued
+Percival, indicating Frederick's retreating figure. "Look to what a
+condition that once bright youth has been brought by your endless stews and
+curries."
+
+"Not a bit of it," answered Binnie lightly. "Frederico could eat patent
+breakfast food and toasted doormats without taxing his digestion. His
+complaint is the tender passion. I recognise the symptoms."
+
+"It looks like an acute attack, anyhow," said Percival, rising, "and prompt
+counter-irritants are indicated. But I'll confirm your diagnosis first."
+
+Inside Frederick's quarters the sound of regular and sustained sighing
+suggested that the sufferer was in the throes of a spasm of melancholy.
+Percival entered and narrowly escaped being drawn into the vortex of a
+particularly powerful inspiration.
+
+"Freddy, old pard," he said kindly, "why so _triste_? If the trouble's
+financial, my cheque-book is unreservedly at your service. Havin' no
+balance at the bank I've no use for it myself."
+
+"It's not that--at least not worse than usual," groaned Frederick.
+
+"Then tell me all about it."
+
+"It's a long story," commenced Frederick.
+
+"Let me off with a synopsis," interrupted Percival.
+
+"Once upon a time," continued Frederick, "there was a big war, which made
+quite a stir in the daily papers and was a common subject of discussion in
+the clubs. There were many casualties, amongst them being a blithe young
+laddy who came down to the Base with a fractured maxilla caused by nibbling
+an M. and V. ration without previously removing the outside tin--or
+something of the sort. He was sent to hospital and devotedly tended by a
+Sister of exquisite beauty--such a figure and such hair! It wasn't exactly
+auburn and not exactly burnished bronze--"
+
+"And it wasn't pale puce and it wasn't ultramarine," broke in Percival
+impatiently. "Tell me what it was, not what it wasn't."
+
+"I can't. It baffled description. Well, they drifted apart; but often
+afterwards, when that young laddy was studying his Manual of Military Law
+in his lonely dug-out, the image of Sister Carruthers glowed on the printed
+page. But I never met her again until the other day, when I was having a
+gentle toddle round Quelquepart and saw her gliding along the quay.
+Something gripped me by the heart; I took my courage in both hands and
+spoke to her.
+
+"'Don't you remember me, Sister?' I said. 'It was you who nursed me in No.
+99 General.'
+
+"She looked at me coldly.
+
+"'As you are the third young officer who has adopted a similar method of
+introduction this afternoon,' she said, 'you must forgive me if I ask for
+some confirmation.'
+
+"'Surely you haven't forgotten?' I cried. 'You drew me a sweet little
+design in dots and dashes to hang over my bed. When I was evacuated to
+England I wanted to thank you, to ask if we might meet again, but you
+thrust a clinical thermometer between my teeth and told me not to speak
+till you gave me permission. Then you left me, and I was whisked away to
+the boat clinging grimly to the thermometer, inarticulate and heartbroken.'
+
+"'And I presume your object in speaking to me to-day is to return the
+thermometer?' she said primly.
+
+"That's where I took the full count," continued Frederick, sadly. "If I
+could have produced any old thing in the thermometer line my _bona fides_
+would have been established an' I could have gone ahead like cotton-mill
+shares. Instead of which, she'd said Good-day and gone while I was thinkin'
+out explanations. Since that time I've been parading Quelquepart simply
+bristling with thermometers, but I've never met her again."
+
+"The old Army fault of unpreparedness," remarked Percival. "You ought to go
+to hospital."
+
+"Don't be juvenile! What have hospitals to do with heartache?"
+
+"Everything, if you go to the right one--the one where your ministering
+angel ministrates, for instance."
+
+"Percival, old ace," said Frederick, with admiration, "you'll rank among
+the world's great thinkers yet. Turn on the current again and tell me what
+is my complaint."
+
+"Digestive trouble," said Percival promptly. "There's already been rumours
+about, and you'll be doing a public service by going to dock with
+dyspepsia. Binnie will be so stricken by remorse that he'll at once start
+providing the Mess with decent food."
+
+"Then for your sakes I'll rehearse the symptoms. But my curse will be on
+your head if I get to the wrong hospital."
+
+It was unfortunate that the M.O. was in an unsympathetic mood next morning.
+He thumped Frederick on the lower chest and pooh-poohed the idea of
+hospital. "All you want is a few of these tablets," he said, "and you'll be
+fit as nails in a day or two."
+
+Frederick crawled away dispiritedly to confide in Percival. That sapient
+youth counselled perseverance.
+
+"You must go right off your feed," he said. "Let the doc. see you feebly
+pecking and he'll soon get alarmed. In the meantime I'm off to give Binnie
+critical accounts of your appetite and send him to market right away."
+
+Only a burning passion and stealthy bars of chocolate could have sustained
+Frederick through the next few days. To sit down to breakfast with a
+healthy appetite and refuse his egg and rasher put the biggest possible
+strain on his constancy. His task was made doubly difficult by the scheming
+of Percival, who was constantly inciting Binnie to procure fresh
+delicacies.
+
+"You've crocked poor Freddy," he said; "and there will be others going the
+same way if you don't improve the messing. Now I saw some nice plump
+chickens to-day in the...."
+
+Thus harried, that evening Binnie provided a dinner that almost reduced
+Frederick to breaking-point. Only the fact that the M.O. was sitting
+opposite gave him strength to refuse the soup and fish, to trifle with the
+chicken and turn wearily from the sweet. As the savoury was being served he
+caught a scrap of conversation across the table.
+
+"... to the boat to see her off for demob.," the M.O. was saying to the
+Padre. "Jolly nice girl--Jim Carruthers' daughter, you know."
+
+Frederick pricked up his ears.
+
+"I remember," said the Padre. "She used to be at 99 General."
+
+There was no doubt who was the girl referred to. Frederick sat back in his
+chair with a heavy sense of disappointment and loss. He felt acutely sorry
+for himself. But presently above the pain in his heart there arose a
+stronger and more compelling feeling.
+
+"Corporal," he said, "I think after all I'll try one of those crab patties.
+Or you might tell the waiter to bring in _two_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Conversationalist._ "EXTRAORDINARY CRIME WAVE WE'RE
+HAVING--ER--AH--FOR THE TIME OF YEAR."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PICTURES.
+
+ "Some likes picturs o' women" (said Bill) "an' some likes 'orses best,"
+ As he fitted a pair of fancy shackles on to his old sea-chest;
+ "But I likes picturs o' ships" (said he), "an' you can keep the rest.
+
+ "An' if I was a ruddy millionaire with dollars to burn that way,
+ Instead of a dead-broke sailorman as never saves his pay,
+ I'd go to some big paintin' guy, an' this is what I'd say:--
+
+ "'Paint me _The Cutty Sark_' (I'd say) 'or the old _Thermopylae_,
+ Or _The Star of Peace_ as I sailed in once in my young days at sea,
+ Shipshape an' Blackwall fashion too, as a clipper ought to be.
+
+ "'An' you might do 'er outward bound, with a sky full o' clouds,
+ An' the tug just droppin' astern an' gulls flyin' in crowds,
+ An' the decks shiny-wet with rain an' the wind shakin' the shrouds.
+
+ "'Or else racin' up-Channel with a sou'-wester blowin',
+ Stuns'ls set aloft and alow an' a hoist o' flags showin',
+ An' a white bone between her teeth, so's you can see she's goin'.
+
+ "'Or you might do 'er off Cape Stiff in the 'igh latitudes yonder,
+ With her main-deck a smother of white an' her lee-rail dipping under,
+ And the big greybeards drivin' by an' breakin' aboard like thunder.
+
+ "'Or I'd like old Tuskar somewhere around--or Sydney 'eads, maybe,
+ Or Bar Light, or the Tail o' the Bank, or a glimp o' Circular Quay,
+ Or a junk or two, if she's tradin' East, to show it's the China Sea.
+
+ "'Nor I don't want no dabs o' paint as you can't tell what they are,
+ Whether they're shadders or fellers' faces or blocks or blobs o' tar,
+ But I want gear as looks like gear an' a spar that's like a spar.
+
+ "'An' I don't care if it's North or South, the Trades or the China Sea,
+ Shortened down or everythin' set, close-hauled or runnin' free;
+ You paint me a ship as is _like_ a ship an' that'll do for me.'"
+
+ C.F.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Old-fashioned Aunt._ "GOOD HEAVENS, CHILD! YOU'RE NOT GOING
+OUT LIKE THAT? YOU LOOK LIKE A CHORUS-GIRL."
+
+_Modern Maiden._ "OH, COME, AUNT! I DON'T LOOK AS HORRIBLY RESPECTABLE AS
+THAT, SURELY?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+EGYPTIAN DARKNESS.
+
+ "Several letters have appeared in the native Press in some of which
+ they ask Minindirect way, as they have done, but in a indirect way they
+ have done but in a clear clear manner which cannot be interpreted two
+ ways."--_Egyptian Gazette._
+
+Or, so far as we are concerned, even one way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ANOTHER "RESERVATION."
+
+STARVING EUROPE. "GOD HELP ME!"
+
+AMERICA. "VERY SAD CASE. BUT I'M AFRAID SHE AIN'T TRYING."
+
+["Relief would be found in the resumption of industrial life and activity
+and the imposition of adequate taxation. The American people should not be
+called upon to finance the requirements of Europe in so far as they result
+from failure to take these necessary steps."--_Mr. CARTER GLASS, Secretary
+of the United States Treasury._]]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BIG-GAME CURE.
+
+ [In common with everything else, wild animals have risen considerably
+ in price.]
+
+ In other times I might have made
+ For those wild lands where growls the grisly,
+ Have tracked him (with some native aid)
+ And held a broken-hearted Bisley;
+ Now that my Maud has murmured, "Nay,"
+ Shrinking from matrimony's tight knot,
+ I might have acted thus, I say
+ (Contrariwise, I might not).
+
+ In any case to-day I shrink
+ From thus evading Sorrow's trammels;
+ A sense of duty bids me think
+ How costly are the larger mammals;
+ To kill them just to soothe my mind
+ Would seem to savour of the wasteful,
+ A thing all patriot poets find
+ Exceedingly distasteful.
+
+ Not mine the immemorial cure;
+ The voice of conscience warns me off it;
+ I'll leave the following of the spoor
+ To those who follow it for profit;
+ I feel they would not thank me for
+ Turning the jungle to a shambles,
+ Who speculate in lions or
+ Have elephantine gambles.
+
+ And so this poet will not roam;
+ Remaining on his native heath, he
+ Will seek an anodyne at home,
+ Nor look beyond the Thames for Lethe;
+ And if he fades away, denied
+ The usual balm in cardiac crises,
+ Say only this of him, "He died
+ A prey to soaring prices."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE RETURN OF THE PRODIGAL.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOW TO ACT IN EMERGENCIES.
+
+_The Weekly Dispatch_ symposium, in which various celebrities discuss the
+way to act in the event of a burglar being found in the house, shows the
+need for a little advice in case of emergencies. We append the following
+very helpful hints:--
+
+The old plan of offering a burglar a cigarette and asking him to take a
+chair while you telephone to the police is not now so successful as in the
+past. The best plan is to tackle the fellow right away. For this purpose
+you should step behind him, take hold of his coat and force it over his
+face. Then tie his left arm to his right leg across the back. Properly
+carried out, this method rarely fails.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To attract the attention of the young lady behind a post-office counter,
+fire a revolver three times in succession, using blank cartridges. After
+first aid has been rendered to the attendants step up to the counter and
+purchase your stamp.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If you should be knocked down by a taxi, don't be alarmed and try to creep
+out from under the thing. And don't blame the driver. Apologise to him,
+and, as you are being carried away, shake hands and tell him that while it
+was his cab it was your fault. Treated in this manner, drivers are not
+nearly so offensive when they knock you down the next time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Should the telephone-bell ring in your house, don't get excited. Keep calm.
+Remember General GRANT. Remove the women and children to a place of safety,
+lift off the receiver and say, "Good Heavens! Whoever can it be?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let us suppose that you are being attacked by a man with a chopper. Wait
+until the weapon is well poised over your head. Just as he begins the down
+stroke step aside smartly. The hatchet will then be found buried in the
+ground. This means that bygones are bygones.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "ARE THEY RISING THE DAY, SIR?"
+
+"NO."
+
+"AH, WEEL, JUST BIDE A WEE. THEY AYE TAK BEST IN THE COOL OF THE EVENING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PETER AND JUDY.
+
+Except for the fact that they had different sets of parents and were born
+some hundred miles apart, Peter and Judy are practically twins.
+Consequently, after an interval of three months, strenuous efforts were
+made by the two young mothers to bring about a proper introduction between
+the two wonders.
+
+The occasion was to be one of great importance, for it was Judy's very
+first tea-party, marking, as it were, the dawn of her social career. For
+days the post-office wrestled with the correspondence necessary to bring
+about the meeting. The mothers, both in person and by proxy, had scoured
+the precincts of Kensington and Oxford Street respectively for the
+necessary adornments to do their offspring justice, changing their minds so
+often that the assistants came to take as much interest in the party as if
+they were going to it themselves.
+
+And yet, when the great moment arrived and the strong silent man was borne
+into the room, round-eyed and expectant, he found his hostess already tired
+out with her first tea-party and fast asleep. He could scarcely believe his
+eyes; nor could Judy's scandalised father.
+
+Peter was very good about it. He bore this chilly reception stoically,
+deprecating any desire to wake the sleeping beauty--deprecating, in fact,
+any interest in her or her cot whatsoever. Ignoring the efforts of the Big
+People to fix his attention by pointing him directly at the main object of
+the tea-party (they should have known that babies like looking the _other_
+way always) he remained passively interested in a fascinating brass knob,
+the while getting his gloves into a satisfactory state of succulence before
+the Big People should take it on themselves to remove them.
+
+At last his patience is rewarded. The hostess, sighing sleepily, is
+beginning to show signs of realising her responsibilities. Two immense
+arms, two enormous fistfuls of fingers gather her up and she is borne
+through the air triumphantly.... Peter and Judy are introduced.
+
+I doubt whether any two people in this world ever displayed greater
+indifference. Solemnly they turn their eyes upon every other object in the
+room except each other. It is not until the number of permutations in which
+two people can look at everything is exhausted mathematically that their
+eyes meet at last.
+
+Then they cut each other dead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Side by side they recline on the couch. Judy, pouting with sleep, is
+buffeting her face with her little white boxing-gloves, while Peter stares
+fascinated at the fire, quite sure that social functions are not in his
+line. "O-o!"
+
+With only three months' experience, Judy has not yet attained complete
+mastery of the art of manipulating difficult things like limbs.
+Inadvertently, and in excess of zeal to kick higher than any other baby,
+she has landed out a beautiful backhander and caught Peter hard in the
+tummy. Peter's eyes open wide. Creases appear on his face and widen. A
+cavern opens and a roar follows:--
+
+"Ya--o-o!"
+
+"Hullo!" (Judy looks up in amazement, for there is only one noise in the
+house like that, and she has the sole rights of it). "Hullo, is that me? I
+didn't know I was doing it"--(the roars from Peter continue)--"but I
+suppose I am. I must be. Let's have a lot more of this very good noise I am
+making--Ya--o-o!"
+
+The duet produces a crescendo astounding to them both, for there has never
+been a noise so wonderful as this in all their experience. Then to Judy a
+very strange thing happens. She pauses for breath, but the noise goes on.
+"This is amazing--how do I do it?..."
+
+She joins in again--and then Peter stops. He too is puzzled vaguely.
+However, bother introspection, the concert proceeds, both artists doing
+their level best. Now one of them pauses, now the other, and at length
+serious doubts begin to creep in. There is something queer afoot--
+something....
+
+The matter resolves itself. Turning suddenly they behold each other, both
+yelling splendidly. Amazement! Cavern confronts cavern! Face to face they
+roar their hardest, demanding the reason for this strange phenomenon, "this
+other me who does when I don't."
+
+They pause--their mouths remain agape. Slowly they close and smiles
+succeed. Joy! A _reasonable_-sized face at last. What a relief after the
+enormous faces, the great mouths, the Cyranese noses of the Big People who
+are wont to come and peer. Here at last is a true face, a face that--no,
+they both agree not to dwell unduly on the discovery.
+
+Indifferent to each other once again they regard the special objects of
+their attention, their hands waving gently in the air, seeking the fairies
+that babies' hands are always trying to catch.
+
+Ha! their hands have met.
+
+"Hoo! It's a _reasonable_ hand. It's got proper fingers, not stumps of
+bananas."
+
+"Moreover," says Peter politely, "if you care to take advantage of my offer
+you will find that it is properly moistened, succulent and suitable to a
+baby's taste. You needn't mind; I prepared it myself."
+
+"Goo! Gool-gur!" All is peace and chuckles. Hand-in-hand they survey their
+mothers. "_Our_ mothers, yours--mine. Ha, ha--he, he--goo!"
+
+The inner thoughts of the two babies may be hidden from me (I accept the
+punishment), but I know--I _know_ what the two mothers are thinking of.
+Twenty years hence, a paragraph in _The Times_: "Peter--Judy--" Oh, you
+fatuous mothers!
+
+L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Public interest remains unabated in the remarkable occurrences at the
+ poultry-house farm at Brickendon, where spirit rappings in the morse
+ code have been heard for weeks past.... One question put to the spirit
+ last night was 'How many people are outside?' And the reply was
+ 'Rorty,' which proved to be correct."--_Liverpool Paper._
+
+And possibly furnishes some clue to the identity of the spirit concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Officer._ "WHAT HAVE YOU GOT THERE?"
+
+_Lighterman._ "COAL."
+
+_Officer._ "I CAN SEE THAT. WHAT KIND OF COAL?"
+
+_Lighterman._ "BLACK COAL."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MORE INTENSIVE PRODUCTION.
+
+ When first I learned to play the fool
+ In various (unaccepted) verses
+ There was, I found, one golden rule
+ For poets who would line their purses.
+ "If ye," it ran, "to wealth would mount,
+ For silk attire would change your tatters,
+ Mere quantity will never count;
+ Quality is the thing that matters."
+
+ Broadly this precept, too, was laid
+ On grosser forms of human labour;
+ _E.g._, on Jones's antique trade,
+ Or Brown, the sausage-man, his neighbour;
+ Until of late, throughout a land
+ Reeling from strikes and "reconstruction,"
+ A cry was heard on every hand,
+ A clamour for "Increased Production."
+
+ While "makers," then, gird on their might
+ And merchants buzz like bees in clover;
+ When Jones is sawing day and night
+ And Brown shows twice his last turnover;
+ Shall I not follow where they've led
+ And, at the PREMIER'S invitation,
+ Double my output, Mr. Ed.?--
+ I look for your co-operation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "'Oh, to be in England now that Noel's near.'
+
+ So, one might adapt one of Kipling's lines."--_Indian Paper._
+
+What do they know of BROWNING who only KIPLING know?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "LADY wishes to travel in exquisite lingerie."--_Daily Paper._
+
+By all means; but why should she be content to wear an inferior quality
+when she is stationary?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AT THE PLAY.
+
+"MR. TODD'S EXPERIMENT."
+
+A new terror--or else a new attraction--has been added to the British
+Drama. Mr. WALTER HACKETT has brought the scent of the cinema across the
+footlights. When he wants to inform you of certain episodes in the hero's
+past career, or let you know what he is doing when he is out of sight, he
+throws the main stage into darkness and lights up a smaller one on which he
+gives you as many as six little tabloid plays within the play.
+
+Such a scheme has its obvious conveniences for the playwright, and should
+greatly simplify the difficulties of stage-craft. Those introductory
+statements which are required to explain the opening conditions and need
+such adroit handling will no longer be necessary. You just put everybody
+wise by a series of _tableaux parlants_. No longer need the author worry
+about the best way of conveying to his audience the details of any action
+that takes place off the stage; he just turns on a playlet and there it is.
+Altogether, with a couple of the unities disposed of, he ought to have a
+much easier time.
+
+On the other hand he is going to have trouble with his principal stage and
+put his actors to the inconvenience of playing in a painfully congested
+area. Thus, in _Mr. Todd's Experiment_, the permanent scene was the hall of
+a house, with a large tapestry occupying more than half of the wall.
+Lurking behind this tapestry was the stage for the tabloids, and the
+general company had to crowd themselves into the remainder or wander
+forlornly about in the space in front of the tapestry. The playlets again
+are almost bound to be just concentrated episodes, probably elemental in
+theme and certainly elementary in treatment.
+
+The excuses for their interpolation in _Mr. Todd's Experiment_ were not
+marked by a very great subtlety. There was really none for the first three,
+which simply relieved _Mr. Todd_ of the tedious recital of the hero's
+disillusionments in love. The next two were introduced by way of
+illustrating his alleged gift of clairvoyance; and the last served frankly
+to fill in the interval while the rest of the company was away at dinner.
+The general effect of all these desultory little _Guignols_ was perhaps
+rather cheap, and not very complimentary to the intelligence of those of us
+who had outgrown a childish _penchant_ for peep-shows.
+
+[Illustration: _Willoughby Todd_ (_Mr. HOLMAN CLARK_). "BE YOUR OLD TRUE
+SELF. MAKE THE WOMEN ADORE YOU."
+
+_Arthur John Carrington_ (_Mr. OWEN NARES_). "YOUR ADVICE IS GOOD. I WILL
+NOW TAKE OFF MY BEARD AND BE OWEN NARES ONCE MORE."]
+
+_Mr. Todd's Experiment_ (for I have spoken only of Mr. HACKETT'S) was to
+restore a _blase_ and valetudinarian young man of thirty to a proper state
+of energy by recalling the memories of his past loves and so reviving in
+him a desire to stand well in the eyes of the sex. For this purpose he
+produces (1) a bunch of wood-violets to suggest (through the nose) the
+environment of his first passion; (2) a specially-tipped brand of
+cigarettes to revive (through the mouth) the sentiment of his second; and a
+gramophone record to recover (through the ear) the associations of his
+third.
+
+So well does he succeed that the hero pulls himself together, shaves off
+his beard, becomes our OWEN NARES again, and sallies forth, habited for
+conquest, to pay calls on all the three. From all the three he retires
+disillusioned, having found them as egoistic as himself, and in the end
+finds solace rather shamelessly, in the love of a devoted slave who might
+have been his for the taking any time in the last several years.
+
+The matter was pleasant enough, but its interest must, I think, have left
+us indifferent if it had not been for the diversion afforded by the
+playlets. While the idea was original, the presentation of it seemed to
+have a touch of amateurishness, though I would not go so far as to agree
+with the old fogey, played by Mr. FRED KERR, who pronounced the scheme to
+be "all Tommy rot." With the exception of one character--the devoted
+slave--the lightness of the dialogue, mildly cynical, was due not so much
+to its wit as to the absence of ponderable stuff. The easy trick, so
+popular with the modern playwright, of letting the audience down in the
+middle of a serious situation was illustrated by the hero when, being in
+deadly earnest, he tells every woman in turn that she is the only woman he
+has ever loved.
+
+As _Mr. Todd_, Mr. HOLMAN CLARK was as fresh as he always is; but Mr. OWEN
+NARES could hardly hope to satisfy the exigent demands of adoration in the
+part of young _Carrington_. Who, indeed, could sustain his reputation as a
+figure of romance when addressed as "Arthur-John"? Mr. FRED KERR, who
+played _Martin Carrington_, the cantankerous uncle, cannot help being
+workmanlike; but he was asked to repeat himself too much. The best
+performance was that of Miss MARION LORNE, in the part of the hero's one
+devout lover, _Fancy Phipps_; her quiet sense of humour, salted with a
+slight American tang, kept the whole play together.
+
+O.S.
+
+"TEA FOR THREE."
+
+Playwright Mr. ROI COOPER-MEGRUE, and principal players Miss FAY COMPTON,
+the wife; Mr. STANLEY LOGAN, the friend, and Mr. A.E. MATTHEWS, the
+husband, made a first-rate thing of two-thirds of _Tea for Three_.
+
+The wife is without blemish physically or morally. The husband is faithful
+with a single-minded fidelity in thought, word and deed that looks (and, I
+am assured by equally innocent victims, is) positively deadly. The friend
+"frits and flutters" about in a distinctly casual, not to say polygamous,
+mood, but has one sacred place in his untidy heart in which the wife is
+enshrined. He can manage to sustain life so long as he may come to
+triangular tea on Thursdays. But the faithful husband puts his foot on
+that.
+
+Hence the stolen lunch for two with which the play opens. Philosophy there
+is, and very good philosophy too, from the flutterer and fritter, and such
+love-making as every virtuous woman (at heart a minx) allows. She is sorry,
+doubtless, for the suffering she causes, but (this is my gloss, not, I
+think, the author's) is really enjoying it like anything and taking jolly
+good care to look her best. Then follow little lies and as little and as
+needless and quite innocent indiscretions; and the jealous husband on the
+rampage.
+
+All this excellently put together, seasoned with wisdom and wit and most
+capably played; Miss FAY COMPTON, admirable example of a pretty actress who
+won't let herself be captured by stage tricks, making everything explicable
+except her continued love for her intolerable bore (and Turk) of a husband;
+Mr. A.E. MATTHEWS handling a desperately unsympathetic part, which was
+already beginning to look impossible, with great adroitness; and Mr.
+STANLEY LOGAN, though badly hampered by a shocking cold and fighting a
+coughing audience, carrying the bulk of the good talk and lifting it gently
+over the few difficult places with a brilliant and well-concealed art.
+
+Thus till towards the end of the Second Act. Then a bad, a very bad, fairy
+stuffed into Mr. MEGRUE'S head the idea of the suicide lottery. The
+infuriated husband, finding his wife in her friend's room at 7 P.M.
+(frightfully improper hour), sternly offers his bowler (or Derby) hat, in
+which are two cards. The one marked with a cross is drawn by the flutterer
+and means that he is for it. He is to kill himself within twenty-four
+hours.... And all this with perfect seriousness.
+
+You will see how the Third Act of a comedy which had tied itself in this
+kind of a knot simply could not be played. The author had completely
+sacrificed plausibility, and it was not uninteresting to see him twisting
+and turning, hedging and bluffing to save it; and a little uncomfortable to
+note the conviction oozing away out of the performers.... Queer also that
+it isn't more generally recognised that to come to the theatre with a loud
+persistent cough is a form of premeditated robbery with violence.
+
+T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A NEW LEAGUE OF NATIONS.
+
+The latest development in connection with the International Brotherhood
+movement is the establishment of a College of Correct Cosmopolitan
+Pronunciation. The need of such an institution has long been clamant, and
+the visit of the Ukrainian choir has brought matters to a crisis. At their
+concert last week several strong women wept like men at their inability to
+pronounce the title of one of the most beautiful items on the programme--
+"Shtchedryk." Again, as Mr. SMILLIE must have bitterly reflected, how can
+we possibly render justice to the cause of Bolshevism so long as we are
+unable to pronounce the names of its leaders correctly? The same remark
+applies to the Russian Ballet; the Yugo-Slav handbell-ringers; the
+vegetarian Indian-club swingers from the Karakoram Himalayas; the
+polyphonic gong-players from North Borneo; the synthetic quarter-tone
+quartette from San Domingo; the anthropophagous back-chat comedians from
+the Solomon Islands; not to mention a host of other interesting companies,
+troupes, corroborees and pow-wows which are now in our midst for the
+purpose of cementing the confraternity of nations.
+
+Suitable premises for the College have been secured in the heart of Mayfair
+and a competent staff of instructors has already been appointed, who, with
+the aid of gramophones, will be able to train the students to perfection in
+the requisite command of the most explosive gutturals, labials and
+sibilants. Doctor Prtnkeivitchsvtnshchitzky will be the director of the
+College; Dr. SETON WATSON and Mr. WICKHAM STEED have kindly undertaken to
+supervise the Yugo-Slav section, and the list of patrons and patronesses
+includes the names of the Prince of Prinkipo; Madame KARSAVINA, so long a
+victim of the mispronunciation of her melodious surname; Dr. DOUGLAS HYDE,
+the famous Irish scholar; Prenk-Bib-Doda, the Albanian chieftain; Sir
+RABINDRANATH TAGORE; Lord PARMOOR; Sir THOMAS BEECHAM and the Dowager Begum
+of BHOPAL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MORE ADVENTURES OF A POST-WAR SPORTSMAN.
+
+HE DETERMINES TO MASTER THE ART OF CRACKING A WHIP.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PEGASUS AT POLO.
+
+ "The following teams have entered for the Lahore Polo Tournament:--4th
+ Cavalry, 17th Cavalry, 21st Lancers, 33rd Cavalry, 39th Central India
+ Horse, Lahore, the Fox-hunters from Meerut, and the Royal Air Horse
+ from Delhi."--_Civil and Military Gazette._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN UP-TO-DATE COSTUME.
+
+ "For your evening dress I advise you simply to buy a piece of broad
+ silver ribbon, pass it twice round the waist and knot it at the side,
+ with a little bunch of berries and leaves caught into the knot."--
+ _Ladies' Paper._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REVOLT OF THE SUPER-GEORGIANS.
+
+WILD SCENES AT A MEETING OF PROTEST.
+
+An Indignation Meeting, to protest against the outrageous attacks levelled
+against Georgian writers and critics by Professor NOYES in his recent
+lecture at the Royal Institution and by Mr. A.D. GODLEY in an article in
+the current _Nineteenth Century_, was held last Saturday evening at the
+Klaxon Hall. The chair was taken by Mr. EDWARD MARSH, C.M.G., who was
+supported on the platform by a compact bevy of Georgian bards; but at an
+early stage of the meeting it became apparent that a majority of those
+present in the body of the hall were extremists of violent type, and
+eventually, as will be seen, the proceedings ended in something
+approximating to a free fight.
+
+Mr. MARSH began by a frank confession. He had taken a First Class in the
+Cambridge Classical Tripos. But the days in which he had been steeped to
+the lips in Latin and Greek were long past, never to return. For many years
+he had not composed hexameters, elegiacs or iambics. He had thrown in his
+lot with insurgent youth, not as a competitor or rival, but as an advocate,
+an admirer and an adviser. Indeed, if he might venture to say so, he
+sometimes acted as a brake on the wheels of the triumphal Chariot of Free
+Verse. He was not an adherent of the fantastic movement known as "Dada." He
+had no desire to abolish the family, morality, logic, memory, archaeology,
+the law and the prophets. A little madness was a splendid thing, but it
+must be methodic. Still, for the rest he was a Georgian, heart and soul,
+and it pained him when men who ought to know better raised the standard of
+reaction and sought to discredit the achievements of his _proteges_. These
+attacks could not be passed over in silence, and the meeting had been
+convened to consider how they should be met, whether by a reasoned protest
+or by retaliation.
+
+Miss Messalina Stoot, who punctuated her remarks with the clashing of a
+pair of cymbals, observed that as a thorough-going Dadaist she had no
+sympathy with the half-hearted attitude of the Chairman. It was a battle
+between Dada and Gaga, and emphatically Dada must win.
+
+Mr. Mimram Stoot, who accompanied himself on the sarrusophone, endorsed the
+iconoclastic views of his sister. The only poetry that counted was that
+which caused spinal chills and issued from husky haughty lips. The moanings
+of mediaeval molluscs were of no avail, though they might excite the
+crustacean fossils of Oxford, the home of lost causes.
+
+Mr. Seumas O'Gambhaoil wished to protest against Mr. NOYES' statement that
+there were ten thousand Bolshevist poets in our midst. This was a shameless
+underestimate of the total, which was at least twice that figure. Mr.
+GODLEY'S offence, however, was much worse, as he was an Irishman, though of
+the self-expatriated type to which GOLDSMITH and MOORE belonged. The rest
+of Mr. O'Gambhaoil's speech was delivered in Irish, but he was understood
+to advocate a repatriation of all Irish renegades to be tried and dealt
+with by the Sinn Fein Republic.
+
+Mr. Caradoc Cramp applauded the sentiments of the last speaker, but
+considered that he avoided the real issue. The Chairman had declared
+himself a Georgian, but that was not enough. The worst enemies of Free
+Verse were to be found in that camp. In technique and even in thought there
+was little to choose between many so-called Georgians and the most effete
+and reactionary Victorians. He alluded to the War poets, or rather the
+"Duration" poets, most of whom were already back-numbers. Between these and
+the Post-war poets, the true super-Georgians or paulo-post-Georgians, it
+was necessary to make a clean cut. To protest against Messrs. GODLEY and
+NOYES was a mere waste of time and energy. They might just as well protest
+against the existence of an extinct volcano or the skeleton of the
+brontosaurus. The real danger to be faced was the intrinsic subjectivity of
+the early and mid-Georgian poets, of whom the Chairman had been so powerful
+and consistent a supporter. He accordingly called for volunteers to storm
+the platform, and, a large number having responded to his appeal, Mr. MARSH
+was dislodged from the Chair after a gallant fight. A resolution of
+adherence to the principles of "Dada" having been passed by a large
+majority, the meeting broke up to the strains of the famous song--
+
+ a e ou o youyouyou i e ou o
+ youyouyou
+ drrrrdrrrrdrrrrgrrrrgrrrrrgrrrrrrrr
+ beng bong beng bang
+ boumboum boumboum boumboum.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Gentleman, Interested in Tattooing and largely covered, would like to
+ hear from other enthusiasts to compare notes."--_Times._
+
+We trust the "bare-back" mode is not going to spread to the more modest
+sex.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From a "stores" circular:--
+
+ "THIS WEEK'S ECONOMY OFFERS.
+
+ Honey in Sections, each 3/9, three for 14/0."
+
+The economy consists, of course, in buying them one at a time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WATER-BABIES.
+
+ In a limbo of desolate waters,
+ In the void of a flood-stricken plain,
+ You will find them--the sons and the daughters
+ Of tropical rain.
+
+ For when rivers are one with the ocean,
+ When the ricefields and roads are no more,
+ There's a feeling of magic, a notion
+ Of fairyland lore;
+
+ And the babies of Burma can revel
+ In a nursery of whirlpool and slime,
+ Where it thunders and rains like the devil
+ For weeks at a time.
+
+ They paddle their rafts through the jungle;
+ They swim through a network of leaves;
+ They clamber with never a bungle
+ To dive from the eaves.
+
+ 'Tis an orgy of goblins, an image
+ Of nudity flouting the flood,
+ Of shorn-headed brownies who scrimmage
+ And splash in the mud.
+
+ As we row neath a tamarind, one'll
+ Roll off with a gesture of fright,
+ Bobbing up like a cork at our gunwale
+ And gurgling delight.
+
+ But never a stanza shall measure
+ The joy of that desperate crew
+ Of four-year-olds scouring for treasure
+ Astride a bamboo.
+
+ Their fathers smoke, huddled in sorrow,
+ Their mothers chew betel and fret,
+ And the pariahs howl for a morrow
+ Which shall not be wet;
+
+ The plovers wheel o'er them complaining,
+ And it's only the babies who pray
+ That the skies may be raining and raining
+ For ever and aye.
+
+
+ J.M.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANOTHER MESOPOTAMIAN SCANDAL.
+
+ "The commodious and fast ss. 40 will leave Basrah for Baghdad and all
+ intermediate ports on Saturday morning at 9 A.M. Passengers will embark
+ at 10 A.M."--_Basrah Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "END OF COTTON SUIT.
+
+ DRAMATIC COLLAPSE."--_Daily Paper._
+
+We are more than ever convinced of the superior wearing qualities of
+woollen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The Government of the Commonwealth of Australia agrees to the
+ admission on passport of Indian merchants, students, tourests, with
+ there irrespective wives."--_Indian Paper._
+
+But ought any Government to encourage this sort of thing?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Dancing Man_ (_at Galleries of New Primitive Art Society_).
+"ONE WOULD HAVE THOUGHT, WITH SUCH A GOOD FLOOR, THEY MIGHT HAVE PUT UP
+SOME BETTER PICTURES."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks._)
+
+Following the iconoclastic spirit of the age, Mr. BARRY PAIN has essayed in
+_The Death of Maurice_ (SKEFFINGTON) the revolutionary experiment of a
+murder mystery tale that does not contain (_a_) a love interest, (_b_) a
+wrongly suspected hero, (_c_) a baffled inspector, (_d_) an amateur, but
+inspired, detective. It would be a grateful task to add that the result
+proves the superfluity of these time-worn accessories. But the cold fact is
+that, to me at least, the proof went the other way. From the first I was
+painfully aware of a lack of snap about the whole business, and I am more
+than suspicious that the author himself may have shared my unwilling
+indifference. _Maurice_ was an artistic bachelor, a landowner, a
+manufacturer of jam, a twin (with a bogie gift of knowing at any moment the
+relative position of his other half, which might have been worked for far
+more effect than is actually obtained from it), and a reputation of making
+enemies. He had also an unusual neighbour, in the person of a young woman
+whose unconventionality led her to perambulate the common at midnight,
+playing the first bars of _Solveig's Song_ upon the flute. One night, at
+the close of the first chapter, a gun was heard. But you are wrong to
+suppose (however naturally) that the flute-player was the victim. It was
+_Maurice_. And of course the problem was, who did it. I have told you my
+own experience of the working out; nothing written by Mr. BARRY PAIN can
+ever be really dull, just as no story starting with a mysterious murder can
+lack a certain intrigue; but the fact remains that my wish, heroically
+resisted, to look on to the last chapter was prompted more often by
+impatience than by any compelling curiosity. Others may be happier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The author of _A Journal of Small Things_ has done much to make us
+understand the sufferings of stricken France and the more intimate sorrows
+of war. _Chill Hours_ (MELROSE) deals with that dark period before the end,
+when, to some, it seemed all but certain that the will to victory must
+fail. Of the three parts of this gracious little book the first consists of
+six sketches of life behind the lines, life both gentle and simple, as
+affected by war. "Odette in Pink Taffeta," an episode of bereavement, is in
+particular exquisitely visualised. "Their Places" and "The Second Hay"
+treat, with a quiet intensity of conviction, of the absolutely deadening
+absorption, by overwork and anxiety, of peasant wives and children left to
+carry on in the absence of their men. The third part is a series of
+hospital vignettes. They do not attempt to be too cheery, but they have the
+stamp of realised truth. "Nostalgia," the second part, is in another
+mood--recalled memories of the beauties of a loved land and of dear common
+things affectionately seen. To those who dare look at war with open eyes
+and who take pleasure in sincere and beautifully-phrased writing I commend
+Mrs. HELEN MACKAY'S book without reserve.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Somewhere in Christendom_ (ALLEN AND UNWIN) is somewhat embarrassing to a
+reviewer, for it has the theme of a great book with the manner of a trivial
+one. It is the history of a very much smaller nation, Ethuria, left
+despoiled and starving at the end of a nine-years' war, in which its great
+neighbours have used it as a battle-ground. Revolution begins, but a woman
+prophet steps in and switches it off in an unusual direction. The Ethurians
+perfect among themselves that fellowship which is the nice ideal behind
+many nasty manifestations in the real world, and, when next they are
+invaded by neighbouring nations anxious to use them as an excuse for
+belligerency, they resolutely stick to their guns (only the metaphor is
+most unsuitable), refuse to find any cause of quarrel with their "foreign
+brothers," and finally persuade them to abandon the ideals of war, so that
+peace on earth becomes a reality at last. Here is the book's theme; its
+working out allows for a boxing match between the President of Hygeia and
+the Foreign Secretary of Tritonia as the minimum of hostilities; a wicked
+newspaper lord, who pulls strings in both countries, and a faithful butler
+to the Royal Family, who becomes assistant state nursemaid and cleans
+silver as a hobby. Though I quite agree with Miss EVELYN SHARP and the
+Ethurians that it _is_ love that makes the world go round, I am not so sure
+that either hers or theirs is the best way of advocating their common
+cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may remember an original and striking book of papers about the theatre
+under the title of _Buzz-Buzz_. Its author, JAMES E. AGATE, has now
+followed it with another, called, rather grimly, _Responsibility_
+(RICHARDS). You will be absolutely correct in guessing that this is not a
+treatise on revue, being indeed an autobiographical novel of (I feel bound
+to add) precisely the same calibre as, in the sister realm of drama, made
+the name of Manchester at one period a word of awe. Why do these young
+Mancunians recollect to such stupendous purpose? Here is Mr. AGATE, with an
+introduction of forty-four pages, all about time and infinity, before he
+can get his protagonist so much as started anywhere at all. It is a little
+like one of those demon-scenes out of the pantomimes he describes so
+lovingly--"_Do so! May safety and success attend on Crusoe._" But of course
+the subsequent action is more responsible. I imagine Mr. AGATE'S picture of
+young-man life in the Manchester of the nineties to be very much like the
+real thing. Relaxation was not wholly remote from it. Cotton and
+commandments were broken with equal facility. Also you may be impressed by
+the number of Germans in it. Finally, after telling us, sometimes
+engagingly, sometimes verbosely, all he can remember about Lancashire, Mr.
+AGATE brings his hero to Town, levers him along, year after year, and gets
+(almost on his last page) to his big situation. I won't spoil it.
+_Responsibility_, which might better have been called "Garrulity," is a
+novel containing boredom and charm in about equal proportions; not to
+mention promise for the days when its author has learned to discipline his
+too-ready pen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the early part of 1915 until the end of 1917 Admiral Sir REGINALD
+BACON commanded at Dover, and from the preface to _The Dover Patrol_
+(HUTCHINSON) we can gather that he is smarting under a considerable sense
+of injustice and injury. Of the merits of his case--he frankly describes
+his dismissal as brutal--I do not pretend to judge, but can safely assume
+that the other side have something to say for themselves, if they care to.
+However, you are not to suppose that this is a bitter book. Most generous
+are the praises which the Admiral bestows upon his subordinates; his venom
+he reserves for just the chosen few who, no doubt, can bear it. Apart from
+personal recriminations, of which some of us must be more than tired, these
+two portly volumes are of real historical value. You will find in them not
+only a record of actual achievements, often carried out under desperately
+difficult conditions, but also of projects which for one reason or another
+were never fulfilled. "Why don't we try to land on the Belgian coast?" was
+a question our amateur strategists were never weary of asking. Well, here
+is their answer. Here, too, are countless photographs, charts, plans and
+diagrams--a really wonderful collection. Even if you are not in the least
+interested in Sir REGINALD'S grievances you will find him a writer who has
+a lot of useful things to say and knows how to say them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN EFFECT OF THE CRIME WAVE.
+
+[Illustration: _Both._ "HM! HE _LOOKS_ RESPECTABLE--]
+
+[Illustration: --_STILL_, ONE NEVER KNOWS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The normal average amount of clothing required in a temperate climate
+ such as ours is: _One pound weight of clothing to every one stone
+ weight of the body_.... Thus the clothes of a child weighing 3 stones
+ should be 3lb., and for a man or woman weighing 10 stones the clothes
+ should weigh 10lb. This is a definite statement; at any rate, disprove
+ it who can."--_Sir JAMES CANTLIE in "The Daily Mail."_
+
+We gave instructions to our Mathematical specialist to work out the
+figures, and his report is that he finds them substantially correct.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume
+158, February 11, 1920, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
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