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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Certain Personal Matters, by H. G. Wells
+
+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: Certain Personal Matters
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2006 [EBook #17508]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS
+
+ BY
+
+ H.G. WELLS
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+ T. FISHER UNWIN
+ PATERNOSTER SQUARE, E.C.
+ 1901
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+THOUGHTS ON CHEAPNESS AND MY AUNT CHARLOTTE 7
+
+THE TROUBLE OF LIFE 12
+
+ON THE CHOICE OF A WIFE 18
+
+THE HOUSE OF DI SORNO 22
+
+OF CONVERSATION 27
+
+IN A LITERARY HOUSEHOLD 32
+
+ON SCHOOLING AND THE PHASES OF MR. SANDSOME 36
+
+THE POET AND THE EMPORIUM 40
+
+THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS 45
+
+THE LITERARY REGIMEN 49
+
+HOUSE-HUNTING AS AN OUTDOOR AMUSEMENT 54
+
+OF BLADES AND BLADERY 59
+
+OF CLEVERNESS 63
+
+THE POSE NOVEL 67
+
+THE VETERAN CRICKETER 71
+
+CONCERNING A CERTAIN LADY 76
+
+THE SHOPMAN 80
+
+THE BOOK OF CURSES 85
+
+DUNSTONE'S DEAR LADY 90
+
+EUPHEMIA'S NEW ENTERTAINMENT (_this is illustrated_) 94
+
+FOR FREEDOM OF SPELLING 98
+
+INCIDENTAL THOUGHTS ON A BALD HEAD 104
+
+OF A BOOK UNWRITTEN 108
+
+THE EXTINCTION OF MAN 115
+
+THE WRITING OF ESSAYS 120
+
+THE PARKES MUSEUM 124
+
+BLEAK MARCH IN EPPING FOREST 128
+
+THE THEORY OF QUOTATION 132
+
+ON THE ART OF STAYING AT THE SEASIDE 135
+
+CONCERNING CHESS 140
+
+THE COAL-SCUTTLE 145
+
+BAGARROW 150
+
+THE BOOK OF ESSAYS DEDICATORY 155
+
+THROUGH A MICROSCOPE 159
+
+THE PLEASURE OF QUARRELLING 164
+
+THE AMATEUR NATURE-LOVER 169
+
+FROM AN OBSERVATORY 174
+
+THE MODE IN MONUMENTS 177
+
+HOW I DIED 182
+
+
+
+
+CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS ON CHEAPNESS AND MY AUNT CHARLOTTE
+
+
+The world mends. In my younger days people believed in mahogany; some of
+my readers will remember it--a heavy, shining substance, having a
+singularly close resemblance to raw liver, exceedingly heavy to move,
+and esteemed on one or other count the noblest of all woods. Such of us
+as were very poor and had no mahogany pretended to have mahogany; and
+the proper hepatite tint was got by veneering. That makes one incline to
+think it was the colour that pleased people. In those days there was a
+word "trashy," now almost lost to the world. My dear Aunt Charlotte used
+that epithet when, in her feminine way, she swore at people she did not
+like. "Trashy" and "paltry" and "Brummagem" was the very worst she could
+say of them. And she had, I remember, an intense aversion to plated
+goods and bronze halfpence. The halfpence of her youth had been vast and
+corpulent red-brown discs, which it was folly to speak of as small
+change. They were fine handsome coins, and almost as inconvenient as
+crown-pieces. I remember she corrected me once when I was very young.
+"Don't call a penny a copper, dear," she said; "copper is a metal. The
+pennies they have nowadays are bronze." It is odd how our childish
+impressions cling to us. I still regard bronze as a kind of upstart
+intruder, a mere trashy pretender among metals.
+
+All my Aunt Charlotte's furniture was thoroughly good, and most of it
+extremely uncomfortable; there was not a thing for a little boy to break
+and escape damnation in the household. Her china was the only thing with
+a touch of beauty in it--at least I remember nothing else--and each of
+her blessed plates was worth the happiness of a mortal for days
+together. And they dressed me in a Nessus suit of valuable garments. I
+learned the value of thoroughly good things only too early. I knew the
+equivalent of a teacup to the very last scowl, and I have hated good,
+handsome property ever since. For my part I love cheap things, trashy
+things, things made of the commonest rubbish that money can possibly
+buy; things as vulgar as primroses, and as transitory as a morning's
+frost.
+
+Think of all the advantages of a cheap possession--cheap and nasty, if
+you will--compared with some valuable substitute. Suppose you need this
+or that. "Get a good one," advises Aunt Charlotte; "one that will last."
+You do--and it does last. It lasts like a family curse. These great
+plain valuable things, as plain as good women, as complacently assured
+of their intrinsic worth--who does not know them? My Aunt Charlotte
+scarcely had a new thing in her life. Her mahogany was avuncular; her
+china remotely ancestral; her feather beds and her bedsteads!--they were
+haunted; the births, marriages, and deaths associated with the best one
+was the history of our race for three generations. There was more in her
+house than the tombstone rectitude of the chair-backs to remind me of
+the graveyard. I can still remember the sombre aisles of that house, the
+vault-like shadows, the magnificent window curtains that blotted out the
+windows. Life was too trivial for such things. She never knew she tired
+of them, but she did. That was the secret of her temper, I think; they
+engendered her sombre Calvinism, her perception of the trashy quality of
+human life. The pretence that they were the accessories to human life
+was too transparent. _We_ were the accessories; we minded them for a
+little while, and then we passed away. They wore us out and cast us
+aside. We were the changing scenery; they were the actors who played on
+through the piece. It was even so with clothing. We buried my other
+maternal aunt--Aunt Adelaide--and wept, and partly forgot her; but her
+wonderful silk dresses--they would stand alone--still went rustling
+cheerfully about an ephemeral world.
+
+All that offended my sense of proportion, my feeling of what is due to
+human life, even when I was a little boy. I want things of my own,
+things I can break without breaking my heart; and, since one can live
+but once, I want some change in my life--to have this kind of thing and
+then that. I never valued Aunt Charlotte's good old things until I sold
+them. They sold remarkably well: those chairs like nether millstones for
+the grinding away of men; the fragile china--an incessant anxiety until
+accident broke it, and the spell of it at the same time; those silver
+spoons, by virtue of which Aunt Charlotte went in fear of burglary for
+six-and-fifty years; the bed from which I alone of all my kindred had
+escaped; the wonderful old, erect, high-shouldered, silver-faced clock.
+
+But, as I say, our ideas are changing--mahogany has gone, and repp
+curtains. Articles are made for man, nowadays, and not man, by careful
+early training, for articles. I feel myself to be in many respects a
+link with the past. Commodities come like the spring flowers, and vanish
+again. "Who steals my watch steals trash," as some poet has remarked;
+the thing is made of I know not what metal, and if I leave it on the
+mantel for a day or so it goes a deep blackish purple that delights me
+exceedingly. My grandfather's hat--I understood when I was a little boy
+that I was to have that some day. But now I get a hat for ten shillings,
+or less, two or three times a year. In the old days buying clothes was
+well-nigh as irrevocable as marriage. Our flat is furnished with
+glittering things--wanton arm-chairs just strong enough not to collapse
+under you, books in gay covers, carpets you are free to drop lighted
+fusees upon; you may scratch what you like, upset your coffee, cast your
+cigar ash to the four quarters of heaven. Our guests, at anyrate, are
+not snubbed by our furniture. It knows its place.
+
+But it is in the case of art and adornment that cheapness is most
+delightful. The only thing that betrayed a care for beauty on the part
+of my aunt was her dear old flower garden, and even there she was not
+above suspicion. Her favourite flowers were tulips, rigid tulips with
+opulent crimson streaks. She despised wildings. Her ornaments were
+simply displays of the precious metal. Had she known the price of
+platinum she would have worn that by preference. Her chains and brooches
+and rings were bought by weight. She would have turned her back on
+Benvenuto Cellini if he was not 22 carats fine. She despised
+water-colour art; her conception of a picture was a vast domain of oily
+brown by an Old Master. The Babbages at the Hall had a display of gold
+plate swaggering in the corner of the dining-room; and the visitor
+(restrained by a plush rope from examining the workmanship) was told the
+value, and so passed on. I like my art unadorned: thought and skill, and
+the other strange quality that is added thereto, to make things
+beautiful--and nothing more. A farthing's worth of paint and paper, and,
+behold! a thing of beauty!--as they do in Japan. And if it should fall
+into the fire--well, it has gone like yesterday's sunset, and to-morrow
+there will be another.
+
+These Japanese are indeed the apostles of cheapness. The Greeks lived to
+teach the world beauty, the Hebrews to teach it morality, and now the
+Japanese are hammering in the lesson that men may be honourable, daily
+life delightful, and a nation great without either freestone houses,
+marble mantelpieces, or mahogany sideboards. I have sometimes wished
+that my Aunt Charlotte could have travelled among the Japanese nation.
+She would, I know, have called it a "parcel of trash." Their use of
+paper--paper suits, paper pocket-handkerchiefs--would have made her
+rigid with contempt. I have tried, but I cannot imagine my Aunt
+Charlotte in paper underclothing. Her aversion to paper was
+extraordinary. Her Book of Beauty was printed on satin, and all her
+books were bound in leather, the boards regulated rather than decorated
+with a severe oblong. Her proper sphere was among the ancient
+Babylonians, among which massive populace even the newspapers were
+built of brick. She would have compared with the King's daughter whose
+raiment was of wrought gold. When I was a little boy I used to think she
+had a mahogany skeleton. However, she is gone, poor old lady, and at
+least she left me her furniture. Her ghost was torn in pieces after the
+sale--must have been. Even the old china went this way and that. I took
+what was perhaps a mean revenge of her for the innumerable
+black-holeings, bread-and-water dinners, summary chastisements, and
+impossible tasks she inflicted upon me for offences against her too
+solid possessions. You will see it at Woking. It is a light and graceful
+cross. It is a mere speck of white between the monstrous granite
+paperweights that oppress the dead on either side of her. Sometimes I am
+half sorry for that. When the end comes I shall not care to look her in
+the face--she will be so humiliated.
+
+
+
+
+THE TROUBLE OF LIFE
+
+
+I do not know whether this will awaken a sympathetic lassitude in, say,
+fifty per cent. of its readers, or whether my experience is unique and
+my testimony simply curious. At anyrate, it is as true as I can make it.
+Whether this is a mere mood, and a certain flagrant exhilaration my true
+attitude towards things, or this is my true attitude and the exuberant
+phase a lapse from it, I cannot say. Probably it does not matter. The
+thing is that I find life an extremely troublesome affair. I do not want
+to make any railing accusations against life; it is--to my
+taste--neither very sad nor very horrible. At times it is distinctly
+amusing. Indeed, I know nothing in the same line that can quite compare
+with it. But there is a difference between general appreciation and
+uncritical acceptance. At times I find life a Bother.
+
+The kind of thing that I object to is, as a good example, all the
+troublesome things one has to do every morning in getting up. There is
+washing. This is an age of unsolicited personal confidences, and I will
+frankly confess that if it were not for Euphemia I do not think I should
+wash at all. There is a vast amount of humbug about washing. Vulgar
+people not only profess a passion for the practice, but a physical
+horror of being unwashed. It is a sort of cant. I can understand a
+sponge bath being a novelty the first time and exhilarating the second
+and third. But day after day, week after week, month after month, and
+nothing to show at the end of it all! Then there is shaving. I have to
+get shaved because Euphemia hates me with a blue jowl, and I will admit
+I hate myself. Yet, if I were left alone, I do not think my personal
+taste would affect my decision; I will say that for myself. Either I
+hack about with a blunt razor--my razors are always blunt--until I am a
+kind of Whitechapel Horror, and with hair in tufts upon my chin like the
+top of a Bosjesman's head, or else I have to spend all the morning being
+dabbed about the face by a barber with damp hands. In either case it is
+a repulsive thing to have, eating into one's time when one might be
+living; and I have calculated that all the hair I have lost in this way,
+put end to end, would reach to Berlin. All that vital energy thrown
+away! However, "Thorns and bristles shall it bring forth to thee." I
+suppose it is part of the primal curse, and I try and stand it like a
+man. But the thing is a bother all the same.
+
+Then after shaving comes the hunt for the collar-stud. Of all idiotic
+inventions the modern collar is the worst. A man who has to write things
+for such readers as mine cannot think over-night of where he puts his
+collar-stud; he has to keep his mind at an altogether higher level.
+Consequently he walks about the bedroom, thinking hard, and dropping
+things about: here a vest and there a collar, and sowing a bitter
+harvest against the morning. Or he sits on the edge of the bed jerking
+his garments this way and that. "I shot a slipper in the air," as the
+poet sings, and in the morning it turns up in the most impossible
+quarters, and where you least expect it. And, talking of going to bed,
+before Euphemia took the responsibility over, I was always forgetting to
+wind my watch. But now that is one of the things she neglects.
+
+Then, after getting up, there is breakfast. Autolycus of the _Pall Mall
+Gazette_ may find heaven there, but I am differently constituted. There
+is, to begin with the essence of the offence--the stuff that has to be
+eaten somehow. Then there is the paper. Unless it is the face of a
+fashionable beauty, I know of nothing more absolutely uninteresting than
+a morning paper. You always expect to find something in it, and never
+do. It wastes half my morning sometimes, going over and over the thing,
+and trying to find out why they publish it. If I edited a daily I think
+I should do like my father does when he writes to me. "Things much the
+same," he writes; "the usual fussing about the curate's red socks"--a
+long letter for him. The rest margin. And, by the bye, there are letters
+every morning at breakfast, too!
+
+Now I do not grumble at letters. You can read them instead of getting on
+with your breakfast. They are entertaining in a way, and you can tear
+them up at the end, and in that respect at least they are better than
+people who come to see you. Usually, too, you need not make a reply. But
+sometimes Euphemia gets hold of some still untorn, and says in her
+dictatorial way that they _have_ to be answered--insists--says I _must_.
+Yet she knows that nothing fills me with a livelier horror than having
+to answer letters. It paralyses me. I waste whole days sometimes
+mourning over the time that I shall have to throw away presently,
+answering some needless impertinence--requests for me to return books
+lent to me; reminders from the London Library that my subscription is
+overdue; proposals for me to renew my ticket at the stores--Euphemia's
+business really; invitations for me to go and be abashed before
+impertinent distinguished people: all kinds of bothering things.
+
+And speaking of letters and invitations brings me round to friends. I
+dislike most people; in London they get in one's way in the street and
+fill up railway carriages, and in the country they stare at you--but I
+_hate_ my friends. Yet Euphemia says I _must_ "keep up" my friends. They
+would be all very well if they were really true friends and respected my
+feelings and left me alone, just to sit quiet. But they come wearing
+shiny clothes, and mop and mow at me and expect me to answer their
+gibberings. Polite conversation always appears to me to be a wicked
+perversion of the blessed gift of speech, which, I take it, was given us
+to season our lives rather than to make them insipid. New friends are
+the worst in this respect. With old friends one is more at home; you
+give them something to eat or drink, or look at, or something--whatever
+they seem to want--and just turn round and go on smoking quietly. But
+every now and then Euphemia or Destiny inflicts a new human being upon
+me. I do not mean a baby, though the sentence has got that turn
+somehow, but an introduction; and the wretched thing, all angles and
+offence, keeps bobbing about me and discovering new ways of worrying me,
+trying, I believe, to find out what topics interest me, though the fact
+is no topics interest me. Once or twice, of course, I have met human
+beings I think I could have got on with very well, after a time; but in
+this mood, at least, I doubt if any human being is quite worth the
+bother of a new acquaintance.
+
+These are just sample bothers--shaving, washing, answering letters,
+talking to people. I could specify hundreds more. Indeed, in my sadder
+moments, it seems to me life is all compact of bothers. There are the
+details of business--knowing the date approximately (an incessant
+anxiety) and the time of day. Then, having to buy things. Euphemia does
+most of this, it is true, but she draws the line at my boots and gloves
+and hosiery and tailoring. Then, doing up parcels and finding pieces of
+string or envelopes or stamps--which Euphemia might very well manage for
+me. Then, finding your way back after a quiet, thoughtful walk. Then,
+having to get matches for your pipe. I sometimes dream of a better
+world, where pipe, pouch, and matches all keep together instead of being
+mutually negatory. But Euphemia is always putting everything into some
+hiding-hole or other, which she calls its "place." Trivial things in
+their way, you may say, yet each levying so much toll on my brain and
+nervous system, and demanding incessant vigilance and activity. I
+calculated once that I wasted a masterpiece upon these mountainous
+little things about every three months of my life. Can I help thinking
+of them, then, and asking why I suffer thus? And can I avoid seeing at
+last how it is they hang together?
+
+For there is still one other bother, a kind of _bother botherum_, to
+tell of, though I hesitate at the telling. It brings this rabble herd of
+worries into line and makes them formidable; it is, so to speak, the
+Bother Commander-in-Chief. Well! Euphemia. I simply worship the ground
+she treads upon, mind, but at the same time the truth is the truth.
+Euphemia is a bother. She is a brave little woman, and helps me in
+every conceivable way. But I wish she would not. It is so obviously all
+her doing. She makes me get up of a morning--I would not stand as much
+from anybody else--and keeps a sharp eye on my chin and collar. If it
+were not for her I could sit about always with no collar or tie on in
+that old jacket she gave to the tramp, and just smoke and grow a beard
+and let all the bothers slide. I would never wash, never shave, never
+answer any letters, never go to see any friends, never do any
+work--except, perhaps, an insulting postcard to a publisher now and
+again. I would just sit about.
+
+Sometimes I think this may be peculiar in me. At other times I fancy I
+am giving voice to the secret feeling of every member of my sex. I
+suspect, then, that we would all do as the noble savage does, take our
+things off and lie about comfortable, if only someone had the courage to
+begin. It is these women--all love and reverence to Euphemia
+notwithstanding--who make us work and bother us with Things. They keep
+us decent, and remind us we have a position to support. And really,
+after all, this is not my original discovery! There is the third chapter
+of Genesis, for instance. And then who has not read Carlyle's gloating
+over a certain historical suit of leather? It gives me a queer thrill of
+envy, that Quaker Fox and his suit of leather. Conceive it, if you can!
+One would never have to quail under the scrutiny of a tailor any more.
+Thoreau, too, come to think of it, was, by way of being a prophet, a
+pioneer in this Emancipation of Man from Bothery.
+
+Then the silent gentry who brew our Chartreuse; what are they in
+retirement for? Looking back into history, with the glow of discovery in
+my eyes, I find records of wise men--everyone acknowledged they were
+wise men--who lived apart. In every age the same associate of solitude,
+silence, and wisdom. The holy hermits!... I grant it, they professed to
+flee wickedness and seek after righteousness, but now my impression is
+that they fled bothers. We all know they had an intense aversion to any
+savour of domesticity, and they never shaved, washed, dined, visited,
+had new clothes. Holiness, indeed! They were _viveurs_.... We have
+witnessed Religion without Theology, and why not an Unsectarian Thebaid?
+I sometimes fancy it needs only one brave man to begin.... If it were
+not for the fuss Euphemia would make I certainly should. But I know she
+would come and worry me worse than St. Anthony was worried until I put
+them all on again, and that keeps me from the attempt.
+
+I am curious whether mine is the common experience. I fancy, after all,
+I am only seeing in a clearer way, putting into modern phrase, so to
+speak, an observation old as the Pentateuch. And looking up I read upon
+a little almanac with which Euphemia has cheered my desk:--
+
+ "The world was sad" (sweet sadness!)
+ "The garden was a wild" (a picturesque wild)
+ "And man the hermit" (he made no complaint)
+ "Till the woman smiled."--CAMPBELL.
+
+[And very shortly after he had, as you know, all that bother about the
+millinery.]
+
+
+
+
+ON THE CHOICE OF A WIFE
+
+
+Wife-choosing is an unending business. This sounds immoral, but what I
+mean will be clearer in the context. People have lived--innumerable
+people--exhausted experience, and yet other people keep on coming to
+hand, none the wiser, none the better. It is like a waterfall more than
+anything else in the world. Every year one has to turn to and warn
+another batch about these stale old things. Yet it is one's duty--the
+last thing that remains to a man. And as a piece of worldly wisdom, that
+has nothing to do with wives, always leave a few duties neglected for
+the comfort of your age. There are such a lot of other things one can do
+when one is young.
+
+Now, the kind of wife a young fellow of eight- or nine-and-twenty
+insists on selecting is something of one-and-twenty or less,
+inexperienced, extremely pretty, graceful, and well dressed, not too
+clever, accomplished; but I need not go on, for the youthful reader can
+fill in the picture himself from his own ideal. Every young man has his
+own ideal, as a matter of course, and they are all exactly alike. Now, I
+do not intend to repeat all the stale old saws of out-of-date wiseacres.
+Most of them are even more foolish than the follies they reprove. Take,
+for instance, the statement that "beauty fades." Absurd; everyone knows
+perfectly well that, as the years creep on, beauty simply gets more
+highly coloured. And then, "beauty is only skin-deep." Fantastically
+wrong! Some of it is not that; and, for the rest, is a woman like a toy
+balloon?--just a surface? To hear that proverb from a man is to know him
+at once for a phonographic kind of fool. The fundamental and enduring
+grace of womanhood goes down to the skeleton; you cannot have a pretty
+face without a pretty skull, just as you cannot have one without a good
+temper.
+
+Yet all the same there is an excellent reason why one should shun beauty
+in a prospective wife, at anyrate obvious beauty--the kind of beauty
+people talk about, and which gets into the photographers' windows. The
+common beautiful woman has a style of her own, a favourite aspect. After
+all, she cannot be perfect. She comes upon you, dazzles you, marries
+you; there is a time of ecstasy. People envy you, continue to envy you.
+After a time you envy yourself--yourself of the day before yesterday.
+For the imperfection, the inevitable imperfection--in one case I
+remember it was a smile--becomes visible to you, becomes your especial
+privilege. That is the real reason. No beauty is a beauty to her
+husband. But with the plain woman--the thoroughly plain woman--it is
+different. At first--I will not mince matters--her ugliness is an
+impenetrable repulse. Face it. After a time little things begin to
+appear through the violent discords: little scraps of melody--a shy
+tenderness in her smile that peeps out at you and vanishes, a something
+that is winning, looking out of her eyes. You find a waviness of her
+hair that you never saw at the beginning, a certain surprising,
+pleasing, enduring want of clumsiness in part of her ear. And it is
+yours. You can see she strikes the beholder with something of a shock;
+and while the beauty of the beauty is common for all the world to
+rejoice in, you will find in your dear, plain wife beauty enough and to
+spare; exquisite--for it is all your own, your treasure-trove, your
+safely-hidden treasure....
+
+Then, in the matter of age; though young fellows do not imagine it, it
+is very easy to marry a wife too young. Marriage has been defined as a
+foolish bargain in which one man provides for another man's daughter,
+but there is no reason why this should go so far as completing her
+education. If your conception of happiness is having something pretty
+and innocent and troublesome about you, something that you can cherish
+and make happy, a pet rabbit is in every way preferable. At the worst
+that will nibble your boots. I have known several cases of the
+girl-wife, and it always began like an idyll, charmingly; the tenderest
+care on one hand, winsome worship on the other--until some little thing,
+a cut chin or a missing paper, startled the pure and natural man out of
+his veneer, dancing and blaspheming, with the most amazing consequences.
+Only a proven saint should marry a girl-wife, and his motives might be
+misunderstood. The idyllic wife is a beautiful thing to read about, but
+in practice idylls should be kept episodes; in practice the idyllic life
+is a little too like a dinner that is all dessert. A common man, after a
+time, tires of winsome worship; he craves after companionship, and a
+sympathy based on experience. The ordinary young man, with the still
+younger wife, I have noticed, continues to love her with all his
+heart--and spends his leisure telling somebody else's wife all about it.
+If in these days of blatant youth an experienced man's counsel is worth
+anything, it would be to marry a woman considerably older than oneself,
+if one must marry at all. And while upon this topic--and I have lived
+long--the ideal wife, I am persuaded, from the close observation of many
+years, is invariably, by some mishap, a widow....
+
+Avoid social charm. It was the capacity for entertaining visitors that
+ruined Paradise. It grows upon a woman. An indiscriminating personal
+magnetism is perhaps the most dreadful vice a wife can have. You think
+you have married the one woman in the world, and you find you have
+married a host--that is to say, a hostess. Instead of making a home for
+you she makes you something between an ethnographical museum and a
+casual ward. You find your rooms littered with people and teacups and
+things, strange creatures that no one could possibly care for, that seem
+scarcely to care for themselves. You go about the house treading upon
+chance geniuses, and get tipped by inexperienced guests. And even when
+she does not entertain, she is continually going out. I do not deny that
+charming people are charming, that their company should be sought, but
+seeking it in marriage is an altogether different matter.
+
+Then, I really must insist that young men do not understand the real
+truth about accomplishments. There comes a day when the most variegated
+wife comes to the end of her tunes, and another when she ends them for
+the second time; _Vita longa, ars brevis_--at least, as regards the art
+of the schoolgirl. It is only like marrying a slightly more complicated
+barrel-organ. And, for another point, watch the young person you would
+honour with your hand for the slightest inkling of economy or tidiness.
+Young men are so full of poetry and emotion that it does not occur to
+them how widely the sordid vices are distributed in the other sex. If
+you are a hotel proprietor, or a school proprietor, or a day labourer,
+such weaknesses become a strength, of course, but not otherwise. For a
+literary person--if perchance you are a literary person--it is
+altogether too dreadful. You are always getting swept and garnished,
+straightened up and sent out to be shaved. And home--even your
+study--becomes a glittering, spick-and-span mechanism. But you know the
+parable of the seven devils?
+
+To conclude, a summary. The woman you choose should be plain, as plain
+as you can find, as old or older than yourself, devoid of social gifts
+or accomplishments, poor--for your self-respect--and with a certain
+amiable untidiness. Of course no young man will heed this, but at least
+I have given my counsel, and very excellent reasons for that counsel.
+And possibly I shall be able to remind him that I told him as much, in
+the course of a few years' time. And, by the bye, I had almost
+forgotten! Never by any chance marry a girl whose dresses do up at the
+back, unless you can afford her a maid or so of her own.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOUSE OF DI SORNO
+
+A MANUSCRIPT FOUND IN A BOX
+
+
+And the box, Euphemia's. Brutally raided it was by an insensate husband,
+eager for a tie and too unreasonably impatient to wait an hour or so
+until she could get home and find it for him. There was, of course, no
+tie at all in that box, for all his stirring--as anyone might have
+known; but, if there was no tie, there were certain papers that at least
+suggested a possibility of whiling away the time until the Chooser and
+Distributer of Ties should return. And, after all, there is no reading
+like your accidental reading come upon unawares.
+
+It was a discovery, indeed, that Euphemia _had_ papers. At the first
+glance these close-written sheets suggested a treasonable Keynote, and
+the husband gripped it with a certain apprehension mingling with his
+relief at the opiate of reading. It was, so to speak, the privilege of
+police he exercised, so he justified himself. He began to read. But what
+is this? "She stood on the balcony outside the window, while the
+noblest-born in the palace waited on her every capricious glance, and
+watched for an unbending look to relieve her hauteur, but in vain." None
+of your snippy-snappy Keynote there!
+
+Then he turned over a page or so of the copy, doubting if the privilege
+of police still held good. Standing out by virtue of a different ink,
+and coming immediately after "bear her to her proud father," were the
+words, "How many yards of carpet 3/4 yds. wide will cover room, width 16
+ft., length 27-1/2 ft.?" Then he knew he was in the presence of the
+great romance that Euphemia wrote when she was sixteen. He had heard
+something of it before. He held it doubtfully in his hands, for the
+question of conscience still troubled him. "Bah!" he said abruptly, "not
+to find it irresistible was to slight the authoress and her skill." And
+with that he sat plump down among the things in the box very comfortably
+and began reading, and, indeed, read until Euphemia arrived. But she, at
+the sight of his head and legs, made several fragmentary and presumably
+offensive remarks about crushing some hat or other, and proceeded with
+needless violence to get him out of the box again. However, that is my
+own private trouble. We are concerned now with the merits of Euphemia's
+romance.
+
+The hero of the story is a Venetian, named (for some unknown reason)
+Ivan di Sorno. So far as I ascertained, he is the entire house of Di
+Sorno referred to in the title. No other Di Sornos transpired. Like
+others in the story, he is possessed of untold wealth, tempered by a
+profound sorrow, for some cause which remains unmentioned, but which is
+possibly internal. He is first displayed "pacing a sombre avenue of ilex
+and arbutus that reflected with singular truth the gloom of his
+countenance," and "toying sadly with the jewelled hilt of his dagger."
+He meditates upon his loveless life and the burthen of riches. Presently
+he "paces the long and magnificent gallery," where a "hundred
+generations of Di Sornos, each with the same flashing eye and the same
+marble brow, look down with the same sad melancholy upon the
+beholder"--a truly monotonous exhibition. It would be too much for
+anyone, day after day. He decides that he will travel. Incognito.
+
+The next chapter is headed "In Old Madrid," and Di Sorno, cloaked to
+conceal his grandeur, "moves sad and observant among the giddy throng."
+But "Gwendolen"--the majestic Gwendolen of the balcony--"marked his
+pallid yet beautiful countenance." And the next day at the bull-fight
+she "flung her bouquet into the arena, and turning to Di Sorno"--a
+perfect stranger, mind you--"smiled commandingly." "In a moment he had
+flung himself headlong down among the flashing blades of the toreadors
+and the trampling confusion of bulls, and in another he stood before
+her, bowing low with the recovered flowers in his hand. 'Fair sir,' she
+said, 'methinks my poor flowers were scarce worth your trouble.'" A very
+proper remark. And then suddenly I put the manuscript down.
+
+My heart was full of pity for Euphemia. Thus had she gone a-dreaming. A
+man of imposing physique and flashing eye, who would fling you oxen here
+and there, and vault in and out of an arena without catching a breath,
+for his lady's sake--and here I sat, the sad reality, a lean and
+slippered literary pretender, and constitutionally afraid of cattle.
+
+Poor little Euphemia! For after all is said and done, and the New Woman
+gibed out of existence, I am afraid we do undeceive these poor wives of
+ours a little after the marrying is over. It may be they have deceived
+themselves, in the first place, but that scarcely affects their
+disappointment. These dream-lovers of theirs, these monsters of
+unselfishness and devotion, these tall fair Donovans and dark
+worshipping Wanderers! And then comes the rabble rout of us poor human
+men, damning at our breakfasts, wiping pens upon our coat sleeves,
+smelling of pipes, fearing our editors, and turning Euphemia's private
+boxes into public copy. And they take it so steadfastly--most of them.
+They never let us see the romance we have robbed them of, but turn to
+and make the best of it--and us--with such sweet grace. Only now and
+then--as in the instance of a flattened hat--may a cry escape them. And
+even then----
+
+But a truce to reality! Let us return to Di Sorno.
+
+This individual does not become enamoured of Gwendolen, as the crude
+novel reader might anticipate. He answers her "coldly," and his eye
+rests the while on her "tirewoman, the sweet Margot." Then come scenes
+of jealousy and love, outside a castle with heavily mullioned windows.
+The sweet Margot, though she turns out to be the daughter of a bankrupt
+prince, has one characteristic of your servant all the world over--she
+spends all her time looking out of the window. Di Sorno tells her of his
+love on the evening of the bull-fight, and she cheerfully promises to
+"learn to love him," and therafter he spends all his days and nights
+"spurring his fiery steed down the road" that leads by the castle
+containing the young scholar. It becomes a habit with him--in all, he
+does it seventeen times in three chapters. Then, "ere it is too late,"
+he implores Margot to fly.
+
+Gwendolen, after a fiery scene with Margot, in which she calls her a
+"petty minion,"--pretty language for a young gentlewoman,--"sweeps with
+unutterable scorn from the room," never, to the reader's huge
+astonishment, to appear in the story again, and Margot flies with Di
+Sorno to Grenada, where the Inquisition, consisting apparently of a
+single monk with a "blazing eye," becomes extremely machinatory. A
+certain Countess di Morno, who intends to marry Di Sorno, and who has
+been calling into the story in a casual kind of way since the romance
+began, now comes prominently forward. She has denounced Margot for
+heresy, and at a masked ball the Inquisition, disguised in a yellow
+domino, succeeds in separating the young couple, and in carrying off
+"the sweet Margot" to a convent.
+
+"Di Sorno, half distraught, flung himself into a cab and drove to all
+the hotels in Grenada" (he overlooked the police station), and, failing
+to find Margot, becomes mad. He goes about ejaculating "Mad, mad!" than
+which nothing could be more eloquent of his complete mental inversion.
+In his paroxysms the Countess di Morno persuades him to "lead her to the
+altar," but on the way (with a certain indelicacy they go to church in
+the same conveyance) she lets slip a little secret. So Di Sorno jumps
+out of the carriage, "hurling the crowd apart," and, "flourishing his
+drawn sword," "clamoured at the gate of the Inquisition" for Margot. The
+Inquisition, represented by the fiery-eyed monk, "looked over the gate
+at him." No doubt it felt extremely uncomfortable.
+
+Now it was just at this thrilling part that Euphemia came home, and the
+trouble about the flattened hat began. I never flattened her hat. It was
+in the box, and so was I; but as for deliberate flattening----It was
+just a thing that happened. She should not write such interesting
+stories if she expects me to go on tiptoe through the world looking
+about for her hats. To have that story taken away just at that
+particular moment was horrible. There was fully as much as I had read
+still to come, so that a lot happened after this duel of Sword _v._
+Fiery Eye. I know from a sheet that came out of place that Margot
+stabbed herself with a dagger ("richly jewelled"), but of all that came
+between I have not the faintest suspicion. That is the peculiar interest
+of it. At this particular moment the one book I want to read in all the
+world is the rest of this novel of Euphemia's. And simply, on the score
+of a new hat needed, she keeps it back and haggles!
+
+
+
+
+OF CONVERSATION
+
+AN APOLOGY
+
+
+I must admit that in conversation I am not a brilliant success. Partly,
+indeed, that may be owing to the assiduity with which my aunt suppressed
+my early essays in the art: "Children," she said, "should be seen but
+not heard," and incontinently rapped my knuckles. To a larger degree,
+however, I regard it as intrinsic. This tendency to silence, to go out
+of the rattle and dazzle of the conversation into a quiet apart, is
+largely, I hold, the consequence of a certain elevation and breadth and
+tenderness of mind; I am no blowfly to buzz my way through the universe,
+no rattle that I should be expected to delight my fellow-creatures by
+the noises I produce. I go about to this social function and that,
+deporting myself gravely and decently in silence, taking, if possible, a
+back seat; and, in consequence of that, people who do not understand me
+have been heard to describe me as a "stick," as "shy," and by an
+abundance of the like unflattering terms. So that I am bound almost in
+self-justification to set down my reasons for this temperance of mine in
+conversation.
+
+Speech, no doubt, is a valuable gift, but at the same time it is a gift
+that may be abused. What is regarded as polite conversation is, I hold,
+such an abuse. Alcohol, opium, tea, are all very excellent things in
+their way; but imagine continuous alcohol, an incessant opium, or to
+receive, ocean-like, a perennially flowing river of tea! That is my
+objection to this conversation: its continuousness. You have to keep on.
+You find three or four people gathered together, and instead of being
+restful and recreative, sitting in comfortable attitudes and at peace
+with themselves and each other, and now and again, perhaps three or four
+times in an hour, making a worthy and memorable remark, they are all
+haggard and intent upon keeping this fetish flow agoing. A fortuitous
+score of cows in a field are a thousand times happier than a score of
+people deliberately assembled for the purposes of happiness. These
+conversationalists say the most shallow and needless of things, impart
+aimless information, simulate interest they do not feel, and generally
+impugn their claim to be considered reasonable creatures. Why, when
+people assemble without hostile intentions, it should be so imperative
+to keep the trickling rill of talk running, I find it impossible to
+imagine. It is a vestige of the old barbaric times, when men murdered at
+sight for a mere whim; when it was good form to take off your sword in
+the antechamber, and give your friend your dagger-hand, to show him it
+was no business visit. Similarly, you keep up this babblement to show
+your mind has no sinister concentration, not necessarily because you
+have anything to say, but as a guarantee of good faith. You have to make
+a noise all the time, like the little boy who was left in the room with
+the plums. It is the only possible explanation.
+
+To a logical mind there is something very distressing in this social law
+of gabble. Out of regard for Mrs. A, let us say, I attend some festival
+she has inaugurated. There I meet for the first time a young person of
+pleasant exterior, and I am placed in her company to deliver her at a
+dinner-table, or dance her about, or keep her out of harm's way, in a
+cosy nook. She has also never seen me before, and probably does not want
+particularly to see me now. However, I find her nice to look at, and she
+has taken great pains to make herself nice to look at, and why we cannot
+pass the evening, I looking at her and she being looked at, I cannot
+imagine. But no; we must talk. Now, possibly there are topics she knows
+about and I do not--it is unlikely, but suppose so; on these topics she
+requires no information. Again, I know about other topics things unknown
+to her, and it seems a mean and priggish thing to broach these, since
+they put her at a disadvantage. Thirdly, comes a last group of subjects
+upon which we are equally informed, and upon which, therefore, neither
+of us is justified in telling things to the other. This classification
+of topics seems to me exhaustive.
+
+These considerations, I think, apply to all conversations. In every
+conversation, every departure must either be a presumption when you talk
+into your antagonist's special things, a pedantry when you fall back
+upon your own, or a platitude when you tell each other things you both
+know. I don't see any other line a conversation can take. The reason why
+one has to keep up the stream of talk is possibly, as I have already
+suggested, to manifest goodwill. And in so many cases this could be
+expressed so much better by a glance, a deferential carriage, possibly
+in some cases a gentle pressure of the hand, or a quiet persistent
+smile. And suppose there is some loophole in my reasoning--though I
+cannot see it--and that possible topics exist, how superficial and
+unexact is the best conversation to a second-rate book!
+
+Even with two people you see the objection, but when three or four are
+gathered together the case is infinitely worse to a man of delicate
+perceptions. Let us suppose--I do not grant it--that there is a possible
+sequence of things to say to the person A that really harmonise with A
+and yourself. Grant also that there is a similar sequence between
+yourself and B. Now, imagine yourself and A and B at the corners of an
+equilateral triangle set down to talk to each other. The kind of talk
+that A appreciates is a discord with B, and similarly B's sequence is
+impossible in the hearing of A. As a matter of fact, a real conversation
+of three people is the most impossible thing in the world. In real life
+one of the three always drops out and becomes a mere audience, or a mere
+partisan. In real life you and A talk, and B pretends to be taking a
+share by interjecting interruptions, or one of the three talks a
+monologue. And the more subtle your sympathy and the greater your
+restraint from self-assertion, the more incredible triple and quadruple
+conversation becomes.
+
+I have observed that there is even nowadays a certain advance towards my
+views in this matter. Men may not pick out antagonists, and argue to the
+general audience as once they did: there is a tacit taboo of
+controversy, neither may you talk your "shop," nor invite your
+antagonist to talk his. There is also a growing feeling against
+extensive quotations or paraphrases from the newspapers. Again,
+personalities, scandal, are, at least in theory, excluded. This narrows
+the scope down to the "last new book," "the last new play," "impressions
+de voyage," and even here it is felt that any very ironical or satirical
+remarks, anything unusual, in fact, may disconcert your adversary. You
+ask: Have you read the _Wheels of Chance_? The answer is "Yes." "Do you
+like it?" "A little vulgar, I thought." And so forth. Most of this is
+stereo. It is akin to responses in church, a prescription, a formula.
+And, following out this line of thought, I have had a vision of the
+twentieth century dinner. At a distance it is very like the nineteenth
+century type; the same bright light, the same pleasant deglutition, the
+same hum of conversation; but, approaching, you discover each diner has
+a little drum-shaped body under his chin--his phonograph. So he dines
+and babbles at his ease. In the smoking-room he substitutes his anecdote
+record. I imagine, too, the suburban hostess meeting the new maiden: "I
+hope, dear, you have brought a lot of conversation," just as now she
+asks for the music. For my own part, I must confess I find this dinner
+conversation particularly a bother. If I could eat with my eye it would
+be different.
+
+I lose a lot of friends through this conversational difficulty. They
+think it is my dulness or my temper, when really it is only my refined
+mind, my subtlety of consideration. It seems to me that when I go to see
+a man, I go to see him--to enjoy his presence. If he is my friend, the
+sight of him healthy and happy is enough for me. I don't want him to
+keep his vocal cords, and I don't want to keep my own vocal cords, in
+incessant vibration all the time I am in his company. If I go to see a
+man, it distracts me to have to talk and it distracts me to hear him
+talking. I can't imagine why one should not go and sit about in people's
+rooms, without bothering them and without their bothering you to say all
+these stereotyped things. Quietly go in, sit down, look at your man
+until you have seen him enough, and then go. Why not?
+
+Let me once more insist that this keeping up a conversation is a sign of
+insecurity, of want of confidence. All those who have had real friends
+know that when the friendship is assured the gabble ceases. You are not
+at the heart of your friend, if either of you cannot go off comfortably
+to sleep in the other's presence. Speech was given us to make known our
+needs, and for imprecation, expostulation, and entreaty. This pitiful
+necessity we are under, upon social occasions, to say something--however
+inconsequent--is, I am assured, the very degradation of speech.
+
+
+
+
+IN A LITERARY HOUSEHOLD
+
+
+In the literary household of fiction and the drama, things are usually
+in a distressing enough condition. The husband, as you know, has a
+hacking cough, and the wife a dying baby, and they write in the
+intervals of these cares among the litter of the breakfast things.
+Occasionally a comic, but sympathetic, servant brings in an
+armful--"heaped up and brimming over"--of rejected MSS., for, in the
+dramatic life, it never rains but it pours. Instead of talking about
+editors in a bright and vigorous fashion, as the recipients of
+rejections are wont, the husband groans and covers his face with his
+hands, and the wife, leaving the touching little story she is
+writing--she posts this about 9 p.m., and it brings in a publisher and
+£100 or so before 10.30--comforts him by flopping suddenly over his
+shoulder. "Courage," she says, stroking his hyacinthine locks (whereas
+all real literary men are more or less grey or bald). Sometimes, as in
+_Our Flat_, comic tradesmen interrupt the course of true literature with
+their ignoble desire for cash payment, and sometimes, as in _Our Boys_,
+uncles come and weep at the infinite pathos of a bad breakfast egg. But
+it's always a very sordid, dusty, lump-in-your-throaty affair, and no
+doubt it conduces to mortality by deterring the young and impressionable
+from literary vices. As for its truth, that is another matter
+altogether.
+
+Yet it must not be really imagined that a literary household is just
+like any other. There is the brass paper-fastener, for instance. I have
+sometimes thought that Euphemia married me with an eye to these
+conveniences. She has two in her grey gloves, and one (with the head
+inked) in her boot in the place of a button. Others I suspect her of.
+Then she fastened the lamp shade together with them, and tried one day
+to introduce them instead of pearl buttons as efficient anchorage for
+cuffs and collars. And she made a new handle for the little drawer under
+the inkstand with one. Indeed, the literary household is held together,
+so to speak, by paper-fasteners, and how other people get along without
+them we are at a loss to imagine.
+
+And another point, almost equally important, is that the husband is
+generally messing about at home. That is, indeed, to a superficial
+observer, one of the most remarkable characteristics of the literary
+household. Other husbands are cast out in the morning to raven for
+income and return to a home that is swept and garnished towards the end
+of the day; but the literary husband is ever in possession. His work
+must not be disturbed even when he is merely thinking. The study is
+consequently a kind of domestic cordite factory, and you are never
+certain when it may explode. The concussion of a dust-pan and brush may
+set it going, the sweeping of a carpet in the room upstairs. Then behold
+a haggard, brain-weary man, fierce and dishevelled, and full of
+shattered masterpiece--expostulating. Other houses have their day of
+cleaning out this room, and their day for cleaning out that; but in the
+literary household there is one uniform date for all such functions, and
+that is "to-morrow." So that Mrs. Mergles makes her purifying raids with
+her heart in her mouth, and has acquired a way of leaving the pail and
+brush, or whatever artillery she has with her, in a manner that
+unavoidably engages the infuriated brute's attention and so covers her
+retreat.
+
+It is a problem that has never been probably solved, this discord of
+order and orderly literary work. Possibly it might be done by making the
+literary person live elsewhere or preventing literary persons from
+having households. However it might be done, it is not done. This is a
+thing innocent girls exposed to the surreptitious proposals of literary
+men do not understand. They think it will be very fine to have
+photographs of themselves and their "cosy nooks" published in magazines,
+to illustrate the man's interviews, and the full horror of having this
+feral creature always about the house, and scarcely ever being able to
+do any little thing without his knowing it, is not brought properly home
+to them until escape is impossible.
+
+And then there is the taint of "copy" everywhere. That is really the
+fundamental distinction. It is the misfortune of literary people, that
+they have to write about something. There is no reason, of course, why
+they should, but the thing is so. Consequently, they are always looking
+about them for something to write about. They cannot take a pure-minded
+interest in anything in earth or heaven. Their servant is no servant,
+but a character; their cat is a possible reservoir of humorous
+observation; they look out of window and see men as columns walking.
+Even the sanctity of their own hearts, their self-respect, their most
+private emotions are disregarded. The wife is infected with the taint.
+Her private opinion of her husband she makes into a short story--forgets
+its origin and shows it him with pride--while the husband decants his
+heart-beats into occasional verse and minor poetry. It is amazing what a
+lot of latter-day literature consists of such breaches of confidence.
+And not simply latter-day literature.
+
+The visitor is fortunate who leaves no marketable impression behind. The
+literary entertainers eye you over, as if they were dealers in a slave
+mart, and speculate on your uses. They try to think how you would do as
+a scoundrel, and mark your little turns of phrase and kinks of thought
+to that end. The innocent visitor bites his cake and talks about
+theatres, while the meditative person in the arm-chair may be in
+imagination stabbing him, or starving him on a desert island, or
+even--horrible to tell!--flinging him headlong into the arms of the
+young lady to the right and "covering her face with a thousand
+passionate kisses." A manuscript in the rough of Euphemia's, that I
+recently suppressed, was an absolutely scandalous example of this method
+of utilising one's acquaintances. Mrs. Harborough, who was indeed
+Euphemia's most confidential friend for six weeks and more, she had
+made to elope with Scrimgeour--as steady and honourable a man as we
+know, though unpleasant to Euphemia on account of his manner of holding
+his teacup. I believe there really was something--quite harmless, of
+course--between Mrs. Harborough and Scrimgeour, and that, imparted in
+confidence, had been touched up with vivid colour here and there and
+utilised freely. Scrimgeour is represented as always holding teacups in
+his peculiar way, so that anyone would recognise him at once. Euphemia
+calls that character. Then Harborough, who is really on excellent terms
+with his wife, and, in spite of his quiet manner, a very generous and
+courageous fellow, is turned aside from his headlong pursuit of the
+fugitives across Wimbledon Common--they elope, by the bye, on
+Scrimgeour's tandem bicycle--by the fear of being hit by a golf ball. I
+pointed out to Euphemia that these things were calculated to lose us
+friends, and she promises to destroy the likeness; but I have no
+confidence in her promise. She will probably clap a violent auburn wig
+on Mrs. Harborough and make Scrimgeour squint and give Harborough a big
+beard. The point that she won't grasp is, that with that fatal facility
+for detail, which is one of the most indisputable proofs of woman's
+intellectual inferiority, she has reproduced endless remarks and
+mannerisms of these excellent people with more than photographic
+fidelity. But this is really a private trouble, though it illustrates
+very well the shameless way in which those who have the literary taint
+will bring to market their most intimate affairs.
+
+
+
+
+ON SCHOOLING AND THE PHASES OF MR. SANDSOME
+
+
+I do not know if you remember your "dates." Indeed, I do not know if
+anyone does. My own memory is of a bridge; like that bridge of
+Goldsmith's, standing firm and clear on its hither piers and then
+passing into a cloud. In the beginning of days was "William the
+Conqueror, 1066," and the path lay safe and open to Henry the Second;
+then came Titanic forms of kings, advancing and receding, elongating and
+dwindling, exchanging dates, losing dates, stealing dates from battles
+and murders and great enactments--even inventing dates, vacant years
+that were really no dates at all. The things I have suffered--prisons,
+scourgings, beating with rods, wild masters, in bounds often, a hundred
+lines often, standing on forms and holding out books often--on account
+of these dates! I knew, and knew well before I was fifteen, what these
+"heredity" babblers are only beginning to discover--that the past is the
+curse of the present. But I never knew my dates--never. And I marvel now
+that all little boys do not grow up to be Republicans, seeing how much
+they suffer for the mere memory of Kings.
+
+Then there were pedigrees, and principal parts and conjugations, and
+county towns. Every county had a county town, and it was always on a
+river. Mr. Sandsome never allowed us a town without that colophon. I
+remember in my early manhood going to Guildford on the Wey, and trying
+to find that unobtrusive rivulet. I went over the downs for miles. It is
+not only the Wey I have had a difficulty in finding. There are certain
+verses--Heaven help me, but I have forgotten them!--about "_i_ vel _e_
+dat" (_was_ it dat?) "utrum malis"--if I remember rightly--and all that
+about _amo, amas, amat_. There was a multitude of such things I
+acquired, and they lie now, in the remote box-rooms and lumber recesses
+of my mind, a rusting armoury far gone in decay. I have never been able
+to find a use for them. I wonder even now why Mr. Sandsome equipped me
+with them. Yet he seemed to be in deadly earnest about this learning,
+and I still go in doubt. In those early days he impressed me, chiefly in
+horizontal strips, with the profoundest respect for his mental and
+physical superiority. I credited him then, and still incline to believe
+he deserved to be credited, with a sincere persuasion that unless I
+learnt these things I should assuredly go--if I may be frank--to the
+devil. It may be so. I may be living in a fool's paradise,
+prospering--like that wicked man the Psalmist disliked. Some unsuspected
+gulf may open, some undreamt-of danger thrust itself through the
+phantasmagoria of the universe, and I may learn too late the folly of
+forgetting my declensions.
+
+I remember Mr. Sandsome chiefly as sitting at his desk, in a little room
+full of boys, a humming hive whose air was thick with dust, as the
+slanting sunbeams showed. When we were not doing sums or writing copies,
+we were always learning or saying lessons. In the early morning Mr.
+Sandsome sat erect and bright, his face animated, his ruddy eyes keen
+and observant, the cane hanging but uncertainly upon its hook. There was
+a standing up of classes, a babble of repetition, now and then a crisis.
+How long the days were then! I have heard that scientific
+people--Professor C. Darwin is their leader, unless I err--which
+probably I do, for names and dates I have hated from my youth up--say
+the days grow longer. Anyhow, whoever says it, it is quite wrong. But as
+the lank hours of that vast schooltime drawled on, Mr. Sandsome lost
+energy, drooped like a flower,--especially if the day was at all
+hot,--his sandy hair became dishevelled, justice became nerveless,
+hectic, and hasty. Finally came copybooks; and yawns and weird rumblings
+from Mr. Sandsome. And so the world aged to the dinner-hour.
+
+When I had been home--it was a day school, for my aunt, who had an
+appetite for such things, knew that boarding-schools were sinks of
+iniquity--and returned, I had Mr. Sandsome at another phase. He had
+dined--for we were simple country folk. The figurative suggestions of
+that "phase" are irresistible--the lunar quality. May I say that Mr.
+Sandsome was at his full? We now stood up, thirty odd of us altogether,
+to read, reading out of books in a soothing monotone, and he sat with
+his reading-book before him, ruddy as the setting sun, and slowly,
+slowly settling down. But now and then he would jerk back suddenly into
+staring wakefulness as though he were fishing--with himself as bait--for
+schoolboy crimes in the waters of oblivion--and fancied a nibble. That
+was a dangerous time, full of anxiety. At last he went right under and
+slept, and the reading grew cheerful, full of quaint glosses and
+unexpected gaps, leaping playfully from boy to boy, instead of
+travelling round with a proper decorum. But it never ceased, and little
+Hurkley's silly little squeak of a voice never broke in upon its mellow
+flow. (It took a year for Hurkley's voice to break.) Any such
+interruption and Mr. Sandsome woke up and into his next phase
+forthwith--a disagreeable phase always, and one we made it our business
+to postpone as long as possible.
+
+During that final period, the last quarter, Mr. Sandsome was distinctly
+malignant. It was hard to do right; harder still to do wrong. A feverish
+energy usually inspired our government. "Let us try to get some work
+done," Mr. Sandsome would say--and I have even known him teach things
+then. More frequently, with a needless bitterness, he set us upon
+impossible tasks, demanding a colossal tale of sums perhaps, scattering
+pens and paper and sowing the horrors of bookkeeping, or chastising us
+with the scorpions of parsing and translation. And even in wintry
+weather the little room grew hot and stuffy, and we terminated our
+schoolday, much exhausted, with minds lax, lounging attitudes, and red
+ears. What became of Mr. Sandsome after the giving-out of home-work, the
+concluding prayer, and the aftermath of impositions, I do not know. I
+stuffed my books, such as came to hand--very dirty they were inside, and
+very neat out with my Aunt Charlotte's chintz covers--into my green
+baize bag, and went forth from the mysteries of schooling into the great
+world, up the broad white road that went slanting over the Down.
+
+I say "the mysteries of schooling" deliberately. I wondered then, I
+wonder still, what it was all for. Reading, almost my only art, I learnt
+from Aunt Charlotte; a certain facility in drawing I acquired at home
+and took to school, to my own undoing. "Undoing," again, is
+deliberate--it was no mere swish on the hand, gentle reader. But the
+things I learnt, more or less partially, at school, lie in my mind, like
+the "Sarsen" stones of Wiltshire--great, disconnected, time-worn chunks
+amidst the natural herbage of it. "The Rivers of the East Coast; the
+Tweed, the Tyne, the Wear, the Tees, the Humber"--why is that, for
+instance, sticking up among my ferns and wild flowers? It is not only
+useless but misleading, for the Humber is not another Tweed. I sometimes
+fancy the world may be mad--yet that seems egotistical. The fact remains
+that for the greater part of my young life Mr. Sandsome got an appetite
+upon us from nine till twelve, and digested his dinner, at first
+placidly and then with petulance, from two until five--and we thirty odd
+boys were sent by our twenty odd parents to act as a sort of chorus to
+his physiology. And he was fed (as I judge) more than sufficiently,
+clothed, sheltered, and esteemed on account of this relation. I think,
+after all, there must have been something in that schooling. I can't
+believe the world mad. And I have forgotten it--or as good as forgotten
+it--all! At times I feel a wild impulse to hunt up all those
+chintz-covered books, and brush up my dates and paradigms, before it is
+too late.
+
+
+
+
+THE POET AND THE EMPORIUM
+
+
+"I am beginning life," he said, with a sigh. "Great Heavens! I have
+spent a day--_a day!_--in a shop. Three bedroom suites and a sideboard
+are among the unanticipated pledges of our affection. Have you lithia?
+For a man of twelve limited editions this has been a terrible day."
+
+I saw to his creature comforts. His tie was hanging outside his
+waistcoat, and his complexion was like white pasteboard that has got
+wet. "Courage," said I. "It will not occur again----"
+
+"It will," said he. "We have to get there again tomorrow. We have--what
+is it?--carpets, curtains----"
+
+He produced his tablets. I was amazed. Those receptacles of choice
+thoughts!
+
+"The amber sunlight splashing through the leaky--leafy interlacing
+green," he read. "No!--that's not it. Ah, here! Curtains!
+Drawing-room--not to cost more than thirty shillings! And there's all
+the Kitchen Hardware! (Thanks.) Dining-room chairs--query--rush bottoms?
+What's this? G.L.I.S.--ah! "Glistering thro' deeps of
+glaucophane"--that's nothing. Mem. to see can we afford Indian
+needlework chairs--57s. 6d.? It's dreadful, Bellows!"
+
+He helped himself to a cigarette.
+
+"Find the salesman pleasant?" said I.
+
+"Delightful. Assumed I was a spendthrift millionaire at first. Produced
+in an off-hand way an eighty-guinea bedroom suite--we're trying to do
+the entire business, you know, on about two hundred pounds. Well--that's
+ten editions, you know. Came down, with evidently dwindling respect, to
+things that were still ruinously expensive. I told him we wanted an
+idyll--love in a cottage, and all that kind of thing. He brushed that on
+one side, said idols were upstairs in the Japanese Department, and that
+perhaps we might _do_ with a servant's set of bedroom furniture. Do with
+a set! He was a gloomy man with (I should judge) some internal pain. I
+tried to tell him that there was quite a lot of middle-class people like
+myself in the country, people of limited or precarious means, whose
+existence he seemed to ignore; assured him some of them led quite
+beautiful lives. But he had no ideas beyond wardrobes. I quite forgot
+the business of shopping in an attempt to kindle a little human
+enthusiasm in his heart. We were in a great vast place full of
+wardrobes, with a remote glittering vista of brass bedsteads--skeleton
+beds, you know--and I tried to inspire him with some of the poetry of
+his emporium; tried to make him imagine these beds and things going east
+and west, north and south, to take sorrow, servitude, joy, worry,
+failing strength, restless ambition in their impartial embraces. He only
+turned round to Annie, and asked her if she thought she could _do_ with
+'enamelled.' But I was quite taken with my idea----Where is it? I left
+Annie to settle with this misanthrope, amidst his raw frameworks of the
+Homes of the Future."
+
+He fumbled with his tablets. "Mats for hall--not to exceed 3s. 9d....
+Kerbs ... inquire tiled hearth ... Ah! Here we are: 'Ballade of the
+Bedroom Suite':--
+
+ "'Noble the oak you are now displaying,
+ Subtly the hazel's grainings go,
+ Walnut's charm there is no gainsaying,
+ Red as red wine is your rosewood's glow;
+ Brave and brilliant the ash you show,
+ Rich your mahogany's hepatite shine,
+ Cool and sweet your enamel: But oh!
+ _Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_'
+
+"They have 'em in the catalogue at five guineas, with a picture--quite
+as good they are as the more expensive ones. To judge by the picture."
+
+"But that's scarcely the idea you started with," I began.
+
+"Not; it went wrong--ballades often do. The preoccupation of the
+'Painted Pine' was too much for me. What's this? 'N.B.--Sludge sells
+music stools at--' No. Here we are (first half unwritten):--
+
+ "'White enamelled, like driven snow,
+ Picked with just one delicate line.
+ Price you were saying is? Fourteen!--No!
+ _Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_'
+
+"Comes round again, you see! Then _L'Envoy_:--
+
+ "'Salesman, sad is the truth I trow:
+ Winsome walnut can never be mine.
+ Poets are cheap. And their poetry. So
+ _Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_'
+
+"Prosaic! As all true poetry is, nowadays. But, how I tired as the
+afternoon moved on! At first I was interested in the shopman's amazing
+lack of imagination, and the glory of that fond dream of mine--love in a
+cottage, you know--still hung about me. I had ideas come--like that
+Ballade--and every now and then Annie told me to write notes. I think my
+last gleam of pleasure was in choosing the drawing-room chairs. There is
+scope for fantasy in chairs. Then----"
+
+He took some more whisky.
+
+"A kind of grey horror came upon me. I don't know if I can describe it.
+We went through vast vistas of chairs, of hall-tables, of machine-made
+pictures, of curtains, huge wildernesses of carpets, and ever this cold,
+unsympathetic shopman led us on, and ever and again made us buy this or
+that. He had a perfectly grey eye--the colour of an overcast sky in
+January--and he seemed neither to hate us nor to detest us, but simply
+to despise us, to feel such an overwhelming contempt for our petty means
+and our petty lives, as an archangel might feel for an apple-maggot. It
+made me think...."
+
+He lit a fresh cigarette.
+
+"I had a kind of vision. I do not know if you will understand. The
+Warehouse of Life, with our Individual Fate hurrying each of us through.
+Showing us with a covert sneer all the good things that we cannot
+afford. A magnificent Rosewood love affair, for instance, deep and
+rich, fitted complete, some hours of perfect life, some acts of perfect
+self-sacrifice, perfect self-devotion.... You ask the price."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?" I quoted.
+
+"That's it. All the things one might do, if the purse of one's courage
+were not so shallow. If it wasn't for the lack of that coinage, Bellows,
+every man might be magnificent. There's heroism, there's such nobility
+as no one has ever attained to, ready to hand. Anyone, if it were not
+for this lack of means, might be a human god in twenty-four hours....
+You see the article. You cannot buy it. No one buys it. It stands in the
+emporium, I suppose, for show--on the chance of a millionaire. And the
+shopman waves his hand to it on your way to the Painted Pine.
+
+"Then you meet other couples and solitary people going about, each with
+a gloomy salesman leading. The run of them look uncomfortable; some are
+hot about the ears and in the spiteful phase of ill-temper; all look
+sick of the business except the raw new-comers. It's the only time they
+will ever select any furniture, their first chance and their last. Most
+of their selections are hurried a little. The salesman must not be kept
+all day.... Yet it goes hard with you if you buy your Object in Life and
+find it just a 'special line' made to sell.... We're all amateurs at
+living, just as we are all amateurs at furnishing--or dying. Some of the
+poor devils one meets carry tattered little scraps of paper, and fumble
+conscientiously with stumpy pencils. It's a comfort to see how you go,
+even if you do have to buy rubbish. 'If we have _this_ so good, dear, I
+don't know _how_ we shall manage in the kitchen,' says the careful
+housewife.... So it is we do our shopping in the Great Emporium."
+
+"You will have to rewrite your Ballade," said I, "and put all that in."
+
+"I wish I could," said the poet.
+
+"And while you were having these very fine moods?"
+
+"Annie and the shopman settled most of the furniture between them.
+Perhaps it's just as well. I was never very good at the practical
+details of life.... Cigarette's out! Have you any more matches?"
+
+"Horribly depressed you are!" I said.
+
+"There's to-morrow. Well, well...."
+
+And then he went off at a tangent to tell me what he expected to make by
+his next volume of poems, and so came to the congenial business of
+running down his contemporaries, and became again the cheerful little
+Poet that I know.
+
+
+
+
+THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS
+
+
+During the early Victorian revival of chivalry the Language of Flowers
+had some considerable vogue. The Romeo of the mutton-chop whiskers was
+expected to keep this delicate symbolism in view, and even to display
+his wit by some dainty conceits in it. An ignorance of the code was
+fraught with innumerable dangers. A sprig of lilac was a suggestion, a
+moss-rosebud pushed the matter, was indeed evidence to go to court upon;
+and unless Charlotte parried with white poplar--a by no means accessible
+flower--or apricot blossom, or failing these dabbed a cooling dock-leaf
+at the fellow, he was at her with tulip, heliotrope, and honeysuckle,
+peach-blossom, white jonquil, and pink, and a really overpowering and
+suffocating host of attentions. I suppose he got at last to
+three-cornered notes in the vernacular; and meanwhile what could a poor
+girl do? There was no downright "No!" in the language of flowers,
+nothing equivalent to "Go away, please," no flower for "Idiot!" The only
+possible defence was something in this way: "Your cruelty causes me
+sorrow," "Your absence is a pleasure." For this, according to the code
+of Mr. Thomas Miller (third edition, 1841, with elegantly coloured
+plates) you would have to get a sweet-pea blossom for Pleasure, wormwood
+for Absence, and indicate Sorrow by the yew, and Cruelty by the
+stinging-nettle. There is always a little risk of mixing your predicates
+in this kind of communication, and he might, for instance, read that his
+Absence caused you Sorrow, but he could scarcely miss the point of the
+stinging-nettle. That and the gorse carefully concealed were about the
+only gleams of humour possible in the language. But then it was the
+appointed tongue of lovers, and while their sickness is upon them they
+have neither humour nor wit.
+
+This Mr. Thomas Miller wrote abundant flowers of language in his book,
+and the plates were coloured by hand. By the bye, what a blessed thing
+colour-printing is! These hand-tinted plates, to an imaginative person,
+are about as distressing as any plates can very well be. Whenever I look
+at these triumphs of art over the beauties of nature, with all their
+weary dabs of crimson, green, blue, and yellow, I think of wretched,
+anæmic girls fading their youth away in some dismal attic over a
+publisher's, toiling through the whole edition tint by tint, and being
+mocked the while by Mr. Miller's alliterative erotics. And they _are_
+erotics! In one place he writes, "Beautiful art thou, O Broom! on the
+breezy bosom of the bee-haunted heath"; and throughout he buds and
+blossoms into similar delights. He wallows in doves and coy toyings and
+modest blushes, and bowers and meads. He always adds, "Wonderful boy!"
+to Chatterton's name as if it were a university degree (W.B.), and he
+invariably refers to Moore as the Bard of Erin, and to Milton as the
+Bard of Paradise--though Bard of the Bottomless Pit would be more
+appropriate. However, we are not concerned with Mr. Miller's language so
+much as with a very fruitful suggestion he throws out, that "it is
+surely worth while to trace a resemblance between the flower and the
+emblem it represents" (a turn like that is nothing to Mr. Miller) "which
+shall at least have some show of reason in it."
+
+Come to think of it, there is something singularly unreasonable about
+almost all floral symbolism. There is your forget-me-not, pink in the
+bud, and sapphire in the flower, with a fruit that breaks up into four,
+the very picture of inconstancy and discursiveness. Yet your lover, with
+a singular blindness, presents this to his lady when they part. Then the
+white water-lily is supposed to represent purity of heart, and, mark
+you, it is white without and its centre is all set about with
+innumerable golden stamens, while in the middle lies, to quote the words
+of that distinguished botanist, Mr. Oliver, "a fleshy disc." Could
+there be a better type of sordid and mercenary deliberation maintaining
+a fair appearance? The tender apple-blossom, rather than Pretence, is
+surely a reminder of Eden and the fall of love's devotion into inflated
+worldliness. The poppy which flaunts its violent colours athwart the
+bearded corn, and which frets and withers like the Second Mrs. Tanqueray
+so soon as you bring it to the shelter of a decent home, is made the
+symbol of Repose. One might almost think Aimé Martin and the other great
+authorities on this subject wrote in a mood of irony.
+
+The daisy, too, presents you Innocence, "companion of the milk-white
+lamb," Mr. Miller calls it. I am sorry for the milk-white lamb. It was
+one of the earliest discoveries of systematic botany that the daisy is a
+fraud, a complicated impostor. _The daisy is not a flower at all._ It is
+a favourite trap in botanical examinations, a snare for artless young
+men entering the medical profession. Each of the little yellow things in
+the centre of the daisy is a flower in itself,--if you look at one with
+a lens you will find it not unlike a cowslip flower,--and the white rays
+outside are a great deal more than the petals they ought to be if the
+Innocence theory is to hold good. There is no such thing as an innocent
+flower; they are all so many deliberate advertisements to catch the eye
+of the undecided bee, but any flower almost is simpler than this one. We
+would make it the emblem of artistic deception, and the confidence trick
+expert should wear it as his crest.
+
+The violet, again, is a greatly overrated exemplar. It stimulates a
+certain bashfulness, hangs its head, and passed as modest among our
+simple grandparents. Its special merit is its perfume, and it pretends
+to wish to hide that from every eye. But, withal, the fragrance is as
+far-reaching as any I know. It droops ingenuously. "How _could_ you come
+to me," it seems to say, "when all these really brilliant flowers invite
+you?" Mere fishing for compliments. All the while it is being sweet, to
+the very best of its undeniable ability. Then it comes, too, in early
+spring, without a chaperon, and catches our hearts fresh before they
+are jaded with the crowded beauties of May. A really modest flower would
+wait for the other flowers to come first. A subtle affectation is surely
+a different thing from modesty. The violet is simply artful, the young
+widow among flowers, and to hold up such a flower as an example is not
+doing one's duty by the young. For true modesty commend me to the agave,
+which flowers once only in half a hundred years, as one may see for
+oneself at the Royal Botanical Gardens.
+
+Enough has been said to show what scope there is for revision of this
+sentimental Volapuk. Mr. Martin himself scarcely goes so far as I have
+done, though I have merely worked out his suggestion. His only
+revolutionary proposal is to displace the wind star by the "rathe
+primrose" for Forsaken, on the strength of a quotation familiar to every
+reader of Mason's little text-book on the English language. For the rest
+he followed his authorities, and has followed them now to the remote
+recesses of the literary lumber-room and into the twopenny book-box.
+From that receptacle one copy of him was disinterred only a day or so
+ago; a hundred and seventy pages of prose, chiefly alliterative, several
+coloured plates, enthusiastic pencil-marking of a vanished somebody,
+and, besides, an early Victorian flavour of dust and a dim vision of a
+silent conversation in a sunlit flower garden--altogether I think very
+cheap at twopence. The fashion has changed altogether now. In these days
+we season our love-making with talk about heredity, philanthropy, and
+sanitation, and present one another with Fabian publications instead of
+wild flowers. But in the end, I fancy, the business comes to very much
+the same thing.
+
+
+
+
+THE LITERARY REGIMEN
+
+
+At the risk of offending the young beginner's illusions, he must be
+reminded of one or two homely but important facts bearing upon literary
+production. Homely as they are, they explain much that is at first
+puzzling. This perplexing question of distinction; the quality of being
+somehow _fresh_--individual. Really it is a perfectly simple matter. It
+is common knowledge that, after a prolonged fast, the brain works in a
+feeble manner, the current of one's thoughts is pallid and shallow, it
+is difficult to fix the attention and impossible to mobilise the full
+forces of the mind. On the other hand, immediately after a sound meal,
+the brain feels massive, but static. Tea is conducive to a gentle flow
+of pleasing thoughts, and anyone who has taken Easton's syrup of the
+hypophosphites will recall at once the state of cerebral erethrism, of
+general mental alacrity, that followed on a dose. Again, champagne
+(followed perhaps by a soupçon of whisky) leads to a mood essentially
+humorous and playful, while about three dozen oysters, taken fasting,
+will in most cases produce a profound and even ominous melancholy. One
+might enlarge further upon this topic, on the brutalising influence of
+beer, the sedative quality of lettuce, the stimulating consequences of
+curried chicken; but enough has been said to point our argument. It is,
+that such facts as this can surely indicate only one conclusion, and
+that is the entire dependence of literary qualities upon the diet of the
+writer.
+
+I may remind the reader, in confirmation of this suggestion, of what is
+perhaps the most widely known fact about Carlyle, that on one memorable
+occasion he threw his breakfast out of the window. Why did he throw his
+breakfast out of the window? Surely his friends have cherished the story
+out of no petty love of depreciatory detail? There are, however, those
+who would have us believe it was mere childish petulance at a chilly
+rasher or a hard-boiled egg. Such a supposition is absurd. On the other
+hand, what is more natural than an outburst of righteous indignation at
+the ruin of some carefully studied climax of feeding? The thoughtful
+literary beginner who is not altogether submerged in foolish theories of
+inspiration and natural genius will, we fancy, see pretty clearly that I
+am developing what is perhaps after all the fundamental secret of
+literary art.
+
+To come now to more explicit instructions. It is imperative, if you wish
+to write with any power and freshness at all, that you should utterly
+ruin your digestion. Any literary person will confirm this statement. At
+any cost the thing must be done, even if you have to live on German
+sausage, onions, and cheese to do it. So long as you turn all your
+dietary to flesh and blood you will get no literature out of it. "We
+learn in suffering what we teach in song." This is why men who live at
+home with their mothers, or have their elder sisters to see after them,
+never, by any chance, however great their literary ambition may be,
+write anything but minor poetry. They get their meals at regular hours,
+and done to a turn, and that plays the very devil--if you will pardon
+the phrase--with one's imagination.
+
+A careful study of the records of literary men in the past, and a
+considerable knowledge of living authors, suggests two chief ways of
+losing one's digestion and engendering literary capacity. You go and
+live in humble lodgings,--we could name dozens of prominent men who have
+fed a great ambition in this way,--or you marry a nice girl who does not
+understand housekeeping. The former is the more efficacious method,
+because, as a rule, the nice girl wants to come and sit on your knee all
+day, and that is a great impediment to literary composition. Belonging
+to a club--even a literary club--where you can dine is absolute ruin to
+the literary beginner. Many a bright young fellow, who has pushed his
+way, or has been pushed by indiscreet friends, into the society of
+successful literary men, has been spoilt by this fatal error, and he has
+saved his stomach to lose his reputation.
+
+Having got rid of your digestion, then, the common condition of all good
+literature, the next thing is to arrange your dietary for the particular
+literary effect you desire. And here we may point out the secrecy
+observed in such matters by literary men. Stevenson fled to Samoa to
+hide his extremely elaborate methods, and to keep his kitchen servants
+out of the reach of bribery. Even Sir Walter Besant, though he is fairly
+communicative to the young aspirant, has dropped no hints of the plain,
+pure, and wholesome menu he follows. Sala professed to eat everything,
+but that was probably his badinage. Possibly he had one staple, and took
+the rest as condiment. Then what did Shakespeare live on? Bacon? And Mr.
+Barrie, though he has written a delightful book about his pipe and
+tobacco, full of suggestion to the young humorist, lets out nothing or
+next to nothing of his meat and drink. His hints about pipes are very
+extensively followed, and nowadays every ambitious young pressman smokes
+in public at least one well-burnt briar with an eccentric stem--even at
+some personal inconvenience. But this jealous reticence on the part of
+successful men--you notice they never let even the interviewer see their
+kitchens or the débris of a meal--necessarily throws one back upon
+rumour and hypothesis in this matter. Mr. Andrew Lang, for instance, is
+popularly associated with salmon, but that is probably a wilful
+delusion. Excessive salmon, far from engendering geniality, will be
+found in practice a vague and melancholy diet, tending more towards the
+magnificent despondency of Mr. Hall Caine.
+
+Nor does Mr. Haggard feed entirely on raw meat. Indeed, for lurid and
+somewhat pessimistic narrative, there is nothing like the ordinary
+currant bun, eaten new and in quantity. A light humorous style is best
+attained by soda-water and dry biscuits, following café-noir. The
+soda-water may be either Scotch or Irish as the taste inclines. For a
+florid, tawdry style the beginner must take nothing but boiled water,
+stewed vegetables, and an interest in the movements against vivisection,
+opium, alcohol, tobacco, sarcophagy, and the male sex.
+
+For contributions to the leading reviews, boiled pork and cabbage may be
+eaten, with bottled beer, followed by apple dumpling. This effectually
+suppresses any tendency to facetiousness, or what respectable English
+people call _double entendre_, and brings you _en rapport_ with the
+serious people who read these publications. So soon as you begin to feel
+wakeful and restless discontinue writing. For what is vulgarly known as
+the _fin-de-siècle_ type of publication, on the other hand, one should
+limit oneself to an aërated bread shop for a week or so, with the
+exception of an occasional tea in a literary household. All people fed
+mainly on scones become clever. And this regimen, with an occasional
+debauch upon macaroons, chocolate, and cheap champagne, and brisk daily
+walks from Oxford Circus, through Regent Street, Piccadilly, and the
+Green Park, to Westminster and back, should result in an animated
+society satire.
+
+It is not known what Mr. Kipling takes to make him so peculiar. Many of
+us would like to know. Possibly it is something he picked up in the
+jungle--berries or something. A friend who made a few tentative
+experiments to this end turned out nothing beyond a will, and that he
+dictated and left incomplete. (It was scarcely on the lines of an
+ordinary will, being blasphemous, and mentioning no property except his
+inside.) For short stories of the detective type, strong cold tea and
+hard biscuits are fruitful eating, while for a social science novel one
+should take an abundance of boiled rice and toast and water.
+
+However, these remarks are mainly by way of suggestion. Every writer in
+the end, so soon as his digestion is destroyed, must ascertain for
+himself the peculiar diet that suits him best--that is, which disagrees
+with him the most. If everything else fails he might try some chemical
+food. "Jabber's Food for Authors," by the bye, well advertised, and with
+portraits of literary men, in their drawing-rooms, "Fed entirely on
+Jabber's Food," with medical certificates of its unwholesomeness, and
+favourable and expurgated reviews of works written on it, ought to be a
+brilliant success among literary aspirants. A small but sufficient
+quantity of arsenic might with advantage be mixed in.
+
+
+
+
+HOUSE-HUNTING AS AN OUTDOOR AMUSEMENT
+
+
+Since Adam and Eve went hand in hand out of the gates of Paradise, the
+world has travailed under an infinite succession of house-hunts. To-day
+in every eligible suburb you may see New Adams and New Eves by the
+score, with rusty keys and pink order-forms in hand, wandering still, in
+search of the ideal home. To them it is anything but an amusement. Most
+of these poor pilgrims look simply tired, some are argumentative in
+addition, but all are disappointed, anxious, and unhappy, their hands
+dirty with prying among cisterns, and their garments soiled from cellar
+walls. All, in the exaltation of the wooing days, saw at least the
+indistinct reflection of the perfect house, but now the Quest is
+irrevocably in hand they seek and do not find. And such a momentous
+question it is to them. Are they not choosing the background, the air
+and the colour, as it were, of the next three or four years, the
+cardinal years, too! of their lives?
+
+Perhaps the exquisite exasperation of the business for the man who hunts
+among empty houses for a home is, that it is so entirely a choice of
+second-hand, or at least ready-made goods. To me, at least, there is a
+decided suggestion of the dead body in your empty house that has once
+been occupied. Here, like pale ghosts upon the wall paper, are outlined
+the pictures of the departed tenant; here are the nails of the invisible
+curtains, this dent in the wall is all that is sensible of a vanished
+piano. I could fancy all these things creeping back to visibility as the
+light grew dim. Someone was irritable in the house, perhaps, and a
+haunting fragrance of departed quarrels is to be found in the loose
+door-handles, and the broken bell-pull. Then the blind in the bedroom
+has a broken string. He was a beer-drinker, for the drip of the tap has
+left its mark in the cellar; a careless man, for this wall is a record
+of burst water-pipes; and rough in his methods, as his emendation of the
+garden gate--a remedy rather worse than the disease--shows. The mark of
+this prepotent previous man is left on the house from cellar to attic.
+It is his house really, not mine. And against these haunting
+individualities set the horrible wholesale flavour, the obvious
+dexterous builder's economies of a new house. Yet, whatever your
+repulsion may be, the end is always the same. After you have asked for
+your ideal house a hundred times or so you begin to see you do not get
+it. You go the way of your kind. All houses are taken in despair.
+
+But such disgusts as this are for the man who really aims at taking a
+house. The artist house-hunter knows better than that. He hunts for the
+hunt's sake, and does not mar his work with a purpose. Then
+house-hunting becomes a really delightful employment, and one strangely
+neglected in this country. I have heard, indeed, of old ladies who
+enlivened the intervals of their devotions in this manner, but to the
+general run of people the thing is unknown. Yet a more entertaining way
+of spending a half-holiday--having regard to current taste--it should be
+difficult to imagine. An empty house is realistic literature in the
+concrete, full of hints and allusions if a little wanting in tangible
+humanity, and it outdoes the modern story in its own line, by beginning
+as well as ending in a note of interrogation. That it is not more
+extensively followed I can only explain by supposing that its merits are
+generally unsuspected. In which case this book should set a fashion.
+
+One singular thing the house-hunter very speedily discovers is, that the
+greater portion of the houses in this country are owned by old gentlemen
+or old ladies who live next door. After a certain age, and especially
+upon retired tradespeople, house property, either alone or in common
+with gardening, exercises an irresistible fascination. You always know
+you are going to meet a landlord or landlady of this type when you read
+on your order to view, "Key next door but one." Calling next door but
+one, you are joined after the lapse of a few minutes by a bald, stout
+gentleman, or a lady of immemorial years, who offers to go over "the
+property" with you. Apparently the intervals between visits to view are
+spent in slumber, and these old people come out refreshed and keen to
+scrutinise their possible new neighbours. They will tell you all about
+the last tenant, and about the present tenants on either side, and about
+themselves, and how all the other houses in the neighbourhood are damp,
+and how they remember when the site of the house was a cornfield, and
+what they do for their rheumatism. As one hears them giving a most
+delightful vent to their loquacity, the artistic house-hunter feels all
+the righteous self-applause of a kindly deed. Sometimes they get
+extremely friendly. One old gentleman--to whom anyone under forty must
+have seemed puerile--presented the gentle writer with three fine large
+green apples as a kind of earnest of his treatment: apples, no doubt, of
+some little value, since they excited the audible envy of several little
+boys before they were disposed of.
+
+Sometimes the landlord has even superintended the building of the house
+himself, and then it often has peculiar distinctions--no coal cellar, or
+a tower with turrets, or pillars of ornamental marble investing the
+portico with disproportionate dignity. One old gentleman, young as old
+gentlemen go, short of stature, of an agreeable red colour, and with
+short iron-grey hair, had a niche over the front door containing a piece
+of statuary. It gave one the impression of the Venus of Milo in
+chocolate pyjamas. "It was nood at first," said the landlord, "but the
+neighbourhood is hardly educated up to art, and objected. So I gave it
+that brown paint."
+
+On one expedition the artistic house-hunter was accompanied by Euphemia.
+Then it was he found Hill Crest, a vast edifice at the incredible rent
+of £40 a year, with which a Megatherial key was identified. It took the
+two of them, not to mention an umbrella, to turn this key. The rent was
+a mystery, and while they were in the house--a thunderstorm kept them
+there some time--they tried to imagine the murder. From the top windows
+they could see the roofs of the opposite houses in plan.
+
+"I wonder how long it would take to get to the top of the house from the
+bottom?" said Euphemia.
+
+"Certainly longer than we could manage every day," said the artistic
+house-hunter. "Fancy looking for my pipe in all these rooms. Starting
+from the top bedroom at the usual time, I suppose one would arrive
+downstairs to breakfast about eleven, and then we should have to be
+getting upstairs again by eight o'clock if we wanted any night's rest
+worth having. Or we might double or treble existence, live a Gargantuan
+life to match the house, make our day of forty-eight hours instead of
+twenty-four. By doubling everything we should not notice the hole it
+made in our time getting about the place. Perhaps by making dinner last
+twice as long, eating twice as much, and doing everything on the scale
+of two to one, we might adapt ourselves to our environment in time, grow
+twice as big."
+
+"_Then_ we might be very comfortable here," said Euphemia.
+
+They went downstairs again. By that time it was thundering and raining
+heavily. The rooms were dark and gloomy. The big side door, which would
+not shut unless locked from the outside, swayed and banged as the gusts
+of wind swept round the house. But they had a good time in the front
+kitchen, playing cricket with an umbrella and the agent's order crumpled
+into a ball. Presently the artistic house-hunter lifted Euphemia on to
+the tall dresser, and they sat there swinging their feet patiently until
+the storm should leave off and release them.
+
+"I should feel in this kitchen," said Euphemia, "like one of my little
+dolls must have felt in the dolls'-house kitchen I had once. The top of
+her head just reached the level of the table. There were only four
+plates on the dresser, but each was about half her height across----"
+
+"Your reminiscences are always entertaining," said the artistic
+house-hunter; "still they fail to explain the absorbing mystery of this
+house being to let at £40 a year." The problem raised his curiosity, but
+though he made inquiries he found no reason for the remarkably low rent
+or the continued emptiness of the house. It was a specimen puzzle for
+the house-hunter. A large house with a garden of about half an acre, and
+with accommodation for about six families, going begging for £40 a year.
+Would it let at eighty? Some such problem, however, turns up in every
+house-hunt, and it is these surprises that give the sport its particular
+interest and delight. Always provided the mind is not unsettled by any
+ulterior notion of settling down.
+
+
+
+
+OF BLADES AND BLADERY
+
+
+The Blade is not so much a culture as a temperament, and Bladery--if the
+thing may have the name--a code of sentiments rather than a ritual. It
+is the rococo school of behaviour, the flamboyant gentleman, the
+gargoyle life. The Blade is the tribute innocence pays to vice. He may
+look like a devil and belong to a church. And the clothing of the Blade,
+being symbolical, is a very important part of him. It must show not only
+a certain tastiness, but also decision in the accent, courage in the
+pattern, and a Dudley Hardihood of outline. A Blade must needs take the
+colour of his social standing, but all Blades have the same essential
+qualities. And all Blades have this quality, that they despise and
+contemn other Blades from the top downward. (But where the bottommost
+Blade comes no man can tell.)
+
+A well-bred Blade--though he be a duke--tends to wear his hat tilted a
+little over the right eyebrow, and a piece of hair is pulled
+coquettishly down just below the brim. His collar is high, and a very
+large bow is worn slightly askew. This may be either cream-coloured or
+deep blue, with spots of white, or it may be red, or buff, but not
+green, because of badinage. The Blade of the middle class displays a
+fine gold watch-chain, and his jacket and vest may be of a rough black
+cloth or blue serge. The trousering may be of a suit with the jacket, or
+tasteful, and the shoes must be long. The betting man, adorned, is a
+perfect Blade. There is often a large and ornamental stick, which is
+invariably carried head downwards. And note, that the born Blade
+instinctively avoids any narrowness of pose. In walking he thrusts out
+his shoulders, elbows, and knees, and it is rather the thing to
+dominate a sphere of influence beyond this by swinging his stick. At
+first the beginner will find this weapon a little apt to slip from the
+hand and cause inconvenience to the general public; but he must not mind
+that. After a few such misadventures he will acquire dexterity.
+
+All Blades smoke--publicly at least. To smoke a white meerschaum in the
+streets, however, is very inferior form. The proper smoking is a briar,
+and, remember, it is not smart to have a new pipe. So soon as he buys
+it, the Blade takes his pipe home, puts it on a glowing fire to burn the
+rim, scrapes this away, burns it again, and so on until it looks a
+sullen desperado of a pipe--a pipe with a wild past. Sometimes he cannot
+smoke a pipe. In this case he may--for his stomach's sake--smoke a
+cigarette. And, besides, there is something cynical about a cigarette.
+For the very young Blade there are certain makes of cigarette that burn
+well--they are mixed with nitre--and these may be smoked by holding them
+in the left hand and idly swinging them to and fro in the air. If it
+were not for the public want of charity, I would recommend a well-known
+brand. A Blade may always escape a cigar by feigning a fastidious taste.
+"None of your Cabanas" is rather good style.
+
+The Blade, it must be understood--especially by the Blade's
+friends--spends his time in a whirl of dissipation. That is the
+symbolism of the emphatic obliquity of the costume. First, he drinks.
+The Blade at Harrow, according to a reliable authority, drinks cherry
+brandy and even champagne; other Blades consume whisky-and-soda; the
+less costly kind of Blade does it on beer. And here the beginner is
+often at a loss. Let us say he has looked up the street and down,
+ascertained that there are no aunts in the air, and then plunged into
+his first public-house. How shall he ask for his liquor? "I will take a
+glass of ale, if you please, Miss," seems tame for a Blade. It may be
+useful to know a more suitable formula. Just at present, we may assure
+the Blade neophyte, it is all the rage to ask for "Two of swipes,
+ducky." Go in boldly, bang down your money as loudly as possible, and
+shout that out at the top of your voice. If it is a barman, though, you
+had better not say "ducky." The slang will, we can assure him, prove
+extremely effective.
+
+Then the Blade gambles; but over the gambling of the Blade it is well to
+draw a veil--a partially translucent and coquettish veil, through which
+we can see the thing dimly, and enhanced in its enormity. You must
+patronise the Turf, of course, and have money on horses, or you are no
+Blade at all, but a mere stick. The Harrow Blade has his book on all the
+big races in the calendar; and the great and noble game of Nap--are not
+Blades its worshippers wherever the sun shines and a pack of cards is
+obtainable? Baccarat, too. Many a glorious Blade has lost his whole
+term's pocket-money at a single sitting at that noble game. And the
+conversation of the Blade must always be brilliant in the extreme, like
+the flashing of steel in the sunlight. It is usually cynical and
+worldly, sometimes horrible enough to make a governess shudder, but
+always epigrammatic. Epigrams and neat comparisons are much easier to
+make than is vulgarly supposed. "Schoolmasters hang about the crops of
+knowledge like dead crows about a field, examples and warnings to greedy
+souls." "Marriage is the beginning of philosophy, and the end is, 'Do
+not marry.'" "All women are constant, but some discover mistakes." "One
+is generally repentant when one is found out, and remorseful when one
+can't do it again." A little practice, and this kind of thing may be
+ground out almost without thinking. Occasionally, in your conversation
+with ladies, you may let an oath slip. (Better not let your aunt hear
+you.) Apologise humbly at once, of course. But it will give them a
+glimpse of the lurid splendour of your private life.
+
+And that brings us to the central thing of the Blade's life, the eternal
+Feminine! Pity them, be a little sorry for them--the poor souls cannot
+be Blades. They must e'en sit and palpitate while the Blade flashes. The
+accomplished Blade goes through life looking unspeakable wickedness at
+everything feminine he meets, old and young, rich and poor, one with
+another. He reeks with intrigue. Every Blade has his secrets and
+mysteries in this matter--remorse even for crimes. You do not know all
+that his handsome face may hide. Even he does not know. He may have sat
+on piers and talked to shop-girls, kissed housemaids, taken barmaids to
+music halls, conversed with painted wickedness in public places--nothing
+is too much for him. And oh! the reckless protestations of love he has
+made, the broken promises, the broken hearts! Yet men must be Blades,
+though women may weep; and every Blade must take his barmaid to a music
+hall at least once, even if she be taller than himself. Until then his
+manhood is not assured.
+
+Just one hint in conclusion. A Blade who collects stamps, or keeps tame
+rabbits, or eats sweets, oranges, or apples in the streets, or calls
+names publicly after his friends, is no Blade at all, but a boy still.
+So, with our blessing, he swaggers on his way and is gone. A Don Juan as
+fresh as spring, a rosebud desperado. May he never come upon just cause
+for repentance!
+
+
+
+
+OF CLEVERNESS
+
+ÀPROPOS OF ONE CRICHTON
+
+
+Crichton is an extremely clever person--abnormally, indeed almost
+unnaturally, so. He is not merely clever at this or that, but clever all
+round; he gives you no consolations. He goes about being needlessly
+brilliant. He caps your jests and corrects your mistakes, and does your
+special things over again in newer and smarter ways. Any really
+well-bred man who presumed so far would at least be plain or physically
+feeble, or unhappily married by way of apology, but the idea of so much
+civility seems never to have entered Crichton's head. He will come into
+a room where we are jesting perhaps, and immediately begin to flourish
+about less funny perhaps but decidedly more brilliant jests, until at
+last we retire one by one from the conversation and watch him with
+savage, weary eyes over our pipes. He invariably beats me at chess,
+invariably. People talk about him and ask my opinion of him, and if I
+venture to criticise him they begin to look as though they thought I was
+jealous. Grossly favourable notices of his books and his pictures crop
+up in the most unlikely places; indeed I have almost given up newspapers
+on account of him. Yet, after all----
+
+This cleverness is not everything. It never pleases me, and I doubt
+sometimes if it pleases anyone. Suppose you let off some clever little
+thing, a subtlety of expression, a paradox, an allusive suggestive
+picture; how does it affect ordinary people? Those who are less clever
+than yourself, the unspecialised, unsophisticated average people, are
+simply annoyed by the puzzle you set them; those who are cleverer find
+your cleverness mere obvious stupidity; and your equals, your
+competitors in cleverness, are naturally your deadly rivals. The fact is
+this cleverness, after all, is merely egotism in its worst and unwisest
+phase. It is an incontinence of brilliance, graceless and aggressive, a
+glaring swagger. The drunken helot of cleverness is the creature who
+goes about making puns. A mere step above comes the epigram, the
+isolated epigram framed and glazed. Then such impressionist art as
+Crichton's pictures, mere puns in paint. What they mean is nothing, they
+arrest a quiet decent-minded man like myself with the same spasmodic
+disgust as a pun in literature--the subject is a transparent excuse;
+they are mere indecent and unedifying exhibitions of himself. He thinks
+it is something superlative to do everything in a startling way. He
+cannot even sign his name without being offensive. He lacks altogether
+the fundamental quality of a gentleman, the magnanimity to be
+commonplace. I----
+
+On the score of personal dignity, why should a young man of respectable
+antecedents and some natural capacity stoop to this kind of thing? To be
+clever is the last desperate resort of the feeble, it is the merit of
+the ambitious slave. You cannot conquer _vi et armis_, you cannot
+stomach a decent inferiority, so you resort to lively, eccentric, and
+brain-wearying brilliance to ingratiate yourself. The cleverest animal
+by far is the monkey, and compare that creature's undignified activity
+with the mountainous majesty of the elephant!
+
+And I cannot help thinking, too, that cleverness must be the greatest
+obstacle a man can possibly have in his way upward in the world. One
+never sees really clever people in positions of trust, never widely
+influential or deeply rooted. Look, for instance, at the Royal Academy,
+at the Judges, at----But there! The very idea of cleverness is an
+all-round readiness and looseness that is the very negation of
+stability.
+
+Whenever Crichton has been particularly exasperating, getting himself
+appreciated in a new quarter, or rising above his former successes, I
+find some consolation in thinking of my Uncle Augustus. He was the
+glory of our family. Even Aunt Charlotte's voice drooped a little in the
+mention of his name. He was conspicuous for an imposing and even
+colossal stupidity: he rose to eminence through it, and, what is more,
+to wealth and influence. He was as reliable, as unlikely to alter his
+precise position, or do anything unexpected, as the Pyramids of Egypt. I
+do not know any topic upon which he was not absolutely uninformed, and
+his contributions to conversation, delivered in that ringing baritone of
+his, were appallingly dull. Often I have seen him utterly flatten some
+cheerful clever person of the Crichton type with one of his simple
+garden-roller remarks--plain, solid, and heavy, which there was no
+possibility either of meeting or avoiding. He was very successful in
+argument, and yet he never fenced. He simply came down. It was, so to
+speak, a case of small sword _versus_ the avalanche. His moral inertia
+was tremendous. He was never excited, never anxious, never jaded; he was
+simply massive. Cleverness broke upon him like shipping on an ironbound
+coast. His monument is like him--a plain large obelisk of coarse
+granite, unpretending in its simple ugliness and prominent a mile off.
+Among the innumerable little white sorrows of the cemetery it looks
+exactly as he used to look among clever people.
+
+Depend upon it cleverness is the antithesis of greatness. The British
+Empire, like the Roman, was built up by dull men. It may be we shall be
+ruined by clever ones. Imagine a regiment of lively and eccentric
+privates! There never was a statesman yet who had not some ballast of
+stupidity, and it seems to me that part at least of the essentials of a
+genius is a certain divine dulness. The people we used to call the
+masters--Shakespeare, Raphael, Milton, and so forth--had a certain
+simplicity Crichton lacks. They do not scintillate nearly so much as he
+does, and they do not give that same uncomfortable feeling of internal
+strain. Even Homer nods. There are restful places in their work, broad
+meadows of breezy flatness, calms. But Crichton has no Pacific Ocean to
+mitigate his everlasting weary passage of Cape Horn: it is all point
+and prominence, point and prominence.
+
+No doubt this Crichton is having a certain vogue now, but it cannot
+last. I wish him no evil, of course, but I cannot help thinking he will
+presently have had his day. This epoch of cleverness must be very near
+its last flare. The last and the abiding thought of humanity is peace. A
+dull man will presently be sought like the shadow of a great rock in a
+thirsty land. Dulness will be the New Genius. "Give us dull books,"
+people will cry, "great dull restful pictures. We are weary, very
+weary." This hectic, restless, incessant phase in which we
+travail--_fin-de-siècle_, "decadent," and all the rest of it--will pass
+away. A chubby, sleepy literature, large in aim, colossal in execution,
+rotund and tranquil will lift its head. And this Crichton will become a
+classic, Messrs. Mudie will sell surplus copies of his works at a
+reduction, and I shall cease to be worried by his disgusting success.
+
+
+
+
+THE POSE NOVEL
+
+
+I watched the little spurts of flame jet out from between the writhing
+pages of my manuscript, watched the sheets coil up in their fiery
+anguish and start one from another. I helped the fire to the very vitals
+of the mass by poking the brittle heap, and at last the sacrifice was
+over, the flames turned from pink to blue and died out, the red glow
+gave place to black, little luminous red streaks coiled across the
+charred sheets and vanished at the margins, and only the ashes of my
+inspiration remained. The ink was a lustrous black on the dull blackness
+of the burnt paper. I could still read this much of my indiscretion
+remaining, "He smiled at them all and said nothing."
+
+"Fool!" I said, and stirred the crackling mass into a featureless heap
+of black scraps. Then with my chin on my fists and elbows on knees I
+stared at the end of my labours.
+
+I suppose, after all, there has been some profit out of the thing. Satan
+finds some mischief still for idle hands to do, and one may well thank
+Heaven it was only a novel. Still, it means many days out of my life,
+and I would be glad to find some positive benefit accruing. Clearly, in
+the first place, I have eased my mind of some execrable English. I am
+cleaner now by some dozen faulty phrases that I committed and saw
+afterwards in all the nakedness of typewriting. (Thank Heaven for
+typewriting! Were it not for that, this thing had gone to the scoffing
+of some publisher's reader, and another had known my shame.) And I shall
+not write another pose novel.
+
+I am inclined to think these pose novels the wild oats of authorship. We
+sit down in the heyday of our youth to write the masterpiece.
+Obviously, it must be a novel about a man and a woman, and something as
+splendid as we can conceive of in that way. We look about us. We do not
+go far for perfection. One of the brace holds the pen and the other is
+inside his or her head; and so Off! to the willing pen. Only a few years
+ago we went slashing among the poppies with a walking-stick, and were,
+we said boldly and openly, Harolds and Hectors slaying our thousands.
+Now of course we are grown up to self-respect, and must needs be a
+little disingenuous about it. But as the story unfolds there is no
+mistaking the likeness, in spite of the transfiguration. This bold,
+decided man who performs such deeds of derring-do in the noisome slum,
+knocks down the burly wife-beater, rescues an unmistakable Miss Clapton
+from the knife of a Lascar, and is all the while cultivating a virtuous
+consumption that stretches him on an edifying, pathetic, and altogether
+beautiful deathbed in the last chapter----My dear Authorling, cry my
+friends, we hear the squeak of that little voice of yours in every word
+he utters. Is _that_ what you aspire to be, that twopence-coloured
+edition of yourself? Heaven defend you from your desires!
+
+Yet there was a singular fascination in writing the book; to be in
+anticipation my own sympathetic historian, to joy with my joys yet to
+come, and sorrow with my sorrows, to bear disaster like a man, and at
+last to close my own dear eyes, and with a swelling heart write my own
+epitaph. The pleasure remained with me until I reached the end. How
+admirably I strutted in front of myself! And I and the better self of me
+that was flourishing about in the book--we pretended not to know each
+other for what we were. He was myself with a wig and a sham visiting
+card, and I owed it to myself to respect my disguise. I made him with
+very red hair--my hair is fairly dark--and shifted his university from
+London to Cambridge. Clearly it could not be the same person, I argued.
+But I endowed him with all the treasures of myself; I made him say all
+the good things I might have said had I thought of them opportunely, and
+all the noble thoughts that occurred to me afterwards occurred to him
+at the time. He was myself--myself at a premium, myself without any
+drawbacks, the quintessence and culmination of me. And yet somehow when
+he came back from the typewriter he seemed a bit of an ass.
+
+Probably every tadpole author writes a pose novel--at least I hope so
+for the sake of my self-respect. Most, after my fashion, burn the thing,
+or benevolent publishers lose it. It is an ill thing if by some accident
+the tadpole tale survives the tadpole stage. The authoress does the
+feminine equivalent, but I should judge either that she did it more
+abundantly or else that she burned less. Has she never swept past you
+with a scornful look, disdained you in all the pride of her beauty,
+rippled laughter at you, or amazed you with her artless girlishness? And
+even after the early stages some of the trick may survive, unless I read
+books with malice instead of charity. I must confess, though, that I
+have a weakness for finding mine author among his puppets. I conceive
+him always taking the best parts, like an actor-manager or a little boy
+playing with his sisters. I do not read many novels with sincere belief,
+and I like to get such entertainment from them as I can. So that these
+artless little self-revelations are very sweet and precious to me among
+all the lay figures, tragedy and comedy. Since the deception is
+transparent I make the most of the transparency, and love to see the
+clumsy fingers on the strings of the marionettes. And this will be none
+the less pleasant now that I have so narrowly escaped giving this
+entertainment to others.
+
+I suppose this stage is a necessary one. We begin with ignorance and the
+imagination, the material of the pose novel. Later come self-knowledge,
+disappointments and self-consciousness, and the prodigals of fiction
+stay themselves upon the husks of epigram and cynicism, and in the place
+of artless aspiration are indeed in plain black and white very desperate
+characters. It is after all only another pose--the pose of not posing.
+We, the common clay of the world of letters, must needs write in this
+way, because we cannot forget our foolish little selves in our work.
+But some few there are who sit as gods above their private universes,
+and write without passion or vanity. At least, so I have been told.
+These be the true artists of letters, the white windows upon the truth
+of things. We by comparison are but stained glass in our own honour, and
+do but obstruct the view with our halos and attitudes. Yet even
+Shakespeare, the critics tell us--and they say they know--posed in the
+character of Hamlet.
+
+After all, the pose novel method has at times attained to the level of
+literature. Charlotte Brontë might possibly have found no other topic
+had she disdained the plain little woman with a shrewish tongue; and
+where had Charles Kingsley been if the vision of a curate rampant had
+not rejoiced his heart? Still, I am not sorry that this novel is burned.
+Even now it was ridiculous, and the time might have come when this book,
+full of high, if foolish aims, and the vain vast promise of well-meaning
+youth, had been too keen a reproach to be endured. Three volumes of good
+intentions! It is too much. There was more than a novel burning just
+now. After this I shall be in a position to take a humorist's view of
+life.
+
+
+
+
+THE VETERAN CRICKETER
+
+
+My old cricketer was seized, he says, some score of years ago now, by
+sciatica, clutched indeed about the loins thereby, and forcibly
+withdrawn from the practice of the art; since when a certain
+predisposition to a corpulent habit has lacked its natural check of
+exercise, and a broadness almost Dutch has won upon him. Were it not for
+this, which renders his contours and his receding aspect unseemly, he
+would be indeed a venerable-looking person, having a profile worthy of a
+patriarch, tinged though it may be with an unpatriarchal jollity, and a
+close curly beard like that of King David. He lives by himself in a
+small cottage outside the village--hating women with an unaccountable
+detestation--and apparently earns a precarious livelihood, and certainly
+the sincere aversion of the country side, by umpiring in matches, and
+playing whist and "Nap" with such as will not be so discreet and
+economical as to bow before his superior merit.
+
+His neighbours do not like him, because he will not take their cricket
+or their whist seriously, because he will persist in offering counsel
+and the stimulus of his gift of satire. All whist than his he avers is
+"Bumble-puppy." His umpiring is pedagogic in tone; he fails to see the
+contest in the game. To him, who has heard his thousands roar as the
+bails of the best of All England went spinning, these village matches
+are mere puerile exercises to be corrected. His corrections, too, are
+Olympian, done, as it were, in red ink, vivid, and without respect of
+persons. Particularly he gibes. He never uses vulgar bad language
+himself, but has a singular power of engendering it in others. He has a
+word "gaby," which he will sometimes enlarge to "stuppid gaby," the
+which, flung neatly into a man who has just missed a catch, will fill
+the same with a whirl of furious curses difficult to restrain. And if
+perchance one should escape, my ancient cricketer will be as startled as
+Cadmus at the crop he has sown. And not only startled but pained at
+human wickedness and the follies of a new generation. "Why can't you
+play without swearing, Muster Gibbs?" he will say, catching the
+whispered hope twenty yards away, and proclaiming it to a censorious
+world. And so Gibbs, our grocer and draper, and one made much of by the
+vicar, is shamed before the whole parish, and damned even as he desired.
+
+To our vicar, a well-meaning, earnest, and extremely nervous man, he
+displays a methodical antagonism. Our vicar is the worst of all possible
+rural vicars--unripe, a glaring modern, no classical scholar, no lover
+of nature, offensively young and yet not youthful, an indecent
+politician. He was meant to labour amid Urban Myriads, to deal with
+Social Evils, Home Rule, the Woman Question, and the Reunion of
+Christendom, attend Conferences and go with the _Weltgeist_--damn
+him!--wherever the _Weltgeist_ is going. He presents you jerkily--a tall
+lean man of ascetic visage and ample garments, a soul clothed not so
+much in a fleshy body as in black flaps that ever trail behind its
+energy. Where they made him Heaven knows. No university owns him. It may
+be he is a renegade Dissenting minister, neither good Church nor
+wholesome Nonconformity. Him my cricketer regards with malignant
+respect. Respect he shows by a punctilious touching of his hat brim,
+directed to the sacred office; all the rest is malignity, and aimed at
+the man that fills it. They come into contact on the cricket-field, and
+on the committee of our reading-room. For our vicar, in spite of a
+tendency to myopia, conceives it his duty to encourage cricket by his
+participation. _Duty_--to encourage cricket! So figure the scene to
+yourself. The sunlit green, and a match in progress,--the ball has just
+snipped a stump askew,--my ancient, leaning on a stout cabbage stick,
+and with the light overcoat that is sacred to umpires upon his arm.
+
+"_Out_, Billy Durgan," says he, and adds, _ex cathedrâ_, "and one you
+ought to ha' hit for four."
+
+Then appears our vicar in semi-canonicals, worn "to keep up his
+position," or some such folly, nervous about the adjustment of his hat
+and his eyeglasses. He approaches the pitch, smiling the while to show
+his purely genial import and to anticipate and explain any amateurish
+touches. He reaches the wicket and poses himself, as the convenient book
+he has studied directs. "You'll be caught, Muster Shackleforth, if you
+keep your shoulder up like that," says the umpire. "Ya-a-ps! that's
+worse!"--forgetting himself in his zeal for attitude. And then a voice
+cries "Play!"
+
+The vicar swipes wildly, cuts the ball for two, and returns to his
+wicket breathless but triumphant. Next comes a bye, and then over. The
+misguided cleric, ever pursuing a theory of foolish condescension to his
+betters at the game, and to show there is no offence at the "Yaaps,"
+takes the opportunity, although panting, of asking my ancient if his
+chicks--late threatened with staggers--are doing well. What would he
+think if my cricketer retaliated by asking, in the pause before the
+sermon, how the vicarage pony took his last bolus? The two men do not
+understand one another. My cricketer waves the hens aside, and revenges
+himself, touching his hat at intervals, by some offensively obvious
+remarks--as to a mere beginner--about playing with a straight bat. And
+the field sniggers none too furtively. I sympathise with his malice.
+Cricket is an altogether too sacred thing to him to be tampered with on
+merely religious grounds. However, our vicar gets himself caught at the
+first opportunity, and so being removed from my veteran's immediate
+environment, to their common satisfaction, the due ritual of the great
+game is resumed.
+
+My ancient cricketer abounds in reminiscence of the glorious days that
+have gone for ever. He can still recall the last echoes of the
+"throwing" controversy that agitated Nyren, when over-arm bowling began,
+and though he never played himself in a beaver hat, he can, he says,
+recollect seeing matches so played. In those days everyone wore tall
+hats--the policeman, the milkman, workmen of all sorts. Some people I
+fancy must have bathed in them and gone to bed wearing them. He recalls
+the Titans of that and the previous age, and particularly delights in
+the legend of Noah Mann, who held it a light thing to walk twenty miles
+from Northchapel to Hambledon to practise every Tuesday afternoon, and
+wander back after dark. He himself as a stripling would run a matter of
+four miles, after a day's work in the garden where he was employed, to
+attend an hour's practice over the downs before the twilight made the
+balls invisible. And afterwards came Teutonic revelry or wanderings
+under the summer starlight, as the mood might take him. For there was a
+vein of silent poetry in the youth of this man.
+
+He hates your modern billiard-table pitch, and a batting of dexterous
+snickery. He likes "character" in a game, gigantic hitting forward,
+bowler-planned leg catches, a cunning obliquity in a wicket that would
+send the balls mysteriously askew. But dramatic breaks are now a thing
+unknown in trade cricket. One legend of his I doubt; he avers that once
+at Brighton, in a match between Surrey and Sussex, he saw seven wickets
+bowled by some such aid in two successive overs. I have never been able
+to verify this. I believe that, as a matter of fact, the thing has never
+occurred, but he tells it often in a fine crescendo of surprise, and the
+refrain, "Out HE came." His first beginning is a cheerful
+anecdote of a crew of "young gentlemen" from Cambridge staying at the
+big house, and a challenge to the rustic talent of "me and Billy Hall,"
+who "played a bit at that time," "of me and Billy Hall" winning the
+pitch and going in first, of a memorable if uncivil stand at the wickets
+through a long hot afternoon, and a number of young gentlemen from
+Cambridge painfully discovering local talent by exhaustive fielding in
+the park, a duty they honourably discharged.
+
+I am fond of my old cricketer, in spite of a certain mendacious and
+malign element in him. His yarns of gallant stands and unexpected turns
+of fortune, of memorable hits and eccentric umpiring, albeit tending
+sometimes incredibly to his glory, are full of the flavour of days well
+spent, of bright mornings of play, sunlit sprawlings beside the score
+tent, warmth, the flavour of bitten grass stems, and the odour of
+crushed turf. One seems to hear the clapping hands of village ancients,
+and their ululations of delight. One thinks of stone jars with cool
+drink swishing therein, of shouting victories and memorable defeats, of
+eleven men in a drag, and tuneful and altogether glorious home-comings
+by the light of the moon. His were the Olympian days of the sport, when
+noble squires were its patrons, and every village a home and nursery of
+stalwart cricketers, before the epoch of special trains, gate-money,
+star elevens, and the tumultuous gathering of idle cads to jabber at a
+game they cannot play.
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING A CERTAIN LADY
+
+
+This lady wears a blue serge suit and a black hat, without flippancy;
+she is a powerfully built lady and generally more or less flushed, and
+she is aunt, apparently, to a great number of objectionable-looking
+people. I go in terror of her. Yet the worm will turn at last, and so
+will the mild, pacific literary man. Her last outrage was too much even
+for my patience. It was committed at Gloucester Road Station the other
+afternoon. I was about to get into a train for Wimbledon,--and there are
+only two of them to the hour,--and, so far as I could see, the whole
+world was at peace with me. I felt perfectly secure. The ægis of the
+_pax Britannica_--if you will pardon the expression--was over me. For
+the moment the thought of the lady in the blue serge was quite out of my
+mind. I had just bought a newspaper, and had my hand on the carriage
+door. The guard was fluttering his flag.
+
+Then suddenly she swooped out of space, out of the infinite unknown, and
+hit me. She always hits me when she comes near me, and I infer she hits
+everyone she comes across. She hit me this time in the chest with her
+elbow and knocked me away from the door-handle. She hit me very hard;
+indeed, she was as fierce as I have ever known her. With her there were
+two nieces and a nephew, and the nephew hit me too. He was a horrid
+little boy in an Eton suit of the kind that they do not wear at Eton,
+and he hit me with his head and pushed at me with his little pink hands.
+The nieces might have been about twenty-two and thirteen respectively,
+and I infer that they were apprenticed to her. All four people seemed
+madly excited. "It's just starting!" they screamed, and the train was,
+indeed, slowly moving. Their object--so far as they had an object and
+were not animated by mere fury--appeared to be to assault me and then
+escape in the train. The lady in blue got in and then came backwards out
+again, sweeping the smaller girl behind her upon the two others, who
+were engaged in hustling me. "It's 'smoking!'" she cried. I could have
+told her that, if she had asked instead of hitting me. The elder girl,
+by backing dexterously upon me, knocked my umbrella out of my hand, and
+when I stooped to pick it up the little boy knocked my hat off. I will
+confess they demoralised me with their archaic violence. I had some
+thought of joining in their wild amuck, whooping, kicking out madly,
+perhaps assaulting a porter,--I think the lady in blue would have been
+surprised to find what an effective addition to her staff she had picked
+up,--but before I could collect my thoughts sufficiently to do any
+definite thing the whole affair was over. A porter was slamming doors on
+them, the train was running fast out of the station, and I was left
+alone with an unmannerly newsboy and an unmannerly porter on the
+platform. I waited until the porter was out of the way, and then I hit
+the newsboy for laughing at me, but even with that altercation it was a
+tedious wait for the next train to Wimbledon.
+
+This is the latest of my encounters with this lady, but it has decided
+me to keep silence no longer. She has been persecuting me now for years
+in all parts of London. It may be I am her only victim, but, on the
+other hand, she may be in the habit of annoying the entire class of
+slender and inoffensive young men. If so, and they will communicate with
+me through the publishers of this little volume, we might do something
+towards suppressing her, found an Anti-Energetic-Lady-League, or
+something of that sort. For if there was ever a crying wrong that
+clamoured for suppression it is this violent woman.
+
+She is, even now, flagrantly illegal. She might be given in charge for
+hitting people at any time, and be warned, or fined, or given a week.
+But somehow it is only when she is overpast and I am recovering my wits
+that I recollect that she might be dealt with in this way. She is the
+chartered libertine of British matrons, and assaulteth where she
+listeth. The blows I have endured from her? She fights people who are
+getting into 'buses. It is no mere accidental jostling, but a deliberate
+shouldering, poking with umbrellas, and clawing. It is her delight to go
+to the Regent Circus corner of Piccadilly, about half-past seven in the
+evening, accompanied by a genteel rout of daughters, and fill up whole
+omnibuses with them. At that hour there are work-girls and tired clerks,
+and the like worn-out anæmic humanity trying to get home for an hour or
+so of rest before bed, and they crowd round the 'buses very eagerly.
+They are little able to cope with her exuberant vitality, being
+ill-nourished and tired from the day's work, and she simply mows through
+them and fills up every vacant place they covet before their eyes. Then,
+I can never count change even when my mind is tranquil, and she knows
+that, and swoops threateningly upon me in booking offices and
+stationers' shops. When I am dodging cabs at crossings she will appear
+from behind an omnibus or carriage and butt into me furiously. She holds
+her umbrella in her folded arms just as the Punch puppet does his staff,
+and with as deadly effect. Sometimes she discards her customary navy
+blue and puts on a glittering bonnet with bead trimmings, and goes and
+hurts people who are waiting to enter the pit at theatres, and
+especially to hurt me. She is fond of public shows, because they afford
+such possibilities of hurting me. Once I saw her standing partly on a
+seat and partly on another lady in the church of St. George's, Hanover
+Square, partly, indeed, watching a bride cry, but chiefly, I expect,
+scheming how she could get round to me and hurt me. Then there was an
+occasion at the Academy when she was peculiarly aggressive. I was
+sitting next my lame friend when she marked me. Of course she came at
+once and sat right upon us. "Come along, Jane," I heard her say, as I
+struggled to draw my flattened remains from under her; "this gentleman
+will make room."
+
+My friend was not so entangled and had escaped on the other side. She
+noticed his walk. "Oh, don't _you_ get up," she said. "_This_
+gentleman," she indicated my convulsive struggles to free myself, "will
+do that. _I did not see that you were a cripple._"
+
+It may be some of my readers will recognise the lady now. It can be--for
+the honour of womankind--only one woman. She is an atavism, a survival
+of the age of violence, a Palæolithic squaw in petticoats. I do not know
+her name and address or I would publish it. I do not care if she kills
+me the next time she meets me, for the limits of endurance have been
+passed. If she kills me I shall die a martyr in the cause of the Queen's
+peace. And if it is only one woman, then it was the same lady, more than
+half intoxicated, that I saw in the Whitechapel Road cruelly
+ill-treating a little costermonger. If it was not she it was certainly
+her sister, and I do not care who knows it.
+
+What to do with her I do not know. A League, after all, seems
+ineffectual; she would break up any League. I have thought of giving her
+in charge for assault, but I shrink from the invidious publicity of
+that. Still, I am in grim earnest to do something. I think at times that
+the compulsory adoption of a narrow doorway for churches and places of
+public entertainment might be some protection for quiet, inoffensive
+people. How she would rage outside to be sure! Yet that seems a great
+undertaking.
+
+But this little paper is not so much a plan of campaign as a preliminary
+defiance. Life is a doubtful boon while one is never safe from assault,
+from hitting and shoving, from poking with umbrellas, being sat upon,
+and used as a target for projectile nephews and nieces. I warn
+her--possibly with a certain quaver in my voice--that I am in revolt. If
+she hits me again----I will not say the precise thing I will do, but I
+warn her, very solemnly and deliberately, that she had better not hit me
+again.
+
+And so for the present the matter remains.
+
+
+
+
+THE SHOPMAN
+
+
+If I were really opulent, I would not go into a shop at all--I would
+have a private secretary. If I were really determined, Euphemia would do
+these things. As it is, I find buying things in a shop the most
+exasperating of all the many trying duties of life. I am sometimes
+almost tempted to declare myself Adamite to escape it. The way the
+shopman eyes you as you enter his den, the very spread of his fingers,
+irritate me. "What can I have the pleasure?" he says, bowing forward at
+me, and with his eye on my chin--and so waits.
+
+Now I hate incomplete sentences, and confound his pleasure! I don't go
+into a shop to give a shopman pleasure. But your ordinary shopman must
+needs pretend you delight and amuse him. I say, trying to display my
+dislike as plainly as possible, "Gloves." "Gloves, yessir," he says. Why
+should he? I suppose he thinks I require to be confirmed in my
+persuasion that I want gloves. "Calf--kid--dogskin?" How should _I_ know
+the technicalities of his traffic? "Ordinary gloves," I say, disdaining
+his petty distinctions. "About what price, sir?" he asks.
+
+Now that always maddens me. Why should I be expected to know the price
+of gloves? I'm not a commercial traveller nor a wholesale dealer, and I
+don't look like one. Neither am I constitutionally parsimonious nor
+petty. I am a literary man, unworldly, and I wear long hair and a soft
+hat and a peculiar overcoat to indicate the same to ordinary people.
+Why, I say, should I know the price of gloves? I know they are some
+ordinary price--elevenpence-halfpenny, or three-and-six, or
+seven-and-six, or something--one of those prices that everything is
+sold at--but further I don't go. Perhaps I say elevenpence-halfpenny at
+a venture.
+
+His face lights up with quiet malice. "Don't keep them, sir," he says. I
+can tell by his expression that I am ridiculously low, and so being
+snubbed. I think of trying with three-and-six, or seven-and-six; the
+only other probable prices for things that I know, except a guinea and
+five pounds. Then I see the absurdity of the business, and my anger
+comes surging up.
+
+"Look here!" I say, as bitterly as possible. "I don't come here to play
+at Guessing Games. Never mind your prices. I want some gloves. Get me
+some!"
+
+This cows him a little, but very little. "May I ask your size, sir?" he
+says, a trifle more respectfully.
+
+One would think I spent all my time remembering the size of my gloves.
+However, it is no good resenting it. "It's either seven or nine," I say
+in a tired way.
+
+He just begins another question, and then he catches my eye and stops
+and goes away to obtain some gloves, and I get a breathing space. But
+why do they keep on with this cross-examination? If I knew exactly what
+I wanted--description, price, size--I should not go to a shop at all, it
+would save me such a lot of trouble just to send a cheque to the Stores.
+The only reason why I go into a tradesman's shop is because I don't know
+what I want exactly, am in doubt about the name or the size, or the
+price, or the fashion, and want a specialist to help me. The only reason
+for having shopmen instead of automatic machines is that one requires
+help in buying things. When I want gloves, the shopman ought to
+understand his business sufficiently well to know better than I do what
+particular kind of gloves I ought to be wearing, and what is a fair
+price for them. I don't see why I should teach him what is in fashion
+and what is not. A doctor does not ask you what kind of operation you
+want and what price you will pay for it. But I really believe these
+outfitter people would let me run about London wearing white cotton
+gloves and a plaid comforter without lifting a finger to prevent me.
+
+And, by the bye, that reminds me of a scandalous trick these salesmen
+will play you. Sometimes they have not the thing you want, and then they
+make you buy other things. I happen to have, through no fault of my own,
+a very small head, and consequently for one long summer I wore a little
+boy's straw hat about London with the colours of a Paddington Board
+School, simply because a rascal outfitter hadn't my size in a proper
+kind of headgear, and induced me to buy the thing by specious
+representations. He must have known perfectly well it was not what I
+ought to wear. It seems never to enter into a shopman's code of honour
+that he ought to do his best for his customer. Since that, however, I
+have noticed lots of people about who have struck me in a new light as
+triumphs of the salesman, masterpieces in the art of incongruity; age in
+the garb of youth, corpulence put off with the size called "slender
+men's"; unhappy, gentle, quiet men with ties like oriflammes, breasts
+like a kingfisher's, and cataclysmal trouser patterns. Even so, if the
+shopkeeper had his will, should we all be. Those poor withered maiden
+ladies, too, who fill us with a kind of horror, with their juvenile
+curls, their girlish crudity of colouring, their bonnets, giddy,
+tottering, hectic. It overcomes me with remorse to think that I myself
+have accused them of vanity and folly. It overcomes me with pain to hear
+the thoughtless laugh aloud after them, in the public ways. For they are
+simply short-sighted trustful people, the myopic victims of the salesman
+and saleswoman. The little children gibe at them, pelt even.... And
+somewhere in the world a draper goes unhung.
+
+However, the gloves are bought. I select a pair haphazard, and he
+pretends to perceive they fit perfectly by putting them over the back of
+my hand. I make him assure me of the fit, and then buy the pair and
+proceed to take my old ones off and put the new on grimly. If they split
+or the fingers are too long--glovemakers have the most erratic
+conceptions of the human finger--I have to buy another pair.
+
+But the trouble only begins when you have bought your thing. "Nothing
+more, sir?" he says. "Nothing," I say. "Braces?" he says. "No, thank
+you," I say. "Collars, cuffs?" He looks at mine swiftly but keenly, and
+with an unendurable suspicion.
+
+He goes on, item after item. Am I in rags, that I should endure this
+thing? And I get sick of my everlasting "No, thank you"--the monotony
+shows up so glaringly against his kaleidoscope variety. I feel all the
+unutterable pettiness, the mean want of enterprise of my poor little
+purchase compared with the catholic fling he suggests. I feel angry with
+myself for being thus played upon, furiously angry with him. "_No, no_!"
+I say.
+
+"These tie-holders are new." He proceeds to show me his infernal
+tie-holders. "They prevent the tie puckering," he says with his eye on
+mine. It's no good. "How much?" I say.
+
+This whets him to further outrage. "Look here, my man!" I say at last,
+goaded to it, "I came here for gloves. After endless difficulties I at
+last induced you to let me have gloves. I have also been intimidated, by
+the most shameful hints and insinuations, into buying that _beastly_
+tie-holder. I'm not a child that I don't know my own needs. Now _will_
+you let me go? How much do you want?"
+
+That usually checks him.
+
+The above is a fair specimen of a shopman--a favourable rendering. There
+are other things they do, but I simply cannot write about them because
+it irritates me so to think of them. One infuriating manoeuvre is to
+correct your pronunciation. Another is to make a terrible ado about your
+name and address--even when it is quite a well-known name.
+
+After I have bought things at a shop I am quite unfit for social
+intercourse. I have to go home and fume. There was a time when Euphemia
+would come and discuss my purchase with a certain levity, but on one
+occasion....
+
+Some day these shopmen will goad me too far. It's almost my only
+consolation, indeed, to think what I am going to do when I do break out.
+There is a salesman somewhere in the world, he going on his way and I
+on mine, who will, I know, prove my last straw. It may be he will read
+this--amused--recking little of the mysteries of fate.... Is killing a
+salesman murder, like killing a human being?
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF CURSES
+
+
+Professor Gargoyle, you must understand, has travelled to and fro in the
+earth, culling flowers of speech: a kind of recording angel he is, but
+without any sentimental tears. To be plain, he studies swearing. His
+collection, however, only approaches completeness in the western
+departments of European language. Going eastward he found such an
+appalling and tropical luxuriance of these ornaments as to despair at
+last altogether of even a representative selection. "They do not curse,"
+he says, "at door-handles, and shirt-studs, and such other trifles as
+will draw down the meagre discharge of an Occidental, but when they do
+begin----
+
+"I hired a promising-looking man at Calcutta, and after a month or so
+refused to pay his wages. He was unable to get at me with the big knife
+he carried, because the door was locked, so he sat on his hams outside
+under the verandah, from a quarter-past six in the morning until nearly
+ten, cursing--cursing in one steady unbroken flow--an astonishing spate
+of blasphemy. First he cursed my family, from me along the female line
+back to Eve, and then, having toyed with me personally for a little
+while, he started off along the line of my possible posterity to my
+remotest great-grandchildren. Then he cursed me by this and that. My
+hand ached taking it down, he was so very rich. It was a perfect
+anthology of Bengali blasphemy--vivid, scorching, and variegated. Not
+two alike. And then he turned about and dealt with different parts of
+me. I was really very fortunate in him. Yet it was depressing to think
+that all this was from one man, and that there are six hundred million
+people in Asia."
+
+"Naturally," said the Professor in answer to my question, "these
+investigations involve a certain element of danger. The first condition
+of curse-collecting is to be unpopular, especially in the East, where
+comminatory swearing alone is practised, and you have to offend a man
+very grievously to get him to disgorge his treasure. In this country,
+except among ladies in comparatively humble circumstances, anything like
+this fluent, explicit, detailed, and sincere cursing, aimed,
+missile-fashion, at a personal enemy, is not found. It was quite common
+a few centuries ago; indeed, in the Middle Ages it was part of the
+recognised procedure. Aggrieved parties would issue a father's curse,
+an orphan's curse, and so forth, much as we should take out a county
+court summons. And it played a large part in ecclesiastical policy too.
+At one time the entire Church militant here on earth was swearing in
+unison, and the Latin tongue, at the Republic of Venice--a very splendid
+and imposing spectacle. It seems to me a pity to let these old customs
+die out so completely. I estimate that more than half these Gothic forms
+have altogether passed out of memory. There must have been some splendid
+things in Erse and Gaelic too; for the Celtic mind, with its more vivid
+sense of colour, its quicker transitions, and deeper emotional quality,
+has ever over-cursed the stolid Teuton. But it is all getting forgotten.
+
+"Indeed, your common Englishman now scarcely curses at all. A more
+colourless and conventional affair than what in England is called
+swearing one can scarcely imagine. It is just common talk, with some
+half-dozen orthodox bad words dropped in here and there in the most
+foolish and illogical manner. Fancy having orthodox unorthodox words! I
+remember one day getting into a third-class smoking carriage on the
+Metropolitan Railway about one o'clock, and finding it full of rough
+working men. Everything they said was seasoned with one incredibly
+stupid adjective, and no doubt they thought they were very desperate
+characters. At last I asked them not to say that word again. One
+forthwith asked me 'What the ----'--I really cannot quote these
+puerilities--'what the idiotic _cliché_ that mattered to me?' So I
+looked at him quietly over my glasses, and I began. It was a revelation
+to these poor fellows. They sat open-mouthed, gasping. Then those that
+were nearest me began to edge away, and at the very next station they
+all bundled out of the carriage before the train stopped, as though I
+had some infectious disease. And the thing was just a rough imperfect
+rendering of some mere commonplaces, passing the time of day as it were,
+with which the heathen of Aleppo used to favour the servants of the
+American missionary. Indeed," said Professor Gargoyle, "if it were not
+for women there would be nothing in England that one could speak of as
+swearing at all."
+
+"I say," said I, "is not that rather rough on the ladies?"
+
+"Not at all; they have agreed to consider certain words, for no very
+good reason, bad words. It is a pure convention; it has little or
+nothing to do with the actual meaning, because for every one of these
+bad words there is a paraphrase or synonym considered to be quite
+suitable for polite ears. Hence the feeblest creature can always produce
+a sensation by breaking the taboo. But women are learning how to undo
+this error of theirs now. The word 'damn,' for instance, is, I hear,
+being admitted freely into the boudoir and feminine conversation; it is
+even considered a rather prudish thing to object to this word. Now, men,
+especially feeble men, hate doing things that women do. As a
+consequence, men who go about saying 'damn' are now regarded by their
+fellow-men as only a shade less effeminate than those who go about
+saying 'nasty' and 'horrid.' The subtler sex will not be long in
+noticing what has happened to this objectionable word. When they do they
+will, of course, forthwith take up all the others. It will be a little
+startling perhaps at first, but in the end there will be no swearing
+left. I have no doubt there will be those who will air their petty wit
+on the pioneer women, but where a martyr is wanted a woman can always be
+found to offer herself. She will clothe herself in cursing, like the
+ungodly, and perish in that Nessus shirt, a martyr to pure language. And
+then this dull cad swearing--a mere unnecessary affectation of
+coarseness--will disappear. And a very good job too.
+
+"There is a pretty department of the subject which I might call grace
+swearing. 'Od's fish,' cried the king, when he saw the man climbing
+Salisbury spire; 'he shall have a patent for it--no one else shall do
+it.' One might call such little things Wardour Street curses. 'Od's
+bodkins' is a ladylike form, and 'Od's possles' a variety I met in the
+British Museum. Every gentleman once upon a time aspired to have his own
+particular grace curse, just as he liked to have his crest, and his
+bookplate, and his characteristic signature. It fluttered pleasantly
+into his conversation, as Mr. Whistler's butterfly comes into his
+pictures--a signature and a delight. 'Od's butterfly!' I have sometimes
+thought of a little book of grace-words and heraldic curses, printed
+with wide margins on the best of paper. Its covers should be of soft red
+leather, stamped with little gold flowers. It might be made a birthday
+book, or a pocket diary--'Daily Invocations.'
+
+"Coming back to wrathy swearing, I must confess I am sorry to see it
+decay. It was such a thoroughly hygienic and moral practice. You see, if
+anything annoying happens to a man, or if any powerful emotion seizes
+him, his brain under the irritation begins to disengage energy at a
+tremendous rate. He has to use all his available force of control in
+keeping the energy in. Some of it will leak away into the nerves of his
+face and distort his features, some may set his tear-glands at work,
+some may travel down his vagus nerve and inhibit his heart's action so
+that he faints, or upset the blood-vessels in his head and give him a
+stroke. Or if he pens it up, without its reaching any of these vents, it
+may rise at last to flood-level, and you will have violent assaults, the
+breaking of furniture, 'murther' even. For all this energy a good
+flamboyant, ranting swear is Nature's outlet. All primitive men and most
+animals swear. It is an emotional shunt. Your cat swears at you because
+she does not want to scratch your face. And the horse, because he cannot
+swear, drops dead. So you see my reason for regretting the decay of
+this excellent and most wholesome practice....
+
+"However, I must be getting on. Just now I am travelling about London
+paying cabmen their legal fares. Sometimes one picks up a new variant,
+though much of it is merely stereo."
+
+And with that, flinging a playful curse at me, he disappeared at once
+into the tobacco smoke from which I had engendered him. An amusing and
+cheerful person on the whole, though I will admit his theme was a little
+undesirable.
+
+
+
+
+DUNSTONE'S DEAR LADY
+
+
+The story of Dunstone is so slight, so trivial in its cardinal
+incidents, such a business of cheap feathers and bits of ribbon on the
+surface, that I should hesitate to tell it, were it not for its
+Inwardness, what one might call the symbolism of the thing. Frankly, I
+do not clearly see what that symbolism is, but I feel it hovering in
+some indefinable way whenever I recall his case. It is one of those
+things that make a man extend his arm and twiddle his fingers, and say,
+blinking, "Like _that_, you know." So do not imagine for one moment that
+this is a shallow story, simply because it is painted, so to speak, not
+in heart's blood but in table claret.
+
+Dunstone was a strong, quiet kind of man--a man of conspicuous
+mediocrity, and rising rapidly, therefore, in his profession. He was
+immensely industrious, and a little given to melancholia in private
+life. He smoked rather too many cigars, and took his social occasions
+seriously. He dressed faultlessly, with a scrupulous elimination of
+style. Unlike Mr. Grant Allen's ideal man, he was not constitutionally a
+lover; indeed, he seemed not to like the ordinary girl at all--found her
+either too clever or too shallow, lacking a something. I don't think
+_he_ knew quite what it was. Neither do I--it is a case for extended
+hand and twiddling fingers. Moreover, I don't think the ordinary girl
+took to Dunstone very much.
+
+He suffered, I fancy, from a kind of mental greyness; he was all subtle
+tones; the laughter of girls jarred upon him; foolish smartness or
+amiable foolishness got on his nerves; he detested, with equal
+sincerity, bright dressing, artistic dabbling, piety, and the glow of
+health. And when, as his confidential friend--confidential, that is, so
+far as his limits allowed--I heard that he intended to marry, I was
+really very much surprised.
+
+I expected something quintessential; I was surprised to find she was a
+visiting governess. Harringay, the artist, thought there was nothing in
+her, but Sackbut, the art critic, was inclined to admire her bones. For
+my own part, I took rather a liking to her. She was small and thin, and,
+to be frank, I think it was because she hardly got enough to eat--of the
+delicate food she needed. She was shabby, too, dressed in rusty
+mourning--she had recently lost her mother. But she had a sweet, low
+voice, a shrinking manner, rather a graceful carriage, I thought, and,
+though she spoke rarely, all she said was sweet and sane. She struck me
+as a refined woman in a blatant age. The general effect of her upon me
+was favourable; upon Dunstone it was tremendous. He lost a considerable
+proportion of his melancholia, and raved at times like a common man. He
+called her in particular his "Dear Lady" and his "Sweet Lady," things
+that I find eloquent of what he found in her. What that was I fancy I
+understand, and yet I cannot say it quite. One has to resort to the
+extended arm and fingers vibratile.
+
+Before he married her--which he did while she was still in
+half-mourning--there was anxiety about her health, and I understood she
+needed air and exercise and strengthening food. But she recovered
+rapidly after her marriage, her eyes grew brighter, we saw less of
+Sackbut's "delicious skeleton." And then, in the strangest way, she
+began to change. It is none of my imagining; I have heard the change
+remarked upon by half a dozen independent observers. Yet you would think
+a girl of three-and-twenty (as she certainly was) had attained her
+development as a woman. I have heard her compared to a winter bud, cased
+in its sombre scales, until the sun shone, and the warm, moist winds
+began to blow. I noticed first that the delicate outline of her cheek
+was filling, and then came the time when she reverted to colour in her
+dress.
+
+Her first essays were charitably received. Her years of struggle, her
+year of mourning, had no doubt dwarfed her powers in this direction;
+presently her natural good taste would reassert itself. But the next
+effort and the next were harder to explain. It was not the note of
+nervousness or inexperience we saw; there was an undeniable decision,
+and not a token of shame. The little black winter bud grew warm-coloured
+above, and burst suddenly into extravagant outlines and chromatic
+confusion. Harringay, who is a cad, first put what we were all feeling
+into words. "I've just seen Dunstone and his donah," he said. Clearly
+she was one of those rare women who cannot dress. And that was not all.
+A certain buoyancy, hitherto unsuspected, crept into her manner, as the
+corpuscles multiplied in her veins--an archness. She talked more, and
+threw up a spray of playfulness. And, with a growing energy, she began
+to revise the exquisite æsthetic balance of Dunstone's house. She even
+enamelled a chair.
+
+For a year or so I was in the East. When I returned Mrs. Dunstone amazed
+me. In some odd way she had grown, she had positively grown. She was
+taller, broader, brighter--infinitely brighter. She wore a diamond
+brooch in the afternoon. The "delicious skeleton" had vanished in
+plumpness. She moved with emphasis. Her eye--which glittered--met mine
+bravely, and she talked as one who would be heard. In the old days you
+saw nothing but a rare timid glance from under the pretty lids. She
+talked now of this and that, of people of "good family," and the
+difficulty of getting a suitable governess for her little boy. She said
+she objected to meeting people "one would not care to invite to one's
+house." She swamped me with tea and ruled the conversation, so that
+Dunstone and I, who were once old friends, talked civil twaddle for the
+space of one hour--theatres, concerts, and assemblies chiefly--and then
+parted again. The furniture had all been altered--there were two "cosy
+nooks" in the room after the recipe in the _Born Lady_. It was plain to
+me, it is plain to everyone, I find, that Mrs. Dunstone is, in the sun
+of prosperity, rapidly developing an extremely florid vulgarity. And
+afterwards I discovered that she had forgotten her music, and evidently
+enjoyed her meals. Yet I for one can witness that five years ago there
+was _that_ about her--I can only extend my arm with quivering digits.
+But it was something very sweet and dainty, something that made her
+white and thoughtful, and marked her off from the rest of womankind. I
+sometimes fancy it may have been anæmia in part, but it was certainly
+poverty and mourning in the main.
+
+You may think that this is a story of disillusionment. When I first
+heard the story, I thought so too. But, so far as Dunstone goes, that is
+not the case. It is rare that I see him now, but the other day we smoked
+two cigars apiece together. And in a moment of confidence he spoke of
+her. He said how anxious he felt for her health, called her his "Dainty
+Little Lady," and spoke of the coarseness of other women. I am afraid
+this is not a very eventful story, and yet there is _that_----That very
+convenient gesture, an arm protruded and flickering fingers, conveys my
+meaning best. Perhaps you will understand.
+
+
+
+
+EUPHEMIA'S NEW ENTERTAINMENT
+
+
+Euphemia has great ideas of putting people at their ease, a thousand
+little devices for thawing the very stiffest among them with a home-like
+glow. Far be it from me to sing her praises, but I must admit that at
+times she is extremely successful in this--at times almost too
+successful. That tea-cake business, for instance. No doubt it's a genial
+expedient to make your guests toast his own tea-cake: down he must go
+upon his knees upon your hearthrug, and his poses will melt away like
+the dews of the morning before the rising sun. Nevertheless, when it
+comes to roasting a gallant veteran like Major Augustus, deliberately
+roasting him, in spite of the facts that he has served his country nobly
+through thirty irksome years of peace, and that he admires Euphemia with
+a delicate fervour--roasting him, I say, alive, as if he were a
+Strasburg goose, or suddenly affixing a delicate young genius to the
+hither end of a toasting-fork while he is in the midst of a really very
+subtle and tender conversation, the limits of social warmth seem to be
+approaching dangerously near. However, this scarcely concerns Euphemia's
+new entertainment.
+
+This new entertainment is modelling in clay. Euphemia tells me it is to
+be quite the common thing this winter. It is intended especially for the
+evening, after a little dinner. As the reader is aware, the evening
+after a little dinner is apt to pall. A certain placid contentment
+creeps over people. I don't know in what organ originality resides; but
+it's a curious thing, and one I must leave to the consideration of
+psychologists, that people's output of original remarks appears to be
+obstructed in some way after these gastronomic exercises. Then a little
+dinner always confirms my theory of the absurdity of polygonal
+conversation. Music and songs, too, have their drawbacks, especially gay
+songs; they invariably evoke a vaporous melancholy. Card-playing
+Euphemia objects to because her uncle, the dean, is prominent in
+connection with some ridiculous association for the suppression of
+gambling; and in what are called "games" no rational creature esteeming
+himself an immortal soul would participate. In this difficulty it was
+that Euphemia--decided, I fancy, by the possession of certain really
+very becoming aprons--took up this business of clay-modelling.
+
+You have a lump of greyish clay and a saucer of water and certain small
+tools of wood (for which I cannot discover the slightest use in the
+world) given you, and Euphemia puts on a very winning bib. Then,
+moistening the clay until it acquires sufficient plasticity, and
+incidentally splashing your cuffs and coat-sleeves with an agreeably
+light tinted mud, you set to work. At first people are a little
+disgusted at the apparent dirtiness of the employment, and also perhaps
+rather diffident. The eldest lady says weakly deprecatory things, and
+the feeblest male is jocular after his wont. But it is remarkable how
+soon the charm of this delightful occupation seizes hold of you. For
+really the sensations of moulding this plastic matter into shape are
+wonderfully and quite unaccountably pleasing. It is ever so much easier
+than drawing things--"anyone can do it," as the advertisement people
+say--and the work is so much more substantial in its effects. Technical
+questions arise. In moulding a head, do you take a lump and fine it
+down, or do you dab on the features after the main knob of it is shaped?
+
+So soon as your guests realise the plastic possibilities before them, a
+great silence, a delicious absorption comes over them. Some rash person
+states that he is moulding an Apollo, or a vase, or a bust of Mr.
+Gladstone, or an elephant, or some such animal. The wiser ones go to
+work in a speculative spirit, aiming secretly at this perhaps, but quite
+willing to go on with that, if Providence so wills it. Buddhas are good
+subjects; there is a certain genial rotundity not difficult to attain,
+and the pyramidal build of the idol is well suited to the material. You
+can start a Buddha, and hedge to make it a loaf of bread if the features
+are unsatisfactory. For slender objects a skeletal substructure of bent
+hairpins or matches is advisable. The innate egotism of the human animal
+becomes very conspicuous. "His tail is too large," says the lady with
+the fish, in self-criticism. "I haven't put his tail on yet--that's his
+trunk," answers the young man with the elephant.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+It's a pretty sight to see the first awakening of the artistic passion
+in your guests--the flush of discovery, the glow of innocent pride as
+the familiar features of Mr. Gladstone emerge from the bust of Clytie.
+An accidental stroke of the thumbnail develops new marvels of
+expression. (By the bye, it's just as well to forbid deliberate attempts
+at portraiture.) And I know no more becoming expression for everyone
+than the look of intent and pleasing effort--a divine touch almost--that
+comes over the common man modelling. For my own part, I feel a being
+infinitely my own superior when I get my fingers upon the clay. And,
+incidentally, how much pleasanter this is than writing articles--to see
+the work grow altogether under your hands; to begin with the large
+masses and finish with the details, as every artist should! Just to show
+how easy the whole thing is, I append a little sketch of the first work
+I ever did. I had had positively no previous instruction. Unfortunately
+the left ear of the animal--a cat, by the bye--has fallen off. (The
+figure to the left is the back view of a Buddha.)
+
+However, I have said enough to show the charm of the new amusement. It
+will prove a boon to many a troubled hostess. The material is called
+modelling-clay, and one may buy it of any dealer in artists' materials,
+several pounds for sixpence. This has to be renewed at intervals, as a
+good deal is taken away by the more careless among your guests upon
+their clothes.
+
+
+
+
+FOR FREEDOM OF SPELLING
+
+THE DISCOVERY OF AN ART
+
+
+It is curious that people do not grumble more at having to spell
+correctly. Yet one may ask, Do we not a little over-estimate the value
+of orthography? This is a natural reflection enough when the maker of
+artless happy phrases has been ransacking the dictionary for some
+elusive wretch of a word which in the end proves to be not yet
+naturalised, or technical, or a mere local vulgarity; yet one does not
+often hear the idea canvassed in polite conversation. Dealers in small
+talk, of the less prolific kind, are continually falling back upon the
+silk hat or dress suit, or some rule of etiquette or other convention as
+a theme, but spelling seems to escape them. The suspicion seems quaint,
+but one may almost fancy that an allusion to spelling savoured a little
+of indelicacy. It must be admitted, though where the scruples come from
+would be hard to say, that there is a certain diffidence even here in
+broaching my doubts in the matter. For some inexplicable reason spelling
+has become mixed up with moral feeling. One cannot pretend to explain
+things in a little paper of this kind; the fact is so. Spelling is not
+appropriate or inappropriate, elegant or inelegant; it is right or
+wrong. We do not greatly blame a man for turn-down collars when the
+vogue is erect; nor, in these liberal days, for theological
+eccentricity; but we esteem him "Nithing" and an outcast if he but drop
+a "p" from opportunity. It is not an anecdote, but a scandal, if we say
+a man cannot spell his own name. There is only one thing esteemed worse
+before we come to the deadly crimes, and that is the softening of
+language by dropping the aspirate.
+
+After all, it is an unorthodox age. We are all horribly afraid of being
+bourgeois, and unconventionality is the ideal of every respectable
+person. It is strange that we should cling so steadfastly to correct
+spelling. Yet again, one can partly understand the business, if one
+thinks of the little ways of your schoolmaster and schoolmistress. This
+sanctity of spelling is stamped upon us in our earliest years. The
+writer recalls a period of youth wherein six hours a week were given to
+the study of spelling, and four hours to all other religious
+instruction. So important is it, that a writer who cannot spell is
+almost driven to abandon his calling, however urgent the thing he may
+have to say, or his need of the incidentals of fame. Yet in the crisis
+of such a struggle rebellious thoughts may arise. Even this: Why, after
+all, should correct spelling be the one absolutely essential literary
+merit? For it is less fatal for an ambitious scribe to be as dull as
+Hoxton than to spell in diverse ways.
+
+Yet correct spelling of English has not been traced to revelation; there
+was no grammatical Sinai, with a dictionary instead of tables of stone.
+Indeed, we do not even know certainly when correct spelling began, which
+word in the language was first spelt the right way, and by whom. Correct
+spelling may have been evolved, or it may be the creation of some master
+mind. Its inventor, if it had an inventor, is absolutely forgotten.
+Thomas Cobbett would have invented it, but that he was born more than
+two centuries too late, poor man. All that we certainly know is that,
+contemporaneously with the rise of extreme Puritanism, the belief in
+orthography first spread among Elizabethan printers, and with the
+Hanoverian succession the new doctrine possessed the whole length and
+breadth of the land. At that time the world passed through what
+extension lecturers call, for no particular reason, the classical epoch.
+Nature--as, indeed, all the literature manuals testify--was in the
+remotest background then of human thought. The human mind, in a mood of
+the severest logic, brought everything to the touchstone of an orderly
+reason; the conception of "correctness" dominated all mortal affairs.
+For instance, one's natural hair with its vagaries of rat's tails,
+duck's tails, errant curls, and baldness, gave place to an orderly wig,
+or was at least decently powdered. The hoop remedied the deficiencies of
+the feminine form, and the gardener clipped his yews into
+respectability. All poetry was written to one measure in those days, and
+a Royal Academy with a lady member was inaugurated that art might become
+at least decent. Dictionaries began. The crowning glory of Hanoverian
+literature was a Great Lexicographer.
+
+In those days it was believed that the spelling of every English word
+had been settled for all time. Thence to the present day, though the
+severities then inaugurated, so far as metre and artistic composition
+are concerned, been generously relaxed--though we have had a Whistler, a
+Walt Whitman, and a Wagner--the rigours of spelling have continued
+unabated. There is just one right way of spelling, and all others are
+held to be not simply inelegant or undesirable, but wrong; and
+unorthodox spelling, like original morality, goes hand in hand with
+shame.
+
+Yet even at the risk of shocking the religious convictions of some, may
+not one ask whether spelling is in truth a matter of right and wrong at
+all? Might it not rather be an art? It is too much to advocate the
+indiscriminate sacking of the alphabet, but yet it seems plausible that
+there is a happy medium between a reckless debauch of errant letters and
+our present dead rigidity. For some words at anyrate may there not be
+sometimes one way of spelling a little happier, sometimes another? We do
+something of this sort even now with our "phantasy" and "fantasie," and
+we might do more. How one would spell this word or that would become, if
+this latitude were conceded, a subtle anxiety of the literary exquisite.
+People are scarcely prepared to realise what shades of meaning may be
+got by such a simple device. Let us take a simple instance. You write,
+let us say, to all your cousins, many of your friends, and even, it may
+be, to this indifferent intimate and that familiar enemy, "My dear
+So-and-so." But at times you feel even as you write, sometimes, that
+there is something too much and sometimes something lacking. You may
+even get so far in the right way occasionally as to write, "My dr.
+So-and-so," when your heart is chill. And people versed in the arts of
+social intercourse know the subtle insult of misspelling a person's
+name, or flicking it off flippantly with a mere waggling wipe of the
+pen. But these are mere beginnings.
+
+Let the reader take a pen in hand and sit down and write, "My very dear
+wife." Clean, cold, and correct this is, speaking of orderly affection,
+settled and stereotyped long ago. In such letters is butcher's meat also
+"very dear." Try now, "Migh verrie deare Wyfe." Is it not immediately
+infinitely more soft and tender? Is there not something exquisitely
+pleasant in lingering over those redundant letters, leaving each word,
+as it were, with a reluctant caress? Such spelling is a soft, domestic,
+lovingly wasteful use of material. Or, again, if you have no wife, or
+object to an old-fashioned conjugal tenderness, try "Mye owne sweete
+dearrest Marrie." There is the tremble of a tenderness no mere
+arrangement of trim everyday letters can express in those double
+_r's_. "Sweete" my ladie must be; sweet! why pump-water and inferior
+champagne, spirits of nitrous ether and pancreatic juice are "sweet."
+For my own part I always spell so, with lots of f's and g's and such
+like tailey, twirley, loopey things, when my heart is in the tender
+vein. And I hold that a man who will not do so, now he has been shown
+how to do it, is, in plain English, neither more nor less than a prig.
+The advantages of a varied spelling of names are very great.
+Industrious, rather than intelligent, people have given not a little
+time, and such minds as they have, to the discussion of the right
+spelling of our great poet's name. But he himself never dreamt of tying
+himself down to one presentation of himself, and was--we have his hand
+for it--Shakespeare, Shakspear, Shakespear, Shakspeare, and so forth, as
+the mood might be. It would be almost as reasonable to debate whether
+Shakespeare smiled or frowned. My dear friend Simmongues is the same.
+He is "Sims," a mere slash of the pen, to those he scorns, Simmonds or
+Simmongs to his familiars, and Simmons, A.T. Simmons, Esq., to all
+Europe.
+
+From such mere introductory departures from precision, such petty
+escapades as these, we would we might seduce the reader into an utter
+debauch of spelling. But a sudden Mænad dance of the letters on the
+page, gleeful and iridescent spelling, a wild rush and procession of
+howling vowels and clattering consonants, might startle the half-won
+reader back into orthodoxy. Besides, there is another reader--the
+printer's reader--to consider. For if an author let his wit run to these
+matters, he must write elaborate marginal exhortations to this
+authority, begging his mercy, to let the little flowers of spelling
+alone. Else the plough of that Philistine's uniformity will utterly root
+them out.
+
+Such high art of spelling as is thus hinted at is an art that has still
+to gather confidence and brave the light of publicity. A few, indeed,
+practise it secretly for love--in letters and on spare bits of paper.
+But, for the most part, people do not know that there is so much as an
+art of spelling possible; the tyranny of orthography lies so heavily on
+the land. Your common editors and their printers are a mere orthodox
+spelling police, and at the least they rigorously blot out all the
+delightful frolics of your artist in spelling before his writings reach
+the public eye. But commonly, as I have proved again and again, the
+slightest lapse into rococo spelling is sufficient to secure the
+rejection of a manuscript without further ado.
+
+And to end,--a word about Phonographers. It may be that my title has led
+the reader to anticipate some mention of these before. They are a kind
+of religious sect, a heresy from the orthodox spelling. They bind one
+another by their mysteries and a five-shilling subscription in a
+"soseiti to introduis an impruvd method of spelinj." They come across
+the artistic vision, they and their Soseiti, with an altogether
+indefinable offence. Perhaps the essence of it is the indescribable
+meanness of their motive. For this phonography really amounts to a
+study of the cheapest way of spelling words. These phonographers are
+sweaters of the Queen's English, living meanly on the selvage of honest
+mental commerce by clipping the coin of thought. But enough of them.
+They are mentioned here only to be disavowed. They would substitute one
+narrow orthodoxy for another, and I would unfold the banner of freedom.
+Spell, my brethren, as you will! Awake, arise, O language living in
+chains; let Butter's spelling be our Bastille! So with a prophetic
+vision of liberated words pouring out of the dungeons of a
+spelling-book, this plea for freedom concludes. What trivial arguments
+there are for a uniform spelling I must leave the reader to discover.
+This is no place to carp against the liberation I foresee, with the glow
+of the dawn in my eyes.
+
+
+
+
+INCIDENTAL THOUGHTS ON A BALD HEAD
+
+
+I was asked to go, quite suddenly, and found myself there before I had
+time to think of what it might be. I understood her to say it was a
+meeting of some "Sunday society," some society that tried to turn the
+Sabbath from a day of woe to a day of rejoicing. "St. George's Hall,
+Langham Place," a cab, and there we were. I thought they would be
+picturesque Pagans. But the entertainment was the oddest it has ever
+been my lot to see, a kind of mystery. The place was dark, except for a
+big circle of light on a screen, and a dismal man with a long stick was
+talking about the effects of alcohol on your muscles. He talked and
+talked, and people went to sleep all about us. Euphemia's face looked so
+very pretty in the dim light that I tried to talk to her and hold her
+hand, but she only said "Ssh!" And then they began showing pictures on
+the screen--the most shocking things!--stomachs, and all that kind of
+thing. They went on like that for an hour, and then there was a lot of
+thumping with umbrellas, and they turned the lights up and we went home.
+Curious way of spending Sunday afternoon, is it not?
+
+But you may imagine I had a dismal time all that hour. I understood the
+people about me were Sceptics, the kind of people who don't believe
+things--a singular class, and, I am told, a growing one. These excellent
+people, it seems, have conscientious objections to going to chapel or
+church, but at the same time the devotional habit of countless
+generations of pious forerunners is strong in them. Consequently they
+have invented things like these lectures to go to, with a professor
+instead of a priest, and a lantern slide of a stomach by way of
+altar-piece; and alcohol they make their Devil, and their god is
+Hygiene--a curious and instructive case of mental inertia. I understand,
+too, there are several other temples of this Cult in London--South Place
+Chapel and Essex Hall, for instance, where they worship the Spirit of
+the Innermost. But the thing that struck me so oddly was the number of
+bald heads glimmering faintly in the reflected light from the lantern
+circle. And that set me thinking upon a difficulty I have never been
+able to surmount.
+
+You see these people, and lots of other people, too, believe in a thing
+they call Natural Selection. They think, as part of that belief, that
+men are descended from hairy simian ancestors; assert that even a
+hundred thousand years ago the ancestor was hairy--hairy, heavy, and
+almost as much a brute as if he lived in Mr. Arthur Morrison's
+Whitechapel. For my own part I think it a pretty theory, and would
+certainly accept it were it not for one objection. The thing I cannot
+understand is how our ancestor lost that hair. I see no reason why he
+should not have kept his hair on. According to the theory of natural
+selection, materially favourable variations survive, unfavourable
+disappear; the only way in which the loss is to be accounted for is by
+explaining it as advantageous; but where is the advantage of losing your
+hair? The disadvantages appear to me to be innumerable. A thick covering
+of hair, like that of a Capuchin monkey, would be an invaluable
+protection against sudden changes of temperature, far better than any
+clothing can be. Had I that, for instance, I should be rid of the
+perpetual cold in the head that so disfigures my life; and the
+multitudes who die annually of chills, bronchitis, and consumption, and
+most of those who suffer from rheumatic pains, neuralgia, and so forth,
+would not so die and suffer. And in the past, when clothing was less
+perfect and firing a casual commodity, the disadvantages of losing hair
+were all the greater. In very hot countries hair is perhaps even more
+important in saving the possessor from the excessive glare of the sun.
+Before the invention of the hat, thick hair on the head at least was
+absolutely essential to save the owner of the skull from sunstroke.
+That, perhaps, explains why the hair has been retained there, and why it
+is going now that we have hats, but it certainly does not explain why it
+has gone from the rest of the body.
+
+One--remarkably weak--explanation has been propounded: an appeal to our
+belief in human vanity. He picked it out by the roots, because he
+thought he was prettier without. But that is no reason at all. Suppose
+he did, it would not affect his children. Professor Weismann has at
+least convinced scientific people of this: that the characters acquired
+by a parent are rarely, if ever, transmitted to its offspring. An
+individual given to such wanton denudation would simply be at a
+disadvantage with his decently covered fellows, would fall behind in the
+race of life, and perish with his kind. Besides, if man has been at such
+pains to uncover his skin, why have quite a large number of the most
+respected among us such a passionate desire to have it covered up again?
+
+Yet that is the only attempted explanation I have ever come upon, and
+the thing has often worried me. I think it is just as probably a change
+in dietary. I have noticed that most of your vegetarians are
+shock-headed, ample-bearded men, and I have heard the Ancestor was
+vegetarian. Or it may be, I sometimes fancy, a kind of inherent
+disposition on the part of your human animal to dwindle. That came back
+in my memory vividly as I looked at the long rows of Sceptics, typical
+Advanced people, and marked their glistening crania. I recalled other
+losses. Here is Humanity, thought I, growing hairless, growing bald,
+growing toothless, unemotional, irreligious, losing the end joint of the
+little toe, dwindling in its osseous structures, its jawbone and brow
+ridges, losing all the full, rich curvatures of its primordial beauty.
+
+It seems almost like what the scientific people call a Law. And by
+strenuous efforts the creature just keeps pace with his losses--devises
+clothes, wigs, artificial teeth, paddings, shoes--what civilised being
+could use his bare feet for his ordinary locomotion? Imagine him on a
+furze-sprinkled golf links. Then stays, an efficient substitute for the
+effete feminine backbone. So the thing goes on. Long ago his superficies
+became artificial, and now the human being shrinks like a burning cigar,
+and the figure he has abandoned remains distended with artificial ashes,
+dead dry protections against the exposures he so unaccountably fears.
+Will he go on shrinking, I wonder?--become at last a mere lurking atomy
+in his own recesses, a kind of hermit crab, the bulk of him a complex
+mechanism, a thing of rags and tatters and papier-maché, stolen from the
+earth and the plant-world and his fellow beasts? And at last may he not
+disappear altogether, none missing him, and a democracy of honest
+machinery, neatly clad and loaded up with sound principles of action,
+walk to and fro in a regenerate world? Thus it was my mind went dreaming
+in St. George's Hall. But presently, as I say, came the last word about
+stomachs, and the bald men woke up, rattled their umbrellas, said it was
+vastly interesting, and went toddling off home in an ecstasy of advanced
+Liberalism. And we two returned to the place whence we came.
+
+
+
+
+OF A BOOK UNWRITTEN
+
+
+Accomplished literature is all very well in its way, no doubt, but much
+more fascinating to the contemplative man are the books that have not
+been written. These latter are no trouble to hold; there are no pages to
+turn over. One can read them in bed on sleepless nights without a
+candle. Turning to another topic, primitive man in the works of the
+descriptive anthropologist is certainly a very entertaining and quaint
+person, but the man of the future, if we only had the facts, would
+appeal to us more strongly. Yet where are the books? As Ruskin has said
+somewhere, _à propos_ of Darwin, it is not what man has been, but what
+he will be, that should interest us.
+
+The contemplative man in his easy-chair, pondering this saying, suddenly
+beholds in the fire, through the blue haze of his pipe, one of these
+great unwritten volumes. It is large in size, heavy in lettering,
+seemingly by one Professor Holzkopf, presumably Professor at
+Weissnichtwo. "The Necessary Characters of the Man of the Remote Future
+deduced from the Existing Stream of Tendency" is the title. The worthy
+Professor is severely scientific in his method, and deliberate and
+cautious in his deductions, the contemplative man discovers as he
+pursues his theme, and yet the conclusions are, to say the least,
+remarkable. We must figure the excellent Professor expanding the matter
+at great length, voluminously technical, but the contemplative
+man--since he has access to the only copy--is clearly at liberty to make
+such extracts and abstracts as he chooses for the unscientific reader.
+Here, for instance, is something of practicable lucidity that he
+considers admits of quotation. "The theory of evolution," writes the
+Professor, "is now universally accepted by zoologists and botanists, and
+it is applied unreservedly to man. Some question, indeed, whether it
+fits his soul, but all agree it accounts for his body. Man, we are
+assured, is descended from ape-like ancestors, moulded by circumstances
+into men, and these apes again were derived from ancestral forms of a
+lower order, and so up from the primordial protoplasmic jelly. Clearly
+then, man, unless the order of the universe has come to an end, will
+undergo further modification in the future, and at last cease to be man,
+giving rise to some other type of animated being. At once the
+fascinating question arises, What will this being be? Let us consider
+for a little the plastic influences at work upon our species.
+
+"Just as the bird is the creature of the wing, and is all moulded and
+modified to flying, and just as the fish is the creature that swims, and
+has had to meet the inflexible conditions of a problem in hydrodynamics,
+so man is the creature of the brain; he will live by intelligence, and
+not by physical strength, if he live at all. So that much that is purely
+'animal' about him is being, and must be, beyond all question,
+suppressed in his ultimate development. Evolution is no mechanical
+tendency making for perfection, according to the ideas current in the
+year of grace 1897; it is simply the continual adaptation of plastic
+life, for good or evil, to the circumstances that surround it.... We
+notice this decay of the animal part around us now, in the loss of teeth
+and hair, in the dwindling hands and feet of men, in their smaller jaws,
+and slighter mouths and ears. Man now does by wit and machinery and
+verbal agreement what he once did by bodily toil; for once he had to
+catch his dinner, capture his wife, run away from his enemies, and
+continually exercise himself, for love of himself, to perform these
+duties well. But now all this is changed. Cabs, trains, trams, render
+speed unnecessary, the pursuit of food becomes easier; his wife is no
+longer hunted, but rather, in view of the crowded matrimonial market,
+seeks him out. One needs wits now to live, and physical activity is a
+drug, a snare even; it seeks artificial outlets, and overflows in
+games. Athleticism takes up time and cripples a man in his competitive
+examinations, and in business. So is your fleshly man handicapped
+against his subtler brother. He is unsuccessful in life, does not marry.
+The better adapted survive."
+
+The coming man, then, will clearly have a larger brain, and a slighter
+body than the present. But the Professor makes one exception to this.
+"The human hand, since it is the teacher and interpreter of the brain,
+will become constantly more powerful and subtle as the rest of the
+musculature dwindles."
+
+Then in the physiology of these children of men, with their expanding
+brains, their great sensitive hands and diminishing bodies, great
+changes were necessarily worked. "We see now," says the Professor, "in
+the more intellectual sections of humanity an increasing sensitiveness
+to stimulants, a growing inability to grapple with such a matter as
+alcohol, for instance. No longer can men drink a bottleful of port; some
+cannot drink tea; it is too exciting for their highly-wrought nervous
+systems. The process will go on, and the Sir Wilfrid Lawson of some near
+generation may find it his duty and pleasure to make the silvery spray
+of his wisdom tintinnabulate against the tea-tray. These facts lead
+naturally to the comprehension of others. Fresh raw meat was once a dish
+for a king. Now refined persons scarcely touch meat unless it is
+cunningly disguised. Again, consider the case of turnips; the raw root
+is now a thing almost uneatable, but once upon a time a turnip must have
+been a rare and fortunate find, to be torn up with delirious eagerness
+and devoured in ecstasy. The time will come when the change will affect
+all the other fruits of the earth. Even now, only the young of mankind
+eat apples raw--the young always preserving ancestral characteristics
+after their disappearance in the adult. Some day even boys will regard
+apples without emotion. The boy of the future, one must believe, will
+gaze on an apple with the same unspeculative languor with which he now
+regards a flint"--in the absence of a cat.
+
+"Furthermore, fresh chemical discoveries came into action as modifying
+influences upon men. In the prehistoric period even, man's mouth had
+ceased to be an instrument for grasping food; it is still growing
+continually less prehensile, his front teeth are smaller, his lips
+thinner and less muscular; he has a new organ, a mandible not of
+irreparable tissue, but of bone and steel--a knife and fork. There is no
+reason why things should stop at partial artificial division thus
+afforded; there is every reason, on the contrary, to believe my
+statement that some cunning exterior mechanism will presently masticate
+and insalivate his dinner, relieve his diminishing salivary glands and
+teeth, and at last altogether abolish them."
+
+Then what is not needed disappears. What use is there for external ears,
+nose, and brow ridges now? The two latter once protected the eye from
+injury in conflict and in falls, but in these days we keep on our legs,
+and at peace. Directing his thoughts in this way, the reader may
+presently conjure up a dim, strange vision of the latter-day face: "Eyes
+large, lustrous, beautiful, soulful; above them, no longer separated by
+rugged brow ridges, is the top of the head, a glistening, hairless dome,
+terete and beautiful; no craggy nose rises to disturb by its unmeaning
+shadows the symmetry of that calm face, no vestigial ears project; the
+mouth is a small, perfectly round aperture, toothless and gumless,
+jawless, unanimal, no futile emotions disturbing its roundness as it
+lies, like the harvest moon or the evening star, in the wide firmament
+of face." Such is the face the Professor beholds in the future.
+
+Of course parallel modifications will also affect the body and limbs.
+"Every day so many hours and so much energy are required for digestion;
+a gross torpidity, a carnal lethargy, seizes on mortal men after dinner.
+This may and can be avoided. Man's knowledge of organic chemistry widens
+daily. Already he can supplement the gastric glands by artificial
+devices. Every doctor who administers physic implies that the bodily
+functions may be artificially superseded. We have pepsine, pancreatine,
+artificial gastric acid--I know not what like mixtures. Why, then,
+should not the stomach be ultimately superannuated altogether? A man
+who could not only leave his dinner to be cooked, but also leave it to
+be masticated and digested, would have vast social advantages over his
+food-digesting fellow. This is, let me remind you here, the calmest,
+most passionless, and scientific working out of the future forms of
+things from the data of the present. At this stage the following facts
+may perhaps stimulate your imagination. There can be no doubt that many
+of the Arthropods, a division of animals more ancient and even now more
+prevalent than the Vertebrata, have undergone more phylogenetic
+modification"--a beautiful phrase--"than even the most modified of
+vertebrated animals. Simple forms like the lobsters display a primitive
+structure parallel with that of the fishes. However, in such a form as
+the degraded 'Chondracanthus,' the structure has diverged far more
+widely from its original type than in man. Among some of these most
+highly modified crustaceans the whole of the alimentary canal--that is,
+all the food-digesting and food-absorbing parts--form a useless solid
+cord: the animal is nourished--it is a parasite--by absorption of the
+nutritive fluid in which it swims. Is there any absolute impossibility
+in supposing man to be destined for a similar change; to imagine him no
+longer dining, with unwieldy paraphernalia of servants and plates, upon
+food queerly dyed and distorted, but nourishing himself in elegant
+simplicity by immersion in a tub of nutritive fluid?
+
+"There grows upon the impatient imagination a building, a dome of
+crystal, across the translucent surface of which flushes of the most
+glorious and pure prismatic colours pass and fade and change. In the
+centre of this transparent chameleon-tinted dome is a circular white
+marble basin filled with some clear, mobile, amber liquid, and in this
+plunge and float strange beings. Are they birds?
+
+"They are the descendants of man--at dinner. Watch them as they hop on
+their hands--a method of progression advocated already by
+Bjornsen--about the pure white marble floor. Great hands they have,
+enormous brains, soft, liquid, soulful eyes. Their whole muscular
+system, their legs, their abdomens, are shrivelled to nothing, a
+dangling, degraded pendant to their minds."
+
+The further visions of the Professor are less alluring.
+
+"The animals and plants die away before men, except such as he preserves
+for his food or delight, or such as maintain a precarious footing about
+him as commensals and parasites. These vermin and pests must succumb
+sooner or later to his untiring inventiveness and incessantly growing
+discipline. When he learns (the chemists are doubtless getting towards
+the secret now) to do the work of chlorophyll without the plant, then
+his necessity for other animals and plants upon the earth will
+disappear. Sooner or later, where there is no power of resistance and no
+necessity, there comes extinction. In the last days man will be alone on
+the earth, and his food will be won by the chemist from the dead rocks
+and the sunlight.
+
+"And--one may learn the full reason in that explicit and painfully right
+book, the _Data of Ethics_--the irrational fellowship of man will give
+place to an intellectual co-operation, and emotion fall within the
+scheme of reason. Undoubtedly it is a long time yet, but a long time is
+nothing in the face of eternity, and every man who dares think of these
+things must look eternity in the face."
+
+Then the earth is ever radiating away heat into space, the Professor
+reminds us. And so at last comes a vision of earthly cherubim, hopping
+heads, great unemotional intelligences, and little hearts, fighting
+together perforce and fiercely against the cold that grips them tighter
+and tighter. For the world is cooling--slowly and inevitably it grows
+colder as the years roll by. "We must imagine these creatures," says the
+Professor, "in galleries and laboratories deep down in the bowels of the
+earth. The whole world will be snow-covered and piled with ice; all
+animals, all vegetation vanished, except this last branch of the tree of
+life. The last men have gone even deeper, following the diminishing heat
+of the planet, and vast metallic shafts and ventilators make way for the
+air they need."
+
+So with a glimpse of these human tadpoles, in their deep close gallery,
+with their boring machinery ringing away, and artificial lights glaring
+and casting black shadows, the Professor's horoscope concludes. Humanity
+in dismal retreat before the cold, changed beyond recognition. Yet the
+Professor is reasonable enough, his facts are current science, his
+methods orderly. The contemplative man shivers at the prospect, starts
+up to poke the fire, and the whole of this remarkable book that is not
+written vanishes straightway in the smoke of his pipe. This is the great
+advantage of this unwritten literature: there is no bother in changing
+the books. The contemplative man consoles himself for the destiny of the
+species with the lost portion of Kubla Khan.
+
+
+
+
+THE EXTINCTION OF MAN
+
+
+It is part of the excessive egotism of the human animal that the bare
+idea of its extinction seems incredible to it. "A world without _us_!"
+it says, as a heady young Cephalaspis might have said it in the old
+Silurian sea. But since the Cephalaspis and the Coccostëus many a fine
+animal has increased and multiplied upon the earth, lorded it over land
+or sea without a rival, and passed at last into the night. Surely it is
+not so unreasonable to ask why man should be an exception to the rule.
+From the scientific standpoint at least any reason for such exception is
+hard to find.
+
+No doubt man is undisputed master at the present time--at least of most
+of the land surface; but so it has been before with other animals. Let
+us consider what light geology has to throw upon this. The great land
+and sea reptiles of the Mesozoic period, for instance, seem to have been
+as secure as humanity is now in their pre-eminence. But they passed away
+and left no descendants when the new orders of the mammals emerged from
+their obscurity. So, too, the huge Titanotheria of the American
+continent, and all the powerful mammals of Pleistocene South America,
+the sabre-toothed lion, for instance, and the Machrauchenia suddenly
+came to a finish when they were still almost at the zenith of their
+rule. _And in no case does the record of the fossils show a really
+dominant species succeeded by its own descendants._ What has usually
+happened in the past appears to be the emergence of some type of animal
+hitherto rare and unimportant, and the extinction, not simply of the
+previously ruling species, but of most of the forms that are at all
+closely related to it. Sometimes, indeed, as in the case of the extinct
+giants of South America, they vanished without any considerable rivals,
+victims of pestilence, famine, or, it may be, of that cumulative
+inefficiency that comes of a too undisputed life. So that the analogy of
+geology, at anyrate, is against this too acceptable view of man's
+certain tenure of the earth for the next few million years or so.
+
+And, after all, even now man is by no means such a master of the
+kingdoms of life as he is apt to imagine. The sea, that mysterious
+nursery of living things, is for all practical purposes beyond his
+control. The low-water mark is his limit. Beyond that he may do a little
+with seine and dredge, murder a few million herrings a year as they come
+in to spawn, butcher his fellow air-breather, the whale, or haul now and
+then an unlucky king-crab or strange sea-urchin out of the deep water,
+in the name of science; but the life of the sea as a whole knows him
+not, plays out its slow drama of change and development unheeding him,
+and may in the end, in mere idle sport, throw up some new terrestrial
+denizens, some new competitor for space to live in and food to live
+upon, that will sweep him and all his little contrivances out of
+existence, as certainly and inevitably as he has swept away auk, bison,
+and dodo during the last two hundred years.
+
+For instance, there are the Crustacea. As a group the crabs and lobsters
+are confined below the high-water mark. But experiments in air-breathing
+are no doubt in progress in this group--we already have tropical
+land-crabs--and as far as we know there is no reason why in the future
+these creatures should not increase in size and terrestrial capacity. In
+the past we have the evidence of the fossil _Paradoxides_ that creatures
+of this kind may at least attain a length of six feet, and, considering
+their intense pugnacity, a crab of such dimensions would be as
+formidable a creature as one could well imagine. And their amphibious
+capacity would give them an advantage against us such as at present is
+only to be found in the case of the alligator or crocodile. If we
+imagine a shark that could raid out upon the land, or a tiger that could
+take refuge in the sea, we should have a fair suggestion of what a
+terrible monster a large predatory crab might prove. And so far as
+zoological science goes we must, at least, admit that such a creature is
+an evolutionary possibility.
+
+Then, again, the order of the Cephalopods, to which belong the
+cuttle-fish and the octopus (sacred to Victor Hugo), may be, for all we
+can say to the contrary, an order with a future. Their kindred, the
+Gastropods, have, in the case of the snail and slug, learnt the trick of
+air-breathing. And not improbably there are even now genera of this
+order that have escaped the naturalist, or even well-known genera whose
+possibilities in growth and dietary are still unknown. Suppose some day
+a specimen of a new species is caught off the coast of Kent. It excites
+remark at a Royal Society soirée, engenders a Science Note or so, "A
+Huge Octopus!" and in the next year or so three or four other specimens
+come to hand, and the thing becomes familiar. "Probably a new and larger
+variety of _Octopus_ so-and-so, hitherto supposed to be tropical," says
+Professor Gargoyle, and thinks he has disposed of it. Then conceive some
+mysterious boating accidents and deaths while bathing. A large animal of
+this kind coming into a region of frequent wrecks might so easily
+acquire a preferential taste for human nutriment, just as the Colorado
+beetle acquired a new taste for the common potato and gave up its old
+food-plants some years ago. Then perhaps a school or pack or flock of
+_Octopus gigas_ would be found busy picking the sailors off a stranded
+ship, and then in the course of a few score years it might begin to
+stroll up the beaches and batten on excursionists. Soon it would be a
+common feature of the watering-places--possibly at last commoner than
+excursionists. Suppose such a creature were to appear--and it is, we
+repeat, a possibility, if perhaps a remote one--how could it be fought
+against? Something might be done by torpedoes; but, so far as our past
+knowledge goes, man has no means of seriously diminishing the numbers of
+any animal of the most rudimentary intelligence that made its fastness
+in the sea.
+
+Even on land it is possible to find creatures that with a little
+modification might become excessively dangerous to the human ascendency.
+Most people have read of the migratory ants of Central Africa, against
+which no man can stand. On the march they simply clear out whole
+villages, drive men and animals before them in headlong rout, and kill
+and eat every living creature they can capture. One wonders why they
+have not already spread the area of their devastations. But at present
+no doubt they have their natural checks, of ant-eating birds, or what
+not. In the near future it may be that the European immigrant, as he
+sets the balance of life swinging in his vigorous manner, may kill off
+these ant-eating animals, or otherwise unwittingly remove the checks
+that now keep these terrible little pests within limits. And once they
+begin to spread in real earnest, it is hard to see how their advance
+could be stopped. A world devoured by ants seems incredible now, simply
+because it is not within our experience; but a naturalist would have a
+dull imagination who could not see in the numerous species of ants, and
+in their already high intelligence, far more possibility of strange
+developments than we have in the solitary human animal. And no doubt the
+idea of the small and feeble organism of man, triumphant and
+omnipresent, would have seemed equally incredible to an intelligent
+mammoth or a palæolithic cave bear.
+
+And, finally, there is always the prospect of a new disease. As yet
+science has scarcely touched more than the fringe of the probabilities
+associated with the minute fungi that constitute our zymotic diseases.
+But the bacilli have no more settled down into their final quiescence
+than have men; like ourselves, they are adapting themselves to new
+conditions and acquiring new powers. The plagues of the Middle Ages, for
+instance, seem to have been begotten of a strange bacillus engendered
+under conditions that sanitary science, in spite of its panacea of
+drainage, still admits are imperfectly understood, and for all we know
+even now we may be quite unwittingly evolving some new and more terrible
+plague--a plague that will not take ten or twenty or thirty per cent.,
+as plagues have done in the past, but the entire hundred.
+
+No; man's complacent assumption of the future is too confident. We
+think, because things have been easy for mankind as a whole for a
+generation or so, we are going on to perfect comfort and security in the
+future. We think that we shall always go to work at ten and leave off at
+four, and have dinner at seven for ever and ever. But these four
+suggestions, out of a host of others, must surely do a little against
+this complacency. Even now, for all we can tell, the coming terror may
+be crouching for its spring and the fall of humanity be at hand. In the
+case of every other predominant animal the world has ever seen, I
+repeat, the hour of its complete ascendency has been the eve of its
+entire overthrow. But if some poor story-writing man ventures to figure
+this sober probability in a tale, not a reviewer in London but will tell
+him his theme is the utterly impossible. And, when the thing happens,
+one may doubt if even then one will get the recognition one deserves.
+
+
+
+
+THE WRITING OF ESSAYS
+
+
+The art of the essayist is so simple, so entirely free from canons of
+criticism, and withal so delightful, that one must needs wonder why all
+men are not essayists. Perhaps people do not know how easy it is. Or
+perhaps beginners are misled. Rightly taught it may be learnt in a brief
+ten minutes or so, what art there is in it. And all the rest is as easy
+as wandering among woodlands on a bright morning in the spring.
+
+Then sit you down if you would join us, taking paper, pens, and ink; and
+mark this, your pen is a matter of vital moment. For every pen writes
+its own sort of essay, and pencils also after their kind. The ink
+perhaps may have its influence too, and the paper; but paramount is the
+pen. This, indeed, is the fundamental secret of essay-writing. Wed any
+man to his proper pen, and the delights of composition and the birth of
+an essay are assured. Only many of us wander through the earth and never
+meet with her--futile and lonely men.
+
+And, of all pens, your quill for essays that are literature. There is a
+subtle informality, a delightful easiness, perhaps even a faint
+immorality essentially literary, about the quill. The quill is rich in
+suggestion and quotation. There are quills that would quote you
+Montaigne and Horace in the hands of a trades-union delegate. And those
+quirky, idle noises this pen makes are delightful, and would break your
+easy fluency with wit. All the classical essayists wrote with a quill,
+and Addison used the most expensive kind the Government purchased. And
+the beginning of the inferior essay was the dawn of the cheap steel
+pen.
+
+The quill nibs they sell to fit into ordinary pen-holders are no true
+quills at all, lacking dignity, and may even lead you into the New
+Humour if you trust overmuch to their use. After a proper quill commend
+me to a stumpy BB pencil; you get less polish and broader effects, but
+you are still doing good literature. Sometimes the work is close--Mr.
+George Meredith, for instance, is suspected of a soft pencil--and always
+it is blunter than quill work and more terse. With a hard pencil no man
+can write anything but a graceless style--a kind of east wind air it
+gives--and smile you cannot. So that it is often used for serious
+articles in the half-crown reviews.
+
+There follows the host of steel pens. That bald, clear, scientific
+style, all set about with words like "evolution" and "environment,"
+which aims at expressing its meaning with precision and an exemplary
+economy of words, is done with fine steel nibs--twelve a penny at any
+stationer's. The J pen to the lady novelist, and the stylograph to the
+devil--your essayist must not touch the things. So much for the pen. If
+you cannot write essays easily, that is where the hitch comes in. Get a
+box of a different kind of pen and begin again, and so on again and
+again until despair or joy arrests you.
+
+As for a typewriter, you could no more get an essay out of a typewriter
+than you could play a sonata upon its keys. No essay was ever written
+with a typewriter yet, nor ever will be. Besides its impossibility, the
+suggestion implies a brutal disregard of the division of labour by which
+we live and move and have our being. If the essayist typewrite, the
+unemployed typewriter, who is commonly a person of superior education
+and capacity, might take to essays, and where is your living then? One
+might as reasonably start at once with the Linotype and print one's wit
+and humour straight away. And taking the invasion of other trades one
+step further one might, after an attempt to sell one's own newspaper,
+even get to the pitch of having to read it oneself. No; even essayists
+must be reasonable. If its mechanical clitter-clatter did not render
+composition impossible, the typewriter would still be beneath the honour
+of a literary man.
+
+Then for the paper. The luxurious, expensive, small-sized cream-laid
+note is best, since it makes your essay choice and compact; and, failing
+that, ripped envelopes and the backs of bills. Some men love ruled
+paper, because they can write athwart the lines, and some take the
+fly-leaves of their friends' books. But whosoever writes on cheap sermon
+paper full of hairs should write far away from the woman he loves, lest
+he offend her ears. It is good, however, for a terse, forcible style.
+
+The ink should be glossy black as it leaves your pen, for polished
+English. Violet inks lead to sham sentiment, and blue-black to
+vulgarity. Red ink essays are often good, but usually unfit for
+publication.
+
+This is as much almost as anyone need know to begin essay writing. Given
+your proper pen and ink, or pencil and paper, you simply sit down and
+write the thing. The value of an essay is not its matter, but its mood.
+You must be comfortable, of course; an easy-chair with arm-rests,
+slippers, and a book to write upon are usually employed, and you must be
+fed recently, and your body clothed with ease rather than grandeur. For
+the rest, do not trouble to stick to your subject, or any subject; and
+take no thought for the editor or the reader, for your essay should be
+as spontaneous as the lilies of the field.
+
+So long as you do not begin with a definition you may begin anyhow. An
+abrupt beginning is much admired, after the fashion of the clown's entry
+through the chemist's window. Then whack at your reader at once, hit him
+over the head with the sausages, brisk him up with the poker, bundle him
+into the wheelbarrow, and so carry him away with you before he knows
+where you are. You can do what you like with a reader then, if you only
+keep him nicely on the move. So long as you are happy your reader will
+be so too. But one law must be observed: an essay, like a dog that
+wishes to please, must have a lively tail, short but as waggish as
+possible. Like a rocket, an essay goes only with fizzle and sparks at
+the end of it. And, know, that to stop writing is the secret of writing
+an essay; the essay that the public loves dies young.
+
+
+
+
+THE PARKES MUSEUM
+
+THE PLACE TO SPEND A HAPPY DAY
+
+
+By way of jest, my morning daily paper constantly includes in its menu
+of "To-day" the Parkes Museum, Margaret Street, adding, seductively,
+"free"; and no doubt many a festive Jonas Chuzzlewit has preened himself
+for a sight-seeing, and all unaware of the multitudes of Margaret
+Streets--surely only Charlottes of that ilk are more abundant--has
+started forth, he and his feminine, to find this Parkes Museum. One may
+even conceive a rare Bank Holiday thoughtfully put aside for the quest,
+and spent all vainly in the asking of policemen, and in traversing this
+vast and tiresome metropolis, from Margaret Street to Margaret Street,
+the freshness of the morning passing into the dry heat of the day,
+fatigue spreading from the feet upwards, discussion, difference, denial,
+"words," and a day of recreation dying at last into a sunset of lurid
+sulks. Such possibility was too painful to think of, and a philanthropic
+inquirer has at last by persistent investigation won the secret of the
+Missing Museum and opened the way to it for all future investigators.
+
+The Margaret Street in question is an apparently derelict thoroughfare,
+opening into Great Portland Street. Immemorial dust is upon its
+pavements, and a profound silence broods over its vacant roadway. The
+blinds of its houses are mostly down, and, where the blackness of some
+window suggests a dark interior, no face appears to reassure us in our
+doubt of humanity within. It may be that somewhen in the past the entire
+population of this street set out on a boating party up the river, and
+was overset by steam launches, and so never returned, or perchance it
+has all been locked up for a long term of imprisonment--though the
+houses seem almost too respectable for that; or the glamour of the
+Sleeping Beauty is upon it all. Certainly we saw the figure of a porter
+in an attitude of repose in the little glass lodge in the museum
+doorway. He _may_ have been asleep. But we feared to touch him--and
+indeed slipped very stealthily by him--lest he should suddenly crumble
+into dust.
+
+And so to the Museum and its wonders. This Parkes Museum is a kind of
+armoury of hygiene, a place full of apparatus for being healthy--in
+brief, a museum of sanitary science. To that large and growing class of
+people who take no thought of anything but what they eat and what they
+drink, and wherewithal they should be clothed, it should prove intensely
+interesting. Apart from the difficulty of approach we cannot understand
+how it is so neglected by an intelligent public. You can see germicides
+and a model convict prison, Pentonville cells in miniature, statistical
+diagrams and drain pipes--if only there was a little more about
+heredity, it would be exactly the kind of thing that is popular in
+literature now, as literature goes. And yet excepting ourselves and the
+sleeping porter--if he was sleeping--and the indistinct and motionless
+outline, visible through a glass door, of a human body sitting over a
+book, there was not a suggestion or memory of living humanity about the
+place.
+
+The exhibits of food are especially remarkable. We cleaned the glass
+case with our sleeves and peered at the most appetising revelations.
+There are dozens of little bottles hermetically sealed, containing such
+curios as a sample of "Bacon Common (Gammon) Uncooked," and then the
+same cooked--it looked no nicer cooked--Irish sausage, pork sausage,
+black pudding, Welsh mutton, and all kinds of rare and exquisite
+feeding. There are ever so many cases of this kind of thing. We saw, for
+instance, further along, several good specimens of the common oyster
+shell (_Ostrea edulis_), cockle shells, and whelks, both "almonds" and
+"whites," and then came breadstuffs. The breadstuffs are particularly
+impressive, of a grey, scientific aspect, a hard, hoary antiquity. We
+always knew that stale bread was good for one, but yet the Parkes Museum
+startled us with the antique pattern it recommended. There was a muffin,
+too, identified and labelled, but without any Latin name, a captured
+crumpet, a collection of buns, a dinner-roll, and a something novel to
+us, called Pumpernickel, that we had rather be without, or rather--for
+the expression is ambiguous--that we had rather not be without, but
+altogether remote from. And all these things have been tested by an
+analyst, with the most painful results. Nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, and
+the like nasty chemical things seem indeed to have occurred in
+everything he touched. Those sturdy mendicants who go about complaining
+that they cannot get food should visit this Parkes Museum and see what
+food is really like, and learn contentment with their lot.
+
+There were no real vegetables, but only the ideals of a firm of
+seedsmen, made of wax and splendidly coloured, with something of the
+boldness and vigour of Michael Angelo about the modelling of them. And
+among other food stuffs were sweetmeats and yellow capers, liver flukes,
+British wines, and snuff. At last we felt replete with food stuffs, and
+went on to see the models to illustrate ventilation, and the exhibits of
+hygienic glazed tiles arranged around a desert lecture-theatre. Hygienic
+tiles stimulate the eye vigorously rather than relax it by any æsthetic
+weakness; and the crematory appliances are so attractive as they are,
+and must have such an added charm of neatness and brightness when
+alight, that one longs to lose a relative or so forthwith, for the mere
+pleasure of seeing them in operation.
+
+A winding staircase designed upon hygienic principles, to bump your head
+at intervals, takes one to a little iron gallery full of the most
+charming and varied display of cooking-stoves and oil-lamps. Here, also,
+there are flaunted the resources of civilisation for the Prevention of
+Accidents, which resources are four, namely, a patent fire-escape, a
+patent carriage pole, a coal plate, and a dog muzzle. But the labels,
+though verbose, are scarcely full enough. They do not tell you, for
+instance, if you wish to prevent cramp while bathing, whether the dog
+muzzle or the coal plate should be employed, nor do they show how the
+fire-escape will prevent the explosion of a paraffin lamp. However, this
+is a detail. We feel assured that no intelligent person will regret a
+visit to this most interesting and instructive exhibition. It offers you
+valuable hints how to live, and suggests the best and tidiest way in
+which you can, when dead, dispose of your body. We feel assured that the
+public only needs this intimation of its whereabouts to startle the
+death-like slumbers of Margaret Street with an unaccustomed tumult. And
+the first to arrive will, no doubt, find legibly and elegantly written
+in the dust that covers the collection the record of its discovery by
+Euphemia and me.
+
+
+
+
+BLEAK MARCH IN EPPING FOREST
+
+
+All along the selvage of Epping Forest there was excitement. Before the
+swallows, before the violets, long before the cuckoo, with only untimely
+honeysuckle bushes showing a trace of green, two trippers had been seen
+traversing the district, making their way towards High Beech, and
+settling awhile near the Forest Hotel. Whether they were belated
+survivals from last season or exceptionally early hatchings of the
+coming year, was a question of considerable moment to the natives, and
+has since engaged the attention of the local Natural History Society.
+But we know that, as a matter of fact, they were of little omen, being
+indeed but insignificant people from Hampstead and not true trippers at
+all, who were curious to see this forest in raw winter.
+
+For some have argued that there is no Epping Forest at all in the
+winter-time; that it is, in fact, taken up and put away, and that
+agriculture is pursued there. Others assert that the Forest is shrouded
+with wrappers, even as a literary man's study is shrouded by dusty women
+when they clean him out. Others, again, have supposed that it is a
+delightful place in winter, far more delightful than in summer, but that
+this is not published, because no writing man hath ever been there in
+the cold season. And much more of unreal speculation, but nothing which
+bore upon it the stamp of truth. So these two--and I am one of the
+two--went down to Epping Forest to see that it was still there, and how
+it fared in the dismal weather.
+
+The sky was a greasy grey that guttered down to the horizon, and the
+wind smote damp and chill. There was a white fringe of ice in the
+cart-wheel ruts, but withal the frost was not so crisp as to prevent a
+thin and slippery glaze of softened clay upon the road. The decaying
+triumphal arch outside the station sadly lacked a coat of paint, and was
+indistinctly regretful of remote royal visits and processions gone for
+ever. Then we passed shuddering by many vacant booths that had once
+resounded with the revelry of ninepenny teas and the gingerbeer cork's
+staccato, and their forms were piled together and their trestles
+overturned. And the wind ravened, and no human beings were to be seen.
+So up the hill to the left, and along the road leading by devious
+windings between the black hedges and through clay wallows to the hilly
+part round High Beech.
+
+But upon the shoulder of a hill we turned to a gate to scrape off the
+mud that made our boots unwieldy. At that moment came a threadbare place
+in the cloudy curtain that was sweeping across the sun, and our shadows
+showed themselves for an instant to comfort us. The amber patch of
+sunlight presently slipped from us and travelled down the meadows
+towards the distant blue of the hills by Waltham Abbey, touching with
+miraculous healing a landscape erst dead and shrouded in grey. This
+transitory gleam of light gladdened us mightily at the time, but it made
+the after-sky seem all the darker.
+
+So through the steep and tortuous village to High Beech, and then
+leaving the road we wandered in among big trees and down slopes ankle
+deep with rustling leaves towards Chingford again. Here was pleasanter
+walking than the thawing clay, but now and then one felt the threat of
+an infinite oozy softness beneath the stiff frozen leaves. Once again
+while we were here the drifting haze of the sky became thinner, and the
+smooth green-grey beech stems and rugged oak trunks were brightly
+illuminated. But only for a moment, and thereafter the sky became not
+simply unsympathetic but ominous. And the misery of the wind grew apace.
+
+Presently we wandered into that sinister corner of the Forest where the
+beech trees have grown so closely together that they have had perforce
+to lift their branches vertically. Divested of leaves, the bare grey
+limbs of these seem strangely restless. These trees, reaching so
+eagerly upward, have an odd resemblance to the weird figures of horror
+in which William Blake delighted--arms, hands, hair, all stretch
+intensely to the zenith. They seem to be straining away from the spot to
+which they are rooted. It is a Laocoon grouping, a wordless concentrated
+struggle for the sunlight, and disagreeably impressive. The trippers
+longed to talk and were tongue-tied; they looked now and then over their
+shoulders. They were glad when the eerie influence was passed, though
+they traversed a morass to get away from it.
+
+Then across an open place, dismal with the dun hulls of lost cows and
+the clatter of their bells, over a brook full of dead leaves and edged
+with rusty clay, through a briery thicket that would fain have detained
+us, and so to a pathway of succulent green, that oozed black under our
+feet. Here some poor lost wayfarer has blazed his way with rustic seats,
+now rheumatic and fungus-eaten. And here, too, the wind, which had
+sought us howling, found us at last, and stung us sharply with a shower
+of congealing raindrops. This grew to a steady downfall as the open
+towards Chingford station was approached at last, after devious winding
+in the Forest. Then, coming upon the edge of the wood and seeing the
+lone station against the grey sky, we broke into a shout and began
+running. But it is dismal running on imperfectly frozen clay, in rain
+and a gusty wind. We slipped and floundered, and one of us wept sore
+that she should never see her home again. And worse, the only train
+sleeping in the station was awakened by our cries, and, with an eldritch
+shriek at the unseasonable presence of trippers, fled incontinently
+Londonward.
+
+Smeared with clay and dead leaves almost beyond human likeness, we
+staggered into the derelict station, and found from an outcast porter
+that perhaps another train might after the lapse of two hours accumulate
+sufficiently to take us back to Gospel Oak and a warm world again. So we
+speered if there were amusements to be got in this place, and he told us
+"some very nice walks." To refrain from homicide we left the station,
+and sought a vast red hotel that loomed through the drift on a steep
+hill, and in the side of this a door that had not been locked. Happily
+one had been forgotten, and, entering at last, we roused a hibernating
+waiter, and he exhumed us some of his winter victual. In this way we
+were presently to some degree comforted, and could play chess until a
+train had been sent for our relief. And this did at last happen, and
+towards the hour of dinner we rejoined our anxious friends, and all the
+evening time we boasted of a pleasant day and urged them to go even as
+we had gone.
+
+
+
+
+THE THEORY OF QUOTATION
+
+
+The nobler method of quotation is not to quote at all. For why should
+one repeat good things that are already written? Are not the words in
+their fittest context in the original? Clearly, then, your new setting
+cannot be quite so congruous, which is, forthwith, an admission of
+incongruity. Your quotation is evidently a plug in a leak, an apology
+for a gap in your own words. But your vulgar author will even go out of
+his way to make the clothing of his thoughts thus heterogeneous. He
+counts every stolen scrap he can work in an improvement--a literary
+caddis worm. Yet would he consider it improvement to put a piece of even
+the richest of old tapestry or gold embroidery into his new pair of
+breeks?
+
+The passion for quotation is peculiar to literature. We do not glory to
+quote our costume, dress in cast-off court robes, or furnish our houses
+from the marine store. Neither are we proud of alien initials on the
+domestic silver. We like things new and primarily our own. We have a
+wholesome instinct against infection, except, it seems, in the matter of
+ideas. An authorling will deliberately inoculate his copy with the
+inverted comma bacillus, till the page swims unsteadily, counting the
+fever a glow of pure literary healthiness. Yet this reproduction,
+rightly considered, is merely a proof that his appetite for books has
+run beyond his digestion. Or his industry may be to seek. You expect an
+omelette, and presently up come the unbroken eggs. A tissue of quotation
+wisely looked at is indeed but a motley garment, eloquent either of a
+fool, or an idle knave in a fool's disguise.
+
+Nevertheless at times--the truth must be told--we must quote. As for
+admitting that we have quoted, that is another matter altogether. But
+the other man's phrase will lie at times so close in one's mind to the
+trend of one's thoughts, that, all virtue notwithstanding, they must
+needs run into the groove of it. There are phrases that lie about in the
+literary mind like orange peel on a pavement. You are down on them
+before you know where you are. But does this necessitate acknowledgment
+to the man, now in Hades, who sucked that orange and strewed the peel in
+your way? Rather, is it not more becoming to be angry at his careless
+anticipation?
+
+One may reasonably look at it in this way. What business has a man to
+think of things right in front of you, poke his head, as it were, into
+your light? What right has he to set up dams and tunnel out
+swallow-holes to deflect the current of your thoughts? Surely you may
+remove these obstructions, if it suits you, and put them where you will.
+Else all literature will presently be choked up, and the making of books
+come to an end. One might as well walk ten miles out of one's way
+because some deaf oaf or other chose to sit upon a necessary stile.
+Surely Shakespeare or Lamb, or what other source you contemplate, has
+had the thing long enough? Out of the road with them. Turn and turn
+about.
+
+And inverted commas are so inhospitable. If you _must_ take in another
+man's offspring, you should surely try to make the poor foundlings feel
+at home. Away with such uncharitable distinctions between the children
+of the house and the stranger within your gates. I never see inverted
+commas but I think of the necessary persecuted mediæval Jew in yellow
+gabardine.
+
+At least, never put the name of the author you quote. Think of the
+feelings of the dead. Don't let the poor spirit take it to heart that
+its monumental sayings would pass unrecognised without your
+advertisement. You mean well, perhaps, but it is in the poorest taste.
+Yet I have seen Patience on a Monument honourably awarded to William
+Shakespeare, and fenced in by commas from all intercourse with the
+general text.
+
+There is something so extremely dishonest, too, in acknowledging
+quotations. Possibly the good people who so contrive that such
+signatures as "Shakespeare," "Homer," or "St. Paul," appear to be
+written here and there to parts of their inferior work, manage to
+justify the proceeding in their conscience; but it is uncommonly like
+hallmarking pewter on the strength of an infinitesimal tinge of silver
+therein. The point becomes at once clear if we imagine some obscure
+painter quoting the style of Raphael and fragments of his designs, and
+acknowledging his indebtedness by appending the master's signature.
+Blank forgery! And a flood of light was thrown on the matter by a chance
+remark of one of Euphemia's aunts--she is a great reader of pure
+fiction--anent a popular novel: "I am sure it must be a nice book," said
+she, "or she could not get all these people to write the mottoes for the
+chapters."
+
+No, it is all very well to play with one's conscience. I have known men
+so sophisticated as to assert that unacknowledged quotation was wrong.
+But very few really reasonable people will, I think, refuse to agree
+with me that the only artistic, the only kindly, and the only honest
+method of quotation is plagiary. If you cannot plagiarise, surely it
+were better not to quote.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE ART OF STAYING AT THE SEASIDE
+
+A MEDITATION AT EASTBOURNE
+
+
+To stay at the seaside properly, one should not think. But even in
+staying at the seaside there are intervals, waking moments when meals
+come, even if there are no appointed meal-times. Moreover, now and then,
+one must go to buy tobacco, a matter one can trust to no hireling, lest
+he get it dry. It cannot be always seaside, even as it cannot be always
+May, and through the gaps thought creeps in. Going over the cliff and
+along the parade, and down by the circulating library to the cigar
+divan, where they sell Parique tobacco, the swinging of one's legs seems
+to act like a pendulum to the clockwork of one's brain. One meditates
+all the way, and chiefly on how few people there are who can really--to
+a critical adept--be said to stay at the seaside.
+
+People seem to think that one can take a ticket to Eastbourne, or
+Bognor, or Ventnor, and come and stay at the seaside straight away, just
+as I have known new-hatched undergraduates tell people they were going
+to play billiards. Thousands and thousands of people think they have
+stayed at the seaside, and have not, just as thousands of people
+erroneously imagine they have played whist. For the latter have played
+not whist, but Bumble-puppy, and the former have only frequented a
+watering-place for a time. Your true staying at the seaside is an art,
+demanding not only railway fares but special aptitude, and, moreover,
+needing culture, like all worthy arts.
+
+The most insurmountable difficulty of the beginner is the classical
+simplicity of the whole thing. To stay at the seaside properly you just
+spread yourself out on the extreme edge of the land and let the sunlight
+soak in. Your eyes are fixed upon the horizon. Some have it that your
+head should be towards the sea, but the best authorities think that this
+determines blood to that region, and so stimulates thought. This is all
+the positive instruction; the rest is prohibition. You must not think,
+and you must not move, neither may you go to sleep. In a few minutes the
+adept becomes as a god, even as a god that sits upon the lotus leaf. New
+light and colour come into the sky and sea, and the surges chant his
+praises. But those who are not of the elect get pins and needles all
+over them.
+
+It must be freely admitted that staying at the seaside such as this,
+staying at the seaside in its perfection, is a thing for a select few.
+You want a broad stretch of beach and all the visible sea to yourself.
+You cannot be disturbed by even the most idyllic children trying to bury
+you with sand and suchlike playfulness, nor by boatloads of the
+democracy rowing athwart your sea and sky. And the absence of friend or
+wife goes without saying. I notice down here a very considerable
+quantity of evidently married pairs, and the huge majority of the rest
+of the visitors run in couples, and are to all appearances engaged. If
+they are not, I would submit that they ought to be. Probably there is a
+certain satisfaction in sitting by the sea with the girl you are in love
+with, or your wife for the matter of that, just as many people
+undoubtedly find tea with milk and sugar very nice. But the former is no
+more the way to get the full and perfect pleasure of staying at the
+seaside than the latter is the way to get the full and perfect flavour
+of the tea. True staying at the seaside is neither the repetition of old
+conversations in new surroundings nor the exposure of one's affections
+to ozone. It is something infinitely higher. It is pure quiescence. It
+is the experience of a waking inanition savouring of Buddha and the
+divine.
+
+Now, staying at the seaside is so rarely done well, because of the
+littleness of man. To do it properly needs many of the elements of
+greatness. Your common man, while he has life in him, can let neither
+himself nor the universe alone. He must be asserting himself in some
+way, even if it is only by flinging pebbles at a stick. That
+self-forgetfulness which should be a delight is a terror to him. He
+brings dogs down to the beach to stand between him and the calm of
+nature, and yelp. He does worse than that.
+
+The meditative man going daily over by the cliff and along the parade,
+to get his ounce of tobacco, has a sad spectacle of what human beings
+may be driven to in this way. One sees altogether some hundreds of
+people there who have heard perhaps that staying at the seaside is good,
+and who have, anyhow, got thus far towards it, and stopped. They have
+not the faintest idea how to make themselves happy. The general
+expression is veiled curiosity. They sit--mostly with their backs to the
+sea--talking poorly of indifferent topics and watching one another. Most
+obviously they want hints of what to do with themselves. Behind them is
+a bank of flowers like those in Battersea Park, and another parallel
+parade, and beyond are bathing-machines. The pier completely cuts the
+horizon out of the background. There is a stout lady, in dark blue,
+bathing. The only glances directed seaward are furtive ones at her. Many
+seem to be doubting whether this is not what they came down for. Others
+lean dubiously to the invitations of the boatmen. Others again listen to
+vocalists and dramatic outcasts who, for ha'pence, render obvious the
+reason of their professional degradation. It seems eccentric to travel
+seventy or eighty miles to hear a man without a voice demonstrate that
+he is unfit to have one, but they do. Anyone curious in these matters
+need only go to a watering-place to see and, what is worse, to hear for
+himself. After an excursion train to Eastbourne, upwards of a thousand
+people have been seen thus heaped together over an oblong space of a
+mile long by twenty yards wide. Only three miles away there was a
+towering white cliff overhanging a practically desert beach; and one
+seagull circled above one solitary, motionless, supine man, really
+staying at the seaside.
+
+You cannot walk six miles anywhere along the south coast without coming
+upon one of these heaps of people, called a watering-place. There will
+be a town of houses behind wherein the people lodge, until, as they
+think, they have stayed a sufficient time at the sea, and they return,
+hot, cross, and mystified, to London. The sea front will be bricked or
+paved for a mile or so, and there will be rows of boats and
+bathing-machines, and other contrivances to screen off the view of the
+sea. And, as we have indicated, watering-places and staying by the
+seaside are incompatible things. The true stayer by the seaside goes
+into the watering-place because he must; because there is little food,
+and that uncooked, and no tobacco, between the cliffs and the sea.
+Having purchased what he needs he flees forth again. What time the whole
+selvage of England becomes watering-place, there will be no more staying
+by the seaside at all in the land. But this is a gloomy train of thought
+that we will not pursue.
+
+There have been those who assert that one end of staying at the seaside
+is bathing; but it is easy to show that this is not so. Your proper
+bathing-place is up the river, where the trees bend to the green and
+brown shadows of the water. There the bath is sweet, fresh out of the
+sky, or but just filtered through the blue hills of the distant
+water-shed; and it is set about with flowers. But the sea--the sea has
+stood there since the beginning of things, and with small prospect of
+change, says Mr. Kipling, to all eternity. The water in the sea,
+geologists tell us, has _not been changed for fifty million years_! The
+same chemist who sets me against all my food with his chemical names
+speaks of the sea as a weak solution of drowned men. Be that as it may,
+it leaves the skin harsh with salt, and the hair sticky. Moreover, it is
+such a promiscuous bathing-place. However, we need scarcely depreciate
+the sea as a bath, for what need is there of that when the river is
+clearly better? No one can deny that the river is better. People who
+bathe in the sea bathe by mistake, because they have come to the side of
+the sea, and know not how else to use it.
+
+So, too, with the boating. It is hard to imagine how human beings who
+have drifted down streams, and watched the brown fish in the shallows,
+and peered through the tall sedges at the forget-me-nots, and fought
+with the ropes of the water-lilies, and heard the ripple under the bows,
+can ever think of going to and fro, pitching spasmodically, in front of
+a watering-place. And as for fishing--they catch fish at sea, indeed,
+but it is not fishing at all; neither rods nor flies have they, and
+there is an end to that matter.
+
+An Eastbourne meditative man returning to where he stays, with his daily
+ounce of tobacco already afire, sees in the streets what are called by
+the natives "cherry-bangs," crowded with people, and, further,
+cabriolets and such vehicles holding parties and families. The good
+folks are driving away from the sea for the better part of the day,
+going to Battle and other places inland. The puzzle of what to do with
+their sea is too much for them, and they are going away for a little to
+rest their minds. Regarded as a centre of drives one might think an
+inland place would be preferable to a seaside town, which at best
+commands but a half-circle. However that may be, the fact remains that
+one of the chief occupations of your common visitor to the seaside is
+going away from it. Than this fact there can be nothing more conclusive
+in support of my argument that ordinary people are absolutely ignorant
+and incapable of staying by the seaside.
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING CHESS
+
+
+The passion for playing chess is one of the most unaccountable in the
+world. It slaps the theory of natural selection in the face. It is the
+most absorbing of occupations, the least satisfying of desires, an
+aimless excrescence upon life. It annihilates a man. You have, let us
+say, a promising politician, a rising artist, that you wish to destroy.
+Dagger or bomb are archaic, clumsy, and unreliable--but teach him,
+inoculate him with chess! It is well, perhaps, that the right way of
+teaching chess is so little known, that consequently in most cases the
+plot fails in the performance, the dagger turns aside. Else we should
+all be chess-players--there would be none left to do the business of the
+world. Our statesmen would sit with pocket boards while the country went
+to the devil, our army would bury itself in chequered contemplation, our
+bread-winners would forget their wives in seeking after impossible
+mates. The whole world would be disorganised. I can fancy this
+abominable hypnotism so wrought into the constitution of men that the
+cabmen would go trying to drive their horses in Knights' moves up and
+down Charing Cross Road. And now and again a suicide would come to hand
+with the pathetic inscription pinned to his chest: "I checked with my
+Queen too soon. I cannot bear the thought of it." There is no remorse
+like the remorse of chess.
+
+Only, happily, as we say, chess is taught the wrong way round. People
+put out the board before the learner with all the men in battle array,
+sixteen a side, with six different kinds of moves, and the poor wretch
+is simply crushed and appalled. A lot of things happen, mostly
+disagreeable, and then a mate comes looming up through the haze of
+pieces. So he goes away awestricken but unharmed, secretly believing
+that all chess-players are humbugs, and that intelligent chess, which is
+neither chancy nor rote-learned, is beyond the wit of man. But clearly
+this is an unreasonable method of instruction. Before the beginner can
+understand the beginning of the game he must surely understand the end;
+how can he commence playing until he knows what he is playing for? It is
+like starting athletes on a race, and leaving them to find out where the
+winning-post is hidden.
+
+Your true teacher of chess, your subtle chess-poisoner, your cunning
+Comus who changes men to chess-players, begins quite the other way
+round. He will, let us say, give you King, Queen, and Pawn placed out in
+careless possible positions. So you master the militant possibilities of
+Queen and Pawn without perplexing complications. Then King, Queen, and
+Bishop perhaps; King, Queen, and Knight; and so on. It ensures that you
+always play a winning game in these happy days of your chess childhood,
+and taste the one sweet of chess-playing, the delight of having the
+upper hand of a better player. Then to more complicated positions, and
+at last back to the formal beginning. You begin to see now to what end
+the array is made, and understand why one Gambit differeth from another
+in glory and virtue. And the chess mania of your teacher cleaveth to you
+thenceforth and for evermore.
+
+It is a curse upon a man. There is no happiness in chess--Mr. St. George
+Mivart, who can find happiness in the strangest places, would be at a
+loss to demonstrate it upon the chess-board. The mild delight of a
+pretty mate is the least unhappy phase of it. But, generally, you find
+afterwards that you ought to have mated two moves before, or at the time
+that an unforeseen reply takes your Queen. No chess-player sleeps well.
+After the painful strategy of the day one fights one's battles over
+again. You see with more than daylight clearness that it was the Rook
+you should have moved, and not the Knight. No! it is impossible! no
+common sinner innocent of chess knows these lower deeps of remorse. Vast
+desert boards lie for the chess-player beyond the gates of horn.
+Stalwart Rooks ram headlong at one, Knights hop sidelong, one's Pawns
+are all tied, and a mate hangs threatening and never descends. And once
+chess has been begun in the proper way, it is flesh of your flesh, bone
+of your bone; you are sold, and the bargain is sealed, and the evil
+spirit hath entered in.
+
+The proper outlet for the craving is the playing of games, and there is
+a class of men--shadowy, unhappy, unreal-looking men--who gather in
+coffee-houses, and play with a desire that dieth not, and a fire that is
+not quenched. These gather in clubs and play Tournaments, such
+tournaments as he of the Table Round could never have imagined. But
+there are others who have the vice who live in country places, in remote
+situations--curates, schoolmasters, rate collectors--who go consumed
+from day to day and meet no fit companion, and who must needs find some
+artificial vent for their mental energy. No one has ever calculated how
+many sound Problems are possible, and no doubt the Psychical Research
+people would be glad if Professor Karl Pearson would give his mind to
+the matter. All the possible dispositions of the pieces come to such a
+vast number, however, that, according to the theory of probability, and
+allowing a few thousand arrangements each day, the same problem ought
+never to turn up more than twice in a century or so. As a matter of
+fact--it is probably due to some flaw in the theory of probability--the
+same problem has a way of turning up in different publications several
+times in a month or so. It may be, of course, that, after all, quite
+"sound" problems are limited in number, and that we keep on inventing
+and reinventing them; that, if a record were kept, the whole system, up
+to four or five moves, might be classified, and placed on record in the
+course of a few score years. Indeed, if we were to eliminate those with
+conspicuously bad moves, it may be we should find the number of
+reasonable games was limited enough, and that even our brilliant Lasker
+is but repeating the inspirations of some long-buried Persian, some mute
+inglorious Hindoo, dead and forgotten ages since. It may be over every
+game there watches the forgotten forerunners of the players, and that
+chess is indeed a dead game, a haunted game, played out centuries ago,
+even, as beyond all cavil, is the game of draughts.
+
+The artistic temperament, the gay irresponsible cast of mind, does what
+it can to lighten the gravity of this too intellectual game. To a mortal
+there is something indescribably horrible in these champions with their
+four moves an hour--the bare thought of the mental operations of the
+fifteen minutes gives one a touch of headache. Compulsory quick moving
+is the thing for gaiety, and that is why, though we revere Steinitz and
+Lasker, it is Bird we love. His victories glitter, his errors are
+magnificent. The true sweetness of chess, if it ever can be sweet, is to
+see a victory snatched, by some happy impertinence, out of the shadow of
+apparently irrevocable disaster. And talking of cheerfulness reminds me
+of Lowson's historical game of chess. Lowson said he had been cheerful
+sometimes--but, drunk! Perish the thought! Challenged, he would have
+proved it by some petty tests of pronunciation, some Good Templar's
+shibboleths. He offered to walk along the kerb, to work any problem in
+mathematics we could devise, finally to play MacBryde at chess. The
+other gentleman was appointed judge, and after putting the antimacassar
+over his head ("jush wigsh") immediately went to sleep in a disorderly
+heap on the sofa. The game was begun very solemnly, so I am told.
+MacBryde, in describing it to me afterwards, swayed his hands about with
+the fingers twiddling in a weird kind of way, and said the board went
+like that. The game was fierce but brief. It was presently discovered
+that both kings had been taken. Lowson was hard to convince, but this
+came home to him. "Man," he is reported to have said to MacBryde, "I'm
+just drunk. There's no doubt in the matter. I'm feeling very ashamed of
+myself." It was accordingly decided to declare the game drawn. The
+position, as I found it next morning, is an interesting one. Lowson's
+Queen was at K Kt 6, his Bishop at Q B 3, he had several Pawns, and his
+Knight occupied a commanding position at the intersection of four
+squares. MacBryde had four Pawns, two Rooks, a Queen, a draught, and a
+small mantel ornament arranged in a rough semicircle athwart the board.
+I have no doubt chess exquisites will sneer at this position, but in my
+opinion it is one of the cheerfulest I have ever seen. I remember I
+admired it very much at the time, in spite of a slight headache, and it
+is still the only game of chess that I recall with undiluted pleasure.
+And yet I have played many games.
+
+
+
+
+THE COAL-SCUTTLE
+
+A STUDY IN DOMESTIC ÆSTHETICS
+
+
+Euphemia, who loves to have home dainty and delightful, would have no
+coals if she could dispense with them, much less a coal-scuttle. Indeed,
+it would seem she would have no fireplace at all, if she had her will.
+All the summer she is happy, and the fireplace is anything but the place
+for a fire; the fender has vanished, the fireirons are gone, it is
+draped and decorated and disguised. So would dear Euphemia drape and
+disguise the whole iron framework of the world, with that decorative and
+decent mind of hers, had she but the scope. There are exotic ferns
+there, spreading their fanlike fronds, and majolica glows and gleams;
+and fabrics, of which Morris is the actual or spiritual begetter,
+delight the eye. In summer-time our fireplace is indeed a thing of
+beauty, but, alas for the solar system! it is not a joy for ever. The
+sun at last recedes beyond the equinoxes, and the black bogey who has
+slept awakens again. Euphemia restores the fender kerb and the brazen
+dogs and the fireirons that will clatter; and then all the winter,
+whenever she sits before the fire, her trouble is with her. Even when
+the red glow of the fire lights up her features most becomingly, and
+flattery is in her ear, every now and then a sidelong glance at her ugly
+foe shows that the thought of it is in her mind, and that the crumpled
+roseleaf, if such a phrase may be used for a coal-scuttle, insists on
+being felt. And she has even been discovered alone, sitting elbows on
+knees, and chin on her small clenched fist, frowning at it, puzzling how
+to circumvent the one enemy of her peace.
+
+"_It_" is what Euphemia always calls this utensil, when she can bring
+herself to give the indescribable an imperfect vent in speech. But
+commonly the feeling is too deep for words. Her war with this foeman in
+her household, this coarse rebel in her realm of soft prettiness, is one
+of those silent ones, those grim struggles without outcry or threat or
+appeal for quarter that can never end in any compromise, never find a
+rest in any truce, except the utter defeat of her antagonist. And how
+she has tried--the happy thoughts, the faint hopes, the new departures
+and outflanking movements! And even to-day there the thing defies her--a
+coal-box, with a broad smile that shows its black teeth, thick and
+squat, filling a snug corner and swaggering in unmanly triumph over the
+outrage upon her delicacy that it commits.
+
+One of Euphemia's brightest ideas was to burn wood. Logs make even a
+picturesque pile in a corner--look "uncommon." But there are objections
+to wood. Wood finely divided burns with gay quirks and jets of flame,
+and making cheerful crackling noises the while; but its warmth and
+brightness are as evanescent as love's young dream. And your solid log
+has a certain irritating inertness. It is an absentee fuel, spending its
+fire up the chimney, and after its youthful clouds of glory turns but a
+cheerless side of black and white char towards the room. And, above all,
+the marital mind is strangely exasperated by the log. Smite it with the
+poker, and you get but a sullen resonance, a flight of red sparks, a
+sense of an unconquerable toughness. It is worse than coke. The crisp
+fracture of coal, the spitting flames suddenly leaping into existence
+from the shiny new fissures, are altogether wanting. Old-seasoned timber
+burns indeed most delightfully, but then it is as ugly as coal, and
+withal very dear. So Euphemia went back to coal again with a sigh.
+Possibly if Euphemia had been surrounded by the wealth she deserves this
+trouble would not have arisen. A silent servant, bearing the due dose of
+fresh fuel, would have come gliding from a mysterious Beneath, restored
+the waning animation of the grate, and vanished noiselessly again. But
+this was beyond the range of Euphemia's possibilities. And so we are
+face to face with this problem of the scuttle again.
+
+At first she would feign there was no such thing as coal. It was too
+horrible. Only a Zola would admit it. It was the epoch of concealment.
+The thing purchased was like a little cupboard on four legs; it might
+have held any convenient trifle; and there was a shelf upon the top and
+a book of poetry and a piece of crackled Satsuma. You took a little
+brass handle and pulled it down, and the front of the little cupboard
+came forward, and there you found your coal. But a dainty little
+cupboard can no more entertain black coal and inelegant firewood and
+keep its daintiness than a mind can entertain black thoughts and yet be
+sweet. This cabinet became demoralised with amazing quickness; it became
+incontinent with its corruptions, a hinge got twisted, and after a time
+it acquired the habit of suddenly, and with an unpleasant oscillatory
+laughing noise, opening of its own accord and proclaiming its horrid
+secret to Euphemia's best visitors. An air of wickedness, at once
+precocious and senile, came upon it; it gaped and leered at Euphemia as
+the partner of her secret with such a familiar air of "I and you" that
+she could stand it no longer, and this depraved piece of furniture was
+banished at last from her presence, and relegated to its proper sphere
+of sham gentility below stairs, where it easily passed itself upon the
+cook as an exquisite. Euphemia tried to be sensible then, and
+determined, since she must have coal in her room, to let no false
+modesty intervene, but to openly proclaim its presence to all the world.
+
+The next thing, therefore, was a cylinder of brass, broadly open above,
+saying to the world, as it were, "Look! I contain coal." And there were
+brass tongs like sugar tongs wherewith Euphemia would regale the fire
+and brighten it up, handing it a lump at a time in the prettiest way.
+But brass dints. The brazen thing was quiet and respectable enough
+upstairs, but ever and again it went away to be filled. What happened on
+these holiday jaunts Euphemia has never ascertained. But a chance blow
+or worse cause ran a crease athwart the forehead of the thing, and
+below an almost imperceptible bulging hinted at a future corpulency. And
+there was complaint of the quantity of polishing it needed, and an
+increasing difficulty in keeping it bright. And except when it was full
+to the brim, the lining was unsightly; and this became more so. One day
+Ithuriel must have visited Euphemia's apartment, and the tarnished
+brilliancy of the thing stood confessed. For some days there was an
+interregnum, and a coal-scuttle from downstairs--a black unstable thing
+on flat foot and with a vast foolish nether lip--did its duty with
+inelegant faithfulness.
+
+Then Euphemia had a really pretty fancy. She procured one of those big
+open garden baskets and painted it a pleasant brown, and instead of a
+garden fork she had a little half horticultural scoop. In this basket
+she kept her coals, and she tied a pink ribbon on the handle. One might
+fancy she had been in some dewy garden and had dug a few coals as one
+might dig up bulbs, and brought them in and put them down. It attracted
+attention from all her visitors, and set a kind of fashion in the
+neighbourhood. For a time Euphemia was almost contented. But one day a
+malignant woman called, and looked at this device through her gilt
+eye-glasses, while she secretly groped in the dark of her mind for an
+unpleasant thing to say. Then suddenly she remarked, "Why not put your
+coal in a bassinette? Or keep it _all_ on the floor?" Euphemia's face
+fell. The thing was undeniably very like a cradle, in the light of this
+suggestion; the coal certainly did seem a little out of place there; and
+besides, if there were more than three or four lumps they had a way of
+tumbling over the edge upon the carpet when the fire was replenished.
+The tender shoot of Euphemia's satisfaction suddenly withered and died.
+
+So the struggle has gone on. Sometimes it has been a wrought iron tripod
+with a subtle tendency to upset in certain directions; sometimes a
+coal-box; once even the noisy old coal-box of japanned tin, making more
+noise than a Salvation Army service, and strangely decorated with "art"
+enamels, had a turn. At present Euphemia is enduring a walnut "casket,"
+that since its first week of office has displayed an increasing
+indisposition to shut. But things cannot stay like this. The worry and
+anxiety and vexation, Euphemia declares, are making her old before her
+time. A delicate woman should not be left alone to struggle against
+brazen monsters. A closed gas stove is happily impossible, but the
+husband of the household is threatened with one of those beastly sham
+fires, wherein gas jets flare among firebrick--a mechanical fire without
+vitality or variety, that never dances nor crackles nor blazes, a
+monotonous horror, a fire you cannot poke. That is what it will
+certainly come to if the problem remains unsolved.
+
+
+
+
+BAGARROW
+
+
+Frankly, I detest this Bagarrow. Yet it is quite generally conceded that
+Bagarrow is a very well-meaning fellow. But the trouble is to understand
+him. To do that I have been at some pains, and yet I am still a mere
+theorist. An anthropometric estimate of the man fails to reveal any
+reason for the distinction of my aversion. He is of passable height,
+breadth, and density, and, save for a certain complacency of expression,
+I find no salient objection in his face. He has bluish eyes and a
+whitish skin, and average-coloured hair--none of them distinctly
+indictable possessions. It is something in his interior and unseen
+mechanism, I think, that must be wrong; some internal lesion that finds
+expression in his acts.
+
+His mental operations, indeed, were at first as inconceivable to me as a
+crab's or a cockchafer's. That is where all the trouble came in. For
+that reason alone they fascinated me and aggrieved me. From the
+conditions of our acquaintance--we were colleagues--I had to study him
+with some thoroughness, observing him under these circumstances and
+those. I have, by the bye, sometimes wondered idly how he would react to
+alcohol--a fluid he avoids. It would, I am sure, be an entirely novel
+and remarkable kind of Drunk, and I am also certain it would be an
+offensive one. But I can't imagine it; I have no data. I could as soon
+evolve from my inner consciousness an intoxicated giraffe. But, as I
+say, this interesting experience has hitherto been denied me.
+
+Now my theory of Bagarrow is this, that he has a kind of disease in his
+ideals, some interruption of nutrition that has left them small and
+emasculate. He aims, it appears, at a state called "Really Nice" or the
+"True Gentleman," the outward and visible signs of which are a
+conspicuous quietness of costume, gloves in all weathers, and a
+tightly-rolled umbrella. But coupled in some way with this is a queer
+smack of the propagandist, a kind of dwarfed prophetic passion. That is
+the particular oddness of him. He displays a timid yet persistent desire
+to foist this True Gentleman of his upon an unwilling world, to make you
+Really Nice after his own pattern. I always suspect him of trying to
+convert me by stealth when I am not looking.
+
+So far as I can see, Bagarrow's conception of this True Gentleman of his
+is at best a compromise, mainly holiness, but a tinted kind of
+holiness--goodness in clean cuffs and with something neat in ties. He
+renounces the flesh and the devil willingly enough, but he wants to keep
+up a decent appearance. Now a stark saint I can find sympathy for. I
+respect your prophet unkempt and in a hair shirt denouncing Sin--and
+mundane affairs in general--with hoarse passion and a fiery hate. I
+would not go for my holidays with nor make a domestic pet of such a man,
+but I respect him. But Bagarrow's pose is different. Bagarrow would call
+that carrying things to extremes. His is an unobtrusive virtue, a
+compromising dissent, inaggressive aggressions on sin. So I take it. And
+at times he puts it to you in a drawling argument, a stream of
+Bagarrowisms, until you have to hurt his feelings--happily he is always
+getting his feelings hurt--just to stop the flow of him.
+
+"Life," said Bagarrow, in a moment of expansiveness, "is scarcely worth
+living unless you are doing good to someone." That I take to be the
+keystone of him. "I want to be a Good Influence upon all the people I
+meet." I do not think it has ever dawned upon him that he himself is any
+way short of perfection; and, so far as I can see, the triumph and end
+of his good influence is cleanliness of cuff, compactness of umbrella,
+and general assimilation to the Bagarrow ideal.
+
+Hear him upon one's social duties--this living soul in this world of
+wonders! "In moderation," said Bagarrow, opening out to questions on
+that matter, "social relaxation is desirable, and I will even go so far
+as to admit that I think it well to have at hand some pleasant expedient
+for entertaining people and passing the time. A humorous song or a
+recitation--provided it is in really good taste--is harmless enough, and
+sometimes it may even be turned to good account. And everyone should try
+to master some instrument or other. The flute, perhaps, is as convenient
+as any; for the fiddle and piano, you know, are difficult and expensive
+to learn, and require constant practice. A little legerdemain is also a
+great acquisition for a man. Some may differ from me in that," continued
+Bagarrow, "but I see no harm in it. There are hundreds of perfectly
+proper and innocent tricks with coins and bits of paper, and pieces of
+string, that will make an evening pass most delightfully. One may get
+quite a little reputation as an entertainer with these things."
+
+"And it is," pursued Bagarrow, quite glowing with liberality, "just a
+little pharisaical to object to card tricks. There are quantities of
+really quite clever and mathematical things that one may do with a
+chosen card, dealing the pack into heaps and counting slowly. Of course
+it is not for mere pleasuring that I learn these things. It gives anyone
+with a little tact an opportunity for stopping card-playing. When the
+pack is brought in, and all the party are intent upon gaming, you may
+seize your opportunity and take the cards, saying, 'Let me show you a
+little trick,' or, 'Have you seen Maskelyne's new trick with the cards?'
+Before anyone can object you are displaying your skill to their
+astonished eyes, and in their wonder at your cleverness the
+objectionable game may be indefinitely postponed."
+
+"Yet so set at times is your gambler upon his abominable pursuit," says
+Bagarrow, "that in practice even this ingenious expedient has been known
+to fail." He tried it once, it seems, in a race train to Kempton Park,
+and afterwards he had to buy a new hat. That incident, indeed, gives you
+the very essence of Bagarrow in his insidious attacks on evil. I
+remember that on another occasion he went out of his way to promise a
+partially intoxicated man a drink; and taking him into a public-house
+ordered two lemon squashes! Drinks! He liked lemon squash himself and he
+did not like beer, and he thought he had only to introduce the poor
+fallen creature to the delights of temperance to ensure his conversion
+there and then. I think he expected the man to fall upon him, crying "My
+benefactor!" But he did not say "My benefactor," at anyrate, though he
+fell upon him, cheerfully enough.
+
+To avoid the appearance of priggishness, which he dreads with some
+reason, he even went so far as to procure a herb tobacco, which he
+smokes with the help of frequent sulphur matches. This he recommends to
+us strongly. "Won't you try it?" he says, with a winning smile. "Just
+once." And he is the only man I ever met who drinks that facetious
+fluid, non-alcoholic beer. Once he proposed to wean me upon that from my
+distinctive vice, which led indeed to our first rupture. "_I_ find it
+delicious," he said in pathetic surprise.
+
+It is one of his most inveterate habits to tell you quietly what he
+does, or would do under the circumstances. Seeing you at Kipling, he
+will propound the proposition that "all true literature has a distinct
+aim." His test of literary merit is "What good does it do you?" He is a
+great lender of books, especially of Carlyle and Ruskin, which authors
+for some absolutely inscrutable reason he considers provocative of
+Bagarrowism, and he goes to the County Council lectures on dairy-work,
+because it encourages others to improve themselves. But I have said
+enough to display him, and of Bagarrow at least--as I can well
+testify--it is easy to have more than enough. Indeed, after whole days
+with him I have gone home to dream of the realisation of his ideals, a
+sort of Bagarrow millennium, a world of Bagarrows. All kinds of
+men--Falstaffs, Don Quixotes, Alan Stewarts, John the Baptists, John
+Knoxes, Quilps, and Benvenuto Cellinis--all, so to speak, Bagarrowed,
+all with clean cuffs, tight umbrellas, and temperate ways, passing to
+and fro in a regenerate earth.
+
+And so he goes on his way through this wonderful universe with his eyes
+fixed upon two or three secondary things, without the lust or pride of
+life, without curiosity or adventure, a mere timid missionary of a
+religion of "Nicer Ways," a quiet setter of a good example. I can assure
+you this is no exaggeration, but a portrait. It seems to me that the
+thing must be pathological, that he and this goodness of his have
+exactly the same claim upon Lombroso, let us say, as the born criminal.
+He is born good, a congenital good example, a sufferer from atrophy of
+his original sin. The only hope I can see for Bagarrow, short of murder,
+is forcible trepanning. He ought to have the seat of his ideals lanced,
+and all this wash about doing good to people by stealth taken away. It
+may be he might prove a very decent fellow then--if there was anything
+left of him, that is.
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF ESSAYS DEDICATORY
+
+
+I have been bothered about this book this three months. I have written
+scarcely anything since Llewellyn asked me for it, for when he asked me
+I had really nothing on hand. I had just published every line I had ever
+written, at my own expense, with Prigsbys. Yet three months should
+suffice for one of Llewellyn's books, which consist chiefly of decorous
+fly-leaves and a dedication or so, and margins. Of course you know
+Llewellyn's books--the most delightful things in the market: the
+sweetest covers, with little gilt apples and things carelessly
+distributed over luminous grey, and bright red initials, and all these
+delightful fopperies. But it was the very slightness of these bibelots
+that disorganised me. And perhaps, also, the fact that no one has ever
+asked me for a book before.
+
+I had no trouble with the title though--"Lichens." I have wondered the
+thing was never used before. Lichens, variegated, beautiful, though on
+the most arid foundations, half fungoid, half vernal--the very name for
+a booklet of modern verse. And that, of course, decided the key of the
+cover and disposed of three or four pages. A fly-leaf, a leaf with
+"Lichens" printed fair and beautiful a little to the left of the centre,
+then a title-page--"Lichens. By H.G. Wells. London: MDCCCXCV. Stephen
+Llewellyn." Then a restful blank page, and then--the Dedication. It was
+the dedication stopped me. The title-page, it is true, had some points
+of difficulty. Should the Christian name be printed in full or not, for
+instance; but it had none of the fatal fascination of the dedicatory
+page. I had, so to speak, to look abroad among the ranks of men, and
+make one of those fretful forgotten millions--immortal. It seemed a
+congenial task.
+
+I went to work forthwith.
+
+It was only this morning that I realised the magnitude of my
+accumulations. Ever since then--it was three months ago--I have been
+elaborating this Dedication. I turned the pile over, idly at first.
+Presently I became interested in tracing my varying moods, as they had
+found a record in the heap.
+
+This struck me--
+
+[Illustration: A Handwritten dedication, "To my Dearest Friend"
+followed by three successive names, two crossed out, then the whole
+dedication struck out]
+
+Then again, a little essay in gratitude came to hand--
+
+ TO
+ PROFESSOR AUGUSTUS FLOOD,
+ Whose Admirable Lectures on
+ Palæontology
+ First turned my Attention to
+ Literature.
+
+There was a tinge of pleasantry in the latter that pleased me very
+greatly when I wrote it, and I find immediately overlying it another
+essay in the same line--
+
+ To the Latter-day Reviewer,
+ These Pearls.
+
+For some days I was smitten with the idea of dedicating my little
+booklet to one of my numerous personal antagonists, and conveying some
+subtly devised insult with an air of magnanimity. I thought, for
+instance, of Blizzard--
+
+ SIR JOSEPH BLIZZARD,
+The most distinguished, if not the greatest, of contemporary
+ anatomists.
+
+
+I think it was "X.L.'s" book, _Aut Diabolus aut Nihil_, that set me upon
+another line. There is, after all, your reader to consider in these
+matters, your average middle-class person to impress in some way. They
+say the creature is a snob, and absolutely devoid of any tinge of
+humour, and I must confess that I more than half believe it. At anyrate,
+it was that persuasion inspired--
+
+ To the Countess of X.,
+ In Memory of Many Happy Days.
+
+I know no Countess of X., as a matter of fact, but if the public is such
+an ass as to think better of my work for the suspicion, I do not care
+how soon I incur it. And this again is a pretty utilisation of the waste
+desert of politics--
+
+ MY DEAR SALISBURY,--Pray accept this unworthy tribute of
+ my affectionate esteem.
+
+There were heaps of others. And looking at those heaps it suddenly came
+sharp and vivid before my mind that there--there was the book I needed,
+already written! A blank page, a dedication, a blank page, a dedication,
+and so on. I saw no reason to change the title. It only remained to
+select the things, and the book was done. I set to work at once, and in
+a very little while my bibelot was selected. There were dedications
+fulsome and fluid, dedications acrid and uncharitable, dedications in
+verse and dedications in the dead languages: all sorts and conditions of
+dedications, even the simple "To J.H. Gabbles"--so suggestive of the
+modest white stones of the village churchyard. Altogether I picked out
+one hundred and three dedications. At last only one thing remained to
+complete the book. And that was--the Dedication. You will scarcely
+credit it, but that worries me still....
+
+I am almost inclined to think that Dedications are going out of
+fashion.
+
+
+
+
+THROUGH A MICROSCOPE
+
+SOME MORAL REFLECTIONS
+
+
+This dabbler person has recently disposed of his camera and obtained a
+microscope--a short, complacent-looking implement it is, of brass--and
+he goes about everywhere now with little glass bottles in his pocket,
+ready to jump upon any stray polly-woggle he may find, and hale it home
+and pry into its affairs. Within his study window are perhaps half a
+dozen jars and basins full of green scum and choice specimens of black
+mud in which his victims live. He persists in making me look through
+this instrument, though I would rather I did not. It seems to me a kind
+of impropriety even when I do it. He gets innumerable things in a drop
+of green water, and puts it on a glass slip under the object glass, and,
+of course, they know nothing of the change in their condition, and go on
+living just as they did before they were observed. It makes me feel at
+times like a public moralist, or Peeping Tom of Coventry, or some such
+creature.
+
+Certainly there are odd things enough in the water. Among others,
+certain queer green things that are neither plants nor animals. Most of
+the time they are plants, quiet green threads matted together, but every
+now and then the inside comes out of one, so to speak, and starts off
+with a fine red eye and a long flickering tail, to see the world. The
+dabbler says it's quite a usual thing among the lower plants--_Algæ_ he
+calls them, for some reason--to disgorge themselves in this way and go
+swimming about; but it has quite upset my notions of things. If the
+lower plants, why not the higher? It may be my abominable imagination,
+but since he told me about these--swarm spores I think he called
+them--I don't feel nearly so safe with my geraniums as I did.
+
+A particularly objectionable thing in these water drops, the dabbler
+insists upon my spying at is the furious activity of everything you see
+in them. You look down his wretched tube, and there, bright and yellow
+with the lamplight in the round field of the microscope, is a perfect
+riot of living things. Perhaps it's the water he got from Hampstead, and
+a dozen flat things the shape of shortbreads will be fussing about.
+They are all quite transparent and colourless, and move about like
+galleys by means of a lot of minute oars that stick out all over them.
+Never a moment's rest. And, presently, one sees that even the green
+plant threads are wriggling across the field. The dabbler tries to
+moralise on this in the vein of Charles Kingsley, and infer we have much
+to learn from these ridiculous creatures; but, so far as I can see, it's
+a direct incentive to sloth to think how low in the scale of creation
+these things are, in spite of all their fussing. If they had sat about
+more and thought, they might be fishing the dabbler out of ponds and
+examining him instead of his examining them. Your energetic people might
+do worse things than have a meditative half-hour at the microscope. Then
+there are green things with a red spot and a tail, that creep about like
+slugs, and are equally transparent. _Euglena viridis_ the dabbler calls
+them, which seems unnecessary information. In fact all the things he
+shows me are transparent. Even the little one-eyed Crustacea, the size
+of a needle-point, that discredit the name of Cyclops. You can see their
+digestion and muscle and nerve, and, in fact, everything. It's at least
+a blessing we are not the same. Fancy the audible comments of the
+temperance advocate when you get in the bus! No use pulling yourself
+together then. "Pretty full!" And "Look," people would say, "his wife
+gives him cold mutton."
+
+Speaking of the name of Cyclops reminds me that these scientific people
+have been playing a scurvy trick upon the classics behind our backs. It
+reminds one of Epistemon's visit to Hades, when he saw Alexander a
+patcher of clouts and Xerxes a crier of mustard. Aphrodite, the dabbler
+tells me, is a kind of dirty mud-worm, and much dissected by spectacled
+pretenders to the London B.Sc.; every candidate, says the syllabus, must
+be able to dissect, to the examiner's satisfaction, and demonstrate upon
+Aphrodite, Nereis, Palæmon. Were the gods ever so insulted? Then the
+snaky Medusa and Pandora, our mother, are jelly-fish; Astræa is still to
+be found on coral reefs, a poor thing, and much browsed upon by parrot
+fish; and Doris and Tethys and Cydippe are sea slugs. It's worse than
+Heine's vision of the gods grown old. They can't be content with the
+departed gods merely. Evadne is a water flea--they'll make something out
+of Mrs. Sarah Grand next; and Autolycus, my Autolycus! is a polymorphic
+worm, whatever subtlety of insult "polymorphic worm" may convey.
+
+However, I wander from the microscope. These shortbread things are
+fussing about hither and thither across the field, and now and then an
+amoeba comes crawling into view. These are invertebrate jelly-like
+things of no particular shape, and they keep on thrusting out a part
+here, and withdrawing a part there, and changing and advancing just as
+though they were popular democratic premiers. Then diatoms keep gliding
+athwart the circle. These diatoms are, to me at least, the most
+perplexing things in the universe. Imagine a highly ornamental thing in
+white and brown, the shape of a spectacle case, without any limbs or
+other visible means of progression, and without any wriggling of the
+body, or indeed any apparent effort at all, gliding along at a smart
+pace. That's your diatom. The dabbler really knows nothing of how they
+do it. He mumbles something about Bütschli and Grenfell. Imagine the
+thing on a larger scale, Cleopatra's Needle, for instance, travelling on
+its side up the Thames Embankment, and all unchaperoned, at the rate of
+four or five miles an hour.
+
+There's another odd thing about these microscope things which redeems,
+to some extent at least, their singular frankness. To use the decorous
+phrase of the text-book, "They multiply by fission." Your amoeba or
+vorticella, as the case may be, splits in two. Then there are two amoebæ
+or vorticellæ. In this way the necessity of the family, that
+middle-class institution so abhorrent to the artistic mind, is avoided.
+In my friend's drop of ditch-water, as in heaven, there is neither
+marrying nor giving in marriage. There are no waste parents, which
+should appeal to the scholastic mind, and the simple protozoon has none
+of that fitful fever of falling in love, that distressingly tender state
+that so bothers your mortal man. They go about their business with an
+enviable singleness of purpose, and when they have eaten and drunk, and
+attained to the fulness of life, they divide and begin again with
+renewed zest the pastime of living.
+
+In a sense they are immortal. For we may look at this matter in another
+light, and say our exuberant protozoon has shed a daughter, and remains.
+In that case the amoeba I look at may have crawled among the slime of
+the Silurian seas when the common ancestor of myself and the royal
+family was an unassuming mud-fish like those in the reptile house in the
+Zoo. His memoirs would be interesting. The thought gives a solemn tint
+to one's meditations. If the dabbler wash him off this slide into his
+tube of water again, this trivial creature may go on feeding and growing
+and dividing, and presently be thrown away to wider waters, and so
+escape to live ... after I am dead, after my masterpieces are forgotten,
+after our Empire has passed away, after the human animal has passed
+through I know not what vicissitudes. It may be he will still, with the
+utmost nonchalance, be pushing out his pseudopodia, and ingesting
+diatoms when the fretful transitory life of humanity has passed
+altogether from the earth. One may catch him in specimen tubes by the
+dozen; but still, when one thinks of this, it is impossible to deny him
+a certain envious, if qualified, respect.
+
+And all the time these creatures are living their vigorous, fussy little
+lives; in this drop of water they are being watched by a creature of
+whose presence they do not dream, who can wipe them all out of existence
+with a stroke of his thumb, and who is withal as finite, and sometimes
+as fussy and unreasonably energetic, as themselves. He sees them, and
+they do not see him, because he has senses they do not possess, because
+he is too incredibly vast and strange to come, save as an overwhelming
+catastrophe, into their lives. Even so, it may be, the dabbler himself
+is being curiously observed.... The dabbler is good enough to say that
+the suggestion is inconceivable. I can imagine a decent amoeba saying
+the same thing.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLEASURE OF QUARRELLING
+
+
+Your cultivated man is apt to pity the respectable poor, on the score of
+their lack of small excitements, and even in the excess of his generous
+sympathy to go a Toynbee-Halling in their cause. And Sir Walter Besant
+once wrote a book about Hoxton, saying, among other things, how
+monotonous life was there. That is your modern fallacy respecting the
+lower middle class. One might multiply instances. The tenor of the pity
+is always the same.
+
+"No music," says the cultivated man, "no pictures, no books to read nor
+leisure to read in. How can they pass their lives?"
+
+The answer is simple enough, as Emily Brontë knew. They quarrel. And an
+excellent way of passing the time it is; so excellent, indeed, that the
+pity were better inverted. But we all lack the knowledge of our chiefest
+needs. In the first place, and mainly, it is hygienic to quarrel, it
+disengages floods of nervous energy, the pulse quickens, the breathing
+is accelerated, the digestion improved. Then it sets one's stagnant
+brains astir and quickens the imagination; it clears the mind of
+vapours, as thunder clears the air. And, finally, it is a natural
+function of the body. In his natural state man is always quarrelling--by
+instinct. Not to quarrel is indeed one of the vices of our civilisation,
+one of the reasons why we are neurotic and anæmic, and all these things.
+And, at last, our enfeebled palates have even lost the capacity for
+enjoying a "jolly good row."
+
+There can be no more melancholy sight in the world than that of your
+young man or young woman suffering from suppressed pugnacity. Up to the
+end of the school years it was well with them; they had ample scope for
+this wholesome commerce, the neat give and take of offence. In the
+family circle, too, there are still plentiful chances of acquiring the
+taste. Then, suddenly, they must be gentle and considerate, and all the
+rest of it. A wholesome shindy, so soon as toga and long skirts arrive,
+is looked upon as positively wrong; even the dear old institution of the
+"cut" is falling into disrepute. The quarrelling is all forced back into
+the system, as it were; it poisons the blood. This is why our literature
+grows sinister and bitter, and our daughters yearn after this and that,
+write odd books, and ride about on bicycles in remarkable clothes. They
+have shut down the safety valve, they suffer from the present lamentable
+increase of gentleness. They must find some outlet, or perish. If they
+could only put their arms akimbo and tell each other a piece of their
+minds for a little, in the ancient way, there can be not the slightest
+doubt that much of this _fin-de-siècle_ unwholesomeness would disappear.
+
+Possibly this fashion of gentleness will pass. Yet it has had increasing
+sway now for some years. An unhealthy generation has arisen--among the
+more educated class at least--that quarrels little, regards the function
+as a vice or a nuisance, as the East-ender does a taste for fine art or
+literature. We seem indeed to be getting altogether out of the way of
+it. Rare quarrels, no doubt, occur to everyone, but rare quarrelling is
+no quarrelling at all. Like beer, smoking, sea-bathing, cycling, and the
+like delights, you cannot judge of quarrelling by the early essay. But
+to show how good it is--did you ever know a quarrelsome person give up
+the use? Alcohol you may wean a man from, and Barrie says he gave up the
+Arcadia Mixture, and De Quincey conquered opium. But once you are set as
+a quarreller you quarrel and quarrel till you die.
+
+How to quarrel well and often has ever been something of an art, and it
+becomes more of an art with the general decline of spirit. For it takes
+two to make a quarrel. Time was when you turned to the handiest human
+being, and with small care or labour had the comfortable warmth you
+needed in a minute or so. There was theology, even in the fifties it was
+ample cause with two out of three you met. Now people will express a
+lamentable indifference. Then politics again, but a little while ago fat
+for the fire of any male gathering, is now a topic of mere tepidity. So
+you are forced to be more subtle, more patient in your quarrelling. You
+play like a little boy playing cricket with his sisters, with those who
+do not understand. A fellow-votary is a rare treat. As a rule you have
+to lure and humour your antagonist like a child. The wooing is as
+intricate and delicate as any wooing can well be. To quarrel now,
+indeed, requires an infinity of patience. The good old days of
+thumb-biting--"Do you bite your thumbs at us, sir?" and so to clash and
+stab--are gone for ever.
+
+There are certain principles in quarrelling, however, that the true
+quarreller ever bears in mind, and which, duly observed, do much to
+facilitate encounters. In the first place, cultivate Distrust. Have
+always before you that this is a wicked world, full of insidious people,
+and you never know what villainous encroachments upon you may be hidden
+under fair-seeming appearances. That is the flavour of it. At the first
+suspicion, "stick up for your rights," as the vulgar say. And see that
+you do it suddenly. Smite promptly, and the surprise and sting of your
+injustice should provoke an excellent reply. And where there is least
+ground for suspicion, there, remember, is the most. The right hand of
+fellowship extended towards you is one of the best openings you have.
+"Not such a fool," is the kind of attitude to assume, and "You don't put
+upon _me_ so easy." Your adversary resents this a little, and, rankling,
+tries to explain. You find a personal inference in the expostulation.
+
+Next to a wariness respecting your interests is a keen regard for your
+honour. Have concealed in the privacy of your mind a code of what is due
+to you. Expand or modify it as occasion offers. Be as it were a
+collector of what are called "slights," and never let one pass you.
+Watch your friend in doorways, passages; when he eats by you, when he
+drinks with you, when he addresses you, when he writes you letters. It
+will be hard if you cannot catch him smuggling some deadly insult into
+your presence. Tax him with it. He did not think, forsooth! Tell him no
+gentleman would do such a thing, thinkingly or not; that you certainly
+will not stand it again. Say you will show him. He will presently argue
+or contradict. So to your climax.
+
+Then, again, there is the personal reference. "Meaning me, sir?" Your
+victim with a blithe heart babbles of this or that. You let him meander
+here and there, watching him as if you were in ambush. Presently he
+comes into your spring. "Of course," you say, "I saw what you were
+driving at just this minute, when you mentioned mustard in salad
+dressing, but if I am peppery I am not mean. And if I have a thing to
+say I say it straight out." A good gambit this, and well into him from
+the start. The particular beauty of this is that you get him apologetic
+at first, and can score heavily before he rises to the defensive.
+
+Then, finally, there is your abstract cause, once very fruitful indeed,
+but now sadly gone in decay, except perhaps in specialist society. As an
+example, let there be one who is gibing genially at some topic or other,
+at Japanese king-crabs, or the inductive process, or any other topic
+which cannot possibly affect you one atom. Then is the time to drop all
+these merely selfish interests, and to champion the cause of truth. Fall
+upon him in a fine glow of indignation, and bring your contradiction
+across his face--whack!--so that all the table may hear. Tell him, with
+his pardon, that the king-crab is no more a crab than you are a
+jelly-fish, or that Mill has been superseded these ten years. Ask: "How
+can you say such things?" From thence to his general knowledge is a
+short flight, and so to his veracity, his reasoning powers, his mere
+common sense. "Let me tell you, sir," is the special incantation for the
+storm.
+
+These are the four chief ways of quarrelling, the four gates to this
+delightful city. For it is delightful, once your 'prentice days are
+past. In a way it is like a cold bath on a winter's morning, and you
+glow all day. In a way it is like football, as the nimble aggravation
+dances to and fro. In a way it is like chess. Indeed, all games of skill
+are watered quarrels, quarrel and soda, come to see them in a proper
+light. And without quarrelling you have not fully appreciated your
+fellow-man. For in the ultimate it is the train and complement of Love,
+the shadow that rounds off the delight we take in poor humanity. It is
+the vinegar and pepper of existence, and long after our taste for sweets
+has vanished it will be the solace of our declining years.
+
+
+
+
+THE AMATEUR NATURE-LOVER
+
+
+It is possible that an education entirely urban is not the best
+conceivable preparation for descriptive articles upon the country. On
+the other hand, your professional nature-lover is sometimes a little
+over-familiar with his subject. He knows the names of all the things,
+and he does not spare you. Besides, he is subtle. The prominent features
+are too familiar to him, and he goes into details. What respectable
+townsman, for instance, knows what "scabiosa" is? It sounds very
+unpleasant. Then the professional nature-lover assumes that you know
+trees. No Englishman can tell any tree from any other tree, except a
+very palpable oak or poplar. So that we may at least, as an experiment,
+allow a good Londoner to take his unsophisticated eyes out into the
+sweet country for once, and try his skill at nature-loving, though his
+botany has been learned over the counter of flower-shops, and his
+zoology on Saturday afternoons when they have the band in the Gardens.
+He makes his way, then, over by Epsom Downs towards Sutton, trying to
+assimilate his mood to the proper flavour of appreciation as he goes,
+and with a little notebook in the palm of his hand to assist an
+ill-trained memory. And the burthen of his song is of course the autumn
+tints.
+
+The masses of trees towards Epsom and Ewell, with the red houses and
+Elizabethan façades peeping through their interstices, contain, it would
+seem, every conceivable colour, except perhaps sky-blue; there are
+brilliant yellow trees, and a kind of tree of the most amazing gamboge
+green, almost the green of spring come back, and tan-coloured trees,
+deep brown, red, and deep crimson trees. Here and there the wind has
+left its mark, and the grey-brown branches and their purple tracery of
+twigs, with a suggestion of infinite depth behind, show through the
+rents in the leafy covering. There are deep green trees--the amateur
+nature-lover fancies they may be yews--with their dense warm foliage
+arranged in horizontal masses, like the clouds low down in a sunset; and
+certain other evergreens, one particularly, with a bluish-green covering
+of upstanding needles, are intensely conspicuous among the flame tints
+around. On a distant church tower, and nearer, disputing the possession
+of a gabled red house with a glowing creeper, is some ivy; and never is
+the perennial green of ivy so delightful as it is now, when all else is
+alight with the sombre fire of the sunset of the year....
+
+The amateur nature-lover proceeds over the down, appreciating all this
+as hard as he can appreciate, and anon gazing up at the grey and white
+cloud shapes melting slowly from this form to that, and showing lakes,
+and wide expanses, and serene distances of blue between their gaps. And
+then he looks round him for a zoological item. Underfoot the grass of
+the down is recovering from the summer drought and growing soft and
+green again, and plentiful little flattened snail shells lie about, and
+here and there a late harebell still nods in the breeze. Yonder bolts a
+rabbit, and then something whizzes by the amateur nature-lover's ear.
+
+They shoot here somewhere, he remembers suddenly; and then looking
+round, in a palpitating state, is reassured by the spectacle of a lone
+golfer looming over the brow of the down, and gesticulating black and
+weird against the sky. The Londoner, with an abrupt affectation of
+nonchalance, flings himself flat upon his back, and so remains
+comparatively safe until the golfer has passed. These golfers are
+strange creatures, rabbit-coloured, except that many are bright red
+about the middle, and they repel and yet are ever attracted by a devil
+in the shape of a little white ball, which leads them on through toothed
+briars, sharp furzes, pricking goss, and thorns; cursing the thing,
+weeping even, and anon laughing at their own foolish rambling;
+muttering, heeding no one to the right or left of their
+career,--demented creatures, as though these balls were their souls,
+that they ever sought to lose, and ever repented losing. And silent,
+ever at the heel of each, is a familiar spirit, an eerie human hedgehog,
+all set about with walking-sticks, a thing like a cylindrical
+umbrella-stand with a hat and boots and a certain suggestion of leg. And
+so they pass and are gone.
+
+Rising, the amateur nature-lover finds he has been reclining on a
+puff-ball. These puff-balls are certainly the most remarkable example of
+adaptation to circumstances known to English botanists. They grow
+abundantly on golf grounds, and are exactly like golf-balls in external
+appearance. They are, however, Pharisees and whited sepulchres, and
+within they are full of a soft mess of a most unpleasant appearance--the
+amateur nature-lover has some on him now--which stuff contains the
+spores. It is a case of what naturalists call "mimicry"--one of nature's
+countless adaptations. The golf-player smites these things with force,
+covering himself with ridicule--and spores, and so disseminating this
+far-sighted and ingenious fungus far and wide about the links.
+
+The amateur nature-lover passes off the down, and towards Banstead
+village. He is on the watch for characteristic objects of the
+countryside, and rustling through the leaves beneath a chestnut avenue
+he comes upon an old boot. It is a very, very old boot, all its blacking
+washed off by the rain, and two spreading chestnut leaves, yellow they
+are with blotches of green, with their broad fingers extended, rest upon
+it, as if they would protect and altogether cover the poor old boot in
+its last resting-place. It is as if Mother Nature, who lost sight of her
+product at the tanner's yard, meant to claim her own trampled child
+again at last, after all its wanderings. So we go on, noting a sardine
+tin gleaming brightly in the amber sunlight, through a hazel hedge, and
+presently another old boot. Some hawthorn berries, some hoary clematis
+we notice--and then another old boot. Altogether, it may be remarked, in
+this walk the amateur nature-lover saw eleven old boots, most of them
+dropped in the very sweetest bits of hedge tangle and grassy corner
+about Banstead.
+
+It is natural to ask, "Whence come all these old boots?" They are, as
+everyone knows, among the commonest objects in a country walk, so
+common, indeed, that the professional nature-lover says very little
+about them. They cannot grow there, they cannot be dropped from
+above--they are distinctly earth-worn boots. I have inquired of my own
+domestic people, and caused inquiry to be made in a large number of
+households, and there does not appear to be any regular custom of taking
+boots away to remote and picturesque spots to abandon them. Some
+discarded boots of my own were produced, but they were quite different
+from the old boot of the outer air. These home-kept old boots were
+lovely in their way, hoary with mould running into the most exquisite
+tints of glaucophane and blue-grey, but it was a different way
+altogether from that of the wild boot.
+
+A friend says, that these boots are cast away by tramps. People, he
+states, give your tramp old boots and hats in great profusion, and the
+modesty of the recipient drives him to these picturesque and secluded
+spots to effect the necessary change. But no nature-lover has ever
+observed the tramp or tramp family in the act of changing their clothes,
+and since there are even reasons to suppose that their garments are not
+detachable, it seems preferable to leave the wayside boot as a pleasant
+flavouring of mystery to our ramble. Another point, which also goes to
+explode this tramp theory, is that these countryside boots _never occur
+in pairs_, as any observer of natural history can testify....
+
+So our Cockney Jefferies proceeds, presently coming upon a cinder path.
+They use cinders a lot about Sutton, to make country paths with; it
+gives you an unexpected surprise the first time it occurs. You drop
+suddenly out of a sweetly tangled lane into a veritable bit of the Black
+Country, and go on with loathing in your soul for your fellow-creatures.
+There is also an abundance of that last product of civilisation, barbed
+wire. Oh that I were Gideon! with thorns and briers of the wilderness
+would I teach these elders of Sutton! But a truce to dark thoughts!
+
+We take our last look at the country from the open down above Sutton.
+Blue hills beyond blue hills recede into the remote distance; from
+Banstead Down one can see into Oxfordshire. Windsor Castle is in minute
+blue silhouette to the left, and to the right and nearer is the Crystal
+Palace. And closer, clusters red-roofed Sutton and its tower, then
+Cheam, with its white spire, and further is Ewell, set in a variegated
+texture of autumn foliage. Water gleams--a silver thread--at Ewell, and
+the sinking sun behind us catches a window here and there, and turns it
+into an eye of flame. And so to Sutton station and home to Cockneydom
+once more.
+
+
+
+
+FROM AN OBSERVATORY
+
+
+It will be some time yet before the rising of the moon. Looking down
+from the observatory one can see the pathways across the park dotted out
+in yellow lamps, each with a fringe of dim green; and further off, hot
+and bright, is the tracery of the illuminated streets, through which the
+people go to and fro. Save for an occasional stirring, or a passing
+voice speaking out of the dimness beneath me, the night is very still.
+Not a cloud is to be seen in the dark midwinter sky to hide one speck of
+its broad smears of star dust and its shining constellations.
+
+As the moon rises, heaven will be flooded with blue light, and one after
+another the stars will be submerged and lost, until only a solitary
+shining pinnacle of brightness will here and there remain out of the
+whole host of them. It is curious to think that, were the moon but a
+little brighter and truly the ruler of the night, rising to its empire
+with the setting of the sun, we should never dream of the great stellar
+universe in which our little solar system swims--or know it only as a
+traveller's tale, a strange thing to be seen at times in the Arctic
+Circle. Nay, if the earth's atmosphere were some few score miles higher,
+a night-long twilight would be drawn like an impenetrable veil across
+the stars. By a mere accident of our existence we see their multitude
+ever and again, when the curtains of the daylight and moonlight, and of
+our own narrow pressing necessities, are for a little while drawn back.
+Then, for an interval, we look, as if out of a window, into the great
+deep of heaven. So far as physical science goes, there is nothing in the
+essential conditions of our existence to necessitate that we should have
+these transitory glimpses of infinite space. We can imagine men just
+like ourselves without such an outlook. But it happens that we have it.
+
+If we had not this vision, if we had always so much light in the sky
+that we could not perceive the stars, our lives, so far as we can infer,
+would be very much as they are now; there would still be the same needs
+and desires, the same appliances for our safety and satisfaction; this
+little gaslit world below would scarcely miss the stars now, if they
+were blotted out for ever. But our science would be different in some
+respects had we never seen them. We should still have good reason, in
+Foucault's pendulum experiment, for supposing that the world rotated
+upon its axis, and that the sun was so far relatively fixed; but we
+should have no suspicion of the orbital revolution of the world. Instead
+we should ascribe the seasonal differences to a meridional movement of
+the sun. Our spectroscopic astronomy--so far as it refers to the
+composition of the sun and moon--would stand precisely where it does,
+but the bulk of our mathematical astronomy would not exist. Our calendar
+would still be in all essential respects as it is now; our year with the
+solstices and equinoxes as its cardinal points. The texture of our
+poetry might conceivably be the poorer without its star spangles; our
+philosophy, for the want of a nebular hypothesis. These would be the
+main differences. Yet, to those who indulge in speculative dreaming, how
+much smaller life would be with a sun and a moon and a blue beyond for
+the only visible, the only thinkable universe. And it is, we repeat,
+from the scientific standpoint a mere accident that the present--the
+daylight--world periodically opens, as it were, and gives us this
+inspiring glimpse of the remoteness of space.
+
+One may imagine countless meteors and comets streaming through the solar
+system, unobserved by those who dwelt under such conditions as have just
+been suggested, or some huge dark body from the outer depths sweeping
+straight at that little visible universe, and all unsuspected by the
+inhabitants. One may imagine the scientific people of such a world, calm
+in their assurance of the permanence of things, incapable almost of
+conceiving any disturbing cause. One may imagine how an imaginative
+writer who doubted that permanence would be pooh-poohed. "Cannot we see
+to the uttermost limits of space?" they might argue, "and is it not
+altogether blue and void?" Then, as the unseen visitor draws near, begin
+the most extraordinary perturbations. The two known heavenly bodies
+suddenly fail from their accustomed routine. The moon, hitherto
+invariably full, changes towards its last quarter--and then, behold! for
+the first time the rays of the greater stars visibly pierce the blue
+canopy of the sky. How suddenly--painfully almost--the minds of thinking
+men would be enlarged when this rash of the stars appeared.
+
+And what then if _our_ heavens were to open? Very thin indeed is the
+curtain between us and the unknown. There is a fear of the night that is
+begotten of ignorance and superstition, a nightmare fear, the fear of
+the impossible; and there is another fear of the night--of the starlit
+night--that comes with knowledge, when we see in its true proportion
+this little life of ours with all its phantasmal environment of cities
+and stores and arsenals, and the habits, prejudices, and promises of
+men. Down there in the gaslit street such things are real and solid
+enough, the only real things, perhaps; but not up here, not under the
+midnight sky. Here for a space, standing silently upon the dim, grey
+tower of the old observatory, we may clear our minds of instincts and
+illusions, and look out upon the real.
+
+And now to the eastward the stars are no longer innumerable, and the sky
+grows wan. Then a faint silvery mist appears above the housetops, and at
+last in the midst of this there comes a brilliantly shining line--the
+upper edge of the rising moon.
+
+
+
+
+THE MODE IN MONUMENTS
+
+STRAY THOUGHTS IN HIGHGATE CEMETERY
+
+
+On a sharp, sunlight morning, when the white clouds are drifting swiftly
+across the luminous blue sky, there is no finer walk about London than
+the Highgate ridge. One may stay awhile on the Archway looking down upon
+the innumerable roofs of London stretching southward into the haze, and
+shining here and there with the reflection of the rising sun, and then
+wander on along the picturesque road by the college of Saint Aloysius to
+the new Catholic church, and so through the Waterlow Park to the
+cemetery. The Waterlow Park is a pleasant place, full of children and
+aged persons in perambulators during the middle hours of the day, and in
+the summer evening time a haunt of young lovers; but your early wanderer
+finds it solitary save for Vertumnus, who, with L.C.C. on the front of
+him, is putting in crocuses. So we wander down to the little red lodge,
+whence a sinuous road runs to Hampstead, and presently into the close
+groves of monuments that whiten the opposite slope.
+
+How tightly these white sepulchres are packed here! How different this
+congestion of sorrow from the mossy latitude of God's Acre in the
+country! The dead are crammed together as closely as the living seemed
+in that bird's-eye view from the Archway. There is no ample shadow of
+trees, no tangled corners where mother earth may weave flower garlands
+over her returning children. The monuments positively jostle and elbow
+each other for frontage upon the footways. And they are so rawly clean
+and assertive. Most of them are conspicuously new whitened, with
+freshly-blackened or newly-gilt inscriptions, bare of lichen, moss, or
+mystery, and altogether so restless that it seems to the meditative man
+that the struggle for existence, for mere standing room and a show in
+the world, still rages among the dead. The unstable slope of the hill,
+with its bristling array of obelisks, crosses and urns, craning one
+above another, is as directly opposed to the restfulness of the village
+churchyard with its serene outspreading yews as midday Fleet Street to a
+Sabbath evening amidst the Sussex hills. This cemetery is, indeed, a
+veritable tumult of tombs.
+
+Another thing that presently comes painfully home to one is the lack of
+individuality among all these dead. Not a necessary lack of
+individuality so much as a deliberate avoidance of it. As one wanders
+along the steep, narrow pathways one is more and more profoundly
+impressed by the wholesale flavour of the mourning, the stereotyping of
+the monuments. The place is too modern for _memento mori_ and the
+hour-glass and the skull. Instead, Slap & Dash, that excellent firm of
+monumental masons, everywhere crave to be remembered. Truly, the firm of
+Slap & Dash have much to answer for among these graves, and they do not
+seem to be ashamed of it.
+
+From one elevated point in this cemetery one can count more than a
+hundred urns, getting at last weary and confused with the receding
+multitude. The urn is not dissimilar to the domestic mantel ornament,
+and always a stony piece of textile fabric is feigned to be thrown over
+its shoulder. At times it is wreathed in stony flowers. The only variety
+is in the form. Sometimes your urn is broad and squat, a Silenus among
+urns; sometimes fragile and high-shouldered, like a slender old maid;
+here an "out-size" in urns stalwart and strong, and there a dwarf
+peeping quaintly from its wrapping. The obelisks, too, run through a
+long scale of size and refinement. But the curious man finds no hidden
+connection between the carriage of the monument and the character of the
+dead. Messrs. Slap & Dash apparently take the urn or obelisk that comes
+readiest to hand. One wonders dimly why mourners have this overwhelming
+proclivity for Messrs. Slap & Dash and their obelisk and urn.
+
+The reason why the firm produces these articles may be guessed at. They
+are probably easy to make, and require scarcely any skill. The
+contemplative man has a dim vision of a grimy shed in a back street,
+where a human being passes dismally through life the while he chips out
+an unending succession of these cheap urns and obelisks for his
+employers' retailing. But the question why numberless people will
+profane the memory of their departed by these public advertisements of
+Slap & Dash, and their evil trade, is a more difficult problem. For
+surely nothing could be more unmeaning or more ungainly than the
+monumental urn, unless it be the monumental obelisk. The plain cross, by
+contrast, has the tenderest meaning, and is a simple and fitting
+monument that no repetition can stale.
+
+The artistic cowardice of the English is perhaps the clue to the
+mystery. Your Englishman is always afraid to commit himself to criticism
+without the refuge of a _tu quoque_. He is covered dead, just as he is
+covered living, with the "correct thing." A respectable stock-in-trade
+is proffered him by the insinuating shopman, to whom it is our custom to
+go. He is told this is selling well, or that is much admired. Heaven
+defend that he should admire on his own account! He orders the stock urn
+or the stock slab because it is large and sufficiently expensive for his
+means and sorrow, and because he knows of nothing better. So we mourn as
+the stonemason decrees, or after the example and pattern of the Smiths
+next door. But some day it will dawn upon us that a little thought and a
+search after beauty are far more becoming than an order and a cheque to
+the nearest advertising tradesman. Or it may be we shall conclude that
+the anonymous peace of a grassy mould is better than his commercial
+brutalities, and so there will be an end of him.
+
+One may go from end to end of this cemetery and find scarcely anything
+beautiful, appropriate, or tender. A lion, ill done, and yet to some
+degree impressive, lies complacently above a menagerie keeper, and near
+this is a tomb of some imagination, with reliefs of the life of Christ.
+In one place a grotesque horse, with a head disproportionately vast, is
+to be seen. Perhaps among all these monuments the one to Mrs. Blake is
+the most pleasing. It is a simply and quaintly executed kneeling figure,
+with a certain quiet and pathetic reverence of pose that is strangely
+restful against the serried vulgarity around it.
+
+But the tradesman ghoul will not leave us; he follows us up and down,
+indecently clamouring his name and address, and at last turns our
+meditation to despair. Certain stock devices become as painful as
+popular autotypes. There is the lily broken on its stalk; we meet it
+here on a cross and there on an obelisk, presently on the pedestal of an
+urn. There is the hand pointing upward, here balanced on the top of an
+obelisk and there upon a cross. The white-robed angel, free from the
+remotest shadow of expression, meets us again and again. "All this is
+mine," says the tradesman ghoul. "Behold the names of me--Slap & Dash
+here, the Ugliness Company there, and this the work of the Cheap and
+Elegant Funeral Association. This is where we slew the art of sculpture.
+These are our trophies that sculpture is no more. All this marble might
+have been beautiful, all this sorrow might have been expressive, had it
+not been for us. See, this is our border, No. A 5, and our pedestal No.
+E, and our second quality urn, along of a nice appropriate text--a
+pretty combination and a cheap one. Or we can do it you better in border
+A 3, and pedestal C, and a larger urn or a hangel----"
+
+The meditative man is seized with a dismal horror, and retreats to the
+gates. Even there a wooden advertisement grins broadly at him in his
+discomfiture, and shouts a name athwart his route. And so down the
+winding road to the valley, and then up Parliament Hill towards
+Hampstead and its breeze-whipped ponds. And the mind of him is full of a
+dim vision of days that have been, when sculptor and stonemason were
+one, when the artist put his work in the porch for all the world to see,
+when people had leisure to think how things should be done and heart to
+do them well, when there was beauty in the business of life and dignity
+in death. And he wonders rather hopelessly if people will ever rise up
+against these damnable tradesmen who ruin our arts, make our lives
+costly and dismal, and advertise, advertise even on our graves.
+
+
+
+
+HOW I DIED
+
+
+It is now ten years ago since I received my death warrant. All these ten
+years I have been, and I am, and shall be, I hope, for years yet, a
+Doomed Man. It only occurred to me yesterday that I had been
+dodging--missing rather than dodging--the common enemy for such a space
+of time. _Then_, I know, I respected him. It seemed he marched upon me,
+inexorable, irresistible; even at last I felt his grip upon me. I bowed
+in the shadow. And he passed. Ten years ago, and once since, he and I
+have been very near. But now he seems to me but a blind man, and we,
+with all our solemn folly of medicine and hygiene, but players in a game
+of Blind Man's Buff. The gaunt, familiar hand comes out suddenly,
+swiftly, this time surely? And it passes close to my shoulder; I hear
+someone near me cry, and it is over.... Another ream of paper; there is
+time at least for the Great Book still.
+
+Very close to the tragedy of life is the comedy, brightest upon the very
+edge of the dark, and I remember now with a queer touch of sympathetic
+amusement my dear departed self of the middle eighties. How the thing
+staggered me! I was full of the vast ambition of youth; I was still at
+the age when death is quite out of sight, when life is still an
+interminable vista of years; and then suddenly, with a gout of blood
+upon my knuckle, with a queer familiar taste in my mouth, that cough
+which had been a bother became a tragedy, and this world that had been
+so solid grew faint and thin. I saw through it; saw his face near to my
+own; suddenly found him beside me, when I had been dreaming he was far
+beyond there, far away over the hills.
+
+My first phase was an immense sorrow for myself. It was a purely selfish
+emotion. You see I had been saving myself up, denying myself half the
+pride of life and most of its indulgence, drilling myself like a
+drill-sergeant, with my eyes on those now unattainable hills. Had I
+known it was to end so soon, I should have planned everything so
+differently. I lay in bed mourning my truncated existence. Then
+presently the sorrow broadened. They were so sorry, so genuinely sorry
+for me. And they considered me so much now. I had this and that they
+would never have given me before--the stateliest bedding, the costliest
+food. I could feel from my bed the suddenly disorganised house, the
+distressed friends, the new-born solicitude. Insensibly a realisation of
+enhanced importance came to temper my regrets for my neglected sins. The
+lost world, that had seemed so brilliant and attractive, dwindled
+steadily as the days of my illness wore on. I thought more of the
+world's loss, and less of my own.
+
+Then came the long journey; the princely style of it! the sudden
+awakening on the part of external humanity, which had hitherto been wont
+to jostle me, to help itself before me, to turn its back upon me, to my
+importance. "He has a diseased lung--cannot live long"....
+
+I was going into the dark and I was not afraid--with ostentation. I
+still regard that, though now with scarcely so much gravity as
+heretofore, as a very magnificent period in my life. For nearly four
+months I was dying with immense dignity. Plutarch might have recorded
+it. I wrote--in touchingly unsteady pencil--to all my intimate friends,
+and indeed to many other people. I saw the littleness of hate and
+ambition. I forgave my enemies, and they were subdued and owned to it.
+How they must regret these admissions! I made many memorable remarks.
+This lasted, I say, nearly four months.
+
+The medical profession, which had pronounced my death sentence,
+reiterated it steadily--has, indeed, done so now this ten years. Towards
+the end of those four months, however, dying lost its freshness for me.
+I began to detect a certain habitual quality in my service. I had
+exhausted all my memorable remarks upon the subject, and the strain
+began to tell upon all of us.
+
+One day in the spring-time I crawled out alone, carefully wrapped, and
+with a stick, to look once more--perhaps for the last time--on sky and
+earth, and the first scattered skirmishers of the coming army of
+flowers. It was a day of soft wind, when the shadows of the clouds go
+sweeping over the hills. Quite casually I happened upon a girl
+clambering over a hedge, and her dress had caught in a bramble, and the
+chat was quite impromptu and most idyllic. I remember she had three or
+four wood anemones in her hand--"wind stars" she called them, and I
+thought it a pretty name. And we talked of this and that, with a light
+in our eyes, as young folks will.
+
+I quite forgot I was a Doomed Man. I surprised myself walking home with
+a confident stride that jarred with the sudden recollection of my
+funereal circumstances. For a moment I tried in vain to think what it
+was had slipped my memory. Then it came, colourless and remote. "Oh!
+Death.... He's a Bore," I said; "I've done with him," and laughed to
+think of having done with him.
+
+"And why not so?" said I.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+ _This book appeared some years ago at another price and in another
+ form. The Publisher believes that its present guise will bring it
+ within the reach of all and sundry, who, while delighting in the
+ marriage of_ wit _with_ wisdom, _cannot complete the trilogy with
+ the third desideratum of_ wealth.
+
+
+
+PRINTED BY MORRISON AND GIBB LIMITED, EDINBURGH
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Front Book Cover]
+
+CERTAIN
+PERSONAL
+MATTERS
+
+
+By
+
+H.G. WELLS
+_Author of the "Time Machine"_
+
+
+
+LONDON
+T. FISHER UNWIN
+PATERNOSTER SQUARE
+
+_Price One Shilling_
+_Also issued in Cloth, price 2s._
+
+
+[Illustration: Back Book Cover]
+
+
+To Furnish Smartly Without Disturbing Capital
+
+[Illustration: BED-TIME]
+
+
+By means of a perfectly simple plan (commended by the Editor of _Truth_
+and many others) you may furnish your House, Chambers, or Flat
+throughout,--and to the extent of Linen, Silver, and Cutlery,--_Out of
+Income without drawing upon Capital_ by dividing the initial outlay into
+6, 12, or 24 monthly, or 12 quarterly payments. At any period the option
+may be exercised of paying off the balance, and so take advantage of the
+Cash Discount.
+
+A beautifully coloured Catalogue given on personal application.
+
+
+CONSULT:
+NORMAN & STACEY, Ltd.,
+_Artistic House Furnishers_,
+118, Queen Victoria St., E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Certain Personal Matters, by H. G. Wells
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS ***
+
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+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Certain Personal Matters, by H.G. Wells.
+ </title>
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Certain Personal Matters, by H. G. Wells
+
+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: Certain Personal Matters
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2006 [EBook #17508]
+[Last updated: November 1, 2015]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<hr width="full" />
+<h2>CERTAIN<br />
+PERSONAL<br />
+MATTERS</h2>
+<h4>By</h4>
+<h3>H.G. WELLS</h3>
+
+<hr width="100%"/>
+
+<h4>Front Cover:</h4>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="./images/frontcover.png" width="575" height="795"
+title="Front Cover of Book (illustrating The Coal-scuttle p.145)" alt="Front Cover of Book" />
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+<h3>CERTAIN<br />
+PERSONAL<br />
+MATTERS</h3>
+<h5>By</h5>
+<h4>H.G. WELLS</h4>
+<h5><i>Author of the "Time Machine"</i></h5>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<p>
+LONDON<br />
+T. FISHER UNWIN<br />
+PATERNOSTER SQUARE</p>
+<p>
+<i>Price One Shilling</i><br />
+<i>Also issued in Cloth, price 2s.</i>
+</p>
+
+<hr width="100%" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+<h1>CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>H.G. WELLS</h2>
+
+
+<p>LONDON</p>
+
+<p>T. FISHER UNWIN</p>
+
+<p>PATERNOSTER SQUARE, E.C.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+
+<h4>CONTENTS</h4>
+
+
+<p class="indexlist">
+<span class="indexpage">PAGE</span><br />
+<br />
+THOUGHTS ON CHEAPNESS AND MY AUNT CHARLOTTE
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE TROUBLE OF LIFE
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_12">12</a></span><br />
+<br />
+ON THE CHOICE OF A WIFE
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE HOUSE OF DI SORNO
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></span><br />
+<br />
+OF CONVERSATION
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></span><br />
+<br />
+IN A LITERARY HOUSEHOLD
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></span><br />
+<br />
+ON SCHOOLING AND THE PHASES OF MR. SANDSOME
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE POET AND THE EMPORIUM
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_45">45</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE LITERARY REGIMEN
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="indextext">HOUSE-HUNTING AS AN OUTDOOR AMUSEMENT</span>
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></span><br />
+<br />
+OF BLADES AND BLADERY
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></span><br />
+<br />
+OF CLEVERNESS
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE POSE NOVEL
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE VETERAN CRICKETER
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></span><br />
+<br />
+CONCERNING A CERTAIN LADY
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE SHOPMAN
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE BOOK OF CURSES
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></span><br />
+<br />
+DUNSTONE'S DEAR LADY
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_90">90</a></span><br />
+<br />
+EUPHEMIA'S NEW ENTERTAINMENT (<i>this is illustrated</i>)
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></span><br />
+<br />
+FOR FREEDOM OF SPELLING
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></span><br />
+<br />
+INCIDENTAL THOUGHTS ON A BALD HEAD
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span><br />
+OF A BOOK UNWRITTEN
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="indextext">THE EXTINCTION OF MAN</span>
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE WRITING OF ESSAYS
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE PARKES MUSEUM
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></span><br />
+<br />
+BLEAK MARCH IN EPPING FOREST
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE THEORY OF QUOTATION
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></span><br />
+<br />
+ON THE ART OF STAYING AT THE SEASIDE
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></span><br />
+<br />
+CONCERNING CHESS
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE COAL-SCUTTLE
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></span><br />
+<br />
+BAGARROW
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE BOOK OF ESSAYS DEDICATORY
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THROUGH A MICROSCOPE
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE PLEASURE OF QUARRELLING
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE AMATEUR NATURE-LOVER
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_169">164</a></span><br />
+<br />
+FROM AN OBSERVATORY
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></span><br />
+<br />
+THE MODE IN MONUMENTS
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></span><br />
+<br />
+HOW I DIED
+<span class="indexpage"><a href="#Page_182">183</a></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+
+<h2><a name="CERTAIN_PERSONAL_MATTERS" id="CERTAIN_PERSONAL_MATTERS"></a>CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS</h2>
+
+
+<hr />
+<h3><a name="THOUGHTS_ON_CHEAPNESS_AND_MY_AUNT_CHARLOTTE" id="THOUGHTS_ON_CHEAPNESS_AND_MY_AUNT_CHARLOTTE"></a>THOUGHTS ON CHEAPNESS AND MY AUNT CHARLOTTE</h3>
+
+
+<p>The world mends. In my younger days people believed
+in mahogany; some of my readers will remember it&mdash;a
+heavy, shining substance, having a singularly close
+resemblance to raw liver, exceedingly heavy to move, and
+esteemed on one or other count the noblest of all woods.
+Such of us as were very poor and had no mahogany
+pretended to have mahogany; and the proper hepatite
+tint was got by veneering. That makes one incline to
+think it was the colour that pleased people. In those
+days there was a word "trashy," now almost lost to the
+world. My dear Aunt Charlotte used that epithet when,
+in her feminine way, she swore at people she did not like.
+"Trashy" and "paltry" and "Brummagem" was the very
+worst she could say of them. And she had, I remember,
+an intense aversion to plated goods and bronze halfpence.
+The halfpence of her youth had been vast and corpulent
+red-brown discs, which it was folly to speak of as small
+change. They were fine handsome coins, and almost as
+inconvenient as crown-pieces. I remember she corrected
+me once when I was very young. "Don't call a penny a
+copper, dear," she said; "copper is a metal. The pennies
+they have nowadays are bronze." It is odd how our
+childish impressions cling to us. I still regard bronze as a
+kind of upstart intruder, a mere trashy pretender among
+metals.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All my Aunt Charlotte's furniture was thoroughly good,
+and most of it extremely uncomfortable; there was not a
+thing for a little boy to break and escape damnation in the
+household. Her china was the only thing with a touch of
+beauty in it&mdash;at least I remember nothing else&mdash;and each
+of her blessed plates was worth the happiness of a mortal
+for days together. And they dressed me in a Nessus suit
+of valuable garments. I learned the value of thoroughly
+good things only too early. I knew the equivalent of a
+teacup to the very last scowl, and I have hated good,
+handsome property ever since. For my part I love cheap
+things, trashy things, things made of the commonest
+rubbish that money can possibly buy; things as vulgar
+as primroses, and as transitory as a morning's frost.</p>
+
+<p>Think of all the advantages of a cheap possession&mdash;cheap
+and nasty, if you will&mdash;compared with some valuable
+substitute. Suppose you need this or that. "Get a good
+one," advises Aunt Charlotte; "one that will last." You
+do&mdash;and it does last. It lasts like a family curse. These
+great plain valuable things, as plain as good women, as
+complacently assured of their intrinsic worth&mdash;who does
+not know them? My Aunt Charlotte scarcely had a new
+thing in her life. Her mahogany was avuncular; her
+china remotely ancestral; her feather beds and her
+bedsteads!&mdash;they were haunted; the births, marriages,
+and deaths associated with the best one was the history
+of our race for three generations. There was more in her
+house than the tombstone rectitude of the chair-backs
+to remind me of the graveyard. I can still remember
+the sombre aisles of that house, the vault-like shadows,
+the magnificent window curtains that blotted out the
+windows. Life was too trivial for such things. She
+never knew she tired of them, but she did. That was the
+secret of her temper, I think; they engendered her sombre
+Calvinism, her perception of the trashy quality of human
+life. The pretence that they were the accessories to
+human life was too transparent. <i>We</i> were the accessories;
+we minded them for a little while, and then we passed
+away. They wore us out and cast us aside. We were the
+changing scenery; they were the actors who played on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+through the piece. It was even so with clothing. We
+buried my other maternal aunt&mdash;Aunt Adelaide&mdash;and
+wept, and partly forgot her; but her wonderful silk
+dresses&mdash;they would stand alone&mdash;still went rustling
+cheerfully about an ephemeral world.</p>
+
+<p>All that offended my sense of proportion, my feeling
+of what is due to human life, even when I was a little boy.
+I want things of my own, things I can break without
+breaking my heart; and, since one can live but once, I want
+some change in my life&mdash;to have this kind of thing and
+then that. I never valued Aunt Charlotte's good old
+things until I sold them. They sold remarkably well:
+those chairs like nether millstones for the grinding away
+of men; the fragile china&mdash;an incessant anxiety until
+accident broke it, and the spell of it at the same time;
+those silver spoons, by virtue of which Aunt Charlotte
+went in fear of burglary for six-and-fifty years; the bed
+from which I alone of all my kindred had escaped; the
+wonderful old, erect, high-shouldered, silver-faced clock.</p>
+
+<p>But, as I say, our ideas are changing&mdash;mahogany has
+gone, and repp curtains. Articles are made for man, nowadays,
+and not man, by careful early training, for articles.
+I feel myself to be in many respects a link with the past.
+Commodities come like the spring flowers, and vanish again.
+"Who steals my watch steals trash," as some poet has
+remarked; the thing is made of I know not what metal, and
+if I leave it on the mantel for a day or so it goes a deep
+blackish purple that delights me exceedingly. My grandfather's
+hat&mdash;I understood when I was a little boy that I
+was to have that some day. But now I get a hat for ten
+shillings, or less, two or three times a year. In the old
+days buying clothes was well-nigh as irrevocable as
+marriage. Our flat is furnished with glittering things&mdash;wanton
+arm-chairs just strong enough not to collapse
+under you, books in gay covers, carpets you are free to
+drop lighted fusees upon; you may scratch what you like,
+upset your coffee, cast your cigar ash to the four quarters
+of heaven. Our guests, at anyrate, are not snubbed by
+our furniture. It knows its place.</p>
+
+<p>But it is in the case of art and adornment that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+cheapness is most delightful. The only thing that
+betrayed a care for beauty on the part of my aunt was
+her dear old flower garden, and even there she was not
+above suspicion. Her favourite flowers were tulips, rigid
+tulips with opulent crimson streaks. She despised
+wildings. Her ornaments were simply displays of the
+precious metal. Had she known the price of platinum
+she would have worn that by preference. Her chains and
+brooches and rings were bought by weight. She would
+have turned her back on Benvenuto Cellini if he was not
+22 carats fine. She despised water-colour art; her
+conception of a picture was a vast domain of oily brown
+by an Old Master. The Babbages at the Hall had a
+display of gold plate swaggering in the corner of the
+dining-room; and the visitor (restrained by a plush
+rope from examining the workmanship) was told the
+value, and so passed on. I like my art unadorned:
+thought and skill, and the other strange quality that
+is added thereto, to make things beautiful&mdash;and nothing
+more. A farthing's worth of paint and paper, and, behold!
+a thing of beauty!&mdash;as they do in Japan. And if it
+should fall into the fire&mdash;well, it has gone like yesterday's
+sunset, and to-morrow there will be another.</p>
+
+<p>These Japanese are indeed the apostles of cheapness.
+The Greeks lived to teach the world beauty, the Hebrews
+to teach it morality, and now the Japanese are hammering
+in the lesson that men may be honourable, daily life
+delightful, and a nation great without either freestone
+houses, marble mantelpieces, or mahogany sideboards. I
+have sometimes wished that my Aunt Charlotte could have
+travelled among the Japanese nation. She would, I know,
+have called it a "parcel of trash." Their use of paper&mdash;paper
+suits, paper pocket-handkerchiefs&mdash;would have
+made her rigid with contempt. I have tried, but I cannot
+imagine my Aunt Charlotte in paper underclothing. Her
+aversion to paper was extraordinary. Her Book of Beauty
+was printed on satin, and all her books were bound in
+leather, the boards regulated rather than decorated with a
+severe oblong. Her proper sphere was among the ancient
+Babylonians, among which massive populace even the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+newspapers were built of brick. She would have
+compared with the King's daughter whose raiment was
+of wrought gold. When I was a little boy I used to think
+she had a mahogany skeleton. However, she is gone, poor
+old lady, and at least she left me her furniture. Her
+ghost was torn in pieces after the sale&mdash;must have been.
+Even the old china went this way and that. I took what
+was perhaps a mean revenge of her for the innumerable
+black-holeings, bread-and-water dinners, summary chastisements,
+and impossible tasks she inflicted upon me for
+offences against her too solid possessions. You will see it
+at Woking. It is a light and graceful cross. It is a
+mere speck of white between the monstrous granite paperweights
+that oppress the dead on either side of her.
+Sometimes I am half sorry for that. When the end comes
+I shall not care to look her in the face&mdash;she will be so
+humiliated.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_TROUBLE_OF_LIFE" id="THE_TROUBLE_OF_LIFE"></a>THE TROUBLE OF LIFE</h3>
+
+
+<p>I do not know whether this will awaken a sympathetic
+lassitude in, say, fifty per cent. of its readers, or whether
+my experience is unique and my testimony simply curious.
+At anyrate, it is as true as I can make it. Whether
+this is a mere mood, and a certain flagrant exhilaration my
+true attitude towards things, or this is my true attitude
+and the exuberant phase a lapse from it, I cannot say.
+Probably it does not matter. The thing is that I find life
+an extremely troublesome affair. I do not want to make
+any railing accusations against life; it is&mdash;to my taste&mdash;neither
+very sad nor very horrible. At times it is distinctly
+amusing. Indeed, I know nothing in the same line that can
+quite compare with it. But there is a difference between
+general appreciation and uncritical acceptance. At times
+I find life a Bother.</p>
+
+<p>The kind of thing that I object to is, as a good example,
+all the troublesome things one has to do every morning
+in getting up. There is washing. This is an age of
+unsolicited personal confidences, and I will frankly confess
+that if it were not for Euphemia I do not think I should
+wash at all. There is a vast amount of humbug about
+washing. Vulgar people not only profess a passion for
+the practice, but a physical horror of being unwashed. It
+is a sort of cant. I can understand a sponge bath being a
+novelty the first time and exhilarating the second and
+third. But day after day, week after week, month after
+month, and nothing to show at the end of it all! Then
+there is shaving. I have to get shaved because Euphemia
+hates me with a blue jowl, and I will admit I hate myself.
+Yet, if I were left alone, I do not think my personal taste
+would affect my decision; I will say that for myself.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+Either I hack about with a blunt razor&mdash;my razors are
+always blunt&mdash;until I am a kind of Whitechapel Horror,
+and with hair in tufts upon my chin like the top of a
+Bosjesman's head, or else I have to spend all the morning
+being dabbed about the face by a barber with damp hands.
+In either case it is a repulsive thing to have, eating into
+one's time when one might be living; and I have calculated
+that all the hair I have lost in this way, put end to end,
+would reach to Berlin. All that vital energy thrown
+away! However, "Thorns and bristles shall it bring forth
+to thee." I suppose it is part of the primal curse, and
+I try and stand it like a man. But the thing is a bother
+all the same.</p>
+
+<p>Then after shaving comes the hunt for the collar-stud.
+Of all idiotic inventions the modern collar is the worst.
+A man who has to write things for such readers as mine
+cannot think over-night of where he puts his collar-stud;
+he has to keep his mind at an altogether higher level.
+Consequently he walks about the bedroom, thinking hard,
+and dropping things about: here a vest and there a collar,
+and sowing a bitter harvest against the morning. Or he
+sits on the edge of the bed jerking his garments this way
+and that. "I shot a slipper in the air," as the poet sings,
+and in the morning it turns up in the most impossible
+quarters, and where you least expect it. And, talking of
+going to bed, before Euphemia took the responsibility over,
+I was always forgetting to wind my watch. But now that
+is one of the things she neglects.</p>
+
+<p>Then, after getting up, there is breakfast. Autolycus of
+the <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i> may find heaven there, but I am
+differently constituted. There is, to begin with the essence
+of the offence&mdash;the stuff that has to be eaten somehow.
+Then there is the paper. Unless it is the face of a
+fashionable beauty, I know of nothing more absolutely
+uninteresting than a morning paper. You always expect
+to find something in it, and never do. It wastes half my
+morning sometimes, going over and over the thing, and
+trying to find out why they publish it. If I edited a
+daily I think I should do like my father does when he
+writes to me. "Things much the same," he writes; "the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+usual fussing about the curate's red socks"&mdash;a long letter
+for him. The rest margin. And, by the bye, there are
+letters every morning at breakfast, too!</p>
+
+<p>Now I do not grumble at letters. You can read them
+instead of getting on with your breakfast. They are
+entertaining in a way, and you can tear them up at the
+end, and in that respect at least they are better than
+people who come to see you. Usually, too, you need not
+make a reply. But sometimes Euphemia gets hold of
+some still untorn, and says in her dictatorial way that
+they <i>have</i> to be answered&mdash;insists&mdash;says I <i>must</i>. Yet she
+knows that nothing fills me with a livelier horror than
+having to answer letters. It paralyses me. I waste whole
+days sometimes mourning over the time that I shall have
+to throw away presently, answering some needless impertinence&mdash;requests
+for me to return books lent to me;
+reminders from the London Library that my subscription
+is overdue; proposals for me to renew my ticket at the
+stores&mdash;Euphemia's business really; invitations for me to
+go and be abashed before impertinent distinguished people:
+all kinds of bothering things.</p>
+
+<p>And speaking of letters and invitations brings me
+round to friends. I dislike most people; in London they
+get in one's way in the street and fill up railway carriages,
+and in the country they stare at you&mdash;but I <i>hate</i> my
+friends. Yet Euphemia says I <i>must</i> "keep up" my
+friends. They would be all very well if they were really
+true friends and respected my feelings and left me alone,
+just to sit quiet. But they come wearing shiny clothes,
+and mop and mow at me and expect me to answer their
+gibberings. Polite conversation always appears to me to
+be a wicked perversion of the blessed gift of speech,
+which, I take it, was given us to season our lives rather
+than to make them insipid. New friends are the worst
+in this respect. With old friends one is more at home;
+you give them something to eat or drink, or look at, or
+something&mdash;whatever they seem to want&mdash;and just turn
+round and go on smoking quietly. But every now and
+then Euphemia or Destiny inflicts a new human being
+upon me. I do not mean a baby, though the sentence<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+has got that turn somehow, but an introduction; and the
+wretched thing, all angles and offence, keeps bobbing
+about me and discovering new ways of worrying me,
+trying, I believe, to find out what topics interest me,
+though the fact is no topics interest me. Once or twice,
+of course, I have met human beings I think I could have
+got on with very well, after a time; but in this mood, at
+least, I doubt if any human being is quite worth the
+bother of a new acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>These are just sample bothers&mdash;shaving, washing,
+answering letters, talking to people. I could specify
+hundreds more. Indeed, in my sadder moments, it seems
+to me life is all compact of bothers. There are the
+details of business&mdash;knowing the date approximately (an
+incessant anxiety) and the time of day. Then, having to
+buy things. Euphemia does most of this, it is true, but
+she draws the line at my boots and gloves and hosiery
+and tailoring. Then, doing up parcels and finding pieces
+of string or envelopes or stamps&mdash;which Euphemia might
+very well manage for me. Then, finding your way back
+after a quiet, thoughtful walk. Then, having to get
+matches for your pipe. I sometimes dream of a better
+world, where pipe, pouch, and matches all keep together
+instead of being mutually negatory. But Euphemia is
+always putting everything into some hiding-hole or other,
+which she calls its "place." Trivial things in their way,
+you may say, yet each levying so much toll on my brain
+and nervous system, and demanding incessant vigilance
+and activity. I calculated once that I wasted a masterpiece
+upon these mountainous little things about every
+three months of my life. Can I help thinking of them,
+then, and asking why I suffer thus? And can I avoid
+seeing at last how it is they hang together?</p>
+
+<p>For there is still one other bother, a kind of <i>bother
+botherum</i>, to tell of, though I hesitate at the telling. It
+brings this rabble herd of worries into line and makes
+them formidable; it is, so to speak, the Bother
+Commander-in-Chief. Well! Euphemia. I simply worship
+the ground she treads upon, mind, but at the same time
+the truth is the truth. Euphemia is a bother. She is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+a brave little woman, and helps me in every conceivable
+way. But I wish she would not. It is so obviously all
+her doing. She makes me get up of a morning&mdash;I would
+not stand as much from anybody else&mdash;and keeps a sharp
+eye on my chin and collar. If it were not for her I could
+sit about always with no collar or tie on in that old
+jacket she gave to the tramp, and just smoke and grow
+a beard and let all the bothers slide. I would never
+wash, never shave, never answer any letters, never go to
+see any friends, never do any work&mdash;except, perhaps, an
+insulting postcard to a publisher now and again. I would
+just sit about.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes I think this may be peculiar in me. At
+other times I fancy I am giving voice to the secret feeling
+of every member of my sex. I suspect, then, that we
+would all do as the noble savage does, take our things
+off and lie about comfortable, if only someone had the
+courage to begin. It is these women&mdash;all love and
+reverence to Euphemia notwithstanding&mdash;who make us
+work and bother us with Things. They keep us decent,
+and remind us we have a position to support. And
+really, after all, this is not my original discovery! There
+is the third chapter of Genesis, for instance. And then
+who has not read Carlyle's gloating over a certain
+historical suit of leather? It gives me a queer thrill of
+envy, that Quaker Fox and his suit of leather. Conceive
+it, if you can! One would never have to quail under the
+scrutiny of a tailor any more. Thoreau, too, come to
+think of it, was, by way of being a prophet, a pioneer
+in this Emancipation of Man from Bothery.</p>
+
+<p>Then the silent gentry who brew our Chartreuse;
+what are they in retirement for? Looking back into
+history, with the glow of discovery in my eyes, I find
+records of wise men&mdash;everyone acknowledged they were
+wise men&mdash;who lived apart. In every age the same
+associate of solitude, silence, and wisdom. The holy
+hermits!... I grant it, they professed to flee wickedness
+and seek after righteousness, but now my impression is
+that they fled bothers. We all know they had an intense
+aversion to any savour of domesticity, and they never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+shaved, washed, dined, visited, had new clothes. Holiness,
+indeed! They were <i>viveurs</i>.... We have witnessed
+Religion without Theology, and why not an Unsectarian
+Thebaid? I sometimes fancy it needs only one brave
+man to begin.... If it were not for the fuss Euphemia
+would make I certainly should. But I know she would
+come and worry me worse than St. Anthony was worried
+until I put them all on again, and that keeps me from
+the attempt.</p>
+
+<p>I am curious whether mine is the common experience.
+I fancy, after all, I am only seeing in a clearer way,
+putting into modern phrase, so to speak, an observation
+old as the Pentateuch. And looking up I read upon a
+little almanac with which Euphemia has cheered my
+desk:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote">
+"The world was sad" (sweet sadness!)<br />
+"The garden was a wild" (a picturesque wild)<br />
+"And man the hermit" (he made no complaint)<br />
+"Till the woman smiled."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Campbell</span>.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>[And very shortly after he had, as you know, all that
+bother about the millinery.]</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="ON_THE_CHOICE_OF_A_WIFE" id="ON_THE_CHOICE_OF_A_WIFE"></a>ON THE CHOICE OF A WIFE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Wife-choosing is an unending business. This sounds
+immoral, but what I mean will be clearer in the context.
+People have lived&mdash;innumerable people&mdash;exhausted
+experience, and yet other people keep on coming to hand,
+none the wiser, none the better. It is like a waterfall
+more than anything else in the world. Every year one
+has to turn to and warn another batch about these stale
+old things. Yet it is one's duty&mdash;the last thing that
+remains to a man. And as a piece of worldly wisdom,
+that has nothing to do with wives, always leave a few
+duties neglected for the comfort of your age. There
+are such a lot of other things one can do when one is
+young.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the kind of wife a young fellow of eight- or nine-and-twenty
+insists on selecting is something of one-and-twenty
+or less, inexperienced, extremely pretty, graceful, and well
+dressed, not too clever, accomplished; but I need not go
+on, for the youthful reader can fill in the picture himself
+from his own ideal. Every young man has his own ideal,
+as a matter of course, and they are all exactly alike. Now,
+I do not intend to repeat all the stale old saws of out-of-date
+wiseacres. Most of them are even more foolish than
+the follies they reprove. Take, for instance, the statement
+that "beauty fades." Absurd; everyone knows perfectly
+well that, as the years creep on, beauty simply gets more
+highly coloured. And then, "beauty is only skin-deep."
+Fantastically wrong! Some of it is not that; and, for the
+rest, is a woman like a toy balloon?&mdash;just a surface? To
+hear that proverb from a man is to know him at once for
+a phonographic kind of fool. The fundamental and
+enduring grace of womanhood goes down to the skeleton;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+you cannot have a pretty face without a pretty skull, just
+as you cannot have one without a good temper.</p>
+
+<p>Yet all the same there is an excellent reason why one
+should shun beauty in a prospective wife, at anyrate
+obvious beauty&mdash;the kind of beauty people talk about,
+and which gets into the photographers' windows. The
+common beautiful woman has a style of her own, a
+favourite aspect. After all, she cannot be perfect. She
+comes upon you, dazzles you, marries you; there is a time
+of ecstasy. People envy you, continue to envy you. After
+a time you envy yourself&mdash;yourself of the day before
+yesterday. For the imperfection, the inevitable imperfection&mdash;in
+one case I remember it was a smile&mdash;becomes
+visible to you, becomes your especial privilege. That is the
+real reason. No beauty is a beauty to her husband. But
+with the plain woman&mdash;the thoroughly plain woman&mdash;it is
+different. At first&mdash;I will not mince matters&mdash;her ugliness
+is an impenetrable repulse. Face it. After a time little
+things begin to appear through the violent discords: little
+scraps of melody&mdash;a shy tenderness in her smile that peeps
+out at you and vanishes, a something that is winning,
+looking out of her eyes. You find a waviness of her hair
+that you never saw at the beginning, a certain surprising,
+pleasing, enduring want of clumsiness in part of her ear.
+And it is yours. You can see she strikes the beholder
+with something of a shock; and while the beauty of the
+beauty is common for all the world to rejoice in, you will
+find in your dear, plain wife beauty enough and to spare;
+exquisite&mdash;for it is all your own, your treasure-trove, your
+safely-hidden treasure....</p>
+
+<p>Then, in the matter of age; though young fellows do
+not imagine it, it is very easy to marry a wife too young.
+Marriage has been defined as a foolish bargain in which
+one man provides for another man's daughter, but there
+is no reason why this should go so far as completing her
+education. If your conception of happiness is having
+something pretty and innocent and troublesome about you,
+something that you can cherish and make happy, a pet
+rabbit is in every way preferable. At the worst that will
+nibble your boots. I have known several cases of the girl-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>wife,
+and it always began like an idyll, charmingly; the
+tenderest care on one hand, winsome worship on the other&mdash;until
+some little thing, a cut chin or a missing paper,
+startled the pure and natural man out of his veneer,
+dancing and blaspheming, with the most amazing consequences.
+Only a proven saint should marry a girl-wife,
+and his motives might be misunderstood. The idyllic wife
+is a beautiful thing to read about, but in practice idylls
+should be kept episodes; in practice the idyllic life is a
+little too like a dinner that is all dessert. A common
+man, after a time, tires of winsome worship; he craves
+after companionship, and a sympathy based on experience.
+The ordinary young man, with the still younger wife, I
+have noticed, continues to love her with all his heart&mdash;and
+spends his leisure telling somebody else's wife all
+about it. If in these days of blatant youth an experienced
+man's counsel is worth anything, it would be to marry a
+woman considerably older than oneself, if one must marry
+at all. And while upon this topic&mdash;and I have lived long&mdash;the
+ideal wife, I am persuaded, from the close observation
+of many years, is invariably, by some mishap, a
+widow....</p>
+
+<p>Avoid social charm. It was the capacity for entertaining
+visitors that ruined Paradise. It grows upon a woman.
+An indiscriminating personal magnetism is perhaps the
+most dreadful vice a wife can have. You think you have
+married the one woman in the world, and you find you
+have married a host&mdash;that is to say, a hostess. Instead
+of making a home for you she makes you something
+between an ethnographical museum and a casual ward.
+You find your rooms littered with people and teacups and
+things, strange creatures that no one could possibly care
+for, that seem scarcely to care for themselves. You go
+about the house treading upon chance geniuses, and get
+tipped by inexperienced guests. And even when she does
+not entertain, she is continually going out. I do not deny
+that charming people are charming, that their company
+should be sought, but seeking it in marriage is an
+altogether different matter.</p>
+
+<p>Then, I really must insist that young men do not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+understand the real truth about accomplishments. There
+comes a day when the most variegated wife comes
+to the end of her tunes, and another when she ends them
+for the second time; <i>Vita longa, ars brevis</i>&mdash;at least, as
+regards the art of the schoolgirl. It is only like marrying
+a slightly more complicated barrel-organ. And, for
+another point, watch the young person you would honour
+with your hand for the slightest inkling of economy or
+tidiness. Young men are so full of poetry and emotion
+that it does not occur to them how widely the sordid vices
+are distributed in the other sex. If you are a hotel
+proprietor, or a school proprietor, or a day labourer, such
+weaknesses become a strength, of course, but not otherwise.
+For a literary person&mdash;if perchance you are a literary person&mdash;it
+is altogether too dreadful. You are always getting
+swept and garnished, straightened up and sent out to
+be shaved. And home&mdash;even your study&mdash;becomes a
+glittering, spick-and-span mechanism. But you know the
+parable of the seven devils?</p>
+
+<p>To conclude, a summary. The woman you choose
+should be plain, as plain as you can find, as old or older
+than yourself, devoid of social gifts or accomplishments,
+poor&mdash;for your self-respect&mdash;and with a certain amiable
+untidiness. Of course no young man will heed this, but
+at least I have given my counsel, and very excellent
+reasons for that counsel. And possibly I shall be able to
+remind him that I told him as much, in the course of a
+few years' time. And, by the bye, I had almost forgotten!
+Never by any chance marry a girl whose dresses do up at
+the back, unless you can afford her a maid or so of her
+own.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_HOUSE_OF_DI_SORNO" id="THE_HOUSE_OF_DI_SORNO"></a>THE HOUSE OF DI SORNO</h3>
+
+<p>A MANUSCRIPT FOUND IN A BOX</p>
+
+
+<p>And the box, Euphemia's. Brutally raided it was by an
+insensate husband, eager for a tie and too unreasonably
+impatient to wait an hour or so until she could get home
+and find it for him. There was, of course, no tie at all in
+that box, for all his stirring&mdash;as anyone might have
+known; but, if there was no tie, there were certain papers
+that at least suggested a possibility of whiling away the
+time until the Chooser and Distributer of Ties should
+return. And, after all, there is no reading like your
+accidental reading come upon unawares.</p>
+
+<p>It was a discovery, indeed, that Euphemia <i>had</i> papers.
+At the first glance these close-written sheets suggested a
+treasonable Keynote, and the husband gripped it with a
+certain apprehension mingling with his relief at the opiate
+of reading. It was, so to speak, the privilege of police he
+exercised, so he justified himself. He began to read. But
+what is this? "She stood on the balcony outside the
+window, while the noblest-born in the palace waited on
+her every capricious glance, and watched for an unbending
+look to relieve her hauteur, but in vain." None of your
+snippy-snappy Keynote there!</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned over a page or so of the copy, doubting
+if the privilege of police still held good. Standing out by
+virtue of a different ink, and coming immediately after
+"bear her to her proud father," were the words, "How
+many yards of carpet &frac34; yds. wide will cover room, width
+16 ft., length 27&frac12; ft.?" Then he knew he was in the
+presence of the great romance that Euphemia wrote when
+she was sixteen. He had heard something of it before.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+He held it doubtfully in his hands, for the question of
+conscience still troubled him. "Bah!" he said abruptly,
+"not to find it irresistible was to slight the authoress and
+her skill." And with that he sat plump down among the
+things in the box very comfortably and began reading, and,
+indeed, read until Euphemia arrived. But she, at the
+sight of his head and legs, made several fragmentary and
+presumably offensive remarks about crushing some hat or
+other, and proceeded with needless violence to get him out
+of the box again. However, that is my own private
+trouble. We are concerned now with the merits of
+Euphemia's romance.</p>
+
+<p>The hero of the story is a Venetian, named (for some
+unknown reason) Ivan di Sorno. So far as I ascertained,
+he is the entire house of Di Sorno referred to in the title.
+No other Di Sornos transpired. Like others in the story,
+he is possessed of untold wealth, tempered by a profound
+sorrow, for some cause which remains unmentioned, but
+which is possibly internal. He is first displayed "pacing
+a sombre avenue of ilex and arbutus that reflected with
+singular truth the gloom of his countenance," and "toying
+sadly with the jewelled hilt of his dagger." He meditates
+upon his loveless life and the burthen of riches. Presently
+he "paces the long and magnificent gallery," where a
+"hundred generations of Di Sornos, each with the same
+flashing eye and the same marble brow, look down with
+the same sad melancholy upon the beholder"&mdash;a truly
+monotonous exhibition. It would be too much for anyone,
+day after day. He decides that he will travel.
+Incognito.</p>
+
+<p>The next chapter is headed "In Old Madrid," and Di
+Sorno, cloaked to conceal his grandeur, "moves sad and
+observant among the giddy throng." But "Gwendolen"&mdash;the
+majestic Gwendolen of the balcony&mdash;"marked his
+pallid yet beautiful countenance." And the next day at
+the bull-fight she "flung her bouquet into the arena, and
+turning to Di Sorno"&mdash;a perfect stranger, mind you&mdash;"smiled
+commandingly." "In a moment he had flung
+himself headlong down among the flashing blades of the
+toreadors and the trampling confusion of bulls, and in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+another he stood before her, bowing low with the recovered
+flowers in his hand. 'Fair sir,' she said, 'methinks my
+poor flowers were scarce worth your trouble.'" A very
+proper remark. And then suddenly I put the manuscript
+down.</p>
+
+<p>My heart was full of pity for Euphemia. Thus had she
+gone a-dreaming. A man of imposing physique and flashing
+eye, who would fling you oxen here and there, and
+vault in and out of an arena without catching a breath,
+for his lady's sake&mdash;and here I sat, the sad reality, a lean
+and slippered literary pretender, and constitutionally
+afraid of cattle.</p>
+
+<p>Poor little Euphemia! For after all is said and done,
+and the New Woman gibed out of existence, I am afraid
+we do undeceive these poor wives of ours a little after the
+marrying is over. It may be they have deceived themselves,
+in the first place, but that scarcely affects their
+disappointment. These dream-lovers of theirs, these
+monsters of unselfishness and devotion, these tall fair
+Donovans and dark worshipping Wanderers! And then
+comes the rabble rout of us poor human men, damning at
+our breakfasts, wiping pens upon our coat sleeves, smelling
+of pipes, fearing our editors, and turning Euphemia's
+private boxes into public copy. And they take it so
+steadfastly&mdash;most of them. They never let us see the
+romance we have robbed them of, but turn to and make
+the best of it&mdash;and us&mdash;with such sweet grace. Only now
+and then&mdash;as in the instance of a flattened hat&mdash;may a
+cry escape them. And even then&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But a truce to reality! Let us return to Di Sorno.</p>
+
+<p>This individual does not become enamoured of Gwendolen,
+as the crude novel reader might anticipate. He
+answers her "coldly," and his eye rests the while on her
+"tirewoman, the sweet Margot." Then come scenes of
+jealousy and love, outside a castle with heavily mullioned
+windows. The sweet Margot, though she turns out to be
+the daughter of a bankrupt prince, has one characteristic
+of your servant all the world over&mdash;she spends all her
+time looking out of the window. Di Sorno tells her of his
+love on the evening of the bull-fight, and she cheerfully<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+promises to "learn to love him," and therafter he spends
+all his days and nights "spurring his fiery steed down the
+road" that leads by the castle containing the young
+scholar. It becomes a habit with him&mdash;in all, he does it
+seventeen times in three chapters. Then, "ere it is too
+late," he implores Margot to fly.</p>
+
+<p>Gwendolen, after a fiery scene with Margot, in which
+she calls her a "petty minion,"&mdash;pretty language for a
+young gentlewoman,&mdash;"sweeps with unutterable scorn from
+the room," never, to the reader's huge astonishment, to
+appear in the story again, and Margot flies with Di Sorno
+to Grenada, where the Inquisition, consisting apparently
+of a single monk with a "blazing eye," becomes extremely
+machinatory. A certain Countess di Morno, who intends
+to marry Di Sorno, and who has been calling into the
+story in a casual kind of way since the romance began,
+now comes prominently forward. She has denounced
+Margot for heresy, and at a masked ball the Inquisition,
+disguised in a yellow domino, succeeds in separating the
+young couple, and in carrying off "the sweet Margot" to
+a convent.</p>
+
+<p>"Di Sorno, half distraught, flung himself into a cab
+and drove to all the hotels in Grenada" (he overlooked
+the police station), and, failing to find Margot, becomes
+mad. He goes about ejaculating "Mad, mad!" than
+which nothing could be more eloquent of his complete
+mental inversion. In his paroxysms the Countess di
+Morno persuades him to "lead her to the altar," but on
+the way (with a certain indelicacy they go to church in
+the same conveyance) she lets slip a little secret. So Di
+Sorno jumps out of the carriage, "hurling the crowd
+apart," and, "flourishing his drawn sword," "clamoured at
+the gate of the Inquisition" for Margot. The Inquisition,
+represented by the fiery-eyed monk, "looked over the
+gate at him." No doubt it felt extremely uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was just at this thrilling part that Euphemia
+came home, and the trouble about the flattened hat began.
+I never flattened her hat. It was in the box, and so
+was I; but as for deliberate flattening&mdash;&mdash; It was just
+a thing that happened. She should not write such<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+interesting stories if she expects me to go on tiptoe
+through the world looking about for her hats. To have
+that story taken away just at that particular moment
+was horrible. There was fully as much as I had read still
+to come, so that a lot happened after this duel of Sword
+<i>v.</i> Fiery Eye. I know from a sheet that came out of
+place that Margot stabbed herself with a dagger ("richly
+jewelled"), but of all that came between I have not the
+faintest suspicion. That is the peculiar interest of it.
+At this particular moment the one book I want to read in
+all the world is the rest of this novel of Euphemia's.
+And simply, on the score of a new hat needed, she keeps
+it back and haggles!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="OF_CONVERSATION" id="OF_CONVERSATION"></a>OF CONVERSATION</h3>
+
+<p>AN APOLOGY</p>
+
+
+<p>I must admit that in conversation I am not a brilliant
+success. Partly, indeed, that may be owing to the
+assiduity with which my aunt suppressed my early essays
+in the art: "Children," she said, "should be seen but not
+heard," and incontinently rapped my knuckles. To a
+larger degree, however, I regard it as intrinsic. This
+tendency to silence, to go out of the rattle and dazzle of
+the conversation into a quiet apart, is largely, I hold, the
+consequence of a certain elevation and breadth and
+tenderness of mind; I am no blowfly to buzz my way
+through the universe, no rattle that I should be expected
+to delight my fellow-creatures by the noises I produce.
+I go about to this social function and that, deporting
+myself gravely and decently in silence, taking, if possible,
+a back seat; and, in consequence of that, people who do
+not understand me have been heard to describe me as a
+"stick," as "shy," and by an abundance of the like unflattering
+terms. So that I am bound almost in self-justification
+to set down my reasons for this temperance
+of mine in conversation.</p>
+
+<p>Speech, no doubt, is a valuable gift, but at the same
+time it is a gift that may be abused. What is regarded
+as polite conversation is, I hold, such an abuse. Alcohol,
+opium, tea, are all very excellent things in their way;
+but imagine continuous alcohol, an incessant opium, or to
+receive, ocean-like, a perennially flowing river of tea!
+That is my objection to this conversation: its continuousness.
+You have to keep on. You find three or four
+people gathered together, and instead of being restful and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+recreative, sitting in comfortable attitudes and at peace
+with themselves and each other, and now and again,
+perhaps three or four times in an hour, making a
+worthy and memorable remark, they are all haggard and
+intent upon keeping this fetish flow agoing. A
+fortuitous score of cows in a field are a thousand times
+happier than a score of people deliberately assembled for
+the purposes of happiness. These conversationalists say
+the most shallow and needless of things, impart aimless information,
+simulate interest they do not feel, and generally
+impugn their claim to be considered reasonable creatures.
+Why, when people assemble without hostile intentions, it
+should be so imperative to keep the trickling rill of talk
+running, I find it impossible to imagine. It is a vestige
+of the old barbaric times, when men murdered at sight
+for a mere whim; when it was good form to take off your
+sword in the antechamber, and give your friend your
+dagger-hand, to show him it was no business visit.
+Similarly, you keep up this babblement to show your
+mind has no sinister concentration, not necessarily
+because you have anything to say, but as a guarantee of
+good faith. You have to make a noise all the time, like
+the little boy who was left in the room with the plums.
+It is the only possible explanation.</p>
+
+<p>To a logical mind there is something very distressing in
+this social law of gabble. Out of regard for Mrs. A, let
+us say, I attend some festival she has inaugurated. There
+I meet for the first time a young person of pleasant
+exterior, and I am placed in her company to deliver her
+at a dinner-table, or dance her about, or keep her out of
+harm's way, in a cosy nook. She has also never seen me
+before, and probably does not want particularly to see me
+now. However, I find her nice to look at, and she has
+taken great pains to make herself nice to look at, and
+why we cannot pass the evening, I looking at her and she
+being looked at, I cannot imagine. But no; we must
+talk. Now, possibly there are topics she knows about and
+I do not&mdash;it is unlikely, but suppose so; on these topics
+she requires no information. Again, I know about other
+topics things unknown to her, and it seems a mean and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+priggish thing to broach these, since they put her at a
+disadvantage. Thirdly, comes a last group of subjects
+upon which we are equally informed, and upon which,
+therefore, neither of us is justified in telling things to
+the other. This classification of topics seems to me
+exhaustive.</p>
+
+<p>These considerations, I think, apply to all conversations.
+In every conversation, every departure must
+either be a presumption when you talk into your antagonist's
+special things, a pedantry when you fall back
+upon your own, or a platitude when you tell each other
+things you both know. I don't see any other line a
+conversation can take. The reason why one has to keep
+up the stream of talk is possibly, as I have already
+suggested, to manifest goodwill. And in so many cases
+this could be expressed so much better by a glance, a
+deferential carriage, possibly in some cases a gentle
+pressure of the hand, or a quiet persistent smile. And
+suppose there is some loophole in my reasoning&mdash;though
+I cannot see it&mdash;and that possible topics exist, how
+superficial and unexact is the best conversation to a
+second-rate book!</p>
+
+<p>Even with two people you see the objection, but when
+three or four are gathered together the case is infinitely
+worse to a man of delicate perceptions. Let us suppose&mdash;I
+do not grant it&mdash;that there is a possible sequence of
+things to say to the person A that really harmonise with
+A and yourself. Grant also that there is a similar
+sequence between yourself and B. Now, imagine yourself
+and A and B at the corners of an equilateral triangle set
+down to talk to each other. The kind of talk that A
+appreciates is a discord with B, and similarly B's sequence
+is impossible in the hearing of A. As a matter of fact, a
+real conversation of three people is the most impossible
+thing in the world. In real life one of the three always
+drops out and becomes a mere audience, or a mere partisan.
+In real life you and A talk, and B pretends to
+be taking a share by interjecting interruptions, or one
+of the three talks a monologue. And the more subtle
+your sympathy and the greater your restraint from<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+self-assertion, the more incredible triple and quadruple
+conversation becomes.</p>
+
+<p>I have observed that there is even nowadays a certain
+advance towards my views in this matter. Men may not
+pick out antagonists, and argue to the general audience
+as once they did: there is a tacit taboo of controversy,
+neither may you talk your "shop," nor invite your
+antagonist to talk his. There is also a growing feeling
+against extensive quotations or paraphrases from the
+newspapers. Again, personalities, scandal, are, at least
+in theory, excluded. This narrows the scope down to the
+"last new book," "the last new play," "impressions de
+voyage," and even here it is felt that any very ironical or
+satirical remarks, anything unusual, in fact, may disconcert
+your adversary. You ask: Have you read the <i>Wheels
+of Chance</i>? The answer is "Yes." "Do you like it?"
+"A little vulgar, I thought." And so forth. Most of this
+is stereo. It is akin to responses in church, a prescription,
+a formula. And, following out this line of thought, I
+have had a vision of the twentieth century dinner. At a
+distance it is very like the nineteenth century type; the
+same bright light, the same pleasant deglutition, the same
+hum of conversation; but, approaching, you discover each
+diner has a little drum-shaped body under his chin&mdash;his
+phonograph. So he dines and babbles at his ease. In
+the smoking-room he substitutes his anecdote record. I
+imagine, too, the suburban hostess meeting the new
+maiden: "I hope, dear, you have brought a lot of conversation,"
+just as now she asks for the music. For my own
+part, I must confess I find this dinner conversation particularly
+a bother. If I could eat with my eye it would
+be different.</p>
+
+<p>I lose a lot of friends through this conversational
+difficulty. They think it is my dulness or my temper,
+when really it is only my refined mind, my subtlety of
+consideration. It seems to me that when I go to see a
+man, I go to see him&mdash;to enjoy his presence. If he is my
+friend, the sight of him healthy and happy is enough for
+me. I don't want him to keep his vocal cords, and I
+don't want to keep my own vocal cords, in incessant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+vibration all the time I am in his company. If I go to
+see a man, it distracts me to have to talk and it distracts
+me to hear him talking. I can't imagine why one should
+not go and sit about in people's rooms, without bothering
+them and without their bothering you to say all these
+stereotyped things. Quietly go in, sit down, look at your
+man until you have seen him enough, and then go. Why
+not?</p>
+
+<p>Let me once more insist that this keeping up a conversation
+is a sign of insecurity, of want of confidence. All
+those who have had real friends know that when the
+friendship is assured the gabble ceases. You are not at
+the heart of your friend, if either of you cannot go off
+comfortably to sleep in the other's presence. Speech was
+given us to make known our needs, and for imprecation,
+expostulation, and entreaty. This pitiful necessity we are
+under, upon social occasions, to say something&mdash;however
+inconsequent&mdash;is, I am assured, the very degradation of
+speech.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="IN_A_LITERARY_HOUSEHOLD" id="IN_A_LITERARY_HOUSEHOLD"></a>IN A LITERARY HOUSEHOLD</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the literary household of fiction and the drama, things
+are usually in a distressing enough condition. The
+husband, as you know, has a hacking cough, and the wife
+a dying baby, and they write in the intervals of these cares
+among the litter of the breakfast things. Occasionally a
+comic, but sympathetic, servant brings in an armful&mdash;"heaped
+up and brimming over"&mdash;of rejected MSS., for,
+in the dramatic life, it never rains but it pours. Instead
+of talking about editors in a bright and vigorous fashion,
+as the recipients of rejections are wont, the husband
+groans and covers his face with his hands, and the wife,
+leaving the touching little story she is writing&mdash;she posts
+this about 9 p.m., and it brings in a publisher and &pound;100
+or so before 10.30&mdash;comforts him by flopping suddenly
+over his shoulder. "Courage," she says, stroking his
+hyacinthine locks (whereas all real literary men are more
+or less grey or bald). Sometimes, as in <i>Our Flat</i>, comic
+tradesmen interrupt the course of true literature with
+their ignoble desire for cash payment, and sometimes, as
+in <i>Our Boys</i>, uncles come and weep at the infinite
+pathos of a bad breakfast egg. But it's always a very
+sordid, dusty, lump-in-your-throaty affair, and no doubt it
+conduces to mortality by deterring the young and impressionable
+from literary vices. As for its truth, that is
+another matter altogether.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it must not be really imagined that a literary
+household is just like any other. There is the brass
+paper-fastener, for instance. I have sometimes thought
+that Euphemia married me with an eye to these conveniences.
+She has two in her grey gloves, and one (with
+the head inked) in her boot in the place of a button.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+Others I suspect her of. Then she fastened the lamp
+shade together with them, and tried one day to introduce
+them instead of pearl buttons as efficient anchorage for
+cuffs and collars. And she made a new handle for the
+little drawer under the inkstand with one. Indeed, the
+literary household is held together, so to speak, by paper-fasteners,
+and how other people get along without them
+we are at a loss to imagine.</p>
+
+<p>And another point, almost equally important, is that
+the husband is generally messing about at home. That
+is, indeed, to a superficial observer, one of the most
+remarkable characteristics of the literary household.
+Other husbands are cast out in the morning to raven for
+income and return to a home that is swept and garnished
+towards the end of the day; but the literary husband is
+ever in possession. His work must not be disturbed
+even when he is merely thinking. The study is consequently
+a kind of domestic cordite factory, and you are
+never certain when it may explode. The concussion of a
+dust-pan and brush may set it going, the sweeping of a
+carpet in the room upstairs. Then behold a haggard,
+brain-weary man, fierce and dishevelled, and full of
+shattered masterpiece&mdash;expostulating. Other houses
+have their day of cleaning out this room, and their day
+for cleaning out that; but in the literary household there
+is one uniform date for all such functions, and that is
+"to-morrow." So that Mrs. Mergles makes her purifying
+raids with her heart in her mouth, and has acquired a
+way of leaving the pail and brush, or whatever artillery
+she has with her, in a manner that unavoidably engages
+the infuriated brute's attention and so covers her retreat.</p>
+
+<p>It is a problem that has never been probably solved,
+this discord of order and orderly literary work. Possibly
+it might be done by making the literary person live
+elsewhere or preventing literary persons from having
+households. However it might be done, it is not done.
+This is a thing innocent girls exposed to the surreptitious
+proposals of literary men do not understand. They think
+it will be very fine to have photographs of themselves and
+their "cosy nooks" published in magazines, to illustrate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+the man's interviews, and the full horror of having this
+feral creature always about the house, and scarcely ever
+being able to do any little thing without his knowing it,
+is not brought properly home to them until escape is
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>And then there is the taint of "copy" everywhere.
+That is really the fundamental distinction. It is the
+misfortune of literary people, that they have to write
+about something. There is no reason, of course, why they
+should, but the thing is so. Consequently, they are always
+looking about them for something to write about. They
+cannot take a pure-minded interest in anything in earth or
+heaven. Their servant is no servant, but a character;
+their cat is a possible reservoir of humorous observation;
+they look out of window and see men as columns walking.
+Even the sanctity of their own hearts, their self-respect,
+their most private emotions are disregarded. The wife is
+infected with the taint. Her private opinion of her
+husband she makes into a short story&mdash;forgets its origin
+and shows it him with pride&mdash;while the husband decants
+his heart-beats into occasional verse and minor poetry. It
+is amazing what a lot of latter-day literature consists of
+such breaches of confidence. And not simply latter-day
+literature.</p>
+
+<p>The visitor is fortunate who leaves no marketable
+impression behind. The literary entertainers eye you
+over, as if they were dealers in a slave mart, and speculate
+on your uses. They try to think how you would do as a
+scoundrel, and mark your little turns of phrase and kinks
+of thought to that end. The innocent visitor bites his
+cake and talks about theatres, while the meditative person
+in the arm-chair may be in imagination stabbing him, or
+starving him on a desert island, or even&mdash;horrible to tell!&mdash;flinging
+him headlong into the arms of the young lady to
+the right and "covering her face with a thousand passionate
+kisses." A manuscript in the rough of Euphemia's, that
+I recently suppressed, was an absolutely scandalous example
+of this method of utilising one's acquaintances.
+Mrs. Harborough, who was indeed Euphemia's most
+confidential friend for six weeks and more, she had made<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+to elope with Scrimgeour&mdash;as steady and honourable a
+man as we know, though unpleasant to Euphemia on
+account of his manner of holding his teacup. I believe
+there really was something&mdash;quite harmless, of course&mdash;between
+Mrs. Harborough and Scrimgeour, and that,
+imparted in confidence, had been touched up with vivid
+colour here and there and utilised freely. Scrimgeour is
+represented as always holding teacups in his peculiar way,
+so that anyone would recognise him at once. Euphemia calls
+that character. Then Harborough, who is really on excellent
+terms with his wife, and, in spite of his quiet manner,
+a very generous and courageous fellow, is turned aside
+from his headlong pursuit of the fugitives across
+Wimbledon Common&mdash;they elope, by the bye, on Scrimgeour's
+tandem bicycle&mdash;by the fear of being hit by a golf
+ball. I pointed out to Euphemia that these things were
+calculated to lose us friends, and she promises to destroy
+the likeness; but I have no confidence in her promise.
+She will probably clap a violent auburn wig on Mrs.
+Harborough and make Scrimgeour squint and give
+Harborough a big beard. The point that she won't grasp
+is, that with that fatal facility for detail, which is one of
+the most indisputable proofs of woman's intellectual inferiority,
+she has reproduced endless remarks and mannerisms
+of these excellent people with more than photographic
+fidelity. But this is really a private trouble, though it
+illustrates very well the shameless way in which those
+who have the literary taint will bring to market their
+most intimate affairs.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="ON_SCHOOLING_AND_THE_PHASES_OF_MR_SANDSOME" id="ON_SCHOOLING_AND_THE_PHASES_OF_MR_SANDSOME"></a>ON SCHOOLING AND THE PHASES OF MR. SANDSOME</h3>
+
+
+<p>I do not know if you remember your "dates." Indeed, I
+do not know if anyone does. My own memory is of a
+bridge; like that bridge of Goldsmith's, standing firm and
+clear on its hither piers and then passing into a cloud.
+In the beginning of days was "William the Conqueror,
+1066," and the path lay safe and open to Henry the
+Second; then came Titanic forms of kings, advancing and
+receding, elongating and dwindling, exchanging dates,
+losing dates, stealing dates from battles and murders and
+great enactments&mdash;even inventing dates, vacant years that
+were really no dates at all. The things I have suffered&mdash;prisons,
+scourgings, beating with rods, wild masters, in
+bounds often, a hundred lines often, standing on forms
+and holding out books often&mdash;on account of these dates!
+I knew, and knew well before I was fifteen, what these
+"heredity" babblers are only beginning to discover&mdash;that
+the past is the curse of the present. But I never knew
+my dates&mdash;never. And I marvel now that all little boys
+do not grow up to be Republicans, seeing how much they
+suffer for the mere memory of Kings.</p>
+
+<p>Then there were pedigrees, and principal parts and
+conjugations, and county towns. Every county had a
+county town, and it was always on a river. Mr. Sandsome
+never allowed us a town without that colophon. I
+remember in my early manhood going to Guildford on the
+Wey, and trying to find that unobtrusive rivulet. I went
+over the downs for miles. It is not only the Wey I have
+had a difficulty in finding. There are certain verses&mdash;Heaven
+help me, but I have forgotten them!&mdash;about "<i>i</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+vel <i>e</i> dat" (<i>was</i> it dat?) "utrum malis"&mdash;if I remember
+rightly&mdash;and all that about <i>amo, amas, amat</i>. There was
+a multitude of such things I acquired, and they lie now,
+in the remote box-rooms and lumber recesses of my mind,
+a rusting armoury far gone in decay. I have never been
+able to find a use for them. I wonder even now why Mr.
+Sandsome equipped me with them. Yet he seemed to be
+in deadly earnest about this learning, and I still go in
+doubt. In those early days he impressed me, chiefly in
+horizontal strips, with the profoundest respect for his
+mental and physical superiority. I credited him then,
+and still incline to believe he deserved to be credited, with
+a sincere persuasion that unless I learnt these things I
+should assuredly go&mdash;if I may be frank&mdash;to the devil. It
+may be so. I may be living in a fool's paradise, prospering&mdash;like
+that wicked man the Psalmist disliked. Some
+unsuspected gulf may open, some undreamt-of danger
+thrust itself through the phantasmagoria of the universe,
+and I may learn too late the folly of forgetting my
+declensions.</p>
+
+<p>I remember Mr. Sandsome chiefly as sitting at his desk,
+in a little room full of boys, a humming hive whose air
+was thick with dust, as the slanting sunbeams showed.
+When we were not doing sums or writing copies, we were
+always learning or saying lessons. In the early morning
+Mr. Sandsome sat erect and bright, his face animated,
+his ruddy eyes keen and observant, the cane hanging but
+uncertainly upon its hook. There was a standing up of
+classes, a babble of repetition, now and then a crisis. How
+long the days were then! I have heard that scientific
+people&mdash;Professor C. Darwin is their leader, unless I err&mdash;which
+probably I do, for names and dates I have hated
+from my youth up&mdash;say the days grow longer. Anyhow,
+whoever says it, it is quite wrong. But as the lank hours
+of that vast schooltime drawled on, Mr. Sandsome lost
+energy, drooped like a flower,&mdash;especially if the day was
+at all hot,&mdash;his sandy hair became dishevelled, justice
+became nerveless, hectic, and hasty. Finally came copybooks;
+and yawns and weird rumblings from Mr. Sandsome.
+And so the world aged to the dinner-hour.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When I had been home&mdash;it was a day school, for my
+aunt, who had an appetite for such things, knew that
+boarding-schools were sinks of iniquity&mdash;and returned, I
+had Mr. Sandsome at another phase. He had dined&mdash;for
+we were simple country folk. The figurative suggestions
+of that "phase" are irresistible&mdash;the lunar quality. May
+I say that Mr. Sandsome was at his full? We now stood
+up, thirty odd of us altogether, to read, reading out of
+books in a soothing monotone, and he sat with his reading-book
+before him, ruddy as the setting sun, and slowly,
+slowly settling down. But now and then he would jerk
+back suddenly into staring wakefulness as though he were
+fishing&mdash;with himself as bait&mdash;for schoolboy crimes in the
+waters of oblivion&mdash;and fancied a nibble. That was a
+dangerous time, full of anxiety. At last he went right
+under and slept, and the reading grew cheerful, full of
+quaint glosses and unexpected gaps, leaping playfully from
+boy to boy, instead of travelling round with a proper
+decorum. But it never ceased, and little Hurkley's silly
+little squeak of a voice never broke in upon its mellow
+flow. (It took a year for Hurkley's voice to break.) Any
+such interruption and Mr. Sandsome woke up and into his
+next phase forthwith&mdash;a disagreeable phase always, and
+one we made it our business to postpone as long as
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>During that final period, the last quarter, Mr. Sandsome
+was distinctly malignant. It was hard to do right;
+harder still to do wrong. A feverish energy usually
+inspired our government. "Let us try to get some work
+done," Mr. Sandsome would say&mdash;and I have even known
+him teach things then. More frequently, with a needless
+bitterness, he set us upon impossible tasks, demanding a
+colossal tale of sums perhaps, scattering pens and paper
+and sowing the horrors of bookkeeping, or chastising us
+with the scorpions of parsing and translation. And even
+in wintry weather the little room grew hot and stuffy, and
+we terminated our schoolday, much exhausted, with minds
+lax, lounging attitudes, and red ears. What became of
+Mr. Sandsome after the giving-out of home-work, the
+concluding prayer, and the aftermath of impositions, I do<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+not know. I stuffed my books, such as came to hand&mdash;very
+dirty they were inside, and very neat out with my
+Aunt Charlotte's chintz covers&mdash;into my green baize bag,
+and went forth from the mysteries of schooling into the
+great world, up the broad white road that went slanting
+over the Down.</p>
+
+<p>I say "the mysteries of schooling" deliberately. I
+wondered then, I wonder still, what it was all for. Reading,
+almost my only art, I learnt from Aunt Charlotte; a
+certain facility in drawing I acquired at home and took to
+school, to my own undoing. "Undoing," again, is deliberate&mdash;it
+was no mere swish on the hand, gentle reader.
+But the things I learnt, more or less partially, at school,
+lie in my mind, like the "Sarsen" stones of Wiltshire&mdash;great,
+disconnected, time-worn chunks amidst the natural
+herbage of it. "The Rivers of the East Coast; the Tweed,
+the Tyne, the Wear, the Tees, the Humber"&mdash;why is that,
+for instance, sticking up among my ferns and wild flowers?
+It is not only useless but misleading, for the Humber is
+not another Tweed. I sometimes fancy the world may be
+mad&mdash;yet that seems egotistical. The fact remains that
+for the greater part of my young life Mr. Sandsome got an
+appetite upon us from nine till twelve, and digested his
+dinner, at first placidly and then with petulance, from two
+until five&mdash;and we thirty odd boys were sent by our
+twenty odd parents to act as a sort of chorus to his
+physiology. And he was fed (as I judge) more than
+sufficiently, clothed, sheltered, and esteemed on account of
+this relation. I think, after all, there must have been
+something in that schooling. I can't believe the world
+mad. And I have forgotten it&mdash;or as good as forgotten it&mdash;all!
+At times I feel a wild impulse to hunt up all those
+chintz-covered books, and brush up my dates and
+paradigms, before it is too late.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_POET_AND_THE_EMPORIUM" id="THE_POET_AND_THE_EMPORIUM"></a>THE POET AND THE EMPORIUM</h3>
+
+
+<p>"I am beginning life," he said, with a sigh. "Great
+Heavens! I have spent a day&mdash;<i>a day!</i>&mdash;in a shop.
+Three bedroom suites and a sideboard are among the
+unanticipated pledges of our affection. Have you lithia?
+For a man of twelve limited editions this has been a
+terrible day."</p>
+
+<p>I saw to his creature comforts. His tie was hanging
+outside his waistcoat, and his complexion was like white
+pasteboard that has got wet. "Courage," said I. "It
+will not occur again&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It will," said he. "We have to get there again tomorrow.
+We have&mdash;what is it?&mdash;carpets, curtains&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He produced his tablets. I was amazed. Those
+receptacles of choice thoughts!</p>
+
+<p>"The amber sunlight splashing through the leaky&mdash;leafy
+interlacing green," he read. "No!&mdash;that's not it.
+Ah, here! Curtains! Drawing-room&mdash;not to cost more
+than thirty shillings! And there's all the Kitchen Hardware!
+(Thanks.) Dining-room chairs&mdash;query&mdash;rush
+bottoms? What's this? G.L.I.S.&mdash;ah! "Glistering
+thro' deeps of glaucophane"&mdash;that's nothing. Mem. to see
+can we afford Indian needlework chairs&mdash;57s. 6d.? It's
+dreadful, Bellows!"</p>
+
+<p>He helped himself to a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"Find the salesman pleasant?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Delightful. Assumed I was a spendthrift millionaire
+at first. Produced in an off-hand way an eighty-guinea
+bedroom suite&mdash;we're trying to do the entire business,
+you know, on about two hundred pounds. Well&mdash;that's
+ten editions, you know. Came down, with evidently
+dwindling respect, to things that were still ruinously<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+expensive. I told him we wanted an idyll&mdash;love in a
+cottage, and all that kind of thing. He brushed that on
+one side, said idols were upstairs in the Japanese Department,
+and that perhaps we might <i>do</i> with a servant's set
+of bedroom furniture. Do with a set! He was a gloomy
+man with (I should judge) some internal pain. I tried to
+tell him that there was quite a lot of middle-class people
+like myself in the country, people of limited or precarious
+means, whose existence he seemed to ignore; assured him
+some of them led quite beautiful lives. But he had no
+ideas beyond wardrobes. I quite forgot the business of
+shopping in an attempt to kindle a little human enthusiasm
+in his heart. We were in a great vast place full of
+wardrobes, with a remote glittering vista of brass bedsteads&mdash;skeleton
+beds, you know&mdash;and I tried to inspire him
+with some of the poetry of his emporium; tried to make
+him imagine these beds and things going east and west,
+north and south, to take sorrow, servitude, joy, worry,
+failing strength, restless ambition in their impartial
+embraces. He only turned round to Annie, and asked
+her if she thought she could <i>do</i> with 'enamelled.' But I
+was quite taken with my idea&mdash;&mdash;Where is it? I left
+Annie to settle with this misanthrope, amidst his raw
+frameworks of the Homes of the Future."</p>
+
+<p>He fumbled with his tablets. "Mats for hall&mdash;not to
+exceed 3s. 9d.... Kerbs ... inquire tiled hearth ... Ah!
+Here we are: 'Ballade of the Bedroom Suite':&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote">
+"'Noble the oak you are now displaying,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Subtly the hazel's grainings go,</span><br />
+Walnut's charm there is no gainsaying,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Red as red wine is your rosewood's glow;</span><br />
+Brave and brilliant the ash you show,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rich your mahogany's hepatite shine,</span><br />
+Cool and sweet your enamel: But oh!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?</i>'</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>"They have 'em in the catalogue at five guineas, with a
+picture&mdash;quite as good they are as the more expensive
+ones. To judge by the picture."</p>
+
+<p>"But that's scarcely the idea you started with," I
+began.</p>
+
+<p>"Not; it went wrong&mdash;ballades often do. The pre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>occupation
+of the 'Painted Pine' was too much for me.
+What's this? 'N.B.&mdash;Sludge sells music stools at&mdash;'
+No. Here we are (first half unwritten):&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote">
+"'White enamelled, like driven snow,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Picked with just one delicate line.</span><br />
+Price you were saying is? Fourteen!&mdash;No!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine</i>?'</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Comes round again, you see! Then <i>L'Envoy</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote">
+"'Salesman, sad is the truth I trow:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Winsome walnut can never be mine.</span><br />
+Poets are cheap. And their poetry. So<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?</i>'</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Prosaic! As all true poetry is, nowadays. But, how I
+tired as the afternoon moved on! At first I was interested
+in the shopman's amazing lack of imagination, and the
+glory of that fond dream of mine&mdash;love in a cottage, you
+know&mdash;still hung about me. I had ideas come&mdash;like that
+Ballade&mdash;and every now and then Annie told me to write
+notes. I think my last gleam of pleasure was in choosing
+the drawing-room chairs. There is scope for fantasy in
+chairs. Then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He took some more whisky.</p>
+
+<p>"A kind of grey horror came upon me. I don't know
+if I can describe it. We went through vast vistas of
+chairs, of hall-tables, of machine-made pictures, of
+curtains, huge wildernesses of carpets, and ever this cold,
+unsympathetic shopman led us on, and ever and again
+made us buy this or that. He had a perfectly grey eye&mdash;the
+colour of an overcast sky in January&mdash;and he seemed
+neither to hate us nor to detest us, but simply to despise
+us, to feel such an overwhelming contempt for our petty
+means and our petty lives, as an archangel might feel for
+an apple-maggot. It made me think...."</p>
+
+<p>He lit a fresh cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"I had a kind of vision. I do not know if you will
+understand. The Warehouse of Life, with our Individual
+Fate hurrying each of us through. Showing us with a
+covert sneer all the good things that we cannot afford. A
+magnificent Rosewood love affair, for instance, deep and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+rich, fitted complete, some hours of perfect life, some acts
+of perfect self-sacrifice, perfect self-devotion.... You ask
+the price."</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?" I quoted.</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. All the things one might do, if the purse of
+one's courage were not so shallow. If it wasn't for the
+lack of that coinage, Bellows, every man might be
+magnificent. There's heroism, there's such nobility as no
+one has ever attained to, ready to hand. Anyone, if it
+were not for this lack of means, might be a human god
+in twenty-four hours.... You see the article. You
+cannot buy it. No one buys it. It stands in the
+emporium, I suppose, for show&mdash;on the chance of a
+millionaire. And the shopman waves his hand to it on
+your way to the Painted Pine.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you meet other couples and solitary people
+going about, each with a gloomy salesman leading. The
+run of them look uncomfortable; some are hot about the
+ears and in the spiteful phase of ill-temper; all look sick
+of the business except the raw new-comers. It's the only
+time they will ever select any furniture, their first chance
+and their last. Most of their selections are hurried a
+little. The salesman must not be kept all day.... Yet
+it goes hard with you if you buy your Object in Life and
+find it just a 'special line' made to sell.... We're all
+amateurs at living, just as we are all amateurs at
+furnishing&mdash;or dying. Some of the poor devils one
+meets carry tattered little scraps of paper, and fumble
+conscientiously with stumpy pencils. It's a comfort to
+see how you go, even if you do have to buy rubbish. 'If
+we have <i>this</i> so good, dear, I don't know <i>how</i> we shall
+manage in the kitchen,' says the careful housewife....
+So it is we do our shopping in the Great Emporium."</p>
+
+<p>"You will have to rewrite your Ballade," said I, "and
+put all that in."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could," said the poet.</p>
+
+<p>"And while you were having these very fine moods?"</p>
+
+<p>"Annie and the shopman settled most of the furniture
+between them. Perhaps it's just as well. I was never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+very good at the practical details of life.... Cigarette's
+out! Have you any more matches?"</p>
+
+<p>"Horribly depressed you are!" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"There's to-morrow. Well, well...."</p>
+
+<p>And then he went off at a tangent to tell me what he
+expected to make by his next volume of poems, and so
+came to the congenial business of running down his
+contemporaries, and became again the cheerful little Poet
+that I know.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_LANGUAGE_OF_FLOWERS" id="THE_LANGUAGE_OF_FLOWERS"></a>THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS</h3>
+
+
+<p>During the early Victorian revival of chivalry the
+Language of Flowers had some considerable vogue. The
+Romeo of the mutton-chop whiskers was expected to keep
+this delicate symbolism in view, and even to display his
+wit by some dainty conceits in it. An ignorance of the
+code was fraught with innumerable dangers. A sprig of
+lilac was a suggestion, a moss-rosebud pushed the matter,
+was indeed evidence to go to court upon; and unless
+Charlotte parried with white poplar&mdash;a by no means
+accessible flower&mdash;or apricot blossom, or failing these
+dabbed a cooling dock-leaf at the fellow, he was at her
+with tulip, heliotrope, and honeysuckle, peach-blossom,
+white jonquil, and pink, and a really overpowering and
+suffocating host of attentions. I suppose he got at last
+to three-cornered notes in the vernacular; and meanwhile
+what could a poor girl do? There was no downright
+"No!" in the language of flowers, nothing equivalent to
+"Go away, please," no flower for "Idiot!" The only
+possible defence was something in this way: "Your
+cruelty causes me sorrow," "Your absence is a pleasure."
+For this, according to the code of Mr. Thomas Miller
+(third edition, 1841, with elegantly coloured plates) you
+would have to get a sweet-pea blossom for Pleasure,
+wormwood for Absence, and indicate Sorrow by the yew,
+and Cruelty by the stinging-nettle. There is always a
+little risk of mixing your predicates in this kind of communication,
+and he might, for instance, read that his
+Absence caused you Sorrow, but he could scarcely miss
+the point of the stinging-nettle. That and the gorse
+carefully concealed were about the only gleams of humour
+possible in the language. But then it was the appointed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+tongue of lovers, and while their sickness is upon them
+they have neither humour nor wit.</p>
+
+<p>This Mr. Thomas Miller wrote abundant flowers of
+language in his book, and the plates were coloured by
+hand. By the bye, what a blessed thing colour-printing
+is! These hand-tinted plates, to an imaginative person,
+are about as distressing as any plates can very well be.
+Whenever I look at these triumphs of art over the
+beauties of nature, with all their weary dabs of crimson,
+green, blue, and yellow, I think of wretched, an&aelig;mic girls
+fading their youth away in some dismal attic over a
+publisher's, toiling through the whole edition tint by tint,
+and being mocked the while by Mr. Miller's alliterative
+erotics. And they <i>are</i> erotics! In one place he writes,
+"Beautiful art thou, O Broom! on the breezy bosom of
+the bee-haunted heath"; and throughout he buds and
+blossoms into similar delights. He wallows in doves and
+coy toyings and modest blushes, and bowers and meads.
+He always adds, "Wonderful boy!" to Chatterton's name
+as if it were a university degree (W.B.), and he invariably
+refers to Moore as the Bard of Erin, and to Milton as the
+Bard of Paradise&mdash;though Bard of the Bottomless Pit
+would be more appropriate. However, we are not concerned
+with Mr. Miller's language so much as with a
+very fruitful suggestion he throws out, that "it is surely
+worth while to trace a resemblance between the flower
+and the emblem it represents" (a turn like that is nothing
+to Mr. Miller) "which shall at least have some show of
+reason in it."</p>
+
+<p>Come to think of it, there is something singularly
+unreasonable about almost all floral symbolism. There is
+your forget-me-not, pink in the bud, and sapphire in the
+flower, with a fruit that breaks up into four, the very
+picture of inconstancy and discursiveness. Yet your lover,
+with a singular blindness, presents this to his lady when
+they part. Then the white water-lily is supposed to
+represent purity of heart, and, mark you, it is white
+without and its centre is all set about with innumerable
+golden stamens, while in the middle lies, to quote the
+words of that distinguished botanist, Mr. Oliver, "a fleshy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+disc." Could there be a better type of sordid and
+mercenary deliberation maintaining a fair appearance?
+The tender apple-blossom, rather than Pretence, is surely
+a reminder of Eden and the fall of love's devotion into
+inflated worldliness. The poppy which flaunts its violent
+colours athwart the bearded corn, and which frets and
+withers like the Second Mrs. Tanqueray so soon as you
+bring it to the shelter of a decent home, is made the
+symbol of Repose. One might almost think Aim&eacute; Martin
+and the other great authorities on this subject wrote in a
+mood of irony.</p>
+
+<p>The daisy, too, presents you Innocence, "companion of
+the milk-white lamb," Mr. Miller calls it. I am sorry for
+the milk-white lamb. It was one of the earliest discoveries
+of systematic botany that the daisy is a fraud, a complicated
+impostor. <i>The daisy is not a flower at all.</i> It
+is a favourite trap in botanical examinations, a snare for
+artless young men entering the medical profession. Each
+of the little yellow things in the centre of the daisy is
+a flower in itself,&mdash;if you look at one with a lens you will
+find it not unlike a cowslip flower,&mdash;and the white rays
+outside are a great deal more than the petals they ought
+to be if the Innocence theory is to hold good. There is
+no such thing as an innocent flower; they are all so many
+deliberate advertisements to catch the eye of the undecided
+bee, but any flower almost is simpler than this
+one. We would make it the emblem of artistic deception,
+and the confidence trick expert should wear it as
+his crest.</p>
+
+<p>The violet, again, is a greatly overrated exemplar. It
+stimulates a certain bashfulness, hangs its head, and passed
+as modest among our simple grandparents. Its special
+merit is its perfume, and it pretends to wish to hide that
+from every eye. But, withal, the fragrance is as far-reaching
+as any I know. It droops ingenuously. "How <i>could</i>
+you come to me," it seems to say, "when all these really
+brilliant flowers invite you?" Mere fishing for compliments.
+All the while it is being sweet, to the very best
+of its undeniable ability. Then it comes, too, in early
+spring, without a chaperon, and catches our hearts fresh<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+before they are jaded with the crowded beauties of May.
+A really modest flower would wait for the other flowers
+to come first. A subtle affectation is surely a different
+thing from modesty. The violet is simply artful, the
+young widow among flowers, and to hold up such a flower
+as an example is not doing one's duty by the young. For
+true modesty commend me to the agave, which flowers
+once only in half a hundred years, as one may see for
+oneself at the Royal Botanical Gardens.</p>
+
+<p>Enough has been said to show what scope there is for
+revision of this sentimental Volapuk. Mr. Martin himself
+scarcely goes so far as I have done, though I have
+merely worked out his suggestion. His only revolutionary
+proposal is to displace the wind star by the "rathe primrose"
+for Forsaken, on the strength of a quotation familiar
+to every reader of Mason's little text-book on the English
+language. For the rest he followed his authorities, and
+has followed them now to the remote recesses of the
+literary lumber-room and into the twopenny book-box.
+From that receptacle one copy of him was disinterred
+only a day or so ago; a hundred and seventy pages of
+prose, chiefly alliterative, several coloured plates, enthusiastic
+pencil-marking of a vanished somebody, and,
+besides, an early Victorian flavour of dust and a dim
+vision of a silent conversation in a sunlit flower garden&mdash;altogether
+I think very cheap at twopence. The fashion
+has changed altogether now. In these days we season
+our love-making with talk about heredity, philanthropy,
+and sanitation, and present one another with Fabian
+publications instead of wild flowers. But in the end, I
+fancy, the business comes to very much the same thing.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_LITERARY_REGIMEN" id="THE_LITERARY_REGIMEN"></a>THE LITERARY REGIMEN</h3>
+
+
+<p>At the risk of offending the young beginner's illusions, he
+must be reminded of one or two homely but important
+facts bearing upon literary production. Homely as they
+are, they explain much that is at first puzzling. This
+perplexing question of distinction; the quality of being
+somehow <i>fresh</i>&mdash;individual. Really it is a perfectly
+simple matter. It is common knowledge that, after a
+prolonged fast, the brain works in a feeble manner, the
+current of one's thoughts is pallid and shallow, it is
+difficult to fix the attention and impossible to mobilise
+the full forces of the mind. On the other hand, immediately
+after a sound meal, the brain feels massive, but
+static. Tea is conducive to a gentle flow of pleasing
+thoughts, and anyone who has taken Easton's syrup of
+the hypophosphites will recall at once the state of cerebral
+erethrism, of general mental alacrity, that followed on
+a dose. Again, champagne (followed perhaps by a soup&ccedil;on
+of whisky) leads to a mood essentially humorous and
+playful, while about three dozen oysters, taken fasting,
+will in most cases produce a profound and even ominous
+melancholy. One might enlarge further upon this topic,
+on the brutalising influence of beer, the sedative quality
+of lettuce, the stimulating consequences of curried chicken;
+but enough has been said to point our argument. It is,
+that such facts as this can surely indicate only one
+conclusion, and that is the entire dependence of literary
+qualities upon the diet of the writer.</p>
+
+<p>I may remind the reader, in confirmation of this
+suggestion, of what is perhaps the most widely known
+fact about Carlyle, that on one memorable occasion he
+threw his breakfast out of the window. Why did he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+throw his breakfast out of the window? Surely his
+friends have cherished the story out of no petty love of
+depreciatory detail? There are, however, those who
+would have us believe it was mere childish petulance
+at a chilly rasher or a hard-boiled egg. Such a supposition
+is absurd. On the other hand, what is more natural than
+an outburst of righteous indignation at the ruin of some
+carefully studied climax of feeding? The thoughtful
+literary beginner who is not altogether submerged in
+foolish theories of inspiration and natural genius will, we
+fancy, see pretty clearly that I am developing what is
+perhaps after all the fundamental secret of literary
+art.</p>
+
+<p>To come now to more explicit instructions. It is
+imperative, if you wish to write with any power and
+freshness at all, that you should utterly ruin your
+digestion. Any literary person will confirm this statement.
+At any cost the thing must be done, even if you
+have to live on German sausage, onions, and cheese to do
+it. So long as you turn all your dietary to flesh and
+blood you will get no literature out of it. "We learn in
+suffering what we teach in song." This is why men who
+live at home with their mothers, or have their elder sisters
+to see after them, never, by any chance, however great
+their literary ambition may be, write anything but minor
+poetry. They get their meals at regular hours, and done
+to a turn, and that plays the very devil&mdash;if you will
+pardon the phrase&mdash;with one's imagination.</p>
+
+<p>A careful study of the records of literary men in the
+past, and a considerable knowledge of living authors,
+suggests two chief ways of losing one's digestion and
+engendering literary capacity. You go and live in humble
+lodgings,&mdash;we could name dozens of prominent men who
+have fed a great ambition in this way,&mdash;or you marry a
+nice girl who does not understand housekeeping. The
+former is the more efficacious method, because, as a rule,
+the nice girl wants to come and sit on your knee all day,
+and that is a great impediment to literary composition.
+Belonging to a club&mdash;even a literary club&mdash;where you can
+dine is absolute ruin to the literary beginner. Many a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+bright young fellow, who has pushed his way, or has been
+pushed by indiscreet friends, into the society of successful
+literary men, has been spoilt by this fatal error, and he
+has saved his stomach to lose his reputation.</p>
+
+<p>Having got rid of your digestion, then, the common
+condition of all good literature, the next thing is to
+arrange your dietary for the particular literary effect you
+desire. And here we may point out the secrecy observed
+in such matters by literary men. Stevenson fled to Samoa
+to hide his extremely elaborate methods, and to keep his
+kitchen servants out of the reach of bribery. Even Sir
+Walter Besant, though he is fairly communicative to the
+young aspirant, has dropped no hints of the plain, pure,
+and wholesome menu he follows. Sala professed to eat
+everything, but that was probably his badinage. Possibly
+he had one staple, and took the rest as condiment. Then
+what did Shakespeare live on? Bacon? And Mr. Barrie,
+though he has written a delightful book about his pipe
+and tobacco, full of suggestion to the young humorist,
+lets out nothing or next to nothing of his meat and drink.
+His hints about pipes are very extensively followed, and
+nowadays every ambitious young pressman smokes in
+public at least one well-burnt briar with an eccentric
+stem&mdash;even at some personal inconvenience. But this
+jealous reticence on the part of successful men&mdash;you
+notice they never let even the interviewer see their
+kitchens or the d&eacute;bris of a meal&mdash;necessarily throws one
+back upon rumour and hypothesis in this matter. Mr.
+Andrew Lang, for instance, is popularly associated with
+salmon, but that is probably a wilful delusion. Excessive
+salmon, far from engendering geniality, will be found in
+practice a vague and melancholy diet, tending more
+towards the magnificent despondency of Mr. Hall
+Caine.</p>
+
+<p>Nor does Mr. Haggard feed entirely on raw meat.
+Indeed, for lurid and somewhat pessimistic narrative,
+there is nothing like the ordinary currant bun, eaten new
+and in quantity. A light humorous style is best attained
+by soda-water and dry biscuits, following caf&eacute;-noir. The
+soda-water may be either Scotch or Irish as the taste<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+inclines. For a florid, tawdry style the beginner must
+take nothing but boiled water, stewed vegetables, and an
+interest in the movements against vivisection, opium,
+alcohol, tobacco, sarcophagy, and the male sex.</p>
+
+<p>For contributions to the leading reviews, boiled pork
+and cabbage may be eaten, with bottled beer, followed
+by apple dumpling. This effectually suppresses any
+tendency to facetiousness, or what respectable English
+people call <i>double entendre</i>, and brings you <i>en rapport</i> with
+the serious people who read these publications. So soon
+as you begin to feel wakeful and restless discontinue
+writing. For what is vulgarly known as the <i>fin-de-si&egrave;cle</i>
+type of publication, on the other hand, one should limit
+oneself to an a&euml;rated bread shop for a week or so, with
+the exception of an occasional tea in a literary household.
+All people fed mainly on scones become clever. And
+this regimen, with an occasional debauch upon macaroons,
+chocolate, and cheap champagne, and brisk daily walks
+from Oxford Circus, through Regent Street, Piccadilly,
+and the Green Park, to Westminster and back, should
+result in an animated society satire.</p>
+
+<p>It is not known what Mr. Kipling takes to make him
+so peculiar. Many of us would like to know. Possibly
+it is something he picked up in the jungle&mdash;berries or
+something. A friend who made a few tentative experiments
+to this end turned out nothing beyond a will, and
+that he dictated and left incomplete. (It was scarcely
+on the lines of an ordinary will, being blasphemous, and
+mentioning no property except his inside.) For short
+stories of the detective type, strong cold tea and hard
+biscuits are fruitful eating, while for a social science
+novel one should take an abundance of boiled rice and
+toast and water.</p>
+
+<p>However, these remarks are mainly by way of suggestion.
+Every writer in the end, so soon as his digestion is
+destroyed, must ascertain for himself the peculiar diet
+that suits him best&mdash;that is, which disagrees with him
+the most. If everything else fails he might try some
+chemical food. "Jabber's Food for Authors," by the bye,
+well advertised, and with portraits of literary men, in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+their drawing-rooms, "Fed entirely on Jabber's Food,"
+with medical certificates of its unwholesomeness, and
+favourable and expurgated reviews of works written on
+it, ought to be a brilliant success among literary aspirants.
+A small but sufficient quantity of arsenic might with
+advantage be mixed in.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="HOUSE-HUNTING_AS_AN_OUTDOOR_AMUSEMENT" id="HOUSE-HUNTING_AS_AN_OUTDOOR_AMUSEMENT"></a>HOUSE-HUNTING AS AN OUTDOOR AMUSEMENT</h3>
+
+
+<p>Since Adam and Eve went hand in hand out of the gates
+of Paradise, the world has travailed under an infinite
+succession of house-hunts. To-day in every eligible
+suburb you may see New Adams and New Eves by the
+score, with rusty keys and pink order-forms in hand,
+wandering still, in search of the ideal home. To them
+it is anything but an amusement. Most of these poor
+pilgrims look simply tired, some are argumentative in
+addition, but all are disappointed, anxious, and unhappy,
+their hands dirty with prying among cisterns, and their
+garments soiled from cellar walls. All, in the exaltation
+of the wooing days, saw at least the indistinct reflection
+of the perfect house, but now the Quest is irrevocably in
+hand they seek and do not find. And such a momentous
+question it is to them. Are they not choosing the background,
+the air and the colour, as it were, of the next
+three or four years, the cardinal years, too! of their lives?</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the exquisite exasperation of the business for
+the man who hunts among empty houses for a home is,
+that it is so entirely a choice of second-hand, or at least
+ready-made goods. To me, at least, there is a decided
+suggestion of the dead body in your empty house that
+has once been occupied. Here, like pale ghosts upon the
+wall paper, are outlined the pictures of the departed
+tenant; here are the nails of the invisible curtains, this
+dent in the wall is all that is sensible of a vanished
+piano. I could fancy all these things creeping back to
+visibility as the light grew dim. Someone was irritable
+in the house, perhaps, and a haunting fragrance of de<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>parted
+quarrels is to be found in the loose door-handles,
+and the broken bell-pull. Then the blind in the bedroom
+has a broken string. He was a beer-drinker, for the drip
+of the tap has left its mark in the cellar; a careless man,
+for this wall is a record of burst water-pipes; and rough
+in his methods, as his emendation of the garden gate&mdash;a
+remedy rather worse than the disease&mdash;shows. The mark
+of this prepotent previous man is left on the house from
+cellar to attic. It is his house really, not mine. And
+against these haunting individualities set the horrible
+wholesale flavour, the obvious dexterous builder's economies
+of a new house. Yet, whatever your repulsion may be,
+the end is always the same. After you have asked for
+your ideal house a hundred times or so you begin to see
+you do not get it. You go the way of your kind. All
+houses are taken in despair.</p>
+
+<p>But such disgusts as this are for the man who really
+aims at taking a house. The artist house-hunter knows
+better than that. He hunts for the hunt's sake, and does
+not mar his work with a purpose. Then house-hunting
+becomes a really delightful employment, and one strangely
+neglected in this country. I have heard, indeed, of old
+ladies who enlivened the intervals of their devotions in
+this manner, but to the general run of people the thing is
+unknown. Yet a more entertaining way of spending a
+half-holiday&mdash;having regard to current taste&mdash;it should
+be difficult to imagine. An empty house is realistic
+literature in the concrete, full of hints and allusions if a
+little wanting in tangible humanity, and it outdoes the
+modern story in its own line, by beginning as well as
+ending in a note of interrogation. That it is not more
+extensively followed I can only explain by supposing
+that its merits are generally unsuspected. In which case
+this book should set a fashion.</p>
+
+<p>One singular thing the house-hunter very speedily
+discovers is, that the greater portion of the houses in this
+country are owned by old gentlemen or old ladies who
+live next door. After a certain age, and especially upon
+retired tradespeople, house property, either alone or in
+common with gardening, exercises an irresistible fascina<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>tion.
+You always know you are going to meet a landlord
+or landlady of this type when you read on your order to
+view, "Key next door but one." Calling next door but
+one, you are joined after the lapse of a few minutes by a
+bald, stout gentleman, or a lady of immemorial years, who
+offers to go over "the property" with you. Apparently
+the intervals between visits to view are spent in slumber,
+and these old people come out refreshed and keen to
+scrutinise their possible new neighbours. They will tell
+you all about the last tenant, and about the present tenants
+on either side, and about themselves, and how all the other
+houses in the neighbourhood are damp, and how they
+remember when the site of the house was a cornfield, and
+what they do for their rheumatism. As one hears them
+giving a most delightful vent to their loquacity, the artistic
+house-hunter feels all the righteous self-applause of a
+kindly deed. Sometimes they get extremely friendly.
+One old gentleman&mdash;to whom anyone under forty must
+have seemed puerile&mdash;presented the gentle writer with
+three fine large green apples as a kind of earnest of his
+treatment: apples, no doubt, of some little value, since
+they excited the audible envy of several little boys before
+they were disposed of.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the landlord has even superintended the
+building of the house himself, and then it often has
+peculiar distinctions&mdash;no coal cellar, or a tower with
+turrets, or pillars of ornamental marble investing the
+portico with disproportionate dignity. One old gentleman,
+young as old gentlemen go, short of stature, of an
+agreeable red colour, and with short iron-grey hair, had a
+niche over the front door containing a piece of statuary.
+It gave one the impression of the Venus of Milo in
+chocolate pyjamas. "It was nood at first," said the landlord,
+"but the neighbourhood is hardly educated up to
+art, and objected. So I gave it that brown paint."</p>
+
+<p>On one expedition the artistic house-hunter was accompanied
+by Euphemia. Then it was he found Hill Crest, a
+vast edifice at the incredible rent of &pound;40 a year, with
+which a Megatherial key was identified. It took the two
+of them, not to mention an umbrella, to turn this key.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+The rent was a mystery, and while they were in the
+house&mdash;a thunderstorm kept them there some time&mdash;they
+tried to imagine the murder. From the top windows
+they could see the roofs of the opposite houses in plan.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder how long it would take to get to the top of
+the house from the bottom?" said Euphemia.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly longer than we could manage every day,"
+said the artistic house-hunter. "Fancy looking for my
+pipe in all these rooms. Starting from the top bedroom
+at the usual time, I suppose one would arrive downstairs
+to breakfast about eleven, and then we should have to be
+getting upstairs again by eight o'clock if we wanted any
+night's rest worth having. Or we might double or treble
+existence, live a Gargantuan life to match the house, make
+our day of forty-eight hours instead of twenty-four. By
+doubling everything we should not notice the hole it made
+in our time getting about the place. Perhaps by making
+dinner last twice as long, eating twice as much, and doing
+everything on the scale of two to one, we might adapt
+ourselves to our environment in time, grow twice as big."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Then</i> we might be very comfortable here," said
+Euphemia.</p>
+
+<p>They went downstairs again. By that time it was
+thundering and raining heavily. The rooms were dark
+and gloomy. The big side door, which would not shut
+unless locked from the outside, swayed and banged as the
+gusts of wind swept round the house. But they had a
+good time in the front kitchen, playing cricket with an
+umbrella and the agent's order crumpled into a ball.
+Presently the artistic house-hunter lifted Euphemia on
+to the tall dresser, and they sat there swinging their feet
+patiently until the storm should leave off and release
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"I should feel in this kitchen," said Euphemia, "like
+one of my little dolls must have felt in the dolls'-house
+kitchen I had once. The top of her head just reached the
+level of the table. There were only four plates on the
+dresser, but each was about half her height across&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Your reminiscences are always entertaining," said the
+artistic house-hunter; "still they fail to explain the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+absorbing mystery of this house being to let at &pound;40 a
+year." The problem raised his curiosity, but though he
+made inquiries he found no reason for the remarkably low
+rent or the continued emptiness of the house. It was a
+specimen puzzle for the house-hunter. A large house
+with a garden of about half an acre, and with accommodation
+for about six families, going begging for &pound;40 a year.
+Would it let at eighty? Some such problem, however,
+turns up in every house-hunt, and it is these surprises
+that give the sport its particular interest and delight.
+Always provided the mind is not unsettled by any ulterior
+notion of settling down.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="OF_BLADES_AND_BLADERY" id="OF_BLADES_AND_BLADERY"></a>OF BLADES AND BLADERY</h3>
+
+
+<p>The Blade is not so much a culture as a temperament, and
+Bladery&mdash;if the thing may have the name&mdash;a code of
+sentiments rather than a ritual. It is the rococo school
+of behaviour, the flamboyant gentleman, the gargoyle life.
+The Blade is the tribute innocence pays to vice. He may
+look like a devil and belong to a church. And the
+clothing of the Blade, being symbolical, is a very important
+part of him. It must show not only a certain tastiness,
+but also decision in the accent, courage in the pattern, and
+a Dudley Hardihood of outline. A Blade must needs
+take the colour of his social standing, but all Blades have
+the same essential qualities. And all Blades have this
+quality, that they despise and contemn other Blades from
+the top downward. (But where the bottommost Blade
+comes no man can tell.)</p>
+
+<p>A well-bred Blade&mdash;though he be a duke&mdash;tends to
+wear his hat tilted a little over the right eyebrow, and a
+piece of hair is pulled coquettishly down just below the
+brim. His collar is high, and a very large bow is worn
+slightly askew. This may be either cream-coloured or
+deep blue, with spots of white, or it may be red, or buff,
+but not green, because of badinage. The Blade of the
+middle class displays a fine gold watch-chain, and his jacket
+and vest may be of a rough black cloth or blue serge.
+The trousering may be of a suit with the jacket, or
+tasteful, and the shoes must be long. The betting man,
+adorned, is a perfect Blade. There is often a large and
+ornamental stick, which is invariably carried head downwards.
+And note, that the born Blade instinctively
+avoids any narrowness of pose. In walking he thrusts
+out his shoulders, elbows, and knees, and it is rather the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+thing to dominate a sphere of influence beyond this by
+swinging his stick. At first the beginner will find this
+weapon a little apt to slip from the hand and cause
+inconvenience to the general public; but he must not
+mind that. After a few such misadventures he will
+acquire dexterity.</p>
+
+<p>All Blades smoke&mdash;publicly at least. To smoke a
+white meerschaum in the streets, however, is very inferior
+form. The proper smoking is a briar, and, remember, it
+is not smart to have a new pipe. So soon as he buys it,
+the Blade takes his pipe home, puts it on a glowing fire
+to burn the rim, scrapes this away, burns it again, and so
+on until it looks a sullen desperado of a pipe&mdash;a pipe with
+a wild past. Sometimes he cannot smoke a pipe. In
+this case he may&mdash;for his stomach's sake&mdash;smoke a
+cigarette. And, besides, there is something cynical about
+a cigarette. For the very young Blade there are certain
+makes of cigarette that burn well&mdash;they are mixed with
+nitre&mdash;and these may be smoked by holding them in the
+left hand and idly swinging them to and fro in the air.
+If it were not for the public want of charity, I would
+recommend a well-known brand. A Blade may always
+escape a cigar by feigning a fastidious taste. "None of
+your Cabanas" is rather good style.</p>
+
+<p>The Blade, it must be understood&mdash;especially by the
+Blade's friends&mdash;spends his time in a whirl of dissipation.
+That is the symbolism of the emphatic obliquity of the
+costume. First, he drinks. The Blade at Harrow, according
+to a reliable authority, drinks cherry brandy and even
+champagne; other Blades consume whisky-and-soda; the
+less costly kind of Blade does it on beer. And here the
+beginner is often at a loss. Let us say he has looked up
+the street and down, ascertained that there are no aunts
+in the air, and then plunged into his first public-house.
+How shall he ask for his liquor? "I will take a glass of
+ale, if you please, Miss," seems tame for a Blade. It may
+be useful to know a more suitable formula. Just at
+present, we may assure the Blade neophyte, it is all the
+rage to ask for "Two of swipes, ducky." Go in boldly,
+bang down your money as loudly as possible, and shout<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+that out at the top of your voice. If it is a barman,
+though, you had better not say "ducky." The slang will,
+we can assure him, prove extremely effective.</p>
+
+<p>Then the Blade gambles; but over the gambling of the
+Blade it is well to draw a veil&mdash;a partially translucent
+and coquettish veil, through which we can see the thing
+dimly, and enhanced in its enormity. You must patronise
+the Turf, of course, and have money on horses, or you are
+no Blade at all, but a mere stick. The Harrow Blade has
+his book on all the big races in the calendar; and the
+great and noble game of Nap&mdash;are not Blades its worshippers
+wherever the sun shines and a pack of cards is
+obtainable? Baccarat, too. Many a glorious Blade has
+lost his whole term's pocket-money at a single sitting at
+that noble game. And the conversation of the Blade
+must always be brilliant in the extreme, like the flashing
+of steel in the sunlight. It is usually cynical and worldly,
+sometimes horrible enough to make a governess shudder,
+but always epigrammatic. Epigrams and neat comparisons
+are much easier to make than is vulgarly supposed.
+"Schoolmasters hang about the crops of knowledge like
+dead crows about a field, examples and warnings to greedy
+souls." "Marriage is the beginning of philosophy, and
+the end is, 'Do not marry.'" "All women are constant,
+but some discover mistakes." "One is generally repentant
+when one is found out, and remorseful when one can't do
+it again." A little practice, and this kind of thing may
+be ground out almost without thinking. Occasionally, in
+your conversation with ladies, you may let an oath slip.
+(Better not let your aunt hear you.) Apologise humbly
+at once, of course. But it will give them a glimpse of the
+lurid splendour of your private life.</p>
+
+<p>And that brings us to the central thing of the Blade's
+life, the eternal Feminine! Pity them, be a little sorry for
+them&mdash;the poor souls cannot be Blades. They must e'en
+sit and palpitate while the Blade flashes. The accomplished
+Blade goes through life looking unspeakable wickedness
+at everything feminine he meets, old and young, rich and
+poor, one with another. He reeks with intrigue. Every
+Blade has his secrets and mysteries in this matter&mdash;remorse<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+even for crimes. You do not know all that his handsome
+face may hide. Even he does not know. He may have
+sat on piers and talked to shop-girls, kissed housemaids,
+taken barmaids to music halls, conversed with painted
+wickedness in public places&mdash;nothing is too much for him.
+And oh! the reckless protestations of love he has made,
+the broken promises, the broken hearts! Yet men must
+be Blades, though women may weep; and every Blade
+must take his barmaid to a music hall at least once, even
+if she be taller than himself. Until then his manhood is
+not assured.</p>
+
+<p>Just one hint in conclusion. A Blade who collects
+stamps, or keeps tame rabbits, or eats sweets, oranges, or
+apples in the streets, or calls names publicly after his
+friends, is no Blade at all, but a boy still. So, with our
+blessing, he swaggers on his way and is gone. A Don
+Juan as fresh as spring, a rosebud desperado. May he
+never come upon just cause for repentance!</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="OF_CLEVERNESS" id="OF_CLEVERNESS"></a>OF CLEVERNESS</h3>
+
+<p>&Agrave;PROPOS OF ONE CRICHTON</p>
+
+
+<p>Crichton is an extremely clever person&mdash;abnormally,
+indeed almost unnaturally, so. He is not merely clever
+at this or that, but clever all round; he gives you no
+consolations. He goes about being needlessly brilliant.
+He caps your jests and corrects your mistakes, and does
+your special things over again in newer and smarter ways.
+Any really well-bred man who presumed so far would at
+least be plain or physically feeble, or unhappily married
+by way of apology, but the idea of so much civility seems
+never to have entered Crichton's head. He will come
+into a room where we are jesting perhaps, and
+immediately begin to flourish about less funny perhaps
+but decidedly more brilliant jests, until at last we retire
+one by one from the conversation and watch him with
+savage, weary eyes over our pipes. He invariably beats
+me at chess, invariably. People talk about him and ask
+my opinion of him, and if I venture to criticise him they
+begin to look as though they thought I was jealous.
+Grossly favourable notices of his books and his pictures
+crop up in the most unlikely places; indeed I have
+almost given up newspapers on account of him. Yet,
+after all&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>This cleverness is not everything. It never pleases
+me, and I doubt sometimes if it pleases anyone.
+Suppose you let off some clever little thing, a subtlety of
+expression, a paradox, an allusive suggestive picture;
+how does it affect ordinary people? Those who are less
+clever than yourself, the unspecialised, unsophisticated
+average people, are simply annoyed by the puzzle you set<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+them; those who are cleverer find your cleverness mere
+obvious stupidity; and your equals, your competitors in
+cleverness, are naturally your deadly rivals. The fact is
+this cleverness, after all, is merely egotism in its worst
+and unwisest phase. It is an incontinence of brilliance,
+graceless and aggressive, a glaring swagger. The drunken
+helot of cleverness is the creature who goes about making
+puns. A mere step above comes the epigram, the isolated
+epigram framed and glazed. Then such impressionist art
+as Crichton's pictures, mere puns in paint. What they
+mean is nothing, they arrest a quiet decent-minded man
+like myself with the same spasmodic disgust as a pun in
+literature&mdash;the subject is a transparent excuse; they are
+mere indecent and unedifying exhibitions of himself. He
+thinks it is something superlative to do everything in a
+startling way. He cannot even sign his name without
+being offensive. He lacks altogether the fundamental
+quality of a gentleman, the magnanimity to be commonplace.
+I&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>On the score of personal dignity, why should a young
+man of respectable antecedents and some natural capacity
+stoop to this kind of thing? To be clever is the last
+desperate resort of the feeble, it is the merit of the
+ambitious slave. You cannot conquer <i>vi et armis</i>, you
+cannot stomach a decent inferiority, so you resort to lively,
+eccentric, and brain-wearying brilliance to ingratiate
+yourself. The cleverest animal by far is the monkey, and
+compare that creature's undignified activity with the
+mountainous majesty of the elephant!</p>
+
+<p>And I cannot help thinking, too, that cleverness must
+be the greatest obstacle a man can possibly have in his
+way upward in the world. One never sees really clever
+people in positions of trust, never widely influential or
+deeply rooted. Look, for instance, at the Royal Academy,
+at the Judges, at&mdash;&mdash; But there! The very idea of
+cleverness is an all-round readiness and looseness that is
+the very negation of stability.</p>
+
+<p>Whenever Crichton has been particularly exasperating,
+getting himself appreciated in a new quarter, or rising
+above his former successes, I find some consolation in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+thinking of my Uncle Augustus. He was the glory of our
+family. Even Aunt Charlotte's voice drooped a little in
+the mention of his name. He was conspicuous for an
+imposing and even colossal stupidity: he rose to eminence
+through it, and, what is more, to wealth and influence.
+He was as reliable, as unlikely to alter his precise position,
+or do anything unexpected, as the Pyramids of Egypt.
+I do not know any topic upon which he was not
+absolutely uninformed, and his contributions to conversation,
+delivered in that ringing baritone of his,
+were appallingly dull. Often I have seen him utterly
+flatten some cheerful clever person of the Crichton type
+with one of his simple garden-roller remarks&mdash;plain, solid,
+and heavy, which there was no possibility either of meeting
+or avoiding. He was very successful in argument, and
+yet he never fenced. He simply came down. It was, so
+to speak, a case of small sword <i>versus</i> the avalanche. His
+moral inertia was tremendous. He was never excited,
+never anxious, never jaded; he was simply massive.
+Cleverness broke upon him like shipping on an ironbound
+coast. His monument is like him&mdash;a plain large obelisk
+of coarse granite, unpretending in its simple ugliness and
+prominent a mile off. Among the innumerable little
+white sorrows of the cemetery it looks exactly as he used
+to look among clever people.</p>
+
+<p>Depend upon it cleverness is the antithesis of greatness.
+The British Empire, like the Roman, was built up by dull
+men. It may be we shall be ruined by clever ones.
+Imagine a regiment of lively and eccentric privates!
+There never was a statesman yet who had not some
+ballast of stupidity, and it seems to me that part at least
+of the essentials of a genius is a certain divine dulness.
+The people we used to call the masters&mdash;Shakespeare,
+Raphael, Milton, and so forth&mdash;had a certain simplicity
+Crichton lacks. They do not scintillate nearly so much
+as he does, and they do not give that same uncomfortable
+feeling of internal strain. Even Homer nods.
+There are restful places in their work, broad meadows
+of breezy flatness, calms. But Crichton has no Pacific
+Ocean to mitigate his everlasting weary passage of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+Cape Horn: it is all point and prominence, point and
+prominence.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt this Crichton is having a certain vogue now,
+but it cannot last. I wish him no evil, of course, but I
+cannot help thinking he will presently have had his day.
+This epoch of cleverness must be very near its last flare.
+The last and the abiding thought of humanity is peace.
+A dull man will presently be sought like the shadow of
+a great rock in a thirsty land. Dulness will be the New
+Genius. "Give us dull books," people will cry, "great
+dull restful pictures. We are weary, very weary." This
+hectic, restless, incessant phase in which we travail&mdash;<i>fin-de-si&egrave;cle</i>,
+"decadent," and all the rest of it&mdash;will pass
+away. A chubby, sleepy literature, large in aim, colossal
+in execution, rotund and tranquil will lift its head. And
+this Crichton will become a classic, Messrs. Mudie will
+sell surplus copies of his works at a reduction, and I shall
+cease to be worried by his disgusting success.
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_POSE_NOVEL" id="THE_POSE_NOVEL"></a>THE POSE NOVEL</h3>
+
+
+<p>I watched the little spurts of flame jet out from between
+the writhing pages of my manuscript, watched the sheets
+coil up in their fiery anguish and start one from another.
+I helped the fire to the very vitals of the mass by poking
+the brittle heap, and at last the sacrifice was over, the
+flames turned from pink to blue and died out, the red
+glow gave place to black, little luminous red streaks coiled
+across the charred sheets and vanished at the margins,
+and only the ashes of my inspiration remained. The ink
+was a lustrous black on the dull blackness of the burnt
+paper. I could still read this much of my indiscretion
+remaining, "He smiled at them all and said nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"Fool!" I said, and stirred the crackling mass into a
+featureless heap of black scraps. Then with my chin on
+my fists and elbows on knees I stared at the end of my
+labours.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose, after all, there has been some profit out of
+the thing. Satan finds some mischief still for idle hands
+to do, and one may well thank Heaven it was only a
+novel. Still, it means many days out of my life, and I
+would be glad to find some positive benefit accruing.
+Clearly, in the first place, I have eased my mind of some
+execrable English. I am cleaner now by some dozen
+faulty phrases that I committed and saw afterwards in all
+the nakedness of typewriting. (Thank Heaven for typewriting!
+Were it not for that, this thing had gone to
+the scoffing of some publisher's reader, and another had
+known my shame.) And I shall not write another pose
+novel.</p>
+
+<p>I am inclined to think these pose novels the wild oats
+of authorship. We sit down in the heyday of our youth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+to write the masterpiece. Obviously, it must be a novel
+about a man and a woman, and something as splendid as
+we can conceive of in that way. We look about us. We
+do not go far for perfection. One of the brace holds the
+pen and the other is inside his or her head; and so Off!
+to the willing pen. Only a few years ago we went
+slashing among the poppies with a walking-stick, and
+were, we said boldly and openly, Harolds and Hectors
+slaying our thousands. Now of course we are grown up
+to self-respect, and must needs be a little disingenuous
+about it. But as the story unfolds there is no mistaking
+the likeness, in spite of the transfiguration. This bold,
+decided man who performs such deeds of derring-do in
+the noisome slum, knocks down the burly wife-beater,
+rescues an unmistakable Miss Clapton from the knife of a
+Lascar, and is all the while cultivating a virtuous consumption
+that stretches him on an edifying, pathetic, and
+altogether beautiful deathbed in the last chapter&mdash;&mdash;
+My dear Authorling, cry my friends, we hear the squeak
+of that little voice of yours in every word he utters. Is
+<i>that</i> what you aspire to be, that twopence-coloured edition
+of yourself? Heaven defend you from your desires!</p>
+
+<p>Yet there was a singular fascination in writing the
+book; to be in anticipation my own sympathetic historian,
+to joy with my joys yet to come, and sorrow with my
+sorrows, to bear disaster like a man, and at last to close
+my own dear eyes, and with a swelling heart write my
+own epitaph. The pleasure remained with me until I
+reached the end. How admirably I strutted in front of
+myself! And I and the better self of me that was
+flourishing about in the book&mdash;we pretended not to know
+each other for what we were. He was myself with a wig
+and a sham visiting card, and I owed it to myself to
+respect my disguise. I made him with very red hair&mdash;my
+hair is fairly dark&mdash;and shifted his university from
+London to Cambridge. Clearly it could not be the same
+person, I argued. But I endowed him with all the
+treasures of myself; I made him say all the good things
+I might have said had I thought of them opportunely,
+and all the noble thoughts that occurred to me afterwards<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+occurred to him at the time. He was myself&mdash;myself
+at a premium, myself without any drawbacks, the quintessence
+and culmination of me. And yet somehow when
+he came back from the typewriter he seemed a bit of
+an ass.</p>
+
+<p>Probably every tadpole author writes a pose novel&mdash;at
+least I hope so for the sake of my self-respect. Most,
+after my fashion, burn the thing, or benevolent publishers
+lose it. It is an ill thing if by some accident the tadpole
+tale survives the tadpole stage. The authoress does the
+feminine equivalent, but I should judge either that she
+did it more abundantly or else that she burned less. Has
+she never swept past you with a scornful look, disdained
+you in all the pride of her beauty, rippled laughter at
+you, or amazed you with her artless girlishness? And
+even after the early stages some of the trick may survive,
+unless I read books with malice instead of charity. I
+must confess, though, that I have a weakness for finding
+mine author among his puppets. I conceive him always
+taking the best parts, like an actor-manager or a little
+boy playing with his sisters. I do not read many novels
+with sincere belief, and I like to get such entertainment
+from them as I can. So that these artless little self-revelations
+are very sweet and precious to me among all
+the lay figures, tragedy and comedy. Since the deception
+is transparent I make the most of the transparency, and
+love to see the clumsy fingers on the strings of the
+marionettes. And this will be none the less pleasant now
+that I have so narrowly escaped giving this entertainment
+to others.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose this stage is a necessary one. We begin
+with ignorance and the imagination, the material of the
+pose novel. Later come self-knowledge, disappointments
+and self-consciousness, and the prodigals of fiction stay
+themselves upon the husks of epigram and cynicism, and
+in the place of artless aspiration are indeed in plain black
+and white very desperate characters. It is after all only
+another pose&mdash;the pose of not posing. We, the common
+clay of the world of letters, must needs write in this way,
+because we cannot forget our foolish little selves in our<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+work. But some few there are who sit as gods above
+their private universes, and write without passion or
+vanity. At least, so I have been told. These be the true
+artists of letters, the white windows upon the truth of
+things. We by comparison are but stained glass in our
+own honour, and do but obstruct the view with our halos
+and attitudes. Yet even Shakespeare, the critics tell us&mdash;and
+they say they know&mdash;posed in the character of
+Hamlet.</p>
+
+<p>After all, the pose novel method has at times attained
+to the level of literature. Charlotte Bront&euml; might possibly
+have found no other topic had she disdained the plain
+little woman with a shrewish tongue; and where had
+Charles Kingsley been if the vision of a curate rampant
+had not rejoiced his heart? Still, I am not sorry that
+this novel is burned. Even now it was ridiculous, and
+the time might have come when this book, full of high,
+if foolish aims, and the vain vast promise of well-meaning
+youth, had been too keen a reproach to be endured. Three
+volumes of good intentions! It is too much. There was
+more than a novel burning just now. After this I shall
+be in a position to take a humorist's view of life.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_VETERAN_CRICKETER" id="THE_VETERAN_CRICKETER"></a>THE VETERAN CRICKETER</h3>
+
+
+<p>My old cricketer was seized, he says, some score of years
+ago now, by sciatica, clutched indeed about the loins thereby,
+and forcibly withdrawn from the practice of the art;
+since when a certain predisposition to a corpulent habit
+has lacked its natural check of exercise, and a broadness
+almost Dutch has won upon him. Were it not for this,
+which renders his contours and his receding aspect unseemly,
+he would be indeed a venerable-looking person,
+having a profile worthy of a patriarch, tinged though it
+may be with an unpatriarchal jollity, and a close curly
+beard like that of King David. He lives by himself in
+a small cottage outside the village&mdash;hating women with
+an unaccountable detestation&mdash;and apparently earns a
+precarious livelihood, and certainly the sincere aversion
+of the country side, by umpiring in matches, and playing
+whist and "Nap" with such as will not be so discreet and
+economical as to bow before his superior merit.</p>
+
+<p>His neighbours do not like him, because he will not
+take their cricket or their whist seriously, because he
+will persist in offering counsel and the stimulus of his
+gift of satire. All whist than his he avers is "Bumble-puppy."
+His umpiring is pedagogic in tone; he fails to
+see the contest in the game. To him, who has heard his
+thousands roar as the bails of the best of All England went
+spinning, these village matches are mere puerile exercises
+to be corrected. His corrections, too, are Olympian, done,
+as it were, in red ink, vivid, and without respect of
+persons. Particularly he gibes. He never uses vulgar
+bad language himself, but has a singular power of
+engendering it in others. He has a word "gaby," which
+he will sometimes enlarge to "stuppid gaby," the which,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+flung neatly into a man who has just missed a catch, will
+fill the same with a whirl of furious curses difficult to
+restrain. And if perchance one should escape, my ancient
+cricketer will be as startled as Cadmus at the crop he has
+sown. And not only startled but pained at human wickedness
+and the follies of a new generation. "Why can't
+you play without swearing, Muster Gibbs?" he will say,
+catching the whispered hope twenty yards away, and
+proclaiming it to a censorious world. And so Gibbs,
+our grocer and draper, and one made much of by the
+vicar, is shamed before the whole parish, and damned even
+as he desired.</p>
+
+<p>To our vicar, a well-meaning, earnest, and extremely
+nervous man, he displays a methodical antagonism. Our
+vicar is the worst of all possible rural vicars&mdash;unripe, a
+glaring modern, no classical scholar, no lover of nature,
+offensively young and yet not youthful, an indecent
+politician. He was meant to labour amid Urban Myriads,
+to deal with Social Evils, Home Rule, the Woman Question,
+and the Reunion of Christendom, attend Conferences and
+go with the <i>Weltgeist</i>&mdash;damn him!&mdash;wherever the <i>Weltgeist</i>
+is going. He presents you jerkily&mdash;a tall lean man of
+ascetic visage and ample garments, a soul clothed not so
+much in a fleshy body as in black flaps that ever trail
+behind its energy. Where they made him Heaven knows.
+No university owns him. It may be he is a renegade
+Dissenting minister, neither good Church nor wholesome
+Nonconformity. Him my cricketer regards with malignant
+respect. Respect he shows by a punctilious touching
+of his hat brim, directed to the sacred office; all the
+rest is malignity, and aimed at the man that fills it.
+They come into contact on the cricket-field, and on the
+committee of our reading-room. For our vicar, in spite
+of a tendency to myopia, conceives it his duty to encourage
+cricket by his participation. <i>Duty</i>&mdash;to encourage cricket!
+So figure the scene to yourself. The sunlit green, and
+a match in progress,&mdash;the ball has just snipped a stump
+askew,&mdash;my ancient, leaning on a stout cabbage stick, and
+with the light overcoat that is sacred to umpires upon
+his arm.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"<i>Out</i>, Billy Durgan," says he, and adds, <i>ex cathedr&acirc;</i>,
+"and one you ought to ha' hit for four."</p>
+
+<p>Then appears our vicar in semi-canonicals, worn "to
+keep up his position," or some such folly, nervous about
+the adjustment of his hat and his eyeglasses. He
+approaches the pitch, smiling the while to show his
+purely genial import and to anticipate and explain any
+amateurish touches. He reaches the wicket and poses
+himself, as the convenient book he has studied directs.
+"You'll be caught, Muster Shackleforth, if you keep your
+shoulder up like that," says the umpire. "Ya-a-ps! that's
+worse!"&mdash;forgetting himself in his zeal for attitude. And
+then a voice cries "Play!"</p>
+
+<p>The vicar swipes wildly, cuts the ball for two, and
+returns to his wicket breathless but triumphant. Next
+comes a bye, and then over. The misguided cleric, ever
+pursuing a theory of foolish condescension to his betters
+at the game, and to show there is no offence at the
+"Yaaps," takes the opportunity, although panting, of
+asking my ancient if his chicks&mdash;late threatened with
+staggers&mdash;are doing well. What would he think if my
+cricketer retaliated by asking, in the pause before the
+sermon, how the vicarage pony took his last bolus? The
+two men do not understand one another. My cricketer
+waves the hens aside, and revenges himself, touching his
+hat at intervals, by some offensively obvious remarks&mdash;as
+to a mere beginner&mdash;about playing with a straight bat.
+And the field sniggers none too furtively. I sympathise
+with his malice. Cricket is an altogether too sacred thing
+to him to be tampered with on merely religious grounds.
+However, our vicar gets himself caught at the first
+opportunity, and so being removed from my veteran's
+immediate environment, to their common satisfaction, the
+due ritual of the great game is resumed.</p>
+
+<p>My ancient cricketer abounds in reminiscence of the
+glorious days that have gone for ever. He can still
+recall the last echoes of the "throwing" controversy that
+agitated Nyren, when over-arm bowling began, and though
+he never played himself in a beaver hat, he can, he says,
+recollect seeing matches so played. In those days every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>one
+wore tall hats&mdash;the policeman, the milkman, workmen
+of all sorts. Some people I fancy must have bathed in
+them and gone to bed wearing them. He recalls the
+Titans of that and the previous age, and particularly
+delights in the legend of Noah Mann, who held it a light
+thing to walk twenty miles from Northchapel to Hambledon
+to practise every Tuesday afternoon, and wander back
+after dark. He himself as a stripling would run a matter
+of four miles, after a day's work in the garden where he
+was employed, to attend an hour's practice over the downs
+before the twilight made the balls invisible. And afterwards
+came Teutonic revelry or wanderings under the
+summer starlight, as the mood might take him. For
+there was a vein of silent poetry in the youth of
+this man.</p>
+
+<p>He hates your modern billiard-table pitch, and a batting
+of dexterous snickery. He likes "character" in a
+game, gigantic hitting forward, bowler-planned leg
+catches, a cunning obliquity in a wicket that would send
+the balls mysteriously askew. But dramatic breaks are
+now a thing unknown in trade cricket. One legend of
+his I doubt; he avers that once at Brighton, in a match
+between Surrey and Sussex, he saw seven wickets bowled
+by some such aid in two successive overs. I have never
+been able to verify this. I believe that, as a matter of
+fact, the thing has never occurred, but he tells it often
+in a fine crescendo of surprise, and the refrain, "Out <span class="smcap">he</span>
+came." His first beginning is a cheerful anecdote of a
+crew of "young gentlemen" from Cambridge staying at
+the big house, and a challenge to the rustic talent of
+"me and Billy Hall," who "played a bit at that time,"
+"of me and Billy Hall" winning the pitch and going in
+first, of a memorable if uncivil stand at the wickets
+through a long hot afternoon, and a number of young
+gentlemen from Cambridge painfully discovering local
+talent by exhaustive fielding in the park, a duty they
+honourably discharged.</p>
+
+<p>I am fond of my old cricketer, in spite of a certain
+mendacious and malign element in him. His yarns of
+gallant stands and unexpected turns of fortune, of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+memorable hits and eccentric umpiring, albeit tending
+sometimes incredibly to his glory, are full of the flavour
+of days well spent, of bright mornings of play, sunlit
+sprawlings beside the score tent, warmth, the flavour of
+bitten grass stems, and the odour of crushed turf. One
+seems to hear the clapping hands of village ancients, and
+their ululations of delight. One thinks of stone jars with
+cool drink swishing therein, of shouting victories and
+memorable defeats, of eleven men in a drag, and tuneful
+and altogether glorious home-comings by the light of
+the moon. His were the Olympian days of the sport,
+when noble squires were its patrons, and every village a
+home and nursery of stalwart cricketers, before the epoch
+of special trains, gate-money, star elevens, and the tumultuous
+gathering of idle cads to jabber at a game they
+cannot play.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="CONCERNING_A_CERTAIN_LADY" id="CONCERNING_A_CERTAIN_LADY"></a>CONCERNING A CERTAIN LADY</h3>
+
+
+<p>This lady wears a blue serge suit and a black hat, without
+flippancy; she is a powerfully built lady and generally
+more or less flushed, and she is aunt, apparently, to a
+great number of objectionable-looking people. I go in
+terror of her. Yet the worm will turn at last, and so
+will the mild, pacific literary man. Her last outrage was
+too much even for my patience. It was committed at
+Gloucester Road Station the other afternoon. I was
+about to get into a train for Wimbledon,&mdash;and there are
+only two of them to the hour,&mdash;and, so far as I could see,
+the whole world was at peace with me. I felt perfectly
+secure. The &aelig;gis of the <i>pax Britannica</i>&mdash;if you will
+pardon the expression&mdash;was over me. For the moment
+the thought of the lady in the blue serge was quite out
+of my mind. I had just bought a newspaper, and had
+my hand on the carriage door. The guard was fluttering
+his flag.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly she swooped out of space, out of the
+infinite unknown, and hit me. She always hits me when
+she comes near me, and I infer she hits everyone she
+comes across. She hit me this time in the chest with her
+elbow and knocked me away from the door-handle. She
+hit me very hard; indeed, she was as fierce as I have
+ever known her. With her there were two nieces and a
+nephew, and the nephew hit me too. He was a horrid
+little boy in an Eton suit of the kind that they do not
+wear at Eton, and he hit me with his head and pushed
+at me with his little pink hands. The nieces might have
+been about twenty-two and thirteen respectively, and I
+infer that they were apprenticed to her. All four people
+seemed madly excited. "It's just starting!" they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+screamed, and the train was, indeed, slowly moving.
+Their object&mdash;so far as they had an object and were not
+animated by mere fury&mdash;appeared to be to assault me
+and then escape in the train. The lady in blue got in
+and then came backwards out again, sweeping the smaller
+girl behind her upon the two others, who were engaged
+in hustling me. "It's 'smoking!'" she cried. I could
+have told her that, if she had asked instead of hitting me.
+The elder girl, by backing dexterously upon me, knocked
+my umbrella out of my hand, and when I stooped to pick
+it up the little boy knocked my hat off. I will confess
+they demoralised me with their archaic violence. I had
+some thought of joining in their wild amuck, whooping,
+kicking out madly, perhaps assaulting a porter,&mdash;I think
+the lady in blue would have been surprised to find what
+an effective addition to her staff she had picked up,&mdash;but
+before I could collect my thoughts sufficiently to do any
+definite thing the whole affair was over. A porter was
+slamming doors on them, the train was running fast out
+of the station, and I was left alone with an unmannerly
+newsboy and an unmannerly porter on the platform. I
+waited until the porter was out of the way, and then I
+hit the newsboy for laughing at me, but even with that
+altercation it was a tedious wait for the next train to
+Wimbledon.</p>
+
+<p>This is the latest of my encounters with this lady, but
+it has decided me to keep silence no longer. She has
+been persecuting me now for years in all parts of London.
+It may be I am her only victim, but, on the other hand,
+she may be in the habit of annoying the entire class of
+slender and inoffensive young men. If so, and they will
+communicate with me through the publishers of this
+little volume, we might do something towards suppressing
+her, found an Anti-Energetic-Lady-League, or something
+of that sort. For if there was ever a crying wrong that
+clamoured for suppression it is this violent woman.</p>
+
+<p>She is, even now, flagrantly illegal. She might be
+given in charge for hitting people at any time, and be
+warned, or fined, or given a week. But somehow it is
+only when she is overpast and I am recovering my wits<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+that I recollect that she might be dealt with in this way.
+She is the chartered libertine of British matrons, and
+assaulteth where she listeth. The blows I have endured
+from her? She fights people who are getting into 'buses.
+It is no mere accidental jostling, but a deliberate
+shouldering, poking with umbrellas, and clawing. It is
+her delight to go to the Regent Circus corner of Piccadilly,
+about half-past seven in the evening, accompanied by a
+genteel rout of daughters, and fill up whole omnibuses
+with them. At that hour there are work-girls and tired
+clerks, and the like worn-out an&aelig;mic humanity trying to
+get home for an hour or so of rest before bed, and they
+crowd round the 'buses very eagerly. They are little
+able to cope with her exuberant vitality, being ill-nourished
+and tired from the day's work, and she simply mows
+through them and fills up every vacant place they covet
+before their eyes. Then, I can never count change even
+when my mind is tranquil, and she knows that, and
+swoops threateningly upon me in booking offices and
+stationers' shops. When I am dodging cabs at crossings
+she will appear from behind an omnibus or carriage and
+butt into me furiously. She holds her umbrella in her
+folded arms just as the Punch puppet does his staff, and
+with as deadly effect. Sometimes she discards her
+customary navy blue and puts on a glittering bonnet with
+bead trimmings, and goes and hurts people who are
+waiting to enter the pit at theatres, and especially to hurt
+me. She is fond of public shows, because they afford
+such possibilities of hurting me. Once I saw her standing
+partly on a seat and partly on another lady in the church
+of St. George's, Hanover Square, partly, indeed, watching
+a bride cry, but chiefly, I expect, scheming how she could
+get round to me and hurt me. Then there was an
+occasion at the Academy when she was peculiarly
+aggressive. I was sitting next my lame friend when she
+marked me. Of course she came at once and sat right
+upon us. "Come along, Jane," I heard her say, as I
+struggled to draw my flattened remains from under her;
+"this gentleman will make room."</p>
+
+<p>My friend was not so entangled and had escaped on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+other side. She noticed his walk. "Oh, don't <i>you</i> get
+up," she said. "<i>This</i> gentleman," she indicated my
+convulsive struggles to free myself, "will do that. <i>I did
+not see that you were a cripple</i>."</p>
+
+<p>It may be some of my readers will recognise the lady
+now. It can be&mdash;for the honour of womankind&mdash;only
+one woman. She is an atavism, a survival of the age of
+violence, a Pal&aelig;olithic squaw in petticoats. I do not
+know her name and address or I would publish it. I do
+not care if she kills me the next time she meets me, for
+the limits of endurance have been passed. If she kills
+me I shall die a martyr in the cause of the Queen's peace.
+And if it is only one woman, then it was the same lady,
+more than half intoxicated, that I saw in the Whitechapel
+Road cruelly ill-treating a little costermonger. If it was
+not she it was certainly her sister, and I do not care who
+knows it.</p>
+
+<p>What to do with her I do not know. A League, after
+all, seems ineffectual; she would break up any League. I
+have thought of giving her in charge for assault, but I
+shrink from the invidious publicity of that. Still, I am
+in grim earnest to do something. I think at times that
+the compulsory adoption of a narrow doorway for churches
+and places of public entertainment might be some protection
+for quiet, inoffensive people. How she would
+rage outside to be sure! Yet that seems a great undertaking.</p>
+
+<p>But this little paper is not so much a plan of campaign
+as a preliminary defiance. Life is a doubtful boon while
+one is never safe from assault, from hitting and shoving,
+from poking with umbrellas, being sat upon, and used as
+a target for projectile nephews and nieces. I warn her&mdash;possibly
+with a certain quaver in my voice&mdash;that I am
+in revolt. If she hits me again&mdash;&mdash; I will not say the
+precise thing I will do, but I warn her, very solemnly and
+deliberately, that she had better not hit me again.</p>
+
+<p>And so for the present the matter remains.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_SHOPMAN" id="THE_SHOPMAN"></a>THE SHOPMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>If I were really opulent, I would not go into a shop at all&mdash;I
+would have a private secretary. If I were really
+determined, Euphemia would do these things. As it is,
+I find buying things in a shop the most exasperating of
+all the many trying duties of life. I am sometimes
+almost tempted to declare myself Adamite to escape it.
+The way the shopman eyes you as you enter his den, the
+very spread of his fingers, irritate me. "What can I have
+the pleasure?" he says, bowing forward at me, and with
+his eye on my chin&mdash;and so waits.</p>
+
+<p>Now I hate incomplete sentences, and confound his
+pleasure! I don't go into a shop to give a shopman
+pleasure. But your ordinary shopman must needs
+pretend you delight and amuse him. I say, trying to
+display my dislike as plainly as possible, "Gloves."
+"Gloves, yessir," he says. Why should he? I suppose
+he thinks I require to be confirmed in my persuasion that
+I want gloves. "Calf&mdash;kid&mdash;dogskin?" How should <i>I</i>
+know the technicalities of his traffic? "Ordinary gloves,"
+I say, disdaining his petty distinctions. "About what
+price, sir?" he asks.</p>
+
+<p>Now that always maddens me. Why should I be
+expected to know the price of gloves? I'm not a
+commercial traveller nor a wholesale dealer, and I don't
+look like one. Neither am I constitutionally parsimonious
+nor petty. I am a literary man, unworldly, and I wear
+long hair and a soft hat and a peculiar overcoat to indicate
+the same to ordinary people. Why, I say, should I know
+the price of gloves? I know they are some ordinary
+price&mdash;elevenpence-halfpenny, or three-and-six, or seven-and-six,
+or something&mdash;one of those prices that everything<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+is sold at&mdash;but further I don't go. Perhaps I say elevenpence-halfpenny
+at a venture.</p>
+
+<p>His face lights up with quiet malice. "Don't keep
+them, sir," he says. I can tell by his expression that I
+am ridiculously low, and so being snubbed. I think of
+trying with three-and-six, or seven-and-six; the only
+other probable prices for things that I know, except a
+guinea and five pounds. Then I see the absurdity of the
+business, and my anger comes surging up.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here!" I say, as bitterly as possible. "I don't
+come here to play at Guessing Games. Never mind
+your prices. I want some gloves. Get me some!"</p>
+
+<p>This cows him a little, but very little. "May I ask
+your size, sir?" he says, a trifle more respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>One would think I spent all my time remembering the
+size of my gloves. However, it is no good resenting it.
+"It's either seven or nine," I say in a tired way.</p>
+
+<p>He just begins another question, and then he catches
+my eye and stops and goes away to obtain some gloves,
+and I get a breathing space. But why do they keep on
+with this cross-examination? If I knew exactly what I
+wanted&mdash;description, price, size&mdash;I should not go to a shop
+at all, it would save me such a lot of trouble just to send
+a cheque to the Stores. The only reason why I go into a
+tradesman's shop is because I don't know what I want
+exactly, am in doubt about the name or the size, or the
+price, or the fashion, and want a specialist to help me.
+The only reason for having shopmen instead of automatic
+machines is that one requires help in buying things.
+When I want gloves, the shopman ought to understand
+his business sufficiently well to know better than I do
+what particular kind of gloves I ought to be wearing, and
+what is a fair price for them. I don't see why I should
+teach him what is in fashion and what is not. A doctor
+does not ask you what kind of operation you want and
+what price you will pay for it. But I really believe
+these outfitter people would let me run about London
+wearing white cotton gloves and a plaid comforter without
+lifting a finger to prevent me.</p>
+
+<p>And, by the bye, that reminds me of a scandalous trick<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+these salesmen will play you. Sometimes they have not
+the thing you want, and then they make you buy other
+things. I happen to have, through no fault of my own, a
+very small head, and consequently for one long summer I
+wore a little boy's straw hat about London with the colours
+of a Paddington Board School, simply because a rascal
+outfitter hadn't my size in a proper kind of headgear,
+and induced me to buy the thing by specious representations.
+He must have known perfectly well it was not
+what I ought to wear. It seems never to enter into a
+shopman's code of honour that he ought to do his best for
+his customer. Since that, however, I have noticed lots of
+people about who have struck me in a new light as
+triumphs of the salesman, masterpieces in the art of
+incongruity; age in the garb of youth, corpulence put off
+with the size called "slender men's"; unhappy, gentle,
+quiet men with ties like oriflammes, breasts like a kingfisher's,
+and cataclysmal trouser patterns. Even so, if the
+shopkeeper had his will, should we all be. Those poor
+withered maiden ladies, too, who fill us with a kind of
+horror, with their juvenile curls, their girlish crudity of
+colouring, their bonnets, giddy, tottering, hectic. It overcomes
+me with remorse to think that I myself have
+accused them of vanity and folly. It overcomes me with
+pain to hear the thoughtless laugh aloud after them, in
+the public ways. For they are simply short-sighted
+trustful people, the myopic victims of the salesman
+and saleswoman. The little children gibe at them, pelt
+even.... And somewhere in the world a draper goes
+unhung.</p>
+
+<p>However, the gloves are bought. I select a pair
+haphazard, and he pretends to perceive they fit perfectly
+by putting them over the back of my hand. I make him
+assure me of the fit, and then buy the pair and proceed to
+take my old ones off and put the new on grimly. If they
+split or the fingers are too long&mdash;glovemakers have the
+most erratic conceptions of the human finger&mdash;I have to
+buy another pair.</p>
+
+<p>But the trouble only begins when you have bought your
+thing. "Nothing more, sir?" he says. "Nothing," I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+say. "Braces?" he says. "No, thank you," I say. "Collars,
+cuffs?" He looks at mine swiftly but keenly, and with
+an unendurable suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>He goes on, item after item. Am I in rags, that I
+should endure this thing? And I get sick of my
+everlasting "No, thank you"&mdash;the monotony shows up
+so glaringly against his kaleidoscope variety. I feel all
+the unutterable pettiness, the mean want of enterprise
+of my poor little purchase compared with the catholic
+fling he suggests. I feel angry with myself for being
+thus played upon, furiously angry with him. "<i>No, no!</i>"
+I say.</p>
+
+<p>"These tie-holders are new." He proceeds to show me
+his infernal tie-holders. "They prevent the tie puckering,"
+he says with his eye on mine. It's no good. "How
+much?" I say.</p>
+
+<p>This whets him to further outrage. "Look here, my
+man!" I say at last, goaded to it, "I came here for gloves.
+After endless difficulties I at last induced you to let me
+have gloves. I have also been intimidated, by the most
+shameful hints and insinuations, into buying that <i>beastly</i>
+tie-holder. I'm not a child that I don't know my own
+needs. Now <i>will</i> you let me go? How much do you
+want?"</p>
+
+<p>That usually checks him.</p>
+
+<p>The above is a fair specimen of a shopman&mdash;a favourable
+rendering. There are other things they do, but I simply
+cannot write about them because it irritates me so to think
+of them. One infuriating man&oelig;uvre is to correct your
+pronunciation. Another is to make a terrible ado about
+your name and address&mdash;even when it is quite a well-known
+name.</p>
+
+<p>After I have bought things at a shop I am quite unfit
+for social intercourse. I have to go home and fume.
+There was a time when Euphemia would come and discuss
+my purchase with a certain levity, but on one
+occasion....</p>
+
+<p>Some day these shopmen will goad me too far. It's
+almost my only consolation, indeed, to think what I am
+going to do when I do break out. There is a salesman<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+somewhere in the world, he going on his way and I on
+mine, who will, I know, prove my last straw. It may be
+he will read this&mdash;amused&mdash;recking little of the mysteries
+of fate.... Is killing a salesman murder, like killing a
+human being?</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_BOOK_OF_CURSES" id="THE_BOOK_OF_CURSES"></a>THE BOOK OF CURSES</h3>
+
+
+<p>Professor Gargoyle, you must understand, has travelled
+to and fro in the earth, culling flowers of speech: a kind
+of recording angel he is, but without any sentimental
+tears. To be plain, he studies swearing. His collection,
+however, only approaches completeness in the western
+departments of European language. Going eastward he
+found such an appalling and tropical luxuriance of these
+ornaments as to despair at last altogether of even a representative
+selection. "They do not curse," he says, "at
+door-handles, and shirt-studs, and such other trifles as will
+draw down the meagre discharge of an Occidental, but
+when they do begin&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I hired a promising-looking man at Calcutta, and after
+a month or so refused to pay his wages. He was unable
+to get at me with the big knife he carried, because the
+door was locked, so he sat on his hams outside under the
+verandah, from a quarter-past six in the morning until
+nearly ten, cursing&mdash;cursing in one steady unbroken flow&mdash;an
+astonishing spate of blasphemy. First he cursed my
+family, from me along the female line back to Eve, and
+then, having toyed with me personally for a little while,
+he started off along the line of my possible posterity to
+my remotest great-grandchildren. Then he cursed me by
+this and that. My hand ached taking it down, he was
+so very rich. It was a perfect anthology of Bengali
+blasphemy&mdash;vivid, scorching, and variegated. Not two
+alike. And then he turned about and dealt with different
+parts of me. I was really very fortunate in him. Yet
+it was depressing to think that all this was from one
+man, and that there are six hundred million people in
+Asia."
+</p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+<p>"Naturally," said the Professor in answer to my question,
+"these investigations involve a certain element of danger.
+The first condition of curse-collecting is to be unpopular,
+especially in the East, where comminatory swearing alone
+is practised, and you have to offend a man very grievously
+to get him to disgorge his treasure. In this country,
+except among ladies in comparatively humble circumstances,
+anything like this fluent, explicit, detailed, and
+sincere cursing, aimed, missile-fashion, at a personal
+enemy, is not found. It was quite common a few
+centuries ago; indeed, in the Middle Ages it was part of
+the recognised procedure. Aggrieved parties would issue
+a father's curse, an orphan's curse, and so forth, much as
+we should take out a county court summons. And it
+played a large part in ecclesiastical policy too. At one
+time the entire Church militant here on earth was
+swearing in unison, and the Latin tongue, at the Republic
+of Venice&mdash;a very splendid and imposing spectacle. It
+seems to me a pity to let these old customs die out so
+completely. I estimate that more than half these Gothic
+forms have altogether passed out of memory. There must
+have been some splendid things in Erse and Gaelic too;
+for the Celtic mind, with its more vivid sense of colour,
+its quicker transitions, and deeper emotional quality, has
+ever over-cursed the stolid Teuton. But it is all getting
+forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, your common Englishman now scarcely curses
+at all. A more colourless and conventional affair than
+what in England is called swearing one can scarcely
+imagine. It is just common talk, with some half-dozen
+orthodox bad words dropped in here and there in the
+most foolish and illogical manner. Fancy having orthodox
+unorthodox words! I remember one day getting into a
+third-class smoking carriage on the Metropolitan Railway
+about one o'clock, and finding it full of rough working men.
+Everything they said was seasoned with one incredibly
+stupid adjective, and no doubt they thought they were
+very desperate characters. At last I asked them not to
+say that word again. One forthwith asked me 'What
+the &mdash;&mdash;'&mdash;I really cannot quote these puerilities&mdash;'what<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+the idiotic <i>clich&eacute;</i> that mattered to me?' So I looked at
+him quietly over my glasses, and I began. It was a
+revelation to these poor fellows. They sat open-mouthed,
+gasping. Then those that were nearest me began to edge
+away, and at the very next station they all bundled out
+of the carriage before the train stopped, as though I had
+some infectious disease. And the thing was just a rough
+imperfect rendering of some mere commonplaces, passing
+the time of day as it were, with which the heathen of
+Aleppo used to favour the servants of the American
+missionary. Indeed," said Professor Gargoyle, "if it were
+not for women there would be nothing in England that
+one could speak of as swearing at all."</p>
+
+<p>"I say," said I, "is not that rather rough on the
+ladies?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all; they have agreed to consider certain
+words, for no very good reason, bad words. It is a pure
+convention; it has little or nothing to do with the actual
+meaning, because for every one of these bad words there
+is a paraphrase or synonym considered to be quite suitable
+for polite ears. Hence the feeblest creature can always
+produce a sensation by breaking the taboo. But women
+are learning how to undo this error of theirs now. The
+word 'damn,' for instance, is, I hear, being admitted freely
+into the boudoir and feminine conversation; it is even
+considered a rather prudish thing to object to this word.
+Now, men, especially feeble men, hate doing things that
+women do. As a consequence, men who go about saying
+'damn' are now regarded by their fellow-men as only a
+shade less effeminate than those who go about saying 'nasty'
+and 'horrid.' The subtler sex will not be long in noticing
+what has happened to this objectionable word. When
+they do they will, of course, forthwith take up all the others.
+It will be a little startling perhaps at first, but in the end
+there will be no swearing left. I have no doubt there
+will be those who will air their petty wit on the pioneer
+women, but where a martyr is wanted a woman can
+always be found to offer herself. She will clothe herself
+in cursing, like the ungodly, and perish in that Nessus
+shirt, a martyr to pure language. And then this dull cad<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+swearing&mdash;a mere unnecessary affectation of coarseness&mdash;will
+disappear. And a very good job too.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a pretty department of the subject which I
+might call grace swearing. 'Od's fish,' cried the king,
+when he saw the man climbing Salisbury spire; 'he shall
+have a patent for it&mdash;no one else shall do it.' One might
+call such little things Wardour Street curses. 'Od's
+bodkins' is a ladylike form, and 'Od's possles' a variety
+I met in the British Museum. Every gentleman once
+upon a time aspired to have his own particular grace
+curse, just as he liked to have his crest, and his bookplate,
+and his characteristic signature. It fluttered
+pleasantly into his conversation, as Mr. Whistler's butterfly
+comes into his pictures&mdash;a signature and a delight.
+'Od's butterfly!' I have sometimes thought of a little
+book of grace-words and heraldic curses, printed with
+wide margins on the best of paper. Its covers should be
+of soft red leather, stamped with little gold flowers. It
+might be made a birthday book, or a pocket diary&mdash;'Daily
+Invocations.'</p>
+
+<p>"Coming back to wrathy swearing, I must confess I
+am sorry to see it decay. It was such a thoroughly
+hygienic and moral practice. You see, if anything
+annoying happens to a man, or if any powerful emotion
+seizes him, his brain under the irritation begins to disengage
+energy at a tremendous rate. He has to use all
+his available force of control in keeping the energy in.
+Some of it will leak away into the nerves of his face and
+distort his features, some may set his tear-glands at work,
+some may travel down his vagus nerve and inhibit his
+heart's action so that he faints, or upset the blood-vessels
+in his head and give him a stroke. Or if he pens it up,
+without its reaching any of these vents, it may rise at last
+to flood-level, and you will have violent assaults, the
+breaking of furniture, 'murther' even. For all this
+energy a good flamboyant, ranting swear is Nature's outlet.
+All primitive men and most animals swear. It is an
+emotional shunt. Your cat swears at you because she
+does not want to scratch your face. And the horse,
+because he cannot swear, drops dead. So you see my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+reason for regretting the decay of this excellent and most
+wholesome practice....</p>
+
+<p>"However, I must be getting on. Just now I am
+travelling about London paying cabmen their legal fares.
+Sometimes one picks up a new variant, though much of
+it is merely stereo."</p>
+
+<p>And with that, flinging a playful curse at me, he disappeared
+at once into the tobacco smoke from which I
+had engendered him. An amusing and cheerful person
+on the whole, though I will admit his theme was a little
+undesirable.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="DUNSTONES_DEAR_LADY" id="DUNSTONES_DEAR_LADY"></a>DUNSTONE'S DEAR LADY</h3>
+
+
+<p>The story of Dunstone is so slight, so trivial in its
+cardinal incidents, such a business of cheap feathers and
+bits of ribbon on the surface, that I should hesitate to tell
+it, were it not for its Inwardness, what one might call the
+symbolism of the thing. Frankly, I do not clearly see
+what that symbolism is, but I feel it hovering in some
+indefinable way whenever I recall his case. It is one of
+those things that make a man extend his arm and twiddle
+his fingers, and say, blinking, "Like <i>that</i>, you know." So
+do not imagine for one moment that this is a shallow
+story, simply because it is painted, so to speak, not in
+heart's blood but in table claret.</p>
+
+<p>Dunstone was a strong, quiet kind of man&mdash;a man of
+conspicuous mediocrity, and rising rapidly, therefore, in
+his profession. He was immensely industrious, and a
+little given to melancholia in private life. He smoked
+rather too many cigars, and took his social occasions
+seriously. He dressed faultlessly, with a scrupulous
+elimination of style. Unlike Mr. Grant Allen's ideal man,
+he was not constitutionally a lover; indeed, he seemed
+not to like the ordinary girl at all&mdash;found her either too
+clever or too shallow, lacking a something. I don't think
+<i>he</i> knew quite what it was. Neither do I&mdash;it is a case for
+extended hand and twiddling fingers. Moreover, I don't
+think the ordinary girl took to Dunstone very much.</p>
+
+<p>He suffered, I fancy, from a kind of mental greyness;
+he was all subtle tones; the laughter of girls jarred upon
+him; foolish smartness or amiable foolishness got on his
+nerves; he detested, with equal sincerity, bright dressing,
+artistic dabbling, piety, and the glow of health. And
+when, as his confidential friend&mdash;confidential, that is, so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+far as his limits allowed&mdash;I heard that he intended to
+marry, I was really very much surprised.</p>
+
+<p>I expected something quintessential; I was surprised
+to find she was a visiting governess. Harringay, the
+artist, thought there was nothing in her, but Sackbut, the
+art critic, was inclined to admire her bones. For my own
+part, I took rather a liking to her. She was small and
+thin, and, to be frank, I think it was because she hardly
+got enough to eat&mdash;of the delicate food she needed. She
+was shabby, too, dressed in rusty mourning&mdash;she had
+recently lost her mother. But she had a sweet, low voice,
+a shrinking manner, rather a graceful carriage, I thought,
+and, though she spoke rarely, all she said was sweet and
+sane. She struck me as a refined woman in a blatant age.
+The general effect of her upon me was favourable; upon
+Dunstone it was tremendous. He lost a considerable
+proportion of his melancholia, and raved at times like a
+common man. He called her in particular his "Dear
+Lady" and his "Sweet Lady," things that I find eloquent of
+what he found in her. What that was I fancy I understand,
+and yet I cannot say it quite. One has to resort to
+the extended arm and fingers vibratile.</p>
+
+<p>Before he married her&mdash;which he did while she was still
+in half-mourning&mdash;there was anxiety about her health,
+and I understood she needed air and exercise and strengthening
+food. But she recovered rapidly after her marriage,
+her eyes grew brighter, we saw less of Sackbut's "delicious
+skeleton." And then, in the strangest way, she began to
+change. It is none of my imagining; I have heard the
+change remarked upon by half a dozen independent
+observers. Yet you would think a girl of three-and-twenty
+(as she certainly was) had attained her development
+as a woman. I have heard her compared to a winter
+bud, cased in its sombre scales, until the sun shone, and
+the warm, moist winds began to blow. I noticed first
+that the delicate outline of her cheek was filling, and
+then came the time when she reverted to colour in her
+dress.</p>
+
+<p>Her first essays were charitably received. Her years of
+struggle, her year of mourning, had no doubt dwarfed her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+powers in this direction; presently her natural good taste
+would reassert itself. But the next effort and the next
+were harder to explain. It was not the note of nervousness
+or inexperience we saw; there was an undeniable
+decision, and not a token of shame. The little black
+winter bud grew warm-coloured above, and burst suddenly
+into extravagant outlines and chromatic confusion.
+Harringay, who is a cad, first put what we were all feeling
+into words. "I've just seen Dunstone and his donah," he
+said. Clearly she was one of those rare women who
+cannot dress. And that was not all. A certain
+buoyancy, hitherto unsuspected, crept into her manner, as
+the corpuscles multiplied in her veins&mdash;an archness. She
+talked more, and threw up a spray of playfulness. And,
+with a growing energy, she began to revise the exquisite
+&aelig;sthetic balance of Dunstone's house. She even enamelled
+a chair.</p>
+
+<p>For a year or so I was in the East. When I returned
+Mrs. Dunstone amazed me. In some odd way she had
+grown, she had positively grown. She was taller, broader,
+brighter&mdash;infinitely brighter. She wore a diamond brooch
+in the afternoon. The "delicious skeleton" had vanished
+in plumpness. She moved with emphasis. Her eye&mdash;which
+glittered&mdash;met mine bravely, and she talked as one
+who would be heard. In the old days you saw nothing
+but a rare timid glance from under the pretty lids. She
+talked now of this and that, of people of "good family,"
+and the difficulty of getting a suitable governess for her
+little boy. She said she objected to meeting people "one
+would not care to invite to one's house." She swamped
+me with tea and ruled the conversation, so that Dunstone
+and I, who were once old friends, talked civil twaddle for
+the space of one hour&mdash;theatres, concerts, and assemblies
+chiefly&mdash;and then parted again. The furniture had all
+been altered&mdash;there were two "cosy nooks" in the room
+after the recipe in the <i>Born Lady</i>. It was plain to me, it
+is plain to everyone, I find, that Mrs. Dunstone is, in the
+sun of prosperity, rapidly developing an extremely florid
+vulgarity. And afterwards I discovered that she had
+forgotten her music, and evidently enjoyed her meals. Yet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+I for one can witness that five years ago there was <i>that</i>
+about her&mdash;I can only extend my arm with quivering
+digits. But it was something very sweet and dainty,
+something that made her white and thoughtful, and
+marked her off from the rest of womankind. I sometimes
+fancy it may have been an&aelig;mia in part, but it was
+certainly poverty and mourning in the main.</p>
+
+<p>You may think that this is a story of disillusionment.
+When I first heard the story, I thought so too. But, so
+far as Dunstone goes, that is not the case. It is rare that
+I see him now, but the other day we smoked two cigars
+apiece together. And in a moment of confidence he
+spoke of her. He said how anxious he felt for her health,
+called her his "Dainty Little Lady," and spoke of the
+coarseness of other women. I am afraid this is not a
+very eventful story, and yet there is <i>that</i>&mdash;&mdash; That very
+convenient gesture, an arm protruded and flickering
+fingers, conveys my meaning best. Perhaps you will
+understand.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="EUPHEMIAS_NEW_ENTERTAINMENT" id="EUPHEMIAS_NEW_ENTERTAINMENT"></a>EUPHEMIA'S NEW ENTERTAINMENT</h3>
+
+
+<p>Euphemia has great ideas of putting people at their ease,
+a thousand little devices for thawing the very stiffest
+among them with a home-like glow. Far be it from me
+to sing her praises, but I must admit that at times she is
+extremely successful in this&mdash;at times almost too
+successful. That tea-cake business, for instance. No
+doubt it's a genial expedient to make your guests toast
+his own tea-cake: down he must go upon his knees upon
+your hearthrug, and his poses will melt away like the
+dews of the morning before the rising sun. Nevertheless,
+when it comes to roasting a gallant veteran like Major
+Augustus, deliberately roasting him, in spite of the facts
+that he has served his country nobly through thirty
+irksome years of peace, and that he admires Euphemia
+with a delicate fervour&mdash;roasting him, I say, alive, as if
+he were a Strasburg goose, or suddenly affixing a delicate
+young genius to the hither end of a toasting-fork while
+he is in the midst of a really very subtle and tender
+conversation, the limits of social warmth seem to be
+approaching dangerously near. However, this scarcely
+concerns Euphemia's new entertainment.</p>
+
+<p>This new entertainment is modelling in clay. Euphemia
+tells me it is to be quite the common thing this winter. It
+is intended especially for the evening, after a little dinner.
+As the reader is aware, the evening after a little dinner
+is apt to pall. A certain placid contentment creeps over
+people. I don't know in what organ originality resides;
+but it's a curious thing, and one I must leave to the
+consideration of psychologists, that people's output of
+original remarks appears to be obstructed in some way
+after these gastronomic exercises. Then a little dinner<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+always confirms my theory of the absurdity of polygonal
+conversation. Music and songs, too, have their drawbacks,
+especially gay songs; they invariably evoke a vaporous
+melancholy. Card-playing Euphemia objects to because
+her uncle, the dean, is prominent in connection with some
+ridiculous association for the suppression of gambling;
+and in what are called "games" no rational creature
+esteeming himself an immortal soul would participate. In
+this difficulty it was that Euphemia&mdash;decided, I fancy, by
+the possession of certain really very becoming aprons&mdash;took
+up this business of clay-modelling.</p>
+
+<p>You have a lump of greyish clay and a saucer of water
+and certain small tools of wood (for which I cannot
+discover the slightest use in the world) given you, and
+Euphemia puts on a very winning bib. Then, moistening
+the clay until it acquires sufficient plasticity, and
+incidentally splashing your cuffs and coat-sleeves with an
+agreeably light tinted mud, you set to work. At first
+people are a little disgusted at the apparent dirtiness of
+the employment, and also perhaps rather diffident. The
+eldest lady says weakly deprecatory things, and the
+feeblest male is jocular after his wont. But it is remarkable
+how soon the charm of this delightful occupation
+seizes hold of you. For really the sensations of moulding
+this plastic matter into shape are wonderfully and quite
+unaccountably pleasing. It is ever so much easier than
+drawing things&mdash;"anyone can do it," as the advertisement
+people say&mdash;and the work is so much more substantial in
+its effects. Technical questions arise. In moulding
+a head, do you take a lump and fine it down, or do
+you dab on the features after the main knob of it is
+shaped?</p>
+
+<p>So soon as your guests realise the plastic possibilities
+before them, a great silence, a delicious absorption comes
+over them. Some rash person states that he is moulding
+an Apollo, or a vase, or a bust of Mr. Gladstone, or an
+elephant, or some such animal. The wiser ones go to
+work in a speculative spirit, aiming secretly at this
+perhaps, but quite willing to go on with that, if Providence
+so wills it. Buddhas are good subjects; there is a certain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+genial rotundity not difficult to attain, and the pyramidal
+build of the idol is well suited to the material. You can
+start a Buddha, and hedge to make it a loaf of bread if
+the features are unsatisfactory. For slender objects a
+skeletal substructure of bent hairpins or matches is
+advisable. The innate egotism of the human animal
+becomes very conspicuous. "His tail is too large," says
+the lady with the fish, in self-criticism. "I haven't put
+his tail on yet&mdash;that's his trunk," answers the young man
+with the elephant.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="./images/img-096.png" width="550" height="297"
+title="Clay Models" alt="Clay Models" />
+</div>
+
+<p>It's a pretty sight to see the first awakening of the
+artistic passion in your guests&mdash;the flush of discovery, the
+glow of innocent pride as the familiar features of Mr.
+Gladstone emerge from the bust of Clytie. An accidental
+stroke of the thumbnail develops new marvels of
+expression. (By the bye, it's just as well to forbid
+deliberate attempts at portraiture.) And I know no more
+becoming expression for everyone than the look of intent
+and pleasing effort&mdash;a divine touch almost&mdash;that comes
+over the common man modelling. For my own part, I
+feel a being infinitely my own superior when I get my
+fingers upon the clay. And, incidentally, how much
+pleasanter this is than writing articles&mdash;to see the work
+grow altogether under your hands; to begin with the large
+masses and finish with the details, as every artist should!
+Just to show how easy the whole thing is, I append a little
+sketch of the first work I ever did. I had had positively<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+no previous instruction. Unfortunately the left ear of the
+animal&mdash;a cat, by the bye&mdash;has fallen off. (The figure to
+the left is the back view of a Buddha.)</p>
+
+<p>However, I have said enough to show the charm of the
+new amusement. It will prove a boon to many a troubled
+hostess. The material is called modelling-clay, and one
+may buy it of any dealer in artists' materials, several
+pounds for sixpence. This has to be renewed at intervals,
+as a good deal is taken away by the more careless among
+your guests upon their clothes.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="FOR_FREEDOM_OF_SPELLING" id="FOR_FREEDOM_OF_SPELLING"></a>FOR FREEDOM OF SPELLING</h3>
+
+<p>THE DISCOVERY OF AN ART</p>
+
+
+<p>It is curious that people do not grumble more at having
+to spell correctly. Yet one may ask, Do we not a little
+over-estimate the value of orthography? This is a
+natural reflection enough when the maker of artless happy
+phrases has been ransacking the dictionary for some
+elusive wretch of a word which in the end proves to be
+not yet naturalised, or technical, or a mere local vulgarity;
+yet one does not often hear the idea canvassed in polite
+conversation. Dealers in small talk, of the less prolific
+kind, are continually falling back upon the silk hat or
+dress suit, or some rule of etiquette or other convention
+as a theme, but spelling seems to escape them. The
+suspicion seems quaint, but one may almost fancy that an
+allusion to spelling savoured a little of indelicacy. It
+must be admitted, though where the scruples come from
+would be hard to say, that there is a certain diffidence
+even here in broaching my doubts in the matter. For
+some inexplicable reason spelling has become mixed up
+with moral feeling. One cannot pretend to explain
+things in a little paper of this kind; the fact is so.
+Spelling is not appropriate or inappropriate, elegant or
+inelegant; it is right or wrong. We do not greatly blame
+a man for turn-down collars when the vogue is erect;
+nor, in these liberal days, for theological eccentricity; but
+we esteem him "Nithing" and an outcast if he but drop
+a "p" from opportunity. It is not an anecdote, but a
+scandal, if we say a man cannot spell his own name.
+There is only one thing esteemed worse before we come<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+to the deadly crimes, and that is the softening of language
+by dropping the aspirate.</p>
+
+<p>After all, it is an unorthodox age. We are all horribly
+afraid of being bourgeois, and unconventionality is the
+ideal of every respectable person. It is strange that we
+should cling so steadfastly to correct spelling. Yet again,
+one can partly understand the business, if one thinks of
+the little ways of your schoolmaster and schoolmistress.
+This sanctity of spelling is stamped upon us in our earliest
+years. The writer recalls a period of youth wherein six
+hours a week were given to the study of spelling, and four
+hours to all other religious instruction. So important is
+it, that a writer who cannot spell is almost driven to
+abandon his calling, however urgent the thing he may
+have to say, or his need of the incidentals of fame. Yet
+in the crisis of such a struggle rebellious thoughts may
+arise. Even this: Why, after all, should correct spelling
+be the one absolutely essential literary merit? For it is
+less fatal for an ambitious scribe to be as dull as Hoxton
+than to spell in diverse ways.</p>
+
+<p>Yet correct spelling of English has not been traced to
+revelation; there was no grammatical Sinai, with a
+dictionary instead of tables of stone. Indeed, we do not
+even know certainly when correct spelling began, which
+word in the language was first spelt the right way, and by
+whom. Correct spelling may have been evolved, or it
+may be the creation of some master mind. Its inventor,
+if it had an inventor, is absolutely forgotten. Thomas
+Cobbett would have invented it, but that he was born
+more than two centuries too late, poor man. All that we
+certainly know is that, contemporaneously with the rise of
+extreme Puritanism, the belief in orthography first spread
+among Elizabethan printers, and with the Hanoverian
+succession the new doctrine possessed the whole length
+and breadth of the land. At that time the world passed
+through what extension lecturers call, for no particular
+reason, the classical epoch. Nature&mdash;as, indeed, all the
+literature manuals testify&mdash;was in the remotest background
+then of human thought. The human mind, in a mood of
+the severest logic, brought everything to the touchstone<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+of an orderly reason; the conception of "correctness"
+dominated all mortal affairs. For instance, one's natural
+hair with its vagaries of rat's tails, duck's tails, errant curls,
+and baldness, gave place to an orderly wig, or was at least
+decently powdered. The hoop remedied the deficiencies
+of the feminine form, and the gardener clipped his yews
+into respectability. All poetry was written to one
+measure in those days, and a Royal Academy with a lady
+member was inaugurated that art might become at least
+decent. Dictionaries began. The crowning glory of
+Hanoverian literature was a Great Lexicographer.</p>
+
+<p>In those days it was believed that the spelling of every
+English word had been settled for all time. Thence to
+the present day, though the severities then inaugurated,
+so far as metre and artistic composition are concerned,
+been generously relaxed&mdash;though we have had a
+Whistler, a Walt Whitman, and a Wagner&mdash;the rigours
+of spelling have continued unabated. There is just one
+right way of spelling, and all others are held to be not
+simply inelegant or undesirable, but wrong; and unorthodox
+spelling, like original morality, goes hand in hand with
+shame.</p>
+
+<p>Yet even at the risk of shocking the religious convictions
+of some, may not one ask whether spelling is in truth a
+matter of right and wrong at all? Might it not rather
+be an art? It is too much to advocate the indiscriminate
+sacking of the alphabet, but yet it seems plausible that
+there is a happy medium between a reckless debauch
+of errant letters and our present dead rigidity. For some
+words at anyrate may there not be sometimes one way
+of spelling a little happier, sometimes another? We do
+something of this sort even now with our "phantasy" and
+"fantasie," and we might do more. How one would spell
+this word or that would become, if this latitude were conceded,
+a subtle anxiety of the literary exquisite. People
+are scarcely prepared to realise what shades of meaning
+may be got by such a simple device. Let us take a simple
+instance. You write, let us say, to all your cousins, many
+of your friends, and even, it may be, to this indifferent
+intimate and that familiar enemy, "My dear So-and-so."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+But at times you feel even as you write, sometimes, that
+there is something too much and sometimes something
+lacking. You may even get so far in the right way
+occasionally as to write, "My dr. So-and-so," when your
+heart is chill. And people versed in the arts of social
+intercourse know the subtle insult of misspelling a
+person's name, or flicking it off flippantly with a mere
+waggling wipe of the pen. But these are mere
+beginnings.</p>
+
+<p>Let the reader take a pen in hand and sit down and
+write, "My very dear wife." Clean, cold, and correct
+this is, speaking of orderly affection, settled and stereotyped
+long ago. In such letters is butcher's meat also
+"very dear." Try now, "Migh verrie deare Wyfe." Is
+it not immediately infinitely more soft and tender? Is
+there not something exquisitely pleasant in lingering over
+those redundant letters, leaving each word, as it were,
+with a reluctant caress? Such spelling is a soft, domestic,
+lovingly wasteful use of material. Or, again, if you have
+no wife, or object to an old-fashioned conjugal tenderness,
+try "Mye owne sweete dearrest Marrie." There is the
+tremble of a tenderness no mere arrangement of trim
+everyday letters can express in those double <i>r's</i>. "Sweete"
+my ladie must be; sweet! why pump-water and inferior
+champagne, spirits of nitrous ether and pancreatic juice
+are "sweet." For my own part I always spell so, with
+lots of f's and g's and such like tailey, twirley, loopey things,
+when my heart is in the tender vein. And I hold that a
+man who will not do so, now he has been shown how to
+do it, is, in plain English, neither more nor less than a prig.
+The advantages of a varied spelling of names are very
+great. Industrious, rather than intelligent, people have
+given not a little time, and such minds as they have, to
+the discussion of the right spelling of our great poet's
+name. But he himself never dreamt of tying himself
+down to one presentation of himself, and was&mdash;we have
+his hand for it&mdash;Shakespeare, Shakspear, Shakespear,
+Shakspeare, and so forth, as the mood might be.
+It would be almost as reasonable to debate whether
+Shakespeare smiled or frowned. My dear friend Sim<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>mongues
+is the same. He is "Sims," a mere slash of the
+pen, to those he scorns, Simmonds or Simmongs to his
+familiars, and Simmons, A.T. Simmons, Esq., to all
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>From such mere introductory departures from precision,
+such petty escapades as these, we would we might seduce
+the reader into an utter debauch of spelling. But a
+sudden M&aelig;nad dance of the letters on the page, gleeful
+and iridescent spelling, a wild rush and procession of
+howling vowels and clattering consonants, might startle
+the half-won reader back into orthodoxy. Besides, there
+is another reader&mdash;the printer's reader&mdash;to consider. For
+if an author let his wit run to these matters, he must
+write elaborate marginal exhortations to this authority,
+begging his mercy, to let the little flowers of spelling
+alone. Else the plough of that Philistine's uniformity
+will utterly root them out.</p>
+
+<p>Such high art of spelling as is thus hinted at is an art
+that has still to gather confidence and brave the light of
+publicity. A few, indeed, practise it secretly for love&mdash;in
+letters and on spare bits of paper. But, for the most
+part, people do not know that there is so much as an art
+of spelling possible; the tyranny of orthography lies so
+heavily on the land. Your common editors and their
+printers are a mere orthodox spelling police, and at the
+least they rigorously blot out all the delightful frolics
+of your artist in spelling before his writings reach the
+public eye. But commonly, as I have proved again and
+again, the slightest lapse into rococo spelling is sufficient
+to secure the rejection of a manuscript without further
+ado.</p>
+
+<p>And to end,&mdash;a word about Phonographers. It may
+be that my title has led the reader to anticipate some
+mention of these before. They are a kind of religious
+sect, a heresy from the orthodox spelling. They bind
+one another by their mysteries and a five-shilling subscription
+in a "soseiti to introduis an impruvd method
+of spelinj." They come across the artistic vision, they
+and their Soseiti, with an altogether indefinable offence.
+Perhaps the essence of it is the indescribable meanness<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+of their motive. For this phonography really amounts
+to a study of the cheapest way of spelling words. These
+phonographers are sweaters of the Queen's English, living
+meanly on the selvage of honest mental commerce by
+clipping the coin of thought. But enough of them. They
+are mentioned here only to be disavowed. They would
+substitute one narrow orthodoxy for another, and I
+would unfold the banner of freedom. Spell, my brethren,
+as you will! Awake, arise, O language living in chains;
+let Butter's spelling be our Bastille! So with a prophetic
+vision of liberated words pouring out of the
+dungeons of a spelling-book, this plea for freedom concludes.
+What trivial arguments there are for a uniform
+spelling I must leave the reader to discover. This is no
+place to carp against the liberation I foresee, with the
+glow of the dawn in my eyes.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="INCIDENTAL_THOUGHTS_ON_A_BALD_HEAD" id="INCIDENTAL_THOUGHTS_ON_A_BALD_HEAD"></a>INCIDENTAL THOUGHTS ON A BALD HEAD</h3>
+
+
+<p>I was asked to go, quite suddenly, and found myself there
+before I had time to think of what it might be. I understood
+her to say it was a meeting of some "Sunday
+society," some society that tried to turn the Sabbath
+from a day of woe to a day of rejoicing. "St. George's
+Hall, Langham Place," a cab, and there we were. I
+thought they would be picturesque Pagans. But the
+entertainment was the oddest it has ever been my lot
+to see, a kind of mystery. The place was dark, except
+for a big circle of light on a screen, and a dismal man
+with a long stick was talking about the effects of alcohol
+on your muscles. He talked and talked, and people went
+to sleep all about us. Euphemia's face looked so very
+pretty in the dim light that I tried to talk to her and
+hold her hand, but she only said "Ssh!" And then
+they began showing pictures on the screen&mdash;the most
+shocking things!&mdash;stomachs, and all that kind of thing.
+They went on like that for an hour, and then there was
+a lot of thumping with umbrellas, and they turned the
+lights up and we went home. Curious way of spending
+Sunday afternoon, is it not?</p>
+
+<p>But you may imagine I had a dismal time all that
+hour. I understood the people about me were Sceptics,
+the kind of people who don't believe things&mdash;a singular
+class, and, I am told, a growing one. These excellent
+people, it seems, have conscientious objections to going
+to chapel or church, but at the same time the devotional
+habit of countless generations of pious forerunners is
+strong in them. Consequently they have invented things
+like these lectures to go to, with a professor instead of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+a priest, and a lantern slide of a stomach by way of
+altar-piece; and alcohol they make their Devil, and their
+god is Hygiene&mdash;a curious and instructive case of mental
+inertia. I understand, too, there are several other temples
+of this Cult in London&mdash;South Place Chapel and Essex
+Hall, for instance, where they worship the Spirit of the
+Innermost. But the thing that struck me so oddly was
+the number of bald heads glimmering faintly in the
+reflected light from the lantern circle. And that set me
+thinking upon a difficulty I have never been able to
+surmount.</p>
+
+<p>You see these people, and lots of other people, too,
+believe in a thing they call Natural Selection. They
+think, as part of that belief, that men are descended
+from hairy simian ancestors; assert that even a hundred
+thousand years ago the ancestor was hairy&mdash;hairy, heavy,
+and almost as much a brute as if he lived in Mr. Arthur
+Morrison's Whitechapel. For my own part I think it a
+pretty theory, and would certainly accept it were it not
+for one objection. The thing I cannot understand is how
+our ancestor lost that hair. I see no reason why he
+should not have kept his hair on. According to the
+theory of natural selection, materially favourable variations
+survive, unfavourable disappear; the only way in
+which the loss is to be accounted for is by explaining it
+as advantageous; but where is the advantage of losing
+your hair? The disadvantages appear to me to be innumerable.
+A thick covering of hair, like that of a
+Capuchin monkey, would be an invaluable protection
+against sudden changes of temperature, far better than
+any clothing can be. Had I that, for instance, I should
+be rid of the perpetual cold in the head that so disfigures
+my life; and the multitudes who die annually of chills,
+bronchitis, and consumption, and most of those who suffer
+from rheumatic pains, neuralgia, and so forth, would not
+so die and suffer. And in the past, when clothing was
+less perfect and firing a casual commodity, the disadvantages
+of losing hair were all the greater. In very hot
+countries hair is perhaps even more important in saving
+the possessor from the excessive glare of the sun. Before<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+the invention of the hat, thick hair on the head at least
+was absolutely essential to save the owner of the skull
+from sunstroke. That, perhaps, explains why the hair
+has been retained there, and why it is going now that we
+have hats, but it certainly does not explain why it has
+gone from the rest of the body.</p>
+
+<p>One&mdash;remarkably weak&mdash;explanation has been propounded:
+an appeal to our belief in human vanity. He
+picked it out by the roots, because he thought he was
+prettier without. But that is no reason at all. Suppose
+he did, it would not affect his children. Professor
+Weismann has at least convinced scientific people of
+this: that the characters acquired by a parent are rarely,
+if ever, transmitted to its offspring. An individual given
+to such wanton denudation would simply be at a disadvantage
+with his decently covered fellows, would fall
+behind in the race of life, and perish with his kind.
+Besides, if man has been at such pains to uncover his
+skin, why have quite a large number of the most respected
+among us such a passionate desire to have it covered up
+again?</p>
+
+<p>Yet that is the only attempted explanation I have
+ever come upon, and the thing has often worried me.
+I think it is just as probably a change in dietary. I have
+noticed that most of your vegetarians are shock-headed,
+ample-bearded men, and I have heard the Ancestor was
+vegetarian. Or it may be, I sometimes fancy, a kind of
+inherent disposition on the part of your human animal
+to dwindle. That came back in my memory vividly as
+I looked at the long rows of Sceptics, typical Advanced
+people, and marked their glistening crania. I recalled
+other losses. Here is Humanity, thought I, growing
+hairless, growing bald, growing toothless, unemotional,
+irreligious, losing the end joint of the little toe, dwindling
+in its osseous structures, its jawbone and brow ridges,
+losing all the full, rich curvatures of its primordial
+beauty.</p>
+
+<p>It seems almost like what the scientific people call a
+Law. And by strenuous efforts the creature just keeps
+pace with his losses&mdash;devises clothes, wigs, artificial teeth,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+paddings, shoes&mdash;what civilised being could use his bare
+feet for his ordinary locomotion? Imagine him on a
+furze-sprinkled golf links. Then stays, an efficient substitute
+for the effete feminine backbone. So the thing
+goes on. Long ago his superficies became artificial, and
+now the human being shrinks like a burning cigar, and
+the figure he has abandoned remains distended with
+artificial ashes, dead dry protections against the exposures
+he so unaccountably fears. Will he go on shrinking, I
+wonder?&mdash;become at last a mere lurking atomy in his
+own recesses, a kind of hermit crab, the bulk of him a
+complex mechanism, a thing of rags and tatters and
+papier-mach&eacute;, stolen from the earth and the plant-world
+and his fellow beasts? And at last may he not disappear
+altogether, none missing him, and a democracy of honest
+machinery, neatly clad and loaded up with sound principles
+of action, walk to and fro in a regenerate world?
+Thus it was my mind went dreaming in St. George's
+Hall. But presently, as I say, came the last word about
+stomachs, and the bald men woke up, rattled their
+umbrellas, said it was vastly interesting, and went toddling
+off home in an ecstasy of advanced Liberalism. And
+we two returned to the place whence we came.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="OF_A_BOOK_UNWRITTEN" id="OF_A_BOOK_UNWRITTEN"></a>OF A BOOK UNWRITTEN</h3>
+
+
+<p>Accomplished literature is all very well in its way, no
+doubt, but much more fascinating to the contemplative
+man are the books that have not been written. These
+latter are no trouble to hold; there are no pages to turn
+over. One can read them in bed on sleepless nights
+without a candle. Turning to another topic, primitive
+man in the works of the descriptive anthropologist is
+certainly a very entertaining and quaint person, but the
+man of the future, if we only had the facts, would appeal
+to us more strongly. Yet where are the books? As
+Ruskin has said somewhere, <i>&agrave; propos</i> of Darwin, it is not
+what man has been, but what he will be, that should
+interest us.</p>
+
+<p>The contemplative man in his easy-chair, pondering
+this saying, suddenly beholds in the fire, through the
+blue haze of his pipe, one of these great unwritten
+volumes. It is large in size, heavy in lettering, seemingly
+by one Professor Holzkopf, presumably Professor at
+Weissnichtwo. "The Necessary Characters of the Man
+of the Remote Future deduced from the Existing Stream
+of Tendency" is the title. The worthy Professor is
+severely scientific in his method, and deliberate and
+cautious in his deductions, the contemplative man discovers
+as he pursues his theme, and yet the conclusions
+are, to say the least, remarkable. We must figure the
+excellent Professor expanding the matter at great length,
+voluminously technical, but the contemplative man&mdash;since
+he has access to the only copy&mdash;is clearly at liberty
+to make such extracts and abstracts as he chooses for the
+unscientific reader. Here, for instance, is something of
+practicable lucidity that he considers admits of quotation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+"The theory of evolution," writes the Professor, "is
+now universally accepted by zoologists and botanists, and
+it is applied unreservedly to man. Some question, indeed,
+whether it fits his soul, but all agree it accounts for his
+body. Man, we are assured, is descended from ape-like
+ancestors, moulded by circumstances into men, and these
+apes again were derived from ancestral forms of a lower
+order, and so up from the primordial protoplasmic jelly.
+Clearly then, man, unless the order of the universe has
+come to an end, will undergo further modification in the
+future, and at last cease to be man, giving rise to some
+other type of animated being. At once the fascinating
+question arises, What will this being be? Let us consider
+for a little the plastic influences at work upon our species.</p>
+
+<p>"Just as the bird is the creature of the wing, and is all
+moulded and modified to flying, and just as the fish is the
+creature that swims, and has had to meet the inflexible
+conditions of a problem in hydrodynamics, so man is the
+creature of the brain; he will live by intelligence, and not
+by physical strength, if he live at all. So that much that
+is purely 'animal' about him is being, and must be,
+beyond all question, suppressed in his ultimate development.
+Evolution is no mechanical tendency making for
+perfection, according to the ideas current in the year of
+grace 1897; it is simply the continual adaptation of
+plastic life, for good or evil, to the circumstances that
+surround it.... We notice this decay of the animal part
+around us now, in the loss of teeth and hair, in the
+dwindling hands and feet of men, in their smaller jaws,
+and slighter mouths and ears. Man now does by wit and
+machinery and verbal agreement what he once did by
+bodily toil; for once he had to catch his dinner, capture
+his wife, run away from his enemies, and continually
+exercise himself, for love of himself, to perform these
+duties well. But now all this is changed. Cabs, trains,
+trams, render speed unnecessary, the pursuit of food
+becomes easier; his wife is no longer hunted, but rather,
+in view of the crowded matrimonial market, seeks him
+out. One needs wits now to live, and physical activity
+is a drug, a snare even; it seeks artificial outlets, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+overflows in games. Athleticism takes up time and
+cripples a man in his competitive examinations, and in
+business. So is your fleshly man handicapped against
+his subtler brother. He is unsuccessful in life, does not
+marry. The better adapted survive."</p>
+
+<p>The coming man, then, will clearly have a larger brain,
+and a slighter body than the present. But the Professor
+makes one exception to this. "The human hand, since it
+is the teacher and interpreter of the brain, will become
+constantly more powerful and subtle as the rest of the
+musculature dwindles."</p>
+
+<p>Then in the physiology of these children of men, with
+their expanding brains, their great sensitive hands and
+diminishing bodies, great changes were necessarily worked.
+"We see now," says the Professor, "in the more intellectual
+sections of humanity an increasing sensitiveness to
+stimulants, a growing inability to grapple with such a
+matter as alcohol, for instance. No longer can men drink
+a bottleful of port; some cannot drink tea; it is too
+exciting for their highly-wrought nervous systems. The
+process will go on, and the Sir Wilfrid Lawson of some
+near generation may find it his duty and pleasure to make
+the silvery spray of his wisdom tintinnabulate against the
+tea-tray. These facts lead naturally to the comprehension
+of others. Fresh raw meat was once a dish for a king.
+Now refined persons scarcely touch meat unless it is
+cunningly disguised. Again, consider the case of turnips;
+the raw root is now a thing almost uneatable, but once
+upon a time a turnip must have been a rare and fortunate
+find, to be torn up with delirious eagerness and devoured
+in ecstasy. The time will come when the change will
+affect all the other fruits of the earth. Even now, only
+the young of mankind eat apples raw&mdash;the young always
+preserving ancestral characteristics after their disappearance
+in the adult. Some day even boys will regard apples
+without emotion. The boy of the future, one must
+believe, will gaze on an apple with the same unspeculative
+languor with which he now regards a flint"&mdash;in the
+absence of a cat.</p>
+
+<p>"Furthermore, fresh chemical discoveries came into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+action as modifying influences upon men. In the prehistoric
+period even, man's mouth had ceased to be an
+instrument for grasping food; it is still growing continually
+less prehensile, his front teeth are smaller, his lips thinner
+and less muscular; he has a new organ, a mandible not of
+irreparable tissue, but of bone and steel&mdash;a knife and fork.
+There is no reason why things should stop at partial artificial
+division thus afforded; there is every reason, on the
+contrary, to believe my statement that some cunning
+exterior mechanism will presently masticate and insalivate
+his dinner, relieve his diminishing salivary glands and
+teeth, and at last altogether abolish them."</p>
+
+<p>Then what is not needed disappears. What use is
+there for external ears, nose, and brow ridges now? The
+two latter once protected the eye from injury in conflict
+and in falls, but in these days we keep on our legs, and at
+peace. Directing his thoughts in this way, the reader
+may presently conjure up a dim, strange vision of the
+latter-day face: "Eyes large, lustrous, beautiful, soulful;
+above them, no longer separated by rugged brow ridges,
+is the top of the head, a glistening, hairless dome, terete
+and beautiful; no craggy nose rises to disturb by its
+unmeaning shadows the symmetry of that calm face, no
+vestigial ears project; the mouth is a small, perfectly
+round aperture, toothless and gumless, jawless, unanimal,
+no futile emotions disturbing its roundness as it lies, like
+the harvest moon or the evening star, in the wide firmament
+of face." Such is the face the Professor beholds in
+the future.</p>
+
+<p>Of course parallel modifications will also affect the body
+and limbs. "Every day so many hours and so much
+energy are required for digestion; a gross torpidity, a
+carnal lethargy, seizes on mortal men after dinner. This
+may and can be avoided. Man's knowledge of organic
+chemistry widens daily. Already he can supplement the
+gastric glands by artificial devices. Every doctor who
+administers physic implies that the bodily functions may
+be artificially superseded. We have pepsine, pancreatine,
+artificial gastric acid&mdash;I know not what like mixtures. Why,
+then, should not the stomach be ultimately superannuated<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+altogether? A man who could not only leave his dinner
+to be cooked, but also leave it to be masticated and
+digested, would have vast social advantages over his food-digesting
+fellow. This is, let me remind you here, the
+calmest, most passionless, and scientific working out of the
+future forms of things from the data of the present. At
+this stage the following facts may perhaps stimulate your
+imagination. There can be no doubt that many of the
+Arthropods, a division of animals more ancient and even
+now more prevalent than the Vertebrata, have undergone
+more phylogenetic modification"&mdash;a beautiful phrase&mdash;"than
+even the most modified of vertebrated animals.
+Simple forms like the lobsters display a primitive structure
+parallel with that of the fishes. However, in such a form
+as the degraded 'Chondracanthus,' the structure has
+diverged far more widely from its original type than in
+man. Among some of these most highly modified
+crustaceans the whole of the alimentary canal&mdash;that is,
+all the food-digesting and food-absorbing parts&mdash;form a
+useless solid cord: the animal is nourished&mdash;it is a
+parasite&mdash;by absorption of the nutritive fluid in which it
+swims. Is there any absolute impossibility in supposing
+man to be destined for a similar change; to imagine him
+no longer dining, with unwieldy paraphernalia of servants
+and plates, upon food queerly dyed and distorted, but
+nourishing himself in elegant simplicity by immersion in
+a tub of nutritive fluid?</p>
+
+<p>"There grows upon the impatient imagination a
+building, a dome of crystal, across the translucent surface
+of which flushes of the most glorious and pure prismatic
+colours pass and fade and change. In the centre of this
+transparent chameleon-tinted dome is a circular white
+marble basin filled with some clear, mobile, amber liquid,
+and in this plunge and float strange beings. Are they
+birds?</p>
+
+<p>"They are the descendants of man&mdash;at dinner. Watch
+them as they hop on their hands&mdash;a method of progression
+advocated already by Bjornsen&mdash;about the pure white
+marble floor. Great hands they have, enormous brains,
+soft, liquid, soulful eyes. Their whole muscular system,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+their legs, their abdomens, are shrivelled to nothing, a
+dangling, degraded pendant to their minds."</p>
+
+<p>The further visions of the Professor are less alluring.</p>
+
+<p>"The animals and plants die away before men, except
+such as he preserves for his food or delight, or such as
+maintain a precarious footing about him as commensals
+and parasites. These vermin and pests must succumb
+sooner or later to his untiring inventiveness and incessantly
+growing discipline. When he learns (the
+chemists are doubtless getting towards the secret now) to
+do the work of chlorophyll without the plant, then his
+necessity for other animals and plants upon the earth will
+disappear. Sooner or later, where there is no power of
+resistance and no necessity, there comes extinction. In
+the last days man will be alone on the earth, and his food
+will be won by the chemist from the dead rocks and the
+sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;one may learn the full reason in that explicit
+and painfully right book, the <i>Data of Ethics</i>&mdash;the
+irrational fellowship of man will give place to an intellectual
+co-operation, and emotion fall within the scheme
+of reason. Undoubtedly it is a long time yet, but a long
+time is nothing in the face of eternity, and every man
+who dares think of these things must look eternity in the
+face."</p>
+
+<p>Then the earth is ever radiating away heat into space,
+the Professor reminds us. And so at last comes a vision
+of earthly cherubim, hopping heads, great unemotional
+intelligences, and little hearts, fighting together perforce
+and fiercely against the cold that grips them tighter and
+tighter. For the world is cooling&mdash;slowly and inevitably
+it grows colder as the years roll by. "We must imagine
+these creatures," says the Professor, "in galleries and
+laboratories deep down in the bowels of the earth. The
+whole world will be snow-covered and piled with ice; all
+animals, all vegetation vanished, except this last branch
+of the tree of life. The last men have gone even deeper,
+following the diminishing heat of the planet, and vast
+metallic shafts and ventilators make way for the air they
+need."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So with a glimpse of these human tadpoles, in their
+deep close gallery, with their boring machinery ringing
+away, and artificial lights glaring and casting black
+shadows, the Professor's horoscope concludes. Humanity
+in dismal retreat before the cold, changed beyond recognition.
+Yet the Professor is reasonable enough, his facts are
+current science, his methods orderly. The contemplative
+man shivers at the prospect, starts up to poke the fire,
+and the whole of this remarkable book that is not written
+vanishes straightway in the smoke of his pipe. This is
+the great advantage of this unwritten literature: there is
+no bother in changing the books. The contemplative
+man consoles himself for the destiny of the species with
+the lost portion of Kubla Khan.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_EXTINCTION_OF_MAN" id="THE_EXTINCTION_OF_MAN"></a>THE EXTINCTION OF MAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>It is part of the excessive egotism of the human animal
+that the bare idea of its extinction seems incredible to it.
+"A world without <i>us</i>!" it says, as a heady young
+Cephalaspis might have said it in the old Silurian sea.
+But since the Cephalaspis and the Coccost&euml;us many a fine
+animal has increased and multiplied upon the earth,
+lorded it over land or sea without a rival, and passed at
+last into the night. Surely it is not so unreasonable to
+ask why man should be an exception to the rule. From
+the scientific standpoint at least any reason for such
+exception is hard to find.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt man is undisputed master at the present time&mdash;at
+least of most of the land surface; but so it has been
+before with other animals. Let us consider what light
+geology has to throw upon this. The great land and sea
+reptiles of the Mesozoic period, for instance, seem to have
+been as secure as humanity is now in their pre-eminence.
+But they passed away and left no descendants when the
+new orders of the mammals emerged from their obscurity.
+So, too, the huge Titanotheria of the American continent,
+and all the powerful mammals of Pleistocene South
+America, the sabre-toothed lion, for instance, and the
+Machrauchenia suddenly came to a finish when they were
+still almost at the zenith of their rule. <i>And in no case
+does the record of the fossils show a really dominant species
+succeeded by its own descendants</i>. What has usually
+happened in the past appears to be the emergence of some
+type of animal hitherto rare and unimportant, and the
+extinction, not simply of the previously ruling species,
+but of most of the forms that are at all closely related to
+it. Sometimes, indeed, as in the case of the extinct giants<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+of South America, they vanished without any considerable
+rivals, victims of pestilence, famine, or, it may be, of that
+cumulative inefficiency that comes of a too undisputed
+life. So that the analogy of geology, at anyrate, is
+against this too acceptable view of man's certain tenure
+of the earth for the next few million years or so.</p>
+
+<p>And, after all, even now man is by no means such a
+master of the kingdoms of life as he is apt to imagine.
+The sea, that mysterious nursery of living things, is for
+all practical purposes beyond his control. The low-water
+mark is his limit. Beyond that he may do a little with
+seine and dredge, murder a few million herrings a year as
+they come in to spawn, butcher his fellow air-breather,
+the whale, or haul now and then an unlucky king-crab or
+strange sea-urchin out of the deep water, in the name of
+science; but the life of the sea as a whole knows him not,
+plays out its slow drama of change and development
+unheeding him, and may in the end, in mere idle sport,
+throw up some new terrestrial denizens, some new
+competitor for space to live in and food to live upon, that
+will sweep him and all his little contrivances out of
+existence, as certainly and inevitably as he has swept
+away auk, bison, and dodo during the last two hundred
+years.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, there are the Crustacea. As a group the
+crabs and lobsters are confined below the high-water
+mark. But experiments in air-breathing are no doubt in
+progress in this group&mdash;we already have tropical land-crabs&mdash;and
+as far as we know there is no reason why in
+the future these creatures should not increase in size and
+terrestrial capacity. In the past we have the evidence of
+the fossil <i>Paradoxides</i> that creatures of this kind may at
+least attain a length of six feet, and, considering their
+intense pugnacity, a crab of such dimensions would be as
+formidable a creature as one could well imagine. And
+their amphibious capacity would give them an advantage
+against us such as at present is only to be found in the
+case of the alligator or crocodile. If we imagine a shark
+that could raid out upon the land, or a tiger that could
+take refuge in the sea, we should have a fair suggestion of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+what a terrible monster a large predatory crab might
+prove. And so far as zoological science goes we must, at
+least, admit that such a creature is an evolutionary
+possibility.</p>
+
+<p>Then, again, the order of the Cephalopods, to which
+belong the cuttle-fish and the octopus (sacred to Victor
+Hugo), may be, for all we can say to the contrary, an
+order with a future. Their kindred, the Gastropods,
+have, in the case of the snail and slug, learnt the trick of
+air-breathing. And not improbably there are even now
+genera of this order that have escaped the naturalist, or
+even well-known genera whose possibilities in growth
+and dietary are still unknown. Suppose some day a
+specimen of a new species is caught off the coast of Kent.
+It excites remark at a Royal Society soir&eacute;e, engenders a
+Science Note or so, "A Huge Octopus!" and in the next
+year or so three or four other specimens come to hand,
+and the thing becomes familiar. "Probably a new and
+larger variety of <i>Octopus</i> so-and-so, hitherto supposed to
+be tropical," says Professor Gargoyle, and thinks he has
+disposed of it. Then conceive some mysterious boating
+accidents and deaths while bathing. A large animal of
+this kind coming into a region of frequent wrecks might
+so easily acquire a preferential taste for human nutriment,
+just as the Colorado beetle acquired a new taste for the
+common potato and gave up its old food-plants some years
+ago. Then perhaps a school or pack or flock of <i>Octopus
+gigas</i> would be found busy picking the sailors off a stranded
+ship, and then in the course of a few score years it might
+begin to stroll up the beaches and batten on excursionists.
+Soon it would be a common feature of the watering-places&mdash;possibly
+at last commoner than excursionists. Suppose
+such a creature were to appear&mdash;and it is, we repeat, a
+possibility, if perhaps a remote one&mdash;how could it be
+fought against? Something might be done by torpedoes;
+but, so far as our past knowledge goes, man has no means
+of seriously diminishing the numbers of any animal of the
+most rudimentary intelligence that made its fastness in
+the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Even on land it is possible to find creatures that with a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+little modification might become excessively dangerous to
+the human ascendency. Most people have read of the
+migratory ants of Central Africa, against which no man
+can stand. On the march they simply clear out whole
+villages, drive men and animals before them in headlong
+rout, and kill and eat every living creature they can
+capture. One wonders why they have not already spread
+the area of their devastations. But at present no doubt
+they have their natural checks, of ant-eating birds, or
+what not. In the near future it may be that the
+European immigrant, as he sets the balance of life swinging
+in his vigorous manner, may kill off these ant-eating
+animals, or otherwise unwittingly remove the checks that
+now keep these terrible little pests within limits. And
+once they begin to spread in real earnest, it is hard to see
+how their advance could be stopped. A world devoured
+by ants seems incredible now, simply because it is not
+within our experience; but a naturalist would have a dull
+imagination who could not see in the numerous species
+of ants, and in their already high intelligence, far more
+possibility of strange developments than we have in the
+solitary human animal. And no doubt the idea of the
+small and feeble organism of man, triumphant and omnipresent,
+would have seemed equally incredible to an
+intelligent mammoth or a pal&aelig;olithic cave bear.</p>
+
+<p>And, finally, there is always the prospect of a new
+disease. As yet science has scarcely touched more than
+the fringe of the probabilities associated with the minute
+fungi that constitute our zymotic diseases. But the bacilli
+have no more settled down into their final quiescence
+than have men; like ourselves, they are adapting themselves
+to new conditions and acquiring new powers. The
+plagues of the Middle Ages, for instance, seem to have
+been begotten of a strange bacillus engendered under
+conditions that sanitary science, in spite of its panacea
+of drainage, still admits are imperfectly understood, and
+for all we know even now we may be quite unwittingly
+evolving some new and more terrible plague&mdash;a plague
+that will not take ten or twenty or thirty per cent., as
+plagues have done in the past, but the entire hundred.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>No; man's complacent assumption of the future is too
+confident. We think, because things have been easy for
+mankind as a whole for a generation or so, we are going
+on to perfect comfort and security in the future. We
+think that we shall always go to work at ten and leave
+off at four, and have dinner at seven for ever and ever.
+But these four suggestions, out of a host of others, must
+surely do a little against this complacency. Even now,
+for all we can tell, the coming terror may be crouching
+for its spring and the fall of humanity be at hand. In
+the case of every other predominant animal the world has
+ever seen, I repeat, the hour of its complete ascendency
+has been the eve of its entire overthrow. But if some
+poor story-writing man ventures to figure this sober
+probability in a tale, not a reviewer in London but will
+tell him his theme is the utterly impossible. And, when
+the thing happens, one may doubt if even then one will
+get the recognition one deserves.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_WRITING_OF_ESSAYS" id="THE_WRITING_OF_ESSAYS"></a>THE WRITING OF ESSAYS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The art of the essayist is so simple, so entirely free from
+canons of criticism, and withal so delightful, that one
+must needs wonder why all men are not essayists.
+Perhaps people do not know how easy it is. Or perhaps
+beginners are misled. Rightly taught it may be learnt
+in a brief ten minutes or so, what art there is in it. And
+all the rest is as easy as wandering among woodlands on
+a bright morning in the spring.</p>
+
+<p>Then sit you down if you would join us, taking paper,
+pens, and ink; and mark this, your pen is a matter of
+vital moment. For every pen writes its own sort of
+essay, and pencils also after their kind. The ink perhaps
+may have its influence too, and the paper; but paramount
+is the pen. This, indeed, is the fundamental
+secret of essay-writing. Wed any man to his proper
+pen, and the delights of composition and the birth of
+an essay are assured. Only many of us wander through
+the earth and never meet with her&mdash;futile and lonely
+men.</p>
+
+<p>And, of all pens, your quill for essays that are literature.
+There is a subtle informality, a delightful easiness,
+perhaps even a faint immorality essentially literary, about
+the quill. The quill is rich in suggestion and quotation.
+There are quills that would quote you Montaigne and
+Horace in the hands of a trades-union delegate. And
+those quirky, idle noises this pen makes are delightful,
+and would break your easy fluency with wit. All the
+classical essayists wrote with a quill, and Addison used
+the most expensive kind the Government purchased.
+And the beginning of the inferior essay was the dawn of
+the cheap steel pen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The quill nibs they sell to fit into ordinary pen-holders
+are no true quills at all, lacking dignity, and may even
+lead you into the New Humour if you trust overmuch to
+their use. After a proper quill commend me to a
+stumpy BB pencil; you get less polish and broader
+effects, but you are still doing good literature. Sometimes
+the work is close&mdash;Mr. George Meredith, for
+instance, is suspected of a soft pencil&mdash;and always it is
+blunter than quill work and more terse. With a hard
+pencil no man can write anything but a graceless style&mdash;a
+kind of east wind air it gives&mdash;and smile you cannot.
+So that it is often used for serious articles in the
+half-crown reviews.</p>
+
+<p>There follows the host of steel pens. That bald, clear,
+scientific style, all set about with words like "evolution"
+and "environment," which aims at expressing its meaning
+with precision and an exemplary economy of words, is
+done with fine steel nibs&mdash;twelve a penny at any
+stationer's. The J pen to the lady novelist, and the
+stylograph to the devil&mdash;your essayist must not touch
+the things. So much for the pen. If you cannot
+write essays easily, that is where the hitch comes in.
+Get a box of a different kind of pen and begin again,
+and so on again and again until despair or joy arrests
+you.</p>
+
+<p>As for a typewriter, you could no more get an essay
+out of a typewriter than you could play a sonata upon
+its keys. No essay was ever written with a typewriter
+yet, nor ever will be. Besides its impossibility, the
+suggestion implies a brutal disregard of the division of
+labour by which we live and move and have our being.
+If the essayist typewrite, the unemployed typewriter, who
+is commonly a person of superior education and capacity,
+might take to essays, and where is your living then?
+One might as reasonably start at once with the Linotype
+and print one's wit and humour straight away. And
+taking the invasion of other trades one step further one
+might, after an attempt to sell one's own newspaper, even
+get to the pitch of having to read it oneself. No; even
+essayists must be reasonable. If its mechanical clitter-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>clatter
+did not render composition impossible, the typewriter
+would still be beneath the honour of a literary
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Then for the paper. The luxurious, expensive, small-sized
+cream-laid note is best, since it makes your essay
+choice and compact; and, failing that, ripped envelopes
+and the backs of bills. Some men love ruled paper,
+because they can write athwart the lines, and some take
+the fly-leaves of their friends' books. But whosoever
+writes on cheap sermon paper full of hairs should write
+far away from the woman he loves, lest he offend
+her ears. It is good, however, for a terse, forcible
+style.</p>
+
+<p>The ink should be glossy black as it leaves your pen,
+for polished English. Violet inks lead to sham sentiment,
+and blue-black to vulgarity. Red ink essays are often
+good, but usually unfit for publication.</p>
+
+<p>This is as much almost as anyone need know to begin
+essay writing. Given your proper pen and ink, or pencil
+and paper, you simply sit down and write the thing.
+The value of an essay is not its matter, but its mood.
+You must be comfortable, of course; an easy-chair with
+arm-rests, slippers, and a book to write upon are usually
+employed, and you must be fed recently, and your body
+clothed with ease rather than grandeur. For the rest,
+do not trouble to stick to your subject, or any subject;
+and take no thought for the editor or the reader, for
+your essay should be as spontaneous as the lilies of the
+field.</p>
+
+<p>So long as you do not begin with a definition you may
+begin anyhow. An abrupt beginning is much admired,
+after the fashion of the clown's entry through the
+chemist's window. Then whack at your reader at once,
+hit him over the head with the sausages, brisk him up
+with the poker, bundle him into the wheelbarrow, and
+so carry him away with you before he knows where you
+are. You can do what you like with a reader then, if
+you only keep him nicely on the move. So long as
+you are happy your reader will be so too. But one
+law must be observed: an essay, like a dog that wishes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+to please, must have a lively tail, short but as waggish
+as possible. Like a rocket, an essay goes only with
+fizzle and sparks at the end of it. And, know, that to
+stop writing is the secret of writing an essay; the
+essay that the public loves dies young</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_PARKES_MUSEUM" id="THE_PARKES_MUSEUM"></a>THE PARKES MUSEUM</h3>
+
+<p>THE PLACE TO SPEND A HAPPY DAY</p>
+
+
+<p>By way of jest, my morning daily paper constantly includes
+in its menu of "To-day" the Parkes Museum,
+Margaret Street, adding, seductively, "free"; and no
+doubt many a festive Jonas Chuzzlewit has preened
+himself for a sight-seeing, and all unaware of the
+multitudes of Margaret Streets&mdash;surely only Charlottes
+of that ilk are more abundant&mdash;has started forth, he
+and his feminine, to find this Parkes Museum. One
+may even conceive a rare Bank Holiday thoughtfully
+put aside for the quest, and spent all vainly in the
+asking of policemen, and in traversing this vast and
+tiresome metropolis, from Margaret Street to Margaret
+Street, the freshness of the morning passing into the
+dry heat of the day, fatigue spreading from the feet
+upwards, discussion, difference, denial, "words," and a
+day of recreation dying at last into a sunset of lurid
+sulks. Such possibility was too painful to think of,
+and a philanthropic inquirer has at last by persistent
+investigation won the secret of the Missing Museum
+and opened the way to it for all future investigators.</p>
+
+<p>The Margaret Street in question is an apparently
+derelict thoroughfare, opening into Great Portland Street.
+Immemorial dust is upon its pavements, and a profound
+silence broods over its vacant roadway. The blinds
+of its houses are mostly down, and, where the blackness
+of some window suggests a dark interior, no face appears
+to reassure us in our doubt of humanity within. It may
+be that somewhen in the past the entire population of
+this street set out on a boating party up the river,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+and was overset by steam launches, and so never
+returned, or perchance it has all been locked up for
+a long term of imprisonment&mdash;though the houses seem
+almost too respectable for that; or the glamour of the
+Sleeping Beauty is upon it all. Certainly we saw
+the figure of a porter in an attitude of repose in the
+little glass lodge in the museum doorway. He <i>may</i>
+have been asleep. But we feared to touch him&mdash;and
+indeed slipped very stealthily by him&mdash;lest he should
+suddenly crumble into dust.</p>
+
+<p>And so to the Museum and its wonders. This Parkes
+Museum is a kind of armoury of hygiene, a place full of
+apparatus for being healthy&mdash;in brief, a museum of
+sanitary science. To that large and growing class of
+people who take no thought of anything but what they
+eat and what they drink, and wherewithal they should be
+clothed, it should prove intensely interesting. Apart from
+the difficulty of approach we cannot understand how it
+is so neglected by an intelligent public. You can see
+germicides and a model convict prison, Pentonville cells
+in miniature, statistical diagrams and drain pipes&mdash;if only
+there was a little more about heredity, it would be exactly
+the kind of thing that is popular in literature now,
+as literature goes. And yet excepting ourselves and the
+sleeping porter&mdash;if he was sleeping&mdash;and the indistinct
+and motionless outline, visible through a glass door, of a
+human body sitting over a book, there was not a suggestion
+or memory of living humanity about the place.</p>
+
+<p>The exhibits of food are especially remarkable. We
+cleaned the glass case with our sleeves and peered at the most
+appetising revelations. There are dozens of little bottles
+hermetically sealed, containing such curios as a sample of
+"Bacon Common (Gammon) Uncooked," and then the same
+cooked&mdash;it looked no nicer cooked&mdash;Irish sausage, pork
+sausage, black pudding, Welsh mutton, and all kinds of
+rare and exquisite feeding. There are ever so many cases
+of this kind of thing. We saw, for instance, further along,
+several good specimens of the common oyster shell (<i>Ostrea
+edulis</i>), cockle shells, and whelks, both "almonds" and
+"whites," and then came breadstuffs. The breadstuffs are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+particularly impressive, of a grey, scientific aspect, a hard,
+hoary antiquity. We always knew that stale bread was
+good for one, but yet the Parkes Museum startled us with
+the antique pattern it recommended. There was a muffin,
+too, identified and labelled, but without any Latin name, a
+captured crumpet, a collection of buns, a dinner-roll, and
+a something novel to us, called Pumpernickel, that we
+had rather be without, or rather&mdash;for the expression is
+ambiguous&mdash;that we had rather not be without, but
+altogether remote from. And all these things have been
+tested by an analyst, with the most painful results.
+Nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, and the like nasty chemical
+things seem indeed to have occurred in everything he
+touched. Those sturdy mendicants who go about complaining
+that they cannot get food should visit this
+Parkes Museum and see what food is really like, and
+learn contentment with their lot.</p>
+
+<p>There were no real vegetables, but only the ideals of a
+firm of seedsmen, made of wax and splendidly coloured,
+with something of the boldness and vigour of Michael
+Angelo about the modelling of them. And among other
+food stuffs were sweetmeats and yellow capers, liver
+flukes, British wines, and snuff. At last we felt replete
+with food stuffs, and went on to see the models to
+illustrate ventilation, and the exhibits of hygienic
+glazed tiles arranged around a desert lecture-theatre.
+Hygienic tiles stimulate the eye vigorously rather than
+relax it by any &aelig;sthetic weakness; and the crematory
+appliances are so attractive as they are, and must have
+such an added charm of neatness and brightness when
+alight, that one longs to lose a relative or so forthwith, for
+the mere pleasure of seeing them in operation.</p>
+
+<p>A winding staircase designed upon hygienic principles,
+to bump your head at intervals, takes one to a little iron
+gallery full of the most charming and varied display of
+cooking-stoves and oil-lamps. Here, also, there are
+flaunted the resources of civilisation for the Prevention of
+Accidents, which resources are four, namely, a patent fire-escape,
+a patent carriage pole, a coal plate, and a dog
+muzzle. But the labels, though verbose, are scarcely full<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+enough. They do not tell you, for instance, if you wish
+to prevent cramp while bathing, whether the dog muzzle
+or the coal plate should be employed, nor do they show
+how the fire-escape will prevent the explosion of a
+paraffin lamp. However, this is a detail. We feel
+assured that no intelligent person will regret a visit to this
+most interesting and instructive exhibition. It offers you
+valuable hints how to live, and suggests the best and
+tidiest way in which you can, when dead, dispose of your
+body. We feel assured that the public only needs this
+intimation of its whereabouts to startle the death-like
+slumbers of Margaret Street with an unaccustomed tumult.
+And the first to arrive will, no doubt, find legibly and
+elegantly written in the dust that covers the collection
+the record of its discovery by Euphemia and me.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="BLEAK_MARCH_IN_EPPING_FOREST" id="BLEAK_MARCH_IN_EPPING_FOREST"></a>BLEAK MARCH IN EPPING FOREST</h3>
+
+
+<p>All along the selvage of Epping Forest there was
+excitement. Before the swallows, before the violets, long
+before the cuckoo, with only untimely honeysuckle bushes
+showing a trace of green, two trippers had been seen
+traversing the district, making their way towards High
+Beech, and settling awhile near the Forest Hotel.
+Whether they were belated survivals from last season or
+exceptionally early hatchings of the coming year, was a
+question of considerable moment to the natives, and has
+since engaged the attention of the local Natural History
+Society. But we know that, as a matter of fact, they
+were of little omen, being indeed but insignificant people
+from Hampstead and not true trippers at all, who were
+curious to see this forest in raw winter.</p>
+
+<p>For some have argued that there is no Epping Forest
+at all in the winter-time; that it is, in fact, taken up and
+put away, and that agriculture is pursued there. Others
+assert that the Forest is shrouded with wrappers, even as a
+literary man's study is shrouded by dusty women when
+they clean him out. Others, again, have supposed that
+it is a delightful place in winter, far more delightful
+than in summer, but that this is not published,
+because no writing man hath ever been there in the cold
+season. And much more of unreal speculation, but
+nothing which bore upon it the stamp of truth. So these
+two&mdash;and I am one of the two&mdash;went down to Epping
+Forest to see that it was still there, and how it fared in
+the dismal weather.</p>
+
+<p>The sky was a greasy grey that guttered down to the
+horizon, and the wind smote damp and chill. There was
+a white fringe of ice in the cart-wheel ruts, but withal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+the frost was not so crisp as to prevent a thin and
+slippery glaze of softened clay upon the road. The
+decaying triumphal arch outside the station sadly lacked
+a coat of paint, and was indistinctly regretful of remote
+royal visits and processions gone for ever. Then we
+passed shuddering by many vacant booths that had once
+resounded with the revelry of ninepenny teas and the
+gingerbeer cork's staccato, and their forms were piled
+together and their trestles overturned. And the wind
+ravened, and no human beings were to be seen. So up
+the hill to the left, and along the road leading by
+devious windings between the black hedges and through
+clay wallows to the hilly part round High Beech.</p>
+
+<p>But upon the shoulder of a hill we turned to a gate to
+scrape off the mud that made our boots unwieldy. At
+that moment came a threadbare place in the cloudy
+curtain that was sweeping across the sun, and our shadows
+showed themselves for an instant to comfort us. The
+amber patch of sunlight presently slipped from us and
+travelled down the meadows towards the distant blue of
+the hills by Waltham Abbey, touching with miraculous
+healing a landscape erst dead and shrouded in grey. This
+transitory gleam of light gladdened us mightily at the
+time, but it made the after-sky seem all the darker.</p>
+
+<p>So through the steep and tortuous village to High
+Beech, and then leaving the road we wandered in among
+big trees and down slopes ankle deep with rustling leaves
+towards Chingford again. Here was pleasanter walking
+than the thawing clay, but now and then one felt the
+threat of an infinite oozy softness beneath the stiff frozen
+leaves. Once again while we were here the drifting haze
+of the sky became thinner, and the smooth green-grey
+beech stems and rugged oak trunks were brightly illuminated.
+But only for a moment, and thereafter the sky
+became not simply unsympathetic but ominous. And the
+misery of the wind grew apace.</p>
+
+<p>Presently we wandered into that sinister corner of the
+Forest where the beech trees have grown so closely
+together that they have had perforce to lift their branches
+vertically. Divested of leaves, the bare grey limbs of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+these seem strangely restless. These trees, reaching so
+eagerly upward, have an odd resemblance to the weird
+figures of horror in which William Blake delighted&mdash;arms,
+hands, hair, all stretch intensely to the zenith. They
+seem to be straining away from the spot to which they
+are rooted. It is a Laocoon grouping, a wordless concentrated
+struggle for the sunlight, and disagreeably
+impressive. The trippers longed to talk and were
+tongue-tied; they looked now and then over their shoulders.
+They were glad when the eerie influence was passed,
+though they traversed a morass to get away from it.</p>
+
+<p>Then across an open place, dismal with the dun hulls
+of lost cows and the clatter of their bells, over a brook
+full of dead leaves and edged with rusty clay, through a
+briery thicket that would fain have detained us, and so to
+a pathway of succulent green, that oozed black under our
+feet. Here some poor lost wayfarer has blazed his way
+with rustic seats, now rheumatic and fungus-eaten. And
+here, too, the wind, which had sought us howling, found
+us at last, and stung us sharply with a shower of
+congealing raindrops. This grew to a steady downfall as
+the open towards Chingford station was approached at
+last, after devious winding in the Forest. Then, coming
+upon the edge of the wood and seeing the lone station
+against the grey sky, we broke into a shout and began
+running. But it is dismal running on imperfectly frozen
+clay, in rain and a gusty wind. We slipped and floundered,
+and one of us wept sore that she should never see her
+home again. And worse, the only train sleeping in the
+station was awakened by our cries, and, with an eldritch
+shriek at the unseasonable presence of trippers, fled
+incontinently Londonward.</p>
+
+<p>Smeared with clay and dead leaves almost beyond
+human likeness, we staggered into the derelict station, and
+found from an outcast porter that perhaps another train
+might after the lapse of two hours accumulate sufficiently
+to take us back to Gospel Oak and a warm world again.
+So we speered if there were amusements to be got in this
+place, and he told us "some very nice walks." To refrain
+from homicide we left the station, and sought a vast red<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+hotel that loomed through the drift on a steep hill, and in
+the side of this a door that had not been locked. Happily
+one had been forgotten, and, entering at last, we roused a
+hibernating waiter, and he exhumed us some of his winter
+victual. In this way we were presently to some degree
+comforted, and could play chess until a train had been
+sent for our relief. And this did at last happen, and
+towards the hour of dinner we rejoined our anxious friends,
+and all the evening time we boasted of a pleasant day and
+urged them to go even as we had gone.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_THEORY_OF_QUOTATION" id="THE_THEORY_OF_QUOTATION"></a>THE THEORY OF QUOTATION</h3>
+
+
+<p>The nobler method of quotation is not to quote at all.
+For why should one repeat good things that are already
+written? Are not the words in their fittest context in the
+original? Clearly, then, your new setting cannot be quite
+so congruous, which is, forthwith, an admission of
+incongruity. Your quotation is evidently a plug in a leak,
+an apology for a gap in your own words. But your
+vulgar author will even go out of his way to make the
+clothing of his thoughts thus heterogeneous. He counts
+every stolen scrap he can work in an improvement&mdash;a
+literary caddis worm. Yet would he consider it improvement
+to put a piece of even the richest of old tapestry or
+gold embroidery into his new pair of breeks?</p>
+
+<p>The passion for quotation is peculiar to literature. We
+do not glory to quote our costume, dress in cast-off court
+robes, or furnish our houses from the marine store.
+Neither are we proud of alien initials on the domestic
+silver. We like things new and primarily our own. We
+have a wholesome instinct against infection, except, it
+seems, in the matter of ideas. An authorling will
+deliberately inoculate his copy with the inverted comma
+bacillus, till the page swims unsteadily, counting the fever
+a glow of pure literary healthiness. Yet this reproduction,
+rightly considered, is merely a proof that his appetite for
+books has run beyond his digestion. Or his industry may
+be to seek. You expect an omelette, and presently up
+come the unbroken eggs. A tissue of quotation wisely
+looked at is indeed but a motley garment, eloquent either
+of a fool, or an idle knave in a fool's disguise.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless at times&mdash;the truth must be told&mdash;we
+must quote. As for admitting that we have quoted, that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+is another matter altogether. But the other man's phrase
+will lie at times so close in one's mind to the trend of
+one's thoughts, that, all virtue notwithstanding, they must
+needs run into the groove of it. There are phrases that
+lie about in the literary mind like orange peel on a
+pavement. You are down on them before you know
+where you are. But does this necessitate acknowledgment
+to the man, now in Hades, who sucked that orange
+and strewed the peel in your way? Rather, is it not
+more becoming to be angry at his careless anticipation?</p>
+
+<p>One may reasonably look at it in this way. What
+business has a man to think of things right in front
+of you, poke his head, as it were, into your light? What
+right has he to set up dams and tunnel out swallow-holes
+to deflect the current of your thoughts? Surely you may
+remove these obstructions, if it suits you, and put them
+where you will. Else all literature will presently be
+choked up, and the making of books come to an end.
+One might as well walk ten miles out of one's way because
+some deaf oaf or other chose to sit upon a necessary stile.
+Surely Shakespeare or Lamb, or what other source you
+contemplate, has had the thing long enough? Out of the
+road with them. Turn and turn about.</p>
+
+<p>And inverted commas are so inhospitable. If you <i>must</i>
+take in another man's offspring, you should surely try to
+make the poor foundlings feel at home. Away with such
+uncharitable distinctions between the children of the
+house and the stranger within your gates. I never see
+inverted commas but I think of the necessary persecuted
+medi&aelig;val Jew in yellow gabardine.</p>
+
+<p>At least, never put the name of the author you quote.
+Think of the feelings of the dead. Don't let the poor
+spirit take it to heart that its monumental sayings would
+pass unrecognised without your advertisement. You mean
+well, perhaps, but it is in the poorest taste. Yet I have
+seen Patience on a Monument honourably awarded to
+William Shakespeare, and fenced in by commas from all
+intercourse with the general text.</p>
+
+<p>There is something so extremely dishonest, too, in
+acknowledging quotations. Possibly the good people who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+so contrive that such signatures as "Shakespeare," "Homer,"
+or "St. Paul," appear to be written here and there to
+parts of their inferior work, manage to justify the proceeding
+in their conscience; but it is uncommonly like hallmarking
+pewter on the strength of an infinitesimal tinge of
+silver therein. The point becomes at once clear if we
+imagine some obscure painter quoting the style of Raphael
+and fragments of his designs, and acknowledging his
+indebtedness by appending the master's signature. Blank
+forgery! And a flood of light was thrown on the matter
+by a chance remark of one of Euphemia's aunts&mdash;she is a
+great reader of pure fiction&mdash;anent a popular novel: "I
+am sure it must be a nice book," said she, "or she could not
+get all these people to write the mottoes for the chapters."</p>
+
+<p>No, it is all very well to play with one's conscience. I
+have known men so sophisticated as to assert that unacknowledged
+quotation was wrong. But very few really
+reasonable people will, I think, refuse to agree with me
+that the only artistic, the only kindly, and the only
+honest method of quotation is plagiary. If you cannot
+plagiarise, surely it were better not to quote.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="ON_THE_ART_OF_STAYING_AT_THE_SEASIDE" id="ON_THE_ART_OF_STAYING_AT_THE_SEASIDE"></a>ON THE ART OF STAYING AT THE SEASIDE</h3>
+
+<p>A MEDITATION AT EASTBOURNE</p>
+
+
+<p>To stay at the seaside properly, one should not think.
+But even in staying at the seaside there are intervals,
+waking moments when meals come, even if there are no
+appointed meal-times. Moreover, now and then, one must
+go to buy tobacco, a matter one can trust to no hireling,
+lest he get it dry. It cannot be always seaside, even as it
+cannot be always May, and through the gaps thought
+creeps in. Going over the cliff and along the parade, and
+down by the circulating library to the cigar divan, where
+they sell Parique tobacco, the swinging of one's legs seems
+to act like a pendulum to the clockwork of one's brain.
+One meditates all the way, and chiefly on how few people
+there are who can really&mdash;to a critical adept&mdash;be said to
+stay at the seaside.</p>
+
+<p>People seem to think that one can take a ticket to
+Eastbourne, or Bognor, or Ventnor, and come and stay at
+the seaside straight away, just as I have known new-hatched
+undergraduates tell people they were going to
+play billiards. Thousands and thousands of people think
+they have stayed at the seaside, and have not, just as
+thousands of people erroneously imagine they have played
+whist. For the latter have played not whist, but Bumble-puppy,
+and the former have only frequented a watering-place
+for a time. Your true staying at the seaside is an
+art, demanding not only railway fares but special aptitude,
+and, moreover, needing culture, like all worthy arts.</p>
+
+<p>The most insurmountable difficulty of the beginner is
+the classical simplicity of the whole thing. To stay at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+the seaside properly you just spread yourself out on the
+extreme edge of the land and let the sunlight soak in.
+Your eyes are fixed upon the horizon. Some have it that
+your head should be towards the sea, but the best
+authorities think that this determines blood to that
+region, and so stimulates thought. This is all the positive
+instruction; the rest is prohibition. You must not think,
+and you must not move, neither may you go to sleep. In
+a few minutes the adept becomes as a god, even as a god
+that sits upon the lotus leaf. New light and colour come
+into the sky and sea, and the surges chant his praises.
+But those who are not of the elect get pins and needles
+all over them.</p>
+
+<p>It must be freely admitted that staying at the seaside
+such as this, staying at the seaside in its perfection, is a
+thing for a select few. You want a broad stretch of beach
+and all the visible sea to yourself. You cannot be disturbed
+by even the most idyllic children trying to bury
+you with sand and suchlike playfulness, nor by boatloads
+of the democracy rowing athwart your sea and sky. And
+the absence of friend or wife goes without saying. I
+notice down here a very considerable quantity of evidently
+married pairs, and the huge majority of the rest of the
+visitors run in couples, and are to all appearances engaged.
+If they are not, I would submit that they ought to be.
+Probably there is a certain satisfaction in sitting by the
+sea with the girl you are in love with, or your wife for
+the matter of that, just as many people undoubtedly find
+tea with milk and sugar very nice. But the former is no
+more the way to get the full and perfect pleasure of staying
+at the seaside than the latter is the way to get the full
+and perfect flavour of the tea. True staying at the seaside
+is neither the repetition of old conversations in new surroundings
+nor the exposure of one's affections to ozone.
+It is something infinitely higher. It is pure quiescence.
+It is the experience of a waking inanition savouring of
+Buddha and the divine.</p>
+
+<p>Now, staying at the seaside is so rarely done well,
+because of the littleness of man. To do it properly needs
+many of the elements of greatness. Your common man,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+while he has life in him, can let neither himself nor the
+universe alone. He must be asserting himself in some
+way, even if it is only by flinging pebbles at a stick.
+That self-forgetfulness which should be a delight is a
+terror to him. He brings dogs down to the beach to
+stand between him and the calm of nature, and yelp. He
+does worse than that.</p>
+
+<p>The meditative man going daily over by the cliff and
+along the parade, to get his ounce of tobacco, has a sad
+spectacle of what human beings may be driven to in this
+way. One sees altogether some hundreds of people there
+who have heard perhaps that staying at the seaside is
+good, and who have, anyhow, got thus far towards it, and
+stopped. They have not the faintest idea how to make
+themselves happy. The general expression is veiled
+curiosity. They sit&mdash;mostly with their backs to the sea&mdash;talking
+poorly of indifferent topics and watching one
+another. Most obviously they want hints of what to do
+with themselves. Behind them is a bank of flowers like
+those in Battersea Park, and another parallel parade, and
+beyond are bathing-machines. The pier completely cuts
+the horizon out of the background. There is a stout lady,
+in dark blue, bathing. The only glances directed seaward
+are furtive ones at her. Many seem to be doubting
+whether this is not what they came down for. Others
+lean dubiously to the invitations of the boatmen. Others
+again listen to vocalists and dramatic outcasts who, for
+ha'pence, render obvious the reason of their professional
+degradation. It seems eccentric to travel seventy or
+eighty miles to hear a man without a voice demonstrate
+that he is unfit to have one, but they do. Anyone
+curious in these matters need only go to a watering-place
+to see and, what is worse, to hear for himself. After an
+excursion train to Eastbourne, upwards of a thousand
+people have been seen thus heaped together over an
+oblong space of a mile long by twenty yards wide. Only
+three miles away there was a towering white cliff overhanging
+a practically desert beach; and one seagull
+circled above one solitary, motionless, supine man, really
+staying at the seaside.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>You cannot walk six miles anywhere along the south
+coast without coming upon one of these heaps of people,
+called a watering-place. There will be a town of houses
+behind wherein the people lodge, until, as they think,
+they have stayed a sufficient time at the sea, and they
+return, hot, cross, and mystified, to London. The sea front
+will be bricked or paved for a mile or so, and there will
+be rows of boats and bathing-machines, and other
+contrivances to screen off the view of the sea. And, as
+we have indicated, watering-places and staying by the
+seaside are incompatible things. The true stayer by the
+seaside goes into the watering-place because he must;
+because there is little food, and that uncooked, and no
+tobacco, between the cliffs and the sea. Having purchased
+what he needs he flees forth again. What time the whole
+selvage of England becomes watering-place, there will be
+no more staying by the seaside at all in the land. But
+this is a gloomy train of thought that we will not pursue.</p>
+
+<p>There have been those who assert that one end of
+staying at the seaside is bathing; but it is easy to show
+that this is not so. Your proper bathing-place is up the
+river, where the trees bend to the green and brown
+shadows of the water. There the bath is sweet, fresh out
+of the sky, or but just filtered through the blue hills of
+the distant water-shed; and it is set about with flowers.
+But the sea&mdash;the sea has stood there since the beginning
+of things, and with small prospect of change, says Mr.
+Kipling, to all eternity. The water in the sea, geologists
+tell us, has <i>not been changed for fifty million years</i>! The
+same chemist who sets me against all my food with his
+chemical names speaks of the sea as a weak solution of
+drowned men. Be that as it may, it leaves the skin
+harsh with salt, and the hair sticky. Moreover, it is such
+a promiscuous bathing-place. However, we need scarcely
+depreciate the sea as a bath, for what need is there of
+that when the river is clearly better? No one can deny
+that the river is better. People who bathe in the sea
+bathe by mistake, because they have come to the side of
+the sea, and know not how else to use it.</p>
+
+<p>So, too, with the boating. It is hard to imagine how<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+human beings who have drifted down streams, and
+watched the brown fish in the shallows, and peered
+through the tall sedges at the forget-me-nots, and fought
+with the ropes of the water-lilies, and heard the ripple under
+the bows, can ever think of going to and fro, pitching
+spasmodically, in front of a watering-place. And as for
+fishing&mdash;they catch fish at sea, indeed, but it is not fishing
+at all; neither rods nor flies have they, and there is an
+end to that matter.</p>
+
+<p>An Eastbourne meditative man returning to where he
+stays, with his daily ounce of tobacco already afire, sees
+in the streets what are called by the natives "cherry-bangs,"
+crowded with people, and, further, cabriolets and
+such vehicles holding parties and families. The good
+folks are driving away from the sea for the better part of
+the day, going to Battle and other places inland. The
+puzzle of what to do with their sea is too much for them,
+and they are going away for a little to rest their minds.
+Regarded as a centre of drives one might think an inland
+place would be preferable to a seaside town, which at
+best commands but a half-circle. However that may be,
+the fact remains that one of the chief occupations of your
+common visitor to the seaside is going away from it.
+Than this fact there can be nothing more conclusive in
+support of my argument that ordinary people are
+absolutely ignorant and incapable of staying by the
+seaside.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="CONCERNING_CHESS" id="CONCERNING_CHESS"></a>CONCERNING CHESS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The passion for playing chess is one of the most unaccountable
+in the world. It slaps the theory of natural
+selection in the face. It is the most absorbing of
+occupations, the least satisfying of desires, an aimless
+excrescence upon life. It annihilates a man. You have,
+let us say, a promising politician, a rising artist, that you
+wish to destroy. Dagger or bomb are archaic, clumsy,
+and unreliable&mdash;but teach him, inoculate him with chess!
+It is well, perhaps, that the right way of teaching chess is
+so little known, that consequently in most cases the plot
+fails in the performance, the dagger turns aside. Else we
+should all be chess-players&mdash;there would be none left to do
+the business of the world. Our statesmen would sit with
+pocket boards while the country went to the devil, our
+army would bury itself in chequered contemplation, our
+bread-winners would forget their wives in seeking after
+impossible mates. The whole world would be disorganised.
+I can fancy this abominable hypnotism so wrought into
+the constitution of men that the cabmen would go trying
+to drive their horses in Knights' moves up and down
+Charing Cross Road. And now and again a suicide
+would come to hand with the pathetic inscription pinned
+to his chest: "I checked with my Queen too soon. I
+cannot bear the thought of it." There is no remorse like
+the remorse of chess.</p>
+
+<p>Only, happily, as we say, chess is taught the wrong
+way round. People put out the board before the learner
+with all the men in battle array, sixteen a side, with six
+different kinds of moves, and the poor wretch is simply
+crushed and appalled. A lot of things happen, mostly
+disagreeable, and then a mate comes looming up through<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+the haze of pieces. So he goes away awestricken but
+unharmed, secretly believing that all chess-players are
+humbugs, and that intelligent chess, which is neither
+chancy nor rote-learned, is beyond the wit of man. But
+clearly this is an unreasonable method of instruction.
+Before the beginner can understand the beginning of the
+game he must surely understand the end; how can he
+commence playing until he knows what he is playing for?
+It is like starting athletes on a race, and leaving them to
+find out where the winning-post is hidden.</p>
+
+<p>Your true teacher of chess, your subtle chess-poisoner,
+your cunning Comus who changes men to chess-players,
+begins quite the other way round. He will, let us say,
+give you King, Queen, and Pawn placed out in careless
+possible positions. So you master the militant possibilities
+of Queen and Pawn without perplexing complications.
+Then King, Queen, and Bishop perhaps; King, Queen, and
+Knight; and so on. It ensures that you always play a
+winning game in these happy days of your chess childhood,
+and taste the one sweet of chess-playing, the delight of
+having the upper hand of a better player. Then to more
+complicated positions, and at last back to the formal
+beginning. You begin to see now to what end the array
+is made, and understand why one Gambit differeth from
+another in glory and virtue. And the chess mania of
+your teacher cleaveth to you thenceforth and for evermore.</p>
+
+<p>It is a curse upon a man. There is no happiness in
+chess&mdash;Mr. St. George Mivart, who can find happiness in
+the strangest places, would be at a loss to demonstrate it
+upon the chess-board. The mild delight of a pretty mate
+is the least unhappy phase of it. But, generally, you find
+afterwards that you ought to have mated two moves
+before, or at the time that an unforeseen reply takes your
+Queen. No chess-player sleeps well. After the painful
+strategy of the day one fights one's battles over again.
+You see with more than daylight clearness that it was
+the Rook you should have moved, and not the Knight.
+No! it is impossible! no common sinner innocent of
+chess knows these lower deeps of remorse. Vast desert<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+boards lie for the chess-player beyond the gates of horn.
+Stalwart Rooks ram headlong at one, Knights hop sidelong,
+one's Pawns are all tied, and a mate hangs threatening
+and never descends. And once chess has been begun
+in the proper way, it is flesh of your flesh, bone of your
+bone; you are sold, and the bargain is sealed, and the evil
+spirit hath entered in.</p>
+
+<p>The proper outlet for the craving is the playing of
+games, and there is a class of men&mdash;shadowy, unhappy,
+unreal-looking men&mdash;who gather in coffee-houses, and
+play with a desire that dieth not, and a fire that is not
+quenched. These gather in clubs and play Tournaments,
+such tournaments as he of the Table Round could never
+have imagined. But there are others who have the vice
+who live in country places, in remote situations&mdash;curates,
+schoolmasters, rate collectors&mdash;who go consumed from day
+to day and meet no fit companion, and who must needs
+find some artificial vent for their mental energy. No one
+has ever calculated how many sound Problems are possible,
+and no doubt the Psychical Research people would be glad
+if Professor Karl Pearson would give his mind to the
+matter. All the possible dispositions of the pieces come
+to such a vast number, however, that, according to the
+theory of probability, and allowing a few thousand
+arrangements each day, the same problem ought never to
+turn up more than twice in a century or so. As a matter
+of fact&mdash;it is probably due to some flaw in the theory of
+probability&mdash;the same problem has a way of turning up
+in different publications several times in a month or so.
+It may be, of course, that, after all, quite "sound"
+problems are limited in number, and that we keep on
+inventing and reinventing them; that, if a record were
+kept, the whole system, up to four or five moves, might be
+classified, and placed on record in the course of a few
+score years. Indeed, if we were to eliminate those with
+conspicuously bad moves, it may be we should find the
+number of reasonable games was limited enough, and that
+even our brilliant Lasker is but repeating the inspirations
+of some long-buried Persian, some mute inglorious Hindoo,
+dead and forgotten ages since. It may be over every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+game there watches the forgotten forerunners of the
+players, and that chess is indeed a dead game, a haunted
+game, played out centuries ago, even, as beyond all cavil,
+is the game of draughts.</p>
+
+<p>The artistic temperament, the gay irresponsible cast of
+mind, does what it can to lighten the gravity of this too
+intellectual game. To a mortal there is something
+indescribably horrible in these champions with their four
+moves an hour&mdash;the bare thought of the mental operations
+of the fifteen minutes gives one a touch of headache.
+Compulsory quick moving is the thing for gaiety, and
+that is why, though we revere Steinitz and Lasker, it is
+Bird we love. His victories glitter, his errors are magnificent.
+The true sweetness of chess, if it ever can be sweet,
+is to see a victory snatched, by some happy impertinence,
+out of the shadow of apparently irrevocable disaster.
+And talking of cheerfulness reminds me of Lowson's
+historical game of chess. Lowson said he had been cheerful
+sometimes&mdash;but, drunk! Perish the thought! Challenged,
+he would have proved it by some petty tests of
+pronunciation, some Good Templar's shibboleths. He
+offered to walk along the kerb, to work any problem in
+mathematics we could devise, finally to play MacBryde
+at chess. The other gentleman was appointed judge, and
+after putting the antimacassar over his head ("jush
+wigsh") immediately went to sleep in a disorderly heap
+on the sofa. The game was begun very solemnly, so I
+am told. MacBryde, in describing it to me afterwards,
+swayed his hands about with the fingers twiddling in a
+weird kind of way, and said the board went like that.
+The game was fierce but brief. It was presently discovered
+that both kings had been taken. Lowson was
+hard to convince, but this came home to him. "Man,"
+he is reported to have said to MacBryde, "I'm just drunk.
+There's no doubt in the matter. I'm feeling very ashamed
+of myself." It was accordingly decided to declare the
+game drawn. The position, as I found it next morning,
+is an interesting one. Lowson's Queen was at K Kt 6,
+his Bishop at Q B 3, he had several Pawns, and his Knight
+occupied a commanding position at the intersection of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+four squares. MacBryde had four Pawns, two Rooks, a
+Queen, a draught, and a small mantel ornament arranged
+in a rough semicircle athwart the board. I have no
+doubt chess exquisites will sneer at this position, but in
+my opinion it is one of the cheerfulest I have ever seen.
+I remember I admired it very much at the time, in spite
+of a slight headache, and it is still the only game of chess
+that I recall with undiluted pleasure. And yet I have
+played many games.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_COAL-SCUTTLE" id="THE_COAL-SCUTTLE"></a>THE COAL-SCUTTLE</h3>
+
+<p>A STUDY IN DOMESTIC &AElig;STHETICS</p>
+
+
+<p>Euphemia, who loves to have home dainty and delightful,
+would have no coals if she could dispense with them,
+much less a coal-scuttle. Indeed, it would seem she
+would have no fireplace at all, if she had her will. All
+the summer she is happy, and the fireplace is anything
+but the place for a fire; the fender has vanished, the
+fireirons are gone, it is draped and decorated and disguised.
+So would dear Euphemia drape and disguise
+the whole iron framework of the world, with that decorative
+and decent mind of hers, had she but the scope.
+There are exotic ferns there, spreading their fanlike
+fronds, and majolica glows and gleams; and fabrics, of
+which Morris is the actual or spiritual begetter, delight
+the eye. In summer-time our fireplace is indeed a thing
+of beauty, but, alas for the solar system! it is not a joy
+for ever. The sun at last recedes beyond the equinoxes,
+and the black bogey who has slept awakens again.
+Euphemia restores the fender kerb and the brazen dogs and
+the fireirons that will clatter; and then all the winter, whenever
+she sits before the fire, her trouble is with her. Even
+when the red glow of the fire lights up her features most
+becomingly, and flattery is in her ear, every now and then
+a sidelong glance at her ugly foe shows that the thought
+of it is in her mind, and that the crumpled roseleaf, if
+such a phrase may be used for a coal-scuttle, insists on
+being felt. And she has even been discovered alone, sitting
+elbows on knees, and chin on her small clenched fist,
+frowning at it, puzzling how to circumvent the one enemy
+of her peace.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"<i>It</i>" is what Euphemia always calls this utensil, when
+she can bring herself to give the indescribable an imperfect
+vent in speech. But commonly the feeling is too deep for
+words. Her war with this foeman in her household, this
+coarse rebel in her realm of soft prettiness, is one of those
+silent ones, those grim struggles without outcry or threat
+or appeal for quarter that can never end in any compromise,
+never find a rest in any truce, except the utter
+defeat of her antagonist. And how she has tried&mdash;the
+happy thoughts, the faint hopes, the new departures and
+outflanking movements! And even to-day there the thing
+defies her&mdash;a coal-box, with a broad smile that shows its
+black teeth, thick and squat, filling a snug corner and
+swaggering in unmanly triumph over the outrage upon
+her delicacy that it commits.</p>
+
+<p>One of Euphemia's brightest ideas was to burn wood.
+Logs make even a picturesque pile in a corner&mdash;look
+"uncommon." But there are objections to wood. Wood
+finely divided burns with gay quirks and jets of flame,
+and making cheerful crackling noises the while; but its
+warmth and brightness are as evanescent as love's young
+dream. And your solid log has a certain irritating inertness.
+It is an absentee fuel, spending its fire up the
+chimney, and after its youthful clouds of glory turns but
+a cheerless side of black and white char towards the room.
+And, above all, the marital mind is strangely exasperated
+by the log. Smite it with the poker, and you get but a
+sullen resonance, a flight of red sparks, a sense of an
+unconquerable toughness. It is worse than coke. The
+crisp fracture of coal, the spitting flames suddenly leaping
+into existence from the shiny new fissures, are altogether
+wanting. Old-seasoned timber burns indeed most delightfully,
+but then it is as ugly as coal, and withal very dear.
+So Euphemia went back to coal again with a sigh.
+Possibly if Euphemia had been surrounded by the wealth
+she deserves this trouble would not have arisen. A silent
+servant, bearing the due dose of fresh fuel, would have
+come gliding from a mysterious Beneath, restored the
+waning animation of the grate, and vanished noiselessly
+again. But this was beyond the range of Euphemia's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+possibilities. And so we are face to face with this problem
+of the scuttle again.</p>
+
+<p>At first she would feign there was no such thing as coal.
+It was too horrible. Only a Zola would admit it. It was
+the epoch of concealment. The thing purchased was like
+a little cupboard on four legs; it might have held any
+convenient trifle; and there was a shelf upon the top and
+a book of poetry and a piece of crackled Satsuma. You
+took a little brass handle and pulled it down, and the
+front of the little cupboard came forward, and there you
+found your coal. But a dainty little cupboard can no
+more entertain black coal and inelegant firewood and
+keep its daintiness than a mind can entertain black
+thoughts and yet be sweet. This cabinet became demoralised
+with amazing quickness; it became incontinent
+with its corruptions, a hinge got twisted, and after a time
+it acquired the habit of suddenly, and with an unpleasant
+oscillatory laughing noise, opening of its own accord and
+proclaiming its horrid secret to Euphemia's best visitors.
+An air of wickedness, at once precocious and senile, came
+upon it; it gaped and leered at Euphemia as the partner
+of her secret with such a familiar air of "I and you" that
+she could stand it no longer, and this depraved piece of
+furniture was banished at last from her presence, and
+relegated to its proper sphere of sham gentility below
+stairs, where it easily passed itself upon the cook as an
+exquisite. Euphemia tried to be sensible then, and
+determined, since she must have coal in her room, to let
+no false modesty intervene, but to openly proclaim its
+presence to all the world.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing, therefore, was a cylinder of brass,
+broadly open above, saying to the world, as it were,
+"Look! I contain coal." And there were brass tongs
+like sugar tongs wherewith Euphemia would regale the
+fire and brighten it up, handing it a lump at a time in the
+prettiest way. But brass dints. The brazen thing was
+quiet and respectable enough upstairs, but ever and again
+it went away to be filled. What happened on these
+holiday jaunts Euphemia has never ascertained. But a
+chance blow or worse cause ran a crease athwart the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+forehead of the thing, and below an almost imperceptible
+bulging hinted at a future corpulency. And there was
+complaint of the quantity of polishing it needed, and an
+increasing difficulty in keeping it bright. And except
+when it was full to the brim, the lining was unsightly;
+and this became more so. One day Ithuriel must have
+visited Euphemia's apartment, and the tarnished brilliancy
+of the thing stood confessed. For some days there was an
+interregnum, and a coal-scuttle from downstairs&mdash;a black
+unstable thing on flat foot and with a vast foolish nether
+lip&mdash;did its duty with inelegant faithfulness.</p>
+
+<p>Then Euphemia had a really pretty fancy. She procured
+one of those big open garden baskets and painted it a pleasant
+brown, and instead of a garden fork she had a little half
+horticultural scoop. In this basket she kept her coals,
+and she tied a pink ribbon on the handle. One might
+fancy she had been in some dewy garden and had dug a
+few coals as one might dig up bulbs, and brought them in
+and put them down. It attracted attention from all her
+visitors, and set a kind of fashion in the neighbourhood.
+For a time Euphemia was almost contented. But one
+day a malignant woman called, and looked at this device
+through her gilt eye-glasses, while she secretly groped in
+the dark of her mind for an unpleasant thing to say.
+Then suddenly she remarked, "Why not put your coal in
+a bassinette? Or keep it <i>all</i> on the floor?" Euphemia's
+face fell. The thing was undeniably very like a cradle, in
+the light of this suggestion; the coal certainly did seem
+a little out of place there; and besides, if there were more
+than three or four lumps they had a way of tumbling over
+the edge upon the carpet when the fire was replenished.
+The tender shoot of Euphemia's satisfaction suddenly
+withered and died.</p>
+
+<p>So the struggle has gone on. Sometimes it has been a
+wrought iron tripod with a subtle tendency to upset in
+certain directions; sometimes a coal-box; once even the
+noisy old coal-box of japanned tin, making more noise
+than a Salvation Army service, and strangely decorated
+with "art" enamels, had a turn. At present Euphemia
+is enduring a walnut "casket," that since its first week of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+office has displayed an increasing indisposition to shut.
+But things cannot stay like this. The worry and anxiety
+and vexation, Euphemia declares, are making her old
+before her time. A delicate woman should not be left
+alone to struggle against brazen monsters. A closed gas
+stove is happily impossible, but the husband of the
+household is threatened with one of those beastly sham
+fires, wherein gas jets flare among firebrick&mdash;a mechanical
+fire without vitality or variety, that never dances nor
+crackles nor blazes, a monotonous horror, a fire you cannot
+poke. That is what it will certainly come to if the
+problem remains unsolved.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="BAGARROW" id="BAGARROW"></a>BAGARROW</h3>
+
+
+<p>Frankly, I detest this Bagarrow. Yet it is quite
+generally conceded that Bagarrow is a very well-meaning
+fellow. But the trouble is to understand him. To do
+that I have been at some pains, and yet I am still a mere
+theorist. An anthropometric estimate of the man fails to
+reveal any reason for the distinction of my aversion. He
+is of passable height, breadth, and density, and, save for
+a certain complacency of expression, I find no salient
+objection in his face. He has bluish eyes and a whitish
+skin, and average-coloured hair&mdash;none of them distinctly
+indictable possessions. It is something in his interior
+and unseen mechanism, I think, that must be wrong;
+some internal lesion that finds expression in his acts.</p>
+
+<p>His mental operations, indeed, were at first as inconceivable
+to me as a crab's or a cockchafer's. That is where
+all the trouble came in. For that reason alone they
+fascinated me and aggrieved me. From the conditions of
+our acquaintance&mdash;we were colleagues&mdash;I had to study
+him with some thoroughness, observing him under these
+circumstances and those. I have, by the bye, sometimes
+wondered idly how he would react to alcohol&mdash;a fluid he
+avoids. It would, I am sure, be an entirely novel and
+remarkable kind of Drunk, and I am also certain it would
+be an offensive one. But I can't imagine it; I have no
+data. I could as soon evolve from my inner consciousness
+an intoxicated giraffe. But, as I say, this interesting
+experience has hitherto been denied me.</p>
+
+<p>Now my theory of Bagarrow is this, that he has a kind
+of disease in his ideals, some interruption of nutrition that
+has left them small and emasculate. He aims, it appears,
+at a state called "Really Nice" or the "True Gentleman,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+the outward and visible signs of which are a conspicuous
+quietness of costume, gloves in all weathers, and a tightly-rolled
+umbrella. But coupled in some way with this is a
+queer smack of the propagandist, a kind of dwarfed
+prophetic passion. That is the particular oddness of him.
+He displays a timid yet persistent desire to foist this
+True Gentleman of his upon an unwilling world, to make
+you Really Nice after his own pattern. I always suspect
+him of trying to convert me by stealth when I am not
+looking.</p>
+
+<p>So far as I can see, Bagarrow's conception of this True
+Gentleman of his is at best a compromise, mainly holiness,
+but a tinted kind of holiness&mdash;goodness in clean cuffs and
+with something neat in ties. He renounces the flesh and
+the devil willingly enough, but he wants to keep up a
+decent appearance. Now a stark saint I can find
+sympathy for. I respect your prophet unkempt and in a
+hair shirt denouncing Sin&mdash;and mundane affairs in
+general&mdash;with hoarse passion and a fiery hate. I would
+not go for my holidays with nor make a domestic pet of
+such a man, but I respect him. But Bagarrow's pose is
+different. Bagarrow would call that carrying things to
+extremes. His is an unobtrusive virtue, a compromising
+dissent, inaggressive aggressions on sin. So I take it.
+And at times he puts it to you in a drawling argument,
+a stream of Bagarrowisms, until you have to hurt his
+feelings&mdash;happily he is always getting his feelings hurt&mdash;just
+to stop the flow of him.</p>
+
+<p>"Life," said Bagarrow, in a moment of expansiveness,
+"is scarcely worth living unless you are doing good to
+someone." That I take to be the keystone of him. "I
+want to be a Good Influence upon all the people I meet."
+I do not think it has ever dawned upon him that he
+himself is any way short of perfection; and, so far as I
+can see, the triumph and end of his good influence is
+cleanliness of cuff, compactness of umbrella, and general
+assimilation to the Bagarrow ideal.</p>
+
+<p>Hear him upon one's social duties&mdash;this living soul in
+this world of wonders! "In moderation," said Bagarrow,
+opening out to questions on that matter, "social relaxation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+is desirable, and I will even go so far as to admit that I
+think it well to have at hand some pleasant expedient for
+entertaining people and passing the time. A humorous
+song or a recitation&mdash;provided it is in really good taste&mdash;is
+harmless enough, and sometimes it may even be turned
+to good account. And everyone should try to master
+some instrument or other. The flute, perhaps, is as
+convenient as any; for the fiddle and piano, you know, are
+difficult and expensive to learn, and require constant
+practice. A little legerdemain is also a great acquisition
+for a man. Some may differ from me in that," continued
+Bagarrow, "but I see no harm in it. There are hundreds
+of perfectly proper and innocent tricks with coins and bits
+of paper, and pieces of string, that will make an evening
+pass most delightfully. One may get quite a little
+reputation as an entertainer with these things."</p>
+
+<p>"And it is," pursued Bagarrow, quite glowing with
+liberality, "just a little pharisaical to object to card tricks.
+There are quantities of really quite clever and
+mathematical things that one may do with a chosen card,
+dealing the pack into heaps and counting slowly. Of
+course it is not for mere pleasuring that I learn these
+things. It gives anyone with a little tact an opportunity
+for stopping card-playing. When the pack is brought in, and
+all the party are intent upon gaming, you may seize your
+opportunity and take the cards, saying, 'Let me show you
+a little trick,' or, 'Have you seen Maskelyne's new trick
+with the cards?' Before anyone can object you are displaying
+your skill to their astonished eyes, and in their
+wonder at your cleverness the objectionable game may be
+indefinitely postponed."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet so set at times is your gambler upon his abominable
+pursuit," says Bagarrow, "that in practice even this
+ingenious expedient has been known to fail." He tried it
+once, it seems, in a race train to Kempton Park, and
+afterwards he had to buy a new hat. That incident,
+indeed, gives you the very essence of Bagarrow in his
+insidious attacks on evil. I remember that on another
+occasion he went out of his way to promise a partially
+intoxicated man a drink; and taking him into a public-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>house
+ordered two lemon squashes! Drinks! He liked
+lemon squash himself and he did not like beer, and he
+thought he had only to introduce the poor fallen creature
+to the delights of temperance to ensure his conversion
+there and then. I think he expected the man to fall
+upon him, crying "My benefactor!" But he did not say
+"My benefactor," at anyrate, though he fell upon him,
+cheerfully enough.</p>
+
+<p>To avoid the appearance of priggishness, which he
+dreads with some reason, he even went so far as to
+procure a herb tobacco, which he smokes with the
+help of frequent sulphur matches. This he recommends
+to us strongly. "Won't you try it?" he says, with a
+winning smile. "Just once." And he is the only man I
+ever met who drinks that facetious fluid, non-alcoholic
+beer. Once he proposed to wean me upon that from my
+distinctive vice, which led indeed to our first rupture.
+"<i>I</i> find it delicious," he said in pathetic surprise.</p>
+
+<p>It is one of his most inveterate habits to tell you
+quietly what he does, or would do under the
+circumstances. Seeing you at Kipling, he will propound
+the proposition that "all true literature has a distinct
+aim." His test of literary merit is "What good does it
+do you?" He is a great lender of books, especially of
+Carlyle and Ruskin, which authors for some absolutely
+inscrutable reason he considers provocative of Bagarrowism,
+and he goes to the County Council lectures on dairy-work,
+because it encourages others to improve themselves.
+But I have said enough to display him, and of Bagarrow
+at least&mdash;as I can well testify&mdash;it is easy to have more
+than enough. Indeed, after whole days with him I have
+gone home to dream of the realisation of his ideals, a sort
+of Bagarrow millennium, a world of Bagarrows. All
+kinds of men&mdash;Falstaffs, Don Quixotes, Alan Stewarts,
+John the Baptists, John Knoxes, Quilps, and Benvenuto
+Cellinis&mdash;all, so to speak, Bagarrowed, all with clean
+cuffs, tight umbrellas, and temperate ways, passing
+to and fro in a regenerate earth.</p>
+
+<p>And so he goes on his way through this wonderful
+universe with his eyes fixed upon two or three secondary<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+things, without the lust or pride of life, without curiosity
+or adventure, a mere timid missionary of a religion of
+"Nicer Ways," a quiet setter of a good example. I can
+assure you this is no exaggeration, but a portrait. It
+seems to me that the thing must be pathological, that he
+and this goodness of his have exactly the same claim upon
+Lombroso, let us say, as the born criminal. He is born
+good, a congenital good example, a sufferer from atrophy
+of his original sin. The only hope I can see for
+Bagarrow, short of murder, is forcible trepanning. He
+ought to have the seat of his ideals lanced, and all this
+wash about doing good to people by stealth taken away.
+It may be he might prove a very decent fellow then&mdash;if
+there was anything left of him, that is.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_BOOK_OF_ESSAYS_DEDICATORY" id="THE_BOOK_OF_ESSAYS_DEDICATORY"></a>THE BOOK OF ESSAYS DEDICATORY</h3>
+
+
+<p>I have been bothered about this book this three months.
+I have written scarcely anything since Llewellyn asked
+me for it, for when he asked me I had really nothing on
+hand. I had just published every line I had ever written,
+at my own expense, with Prigsbys. Yet three months
+should suffice for one of Llewellyn's books, which consist
+chiefly of decorous fly-leaves and a dedication or so, and
+margins. Of course you know Llewellyn's books&mdash;the
+most delightful things in the market: the sweetest covers,
+with little gilt apples and things carelessly distributed
+over luminous grey, and bright red initials, and all these
+delightful fopperies. But it was the very slightness of
+these bibelots that disorganised me. And perhaps, also,
+the fact that no one has ever asked me for a book before.</p>
+
+<p>I had no trouble with the title though&mdash;"Lichens." I
+have wondered the thing was never used before. Lichens,
+variegated, beautiful, though on the most arid foundations,
+half fungoid, half vernal&mdash;the very name for a booklet
+of modern verse. And that, of course, decided the key
+of the cover and disposed of three or four pages.
+A fly-leaf, a leaf with "Lichens" printed fair and
+beautiful a little to the left of the centre, then a title-page&mdash;"Lichens.
+By H.G. Wells. London: MDCCCXCV.
+Stephen Llewellyn." Then a restful blank page, and then&mdash;the
+Dedication. It was the dedication stopped me. The
+title-page, it is true, had some points of difficulty. Should
+the Christian name be printed in full or not, for instance;
+but it had none of the fatal fascination of the dedicatory
+page. I had, so to speak, to look abroad among the ranks
+of men, and make one of those fretful forgotten millions&mdash;immortal.
+It seemed a congenial task.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I went to work forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>It was only this morning that I realised the magnitude
+of my accumulations. Ever since then&mdash;it was three
+months ago&mdash;I have been elaborating this Dedication. I
+turned the pile over, idly at first. Presently I became
+interested in tracing my varying moods, as they had
+found a record in the heap.</p>
+
+<p>This struck me&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="./images/img-156.png" height="244" width="260"
+alt="Handwritten dedication, To my Dearest Friend (successive names crossed out)"
+title="To my Dearest Friend" /></div>
+
+<p>Then again, a little essay in gratitude came to hand&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote" style="text-align: center;">
+<span class="smcap">To<br />
+Professor Augustus Flood</span>,<br />
+Whose Admirable Lectures on<br />
+Pal&aelig;ontology<br />
+First turned my Attention to<br />
+Literature.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>There was a tinge of pleasantry in the latter that
+pleased me very greatly when I wrote it, and I find
+immediately overlying it another essay in the same
+line&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote" style="text-align: center;">
+To the Latter-day Reviewer,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">These Pearls.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>For some days I was smitten with the idea of dedicat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>ing
+my little booklet to one of my numerous personal
+antagonists, and conveying some subtly devised insult
+with an air of magnanimity. I thought, for instance, of
+Blizzard&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote" style="text-align: center;">
+<span class="smcap">Sir Joseph Blizzard</span>,<br />
+The most distinguished, if not the greatest, of contemporary<br />
+anatomists.
+</div>
+
+<p>I think it was "X.L.'s" book, <i>Aut Diabolus aut
+Nihil</i>, that set me upon another line. There is, after
+all, your reader to consider in these matters, your average
+middle-class person to impress in some way. They say
+the creature is a snob, and absolutely devoid of any
+tinge of humour, and I must confess that I more than
+half believe it. At anyrate, it was that persuasion
+inspired&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote" style="text-align: center;">
+To the Countess of X.,<br />
+In Memory of Many Happy Days.
+</div>
+
+<p>I know no Countess of X., as a matter of fact, but if the
+public is such an ass as to think better of my work for
+the suspicion, I do not care how soon I incur it. And
+this again is a pretty utilisation of the waste desert of
+politics&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquote"><p><span class="smcap">My Dear Salisbury</span>,&mdash; Pray accept this unworthy tribute of my
+affectionate esteem.</p></div>
+
+<p>There were heaps of others. And looking at those
+heaps it suddenly came sharp and vivid before my mind
+that there&mdash;there was the book I needed, already written!
+A blank page, a dedication, a blank page, a dedication,
+and so on. I saw no reason to change the title. It only
+remained to select the things, and the book was done. I
+set to work at once, and in a very little while my bibelot
+was selected. There were dedications fulsome and fluid,
+dedications acrid and uncharitable, dedications in verse
+and dedications in the dead languages: all sorts and
+conditions of dedications, even the simple "To J.H.
+Gabbles"&mdash;so suggestive of the modest white stones of
+the village churchyard. Altogether I picked out one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+hundred and three dedications. At last only one thing
+remained to complete the book. And that was&mdash;the
+Dedication. You will scarcely credit it, but that worries
+me still....</p>
+
+<p>I am almost inclined to think that Dedications are
+going out of fashion.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THROUGH_A_MICROSCOPE" id="THROUGH_A_MICROSCOPE"></a>THROUGH A MICROSCOPE</h3>
+
+<p>SOME MORAL REFLECTIONS</p>
+
+
+<p>This dabbler person has recently disposed of his camera
+and obtained a microscope&mdash;a short, complacent-looking
+implement it is, of brass&mdash;and he goes about everywhere
+now with little glass bottles in his pocket, ready to jump
+upon any stray polly-woggle he may find, and hale it
+home and pry into its affairs. Within his study window
+are perhaps half a dozen jars and basins full of green
+scum and choice specimens of black mud in which his
+victims live. He persists in making me look through
+this instrument, though I would rather I did not. It
+seems to me a kind of impropriety even when I do it.
+He gets innumerable things in a drop of green water,
+and puts it on a glass slip under the object glass, and, of
+course, they know nothing of the change in their condition,
+and go on living just as they did before they were observed.
+It makes me feel at times like a public moralist,
+or Peeping Tom of Coventry, or some such creature.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly there are odd things enough in the water.
+Among others, certain queer green things that are neither
+plants nor animals. Most of the time they are plants,
+quiet green threads matted together, but every now and
+then the inside comes out of one, so to speak, and starts
+off with a fine red eye and a long flickering tail, to see
+the world. The dabbler says it's quite a usual thing
+among the lower plants&mdash;<i>Alg&aelig;</i> he calls them, for some
+reason&mdash;to disgorge themselves in this way and go swimming
+about; but it has quite upset my notions of things.
+If the lower plants, why not the higher? It may be my
+abominable imagination, but since he told me about these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+&mdash;swarm spores I think he called them&mdash;I don't feel
+nearly so safe with my geraniums as I did.</p>
+
+<p>A particularly objectionable thing in these water drops,
+the dabbler insists upon my spying at is the furious
+activity of everything you see in them. You look down
+his wretched tube, and there, bright and yellow with the
+lamplight in the round field of the microscope, is a perfect
+riot of living things. Perhaps it's the water he got from
+Hampstead, and a dozen flat things the shape of shortbreads
+will be fussing about. They are all quite transparent
+and colourless, and move about like galleys by
+means of a lot of minute oars that stick out all over
+them. Never a moment's rest. And, presently, one sees
+that even the green plant threads are wriggling across
+the field. The dabbler tries to moralise on this in the
+vein of Charles Kingsley, and infer we have much to
+learn from these ridiculous creatures; but, so far as I can
+see, it's a direct incentive to sloth to think how low in
+the scale of creation these things are, in spite of all their
+fussing. If they had sat about more and thought, they
+might be fishing the dabbler out of ponds and examining
+him instead of his examining them. Your energetic people
+might do worse things than have a meditative half-hour
+at the microscope. Then there are green things with a
+red spot and a tail, that creep about like slugs, and are
+equally transparent. <i>Euglena viridis</i> the dabbler calls
+them, which seems unnecessary information. In fact
+all the things he shows me are transparent. Even the
+little one-eyed Crustacea, the size of a needle-point, that
+discredit the name of Cyclops. You can see their
+digestion and muscle and nerve, and, in fact, everything.
+It's at least a blessing we are not the same. Fancy the
+audible comments of the temperance advocate when you
+get in the bus! No use pulling yourself together then.
+"Pretty full!" And "Look," people would say, "his
+wife gives him cold mutton."</p>
+
+<p>Speaking of the name of Cyclops reminds me that these
+scientific people have been playing a scurvy trick upon
+the classics behind our backs. It reminds one of Epistemon's
+visit to Hades, when he saw Alexander a patcher<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+of clouts and Xerxes a crier of mustard. Aphrodite, the
+dabbler tells me, is a kind of dirty mud-worm, and much
+dissected by spectacled pretenders to the London B.Sc.;
+every candidate, says the syllabus, must be able to dissect,
+to the examiner's satisfaction, and demonstrate upon
+Aphrodite, Nereis, Pal&aelig;mon. Were the gods ever so
+insulted? Then the snaky Medusa and Pandora, our
+mother, are jelly-fish; Astr&aelig;a is still to be found on coral
+reefs, a poor thing, and much browsed upon by parrot
+fish; and Doris and Tethys and Cydippe are sea slugs.
+It's worse than Heine's vision of the gods grown old.
+They can't be content with the departed gods merely.
+Evadne is a water flea&mdash;they'll make something out of
+Mrs. Sarah Grand next; and Autolycus, my Autolycus!
+is a polymorphic worm, whatever subtlety of insult
+"polymorphic worm" may convey.</p>
+
+<p>However, I wander from the microscope. These shortbread
+things are fussing about hither and thither across
+the field, and now and then an am&oelig;ba comes crawling
+into view. These are invertebrate jelly-like things of no
+particular shape, and they keep on thrusting out a part
+here, and withdrawing a part there, and changing and
+advancing just as though they were popular democratic
+premiers. Then diatoms keep gliding athwart the circle.
+These diatoms are, to me at least, the most perplexing
+things in the universe. Imagine a highly ornamental
+thing in white and brown, the shape of a spectacle case,
+without any limbs or other visible means of progression,
+and without any wriggling of the body, or indeed any
+apparent effort at all, gliding along at a smart pace.
+That's your diatom. The dabbler really knows nothing
+of how they do it. He mumbles something about B&uuml;tschli
+and Grenfell. Imagine the thing on a larger scale,
+Cleopatra's Needle, for instance, travelling on its side up
+the Thames Embankment, and all unchaperoned, at the
+rate of four or five miles an hour.</p>
+
+<p>There's another odd thing about these microscope
+things which redeems, to some extent at least, their
+singular frankness. To use the decorous phrase of the
+text-book, "They multiply by fission." Your am&oelig;ba or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+vorticella, as the case may be, splits in two. Then there
+are two am&oelig;b&aelig; or vorticell&aelig;. In this way the necessity
+of the family, that middle-class institution so abhorrent to
+the artistic mind, is avoided. In my friend's drop of
+ditch-water, as in heaven, there is neither marrying nor
+giving in marriage. There are no waste parents, which
+should appeal to the scholastic mind, and the simple
+protozoon has none of that fitful fever of falling in love,
+that distressingly tender state that so bothers your mortal
+man. They go about their business with an enviable
+singleness of purpose, and when they have eaten and
+drunk, and attained to the fulness of life, they divide and
+begin again with renewed zest the pastime of living.</p>
+
+<p>In a sense they are immortal. For we may look at
+this matter in another light, and say our exuberant
+protozoon has shed a daughter, and remains. In that case
+the am&oelig;ba I look at may have crawled among the slime
+of the Silurian seas when the common ancestor of myself
+and the royal family was an unassuming mud-fish like
+those in the reptile house in the Zoo. His memoirs
+would be interesting. The thought gives a solemn tint
+to one's meditations. If the dabbler wash him off this
+slide into his tube of water again, this trivial creature
+may go on feeding and growing and dividing, and presently
+be thrown away to wider waters, and so escape to live ... after
+I am dead, after my masterpieces are forgotten,
+after our Empire has passed away, after the human animal
+has passed through I know not what vicissitudes. It may
+be he will still, with the utmost nonchalance, be pushing
+out his pseudopodia, and ingesting diatoms when the
+fretful transitory life of humanity has passed altogether
+from the earth. One may catch him in specimen tubes
+by the dozen; but still, when one thinks of this, it is
+impossible to deny him a certain envious, if qualified,
+respect.</p>
+
+<p>And all the time these creatures are living their
+vigorous, fussy little lives; in this drop of water they are
+being watched by a creature of whose presence they do
+not dream, who can wipe them all out of existence with a
+stroke of his thumb, and who is withal as finite, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+sometimes as fussy and unreasonably energetic, as themselves.
+He sees them, and they do not see him, because
+he has senses they do not possess, because he is too
+incredibly vast and strange to come, save as an overwhelming
+catastrophe, into their lives. Even so, it may
+be, the dabbler himself is being curiously observed....
+The dabbler is good enough to say that the suggestion is
+inconceivable. I can imagine a decent am&oelig;ba saying the
+same thing.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_PLEASURE_OF_QUARRELLING" id="THE_PLEASURE_OF_QUARRELLING"></a>THE PLEASURE OF QUARRELLING</h3>
+
+
+<p>Your cultivated man is apt to pity the respectable poor,
+on the score of their lack of small excitements, and even
+in the excess of his generous sympathy to go a Toynbee-Halling
+in their cause. And Sir Walter Besant once
+wrote a book about Hoxton, saying, among other things,
+how monotonous life was there. That is your modern
+fallacy respecting the lower middle class. One might
+multiply instances. The tenor of the pity is always the
+same.</p>
+
+<p>"No music," says the cultivated man, "no pictures, no
+books to read nor leisure to read in. How can they pass
+their lives?"</p>
+
+<p>The answer is simple enough, as Emily Bront&euml; knew.
+They quarrel. And an excellent way of passing the time
+it is; so excellent, indeed, that the pity were better
+inverted. But we all lack the knowledge of our chiefest
+needs. In the first place, and mainly, it is hygienic to
+quarrel, it disengages floods of nervous energy, the pulse
+quickens, the breathing is accelerated, the digestion improved.
+Then it sets one's stagnant brains astir and
+quickens the imagination; it clears the mind of vapours, as
+thunder clears the air. And, finally, it is a natural function
+of the body. In his natural state man is always quarrelling&mdash;by
+instinct. Not to quarrel is indeed one of the
+vices of our civilisation, one of the reasons why we are
+neurotic and an&aelig;mic, and all these things. And, at last,
+our enfeebled palates have even lost the capacity for
+enjoying a "jolly good row."</p>
+
+<p>There can be no more melancholy sight in the world
+than that of your young man or young woman suffering
+from suppressed pugnacity. Up to the end of the school<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+years it was well with them; they had ample scope for
+this wholesome commerce, the neat give and take of
+offence. In the family circle, too, there are still plentiful
+chances of acquiring the taste. Then, suddenly, they
+must be gentle and considerate, and all the rest of it. A
+wholesome shindy, so soon as toga and long skirts arrive,
+is looked upon as positively wrong; even the dear old
+institution of the "cut" is falling into disrepute. The
+quarrelling is all forced back into the system, as it were;
+it poisons the blood. This is why our literature grows
+sinister and bitter, and our daughters yearn after this and
+that, write odd books, and ride about on bicycles in
+remarkable clothes. They have shut down the safety
+valve, they suffer from the present lamentable increase of
+gentleness. They must find some outlet, or perish. If
+they could only put their arms akimbo and tell each
+other a piece of their minds for a little, in the ancient
+way, there can be not the slightest doubt that much of
+this <i>fin-de-si&egrave;cle</i> unwholesomeness would disappear.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly this fashion of gentleness will pass. Yet it
+has had increasing sway now for some years. An unhealthy
+generation has arisen&mdash;among the more educated class at
+least&mdash;that quarrels little, regards the function as a vice
+or a nuisance, as the East-ender does a taste for fine art
+or literature. We seem indeed to be getting altogether
+out of the way of it. Rare quarrels, no doubt, occur to
+everyone, but rare quarrelling is no quarrelling at all.
+Like beer, smoking, sea-bathing, cycling, and the like
+delights, you cannot judge of quarrelling by the early
+essay. But to show how good it is&mdash;did you ever know a
+quarrelsome person give up the use? Alcohol you may
+wean a man from, and Barrie says he gave up the
+Arcadia Mixture, and De Quincey conquered opium.
+But once you are set as a quarreller you quarrel and
+quarrel till you die.</p>
+
+<p>How to quarrel well and often has ever been something
+of an art, and it becomes more of an art with the general
+decline of spirit. For it takes two to make a quarrel.
+Time was when you turned to the handiest human being,
+and with small care or labour had the comfortable warmth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+you needed in a minute or so. There was theology, even
+in the fifties it was ample cause with two out of three you
+met. Now people will express a lamentable indifference.
+Then politics again, but a little while ago fat for the fire
+of any male gathering, is now a topic of mere tepidity.
+So you are forced to be more subtle, more patient in your
+quarrelling. You play like a little boy playing cricket
+with his sisters, with those who do not understand. A
+fellow-votary is a rare treat. As a rule you have to lure
+and humour your antagonist like a child. The wooing is
+as intricate and delicate as any wooing can well be. To
+quarrel now, indeed, requires an infinity of patience.
+The good old days of thumb-biting&mdash;"Do you bite your
+thumbs at us, sir?" and so to clash and stab&mdash;are gone
+for ever.</p>
+
+<p>There are certain principles in quarrelling, however,
+that the true quarreller ever bears in mind, and which,
+duly observed, do much to facilitate encounters. In the
+first place, cultivate Distrust. Have always before you
+that this is a wicked world, full of insidious people, and
+you never know what villainous encroachments upon you
+may be hidden under fair-seeming appearances. That is
+the flavour of it. At the first suspicion, "stick up for
+your rights," as the vulgar say. And see that you do it
+suddenly. Smite promptly, and the surprise and sting of
+your injustice should provoke an excellent reply. And
+where there is least ground for suspicion, there, remember,
+is the most. The right hand of fellowship extended
+towards you is one of the best openings you have. "Not
+such a fool," is the kind of attitude to assume, and "You
+don't put upon <i>me</i> so easy." Your adversary resents this
+a little, and, rankling, tries to explain. You find a
+personal inference in the expostulation.</p>
+
+<p>Next to a wariness respecting your interests is a keen
+regard for your honour. Have concealed in the privacy
+of your mind a code of what is due to you. Expand or
+modify it as occasion offers. Be as it were a collector of
+what are called "slights," and never let one pass you.
+Watch your friend in doorways, passages; when he eats
+by you, when he drinks with you, when he addresses you,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+when he writes you letters. It will be hard if you cannot
+catch him smuggling some deadly insult into your presence.
+Tax him with it. He did not think, forsooth! Tell him
+no gentleman would do such a thing, thinkingly or not;
+that you certainly will not stand it again. Say you will
+show him. He will presently argue or contradict. So to
+your climax.</p>
+
+<p>Then, again, there is the personal reference. "Meaning
+me, sir?" Your victim with a blithe heart babbles of
+this or that. You let him meander here and there,
+watching him as if you were in ambush. Presently he
+comes into your spring. "Of course," you say, "I saw
+what you were driving at just this minute, when you
+mentioned mustard in salad dressing, but if I am peppery
+I am not mean. And if I have a thing to say I say it
+straight out." A good gambit this, and well into him
+from the start. The particular beauty of this is that you
+get him apologetic at first, and can score heavily before
+he rises to the defensive.</p>
+
+<p>Then, finally, there is your abstract cause, once very
+fruitful indeed, but now sadly gone in decay, except
+perhaps in specialist society. As an example, let there
+be one who is gibing genially at some topic or other, at
+Japanese king-crabs, or the inductive process, or any
+other topic which cannot possibly affect you one atom.
+Then is the time to drop all these merely selfish interests,
+and to champion the cause of truth. Fall upon him in a
+fine glow of indignation, and bring your contradiction
+across his face&mdash;whack!&mdash;so that all the table may hear.
+Tell him, with his pardon, that the king-crab is no more
+a crab than you are a jelly-fish, or that Mill has been
+superseded these ten years. Ask: "How can you say
+such things?" From thence to his general knowledge is
+a short flight, and so to his veracity, his reasoning powers,
+his mere common sense. "Let me tell you, sir," is the
+special incantation for the storm.</p>
+
+<p>These are the four chief ways of quarrelling, the four
+gates to this delightful city. For it is delightful, once
+your 'prentice days are past. In a way it is like a cold
+bath on a winter's morning, and you glow all day. In a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+way it is like football, as the nimble aggravation dances
+to and fro. In a way it is like chess. Indeed, all games
+of skill are watered quarrels, quarrel and soda, come to
+see them in a proper light. And without quarrelling you
+have not fully appreciated your fellow-man. For in the
+ultimate it is the train and complement of Love, the
+shadow that rounds off the delight we take in poor
+humanity. It is the vinegar and pepper of existence, and
+long after our taste for sweets has vanished it will be the
+solace of our declining years.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_AMATEUR_NATURE-LOVER" id="THE_AMATEUR_NATURE-LOVER"></a>THE AMATEUR NATURE-LOVER</h3>
+
+
+<p>It is possible that an education entirely urban is not the
+best conceivable preparation for descriptive articles upon
+the country. On the other hand, your professional
+nature-lover is sometimes a little over-familiar with his
+subject. He knows the names of all the things, and he
+does not spare you. Besides, he is subtle. The prominent
+features are too familiar to him, and he goes into details.
+What respectable townsman, for instance, knows what
+"scabiosa" is? It sounds very unpleasant. Then the
+professional nature-lover assumes that you know trees.
+No Englishman can tell any tree from any other tree,
+except a very palpable oak or poplar. So that we may at
+least, as an experiment, allow a good Londoner to take his
+unsophisticated eyes out into the sweet country for once,
+and try his skill at nature-loving, though his botany has
+been learned over the counter of flower-shops, and his
+zoology on Saturday afternoons when they have the band
+in the Gardens. He makes his way, then, over by Epsom
+Downs towards Sutton, trying to assimilate his mood to
+the proper flavour of appreciation as he goes, and with a
+little notebook in the palm of his hand to assist an ill-trained
+memory. And the burthen of his song is of
+course the autumn tints.</p>
+
+<p>The masses of trees towards Epsom and Ewell, with the
+red houses and Elizabethan fa&ccedil;ades peeping through their
+interstices, contain, it would seem, every conceivable
+colour, except perhaps sky-blue; there are brilliant
+yellow trees, and a kind of tree of the most amazing
+gamboge green, almost the green of spring come back, and
+tan-coloured trees, deep brown, red, and deep crimson
+trees. Here and there the wind has left its mark, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+the grey-brown branches and their purple tracery of
+twigs, with a suggestion of infinite depth behind, show
+through the rents in the leafy covering. There are deep
+green trees&mdash;the amateur nature-lover fancies they may
+be yews&mdash;with their dense warm foliage arranged in
+horizontal masses, like the clouds low down in a sunset;
+and certain other evergreens, one particularly, with a
+bluish-green covering of upstanding needles, are intensely
+conspicuous among the flame tints around. On a distant
+church tower, and nearer, disputing the possession of a
+gabled red house with a glowing creeper, is some ivy; and
+never is the perennial green of ivy so delightful as it is
+now, when all else is alight with the sombre fire of the
+sunset of the year....</p>
+
+<p>The amateur nature-lover proceeds over the down,
+appreciating all this as hard as he can appreciate, and
+anon gazing up at the grey and white cloud shapes
+melting slowly from this form to that, and showing lakes,
+and wide expanses, and serene distances of blue between
+their gaps. And then he looks round him for a zoological
+item. Underfoot the grass of the down is recovering
+from the summer drought and growing soft and green
+again, and plentiful little flattened snail shells lie about,
+and here and there a late harebell still nods in the breeze.
+Yonder bolts a rabbit, and then something whizzes by the
+amateur nature-lover's ear.</p>
+
+<p>They shoot here somewhere, he remembers suddenly;
+and then looking round, in a palpitating state, is reassured
+by the spectacle of a lone golfer looming over the brow
+of the down, and gesticulating black and weird against
+the sky. The Londoner, with an abrupt affectation of
+nonchalance, flings himself flat upon his back, and so
+remains comparatively safe until the golfer has passed.
+These golfers are strange creatures, rabbit-coloured, except
+that many are bright red about the middle, and they
+repel and yet are ever attracted by a devil in the shape of
+a little white ball, which leads them on through toothed
+briars, sharp furzes, pricking goss, and thorns; cursing
+the thing, weeping even, and anon laughing at their own
+foolish rambling; muttering, heeding no one to the right<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+or left of their career,&mdash;demented creatures, as though
+these balls were their souls, that they ever sought to
+lose, and ever repented losing. And silent, ever at the
+heel of each, is a familiar spirit, an eerie human hedgehog,
+all set about with walking-sticks, a thing like a
+cylindrical umbrella-stand with a hat and boots and
+a certain suggestion of leg. And so they pass and are
+gone.</p>
+
+<p>Rising, the amateur nature-lover finds he has been
+reclining on a puff-ball. These puff-balls are certainly
+the most remarkable example of adaptation to circumstances
+known to English botanists. They grow abundantly
+on golf grounds, and are exactly like golf-balls in
+external appearance. They are, however, Pharisees and
+whited sepulchres, and within they are full of a soft mess
+of a most unpleasant appearance&mdash;the amateur nature-lover
+has some on him now&mdash;which stuff contains the
+spores. It is a case of what naturalists call "mimicry"&mdash;one
+of nature's countless adaptations. The golf-player
+smites these things with force, covering himself with
+ridicule&mdash;and spores, and so disseminating this far-sighted
+and ingenious fungus far and wide about the links.</p>
+
+<p>The amateur nature-lover passes off the down, and
+towards Banstead village. He is on the watch for
+characteristic objects of the countryside, and rustling
+through the leaves beneath a chestnut avenue he comes
+upon an old boot. It is a very, very old boot, all its
+blacking washed off by the rain, and two spreading chestnut
+leaves, yellow they are with blotches of green, with
+their broad fingers extended, rest upon it, as if they would
+protect and altogether cover the poor old boot in its last
+resting-place. It is as if Mother Nature, who lost sight
+of her product at the tanner's yard, meant to claim her own
+trampled child again at last, after all its wanderings. So
+we go on, noting a sardine tin gleaming brightly in the
+amber sunlight, through a hazel hedge, and presently
+another old boot. Some hawthorn berries, some hoary
+clematis we notice&mdash;and then another old boot. Altogether,
+it may be remarked, in this walk the amateur
+nature-lover saw eleven old boots, most of them dropped<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+in the very sweetest bits of hedge tangle and grassy corner
+about Banstead.</p>
+
+<p>It is natural to ask, "Whence come all these old boots?"
+They are, as everyone knows, among the commonest objects
+in a country walk, so common, indeed, that the professional
+nature-lover says very little about them. They cannot
+grow there, they cannot be dropped from above&mdash;they are
+distinctly earth-worn boots. I have inquired of my own
+domestic people, and caused inquiry to be made in a large
+number of households, and there does not appear to be
+any regular custom of taking boots away to remote and
+picturesque spots to abandon them. Some discarded
+boots of my own were produced, but they were quite
+different from the old boot of the outer air. These home-kept
+old boots were lovely in their way, hoary with mould
+running into the most exquisite tints of glaucophane and
+blue-grey, but it was a different way altogether from that
+of the wild boot.</p>
+
+<p>A friend says, that these boots are cast away by tramps.
+People, he states, give your tramp old boots and hats in
+great profusion, and the modesty of the recipient drives
+him to these picturesque and secluded spots to effect the
+necessary change. But no nature-lover has ever observed
+the tramp or tramp family in the act of changing their
+clothes, and since there are even reasons to suppose that
+their garments are not detachable, it seems preferable to
+leave the wayside boot as a pleasant flavouring of mystery
+to our ramble. Another point, which also goes to explode
+this tramp theory, is that these countryside boots <i>never
+occur in pairs</i>, as any observer of natural history can
+testify....</p>
+
+<p>So our Cockney Jefferies proceeds, presently coming
+upon a cinder path. They use cinders a lot about Sutton,
+to make country paths with; it gives you an unexpected
+surprise the first time it occurs. You drop suddenly out
+of a sweetly tangled lane into a veritable bit of the Black
+Country, and go on with loathing in your soul for your
+fellow-creatures. There is also an abundance of that last
+product of civilisation, barbed wire. Oh that I were
+Gideon! with thorns and briers of the wilderness would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+I teach these elders of Sutton! But a truce to dark
+thoughts!</p>
+
+<p>We take our last look at the country from the open
+down above Sutton. Blue hills beyond blue hills recede
+into the remote distance; from Banstead Down one can
+see into Oxfordshire. Windsor Castle is in minute blue
+silhouette to the left, and to the right and nearer is the
+Crystal Palace. And closer, clusters red-roofed Sutton
+and its tower, then Cheam, with its white spire, and
+further is Ewell, set in a variegated texture of autumn
+foliage. Water gleams&mdash;a silver thread&mdash;at Ewell, and
+the sinking sun behind us catches a window here and
+there, and turns it into an eye of flame. And so to
+Sutton station and home to Cockneydom once more.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="FROM_AN_OBSERVATORY" id="FROM_AN_OBSERVATORY"></a>FROM AN OBSERVATORY</h3>
+
+
+<p>It will be some time yet before the rising of the moon.
+Looking down from the observatory one can see the pathways
+across the park dotted out in yellow lamps, each
+with a fringe of dim green; and further off, hot and bright,
+is the tracery of the illuminated streets, through which
+the people go to and fro. Save for an occasional stirring, or
+a passing voice speaking out of the dimness beneath me,
+the night is very still. Not a cloud is to be seen in the
+dark midwinter sky to hide one speck of its broad smears
+of star dust and its shining constellations.</p>
+
+<p>As the moon rises, heaven will be flooded with blue
+light, and one after another the stars will be submerged
+and lost, until only a solitary shining pinnacle of brightness
+will here and there remain out of the whole host of
+them. It is curious to think that, were the moon but a
+little brighter and truly the ruler of the night, rising to
+its empire with the setting of the sun, we should never
+dream of the great stellar universe in which our little
+solar system swims&mdash;or know it only as a traveller's tale,
+a strange thing to be seen at times in the Arctic Circle.
+Nay, if the earth's atmosphere were some few score miles
+higher, a night-long twilight would be drawn like an
+impenetrable veil across the stars. By a mere accident
+of our existence we see their multitude ever and again,
+when the curtains of the daylight and moonlight, and of
+our own narrow pressing necessities, are for a little while
+drawn back. Then, for an interval, we look, as if out of a
+window, into the great deep of heaven. So far as physical
+science goes, there is nothing in the essential conditions of
+our existence to necessitate that we should have these
+transitory glimpses of infinite space. We can imagine<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+men just like ourselves without such an outlook. But it
+happens that we have it.</p>
+
+<p>If we had not this vision, if we had always so much
+light in the sky that we could not perceive the stars, our
+lives, so far as we can infer, would be very much as they
+are now; there would still be the same needs and desires,
+the same appliances for our safety and satisfaction; this
+little gaslit world below would scarcely miss the stars
+now, if they were blotted out for ever. But our science
+would be different in some respects had we never seen
+them. We should still have good reason, in Foucault's
+pendulum experiment, for supposing that the world
+rotated upon its axis, and that the sun was so far
+relatively fixed; but we should have no suspicion of the
+orbital revolution of the world. Instead we should ascribe
+the seasonal differences to a meridional movement of the
+sun. Our spectroscopic astronomy&mdash;so far as it refers to
+the composition of the sun and moon&mdash;would stand
+precisely where it does, but the bulk of our mathematical
+astronomy would not exist. Our calendar would still be
+in all essential respects as it is now; our year with the
+solstices and equinoxes as its cardinal points. The texture
+of our poetry might conceivably be the poorer without its
+star spangles; our philosophy, for the want of a nebular
+hypothesis. These would be the main differences. Yet,
+to those who indulge in speculative dreaming, how much
+smaller life would be with a sun and a moon and a blue
+beyond for the only visible, the only thinkable universe.
+And it is, we repeat, from the scientific standpoint a mere
+accident that the present&mdash;the daylight&mdash;world periodically
+opens, as it were, and gives us this inspiring glimpse of the
+remoteness of space.</p>
+
+<p>One may imagine countless meteors and comets
+streaming through the solar system, unobserved by those
+who dwelt under such conditions as have just been
+suggested, or some huge dark body from the outer depths
+sweeping straight at that little visible universe, and all
+unsuspected by the inhabitants. One may imagine the
+scientific people of such a world, calm in their assurance
+of the permanence of things, incapable almost of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+conceiving any disturbing cause. One may imagine how
+an imaginative writer who doubted that permanence
+would be pooh-poohed. "Cannot we see to the uttermost
+limits of space?" they might argue, "and is it not
+altogether blue and void?" Then, as the unseen visitor
+draws near, begin the most extraordinary perturbations.
+The two known heavenly bodies suddenly fail from their
+accustomed routine. The moon, hitherto invariably full,
+changes towards its last quarter&mdash;and then, behold! for
+the first time the rays of the greater stars visibly pierce
+the blue canopy of the sky. How suddenly&mdash;painfully
+almost&mdash;the minds of thinking men would be enlarged
+when this rash of the stars appeared.</p>
+
+<p>And what then if <i>our</i> heavens were to open? Very thin
+indeed is the curtain between us and the unknown. There
+is a fear of the night that is begotten of ignorance and
+superstition, a nightmare fear, the fear of the impossible;
+and there is another fear of the night&mdash;of the starlit night&mdash;that
+comes with knowledge, when we see in its true
+proportion this little life of ours with all its phantasmal
+environment of cities and stores and arsenals, and the
+habits, prejudices, and promises of men. Down there in
+the gaslit street such things are real and solid enough, the
+only real things, perhaps; but not up here, not under the
+midnight sky. Here for a space, standing silently upon
+the dim, grey tower of the old observatory, we may clear
+our minds of instincts and illusions, and look out upon the
+real.</p>
+
+<p>And now to the eastward the stars are no longer
+innumerable, and the sky grows wan. Then a faint
+silvery mist appears above the housetops, and at last in
+the midst of this there comes a brilliantly shining line&mdash;the
+upper edge of the rising moon.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="THE_MODE_IN_MONUMENTS" id="THE_MODE_IN_MONUMENTS"></a>THE MODE IN MONUMENTS</h3>
+
+<p>STRAY THOUGHTS IN HIGHGATE CEMETERY</p>
+
+
+<p>On a sharp, sunlight morning, when the white clouds are
+drifting swiftly across the luminous blue sky, there is no
+finer walk about London than the Highgate ridge. One
+may stay awhile on the Archway looking down upon the
+innumerable roofs of London stretching southward into
+the haze, and shining here and there with the reflection of
+the rising sun, and then wander on along the picturesque
+road by the college of Saint Aloysius to the new Catholic
+church, and so through the Waterlow Park to the
+cemetery. The Waterlow Park is a pleasant place, full of
+children and aged persons in perambulators during the
+middle hours of the day, and in the summer evening time
+a haunt of young lovers; but your early wanderer finds it
+solitary save for Vertumnus, who, with L.C.C. on the
+front of him, is putting in crocuses. So we wander down
+to the little red lodge, whence a sinuous road runs to
+Hampstead, and presently into the close groves of monuments
+that whiten the opposite slope.</p>
+
+<p>How tightly these white sepulchres are packed here!
+How different this congestion of sorrow from the mossy
+latitude of God's Acre in the country! The dead are
+crammed together as closely as the living seemed in that
+bird's-eye view from the Archway. There is no ample
+shadow of trees, no tangled corners where mother earth
+may weave flower garlands over her returning children.
+The monuments positively jostle and elbow each other for
+frontage upon the footways. And they are so rawly clean
+and assertive. Most of them are conspicuously new
+whitened, with freshly-blackened or newly-gilt inscriptions,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+bare of lichen, moss, or mystery, and altogether so restless
+that it seems to the meditative man that the struggle for
+existence, for mere standing room and a show in the
+world, still rages among the dead. The unstable slope of
+the hill, with its bristling array of obelisks, crosses and
+urns, craning one above another, is as directly opposed to
+the restfulness of the village churchyard with its serene
+outspreading yews as midday Fleet Street to a Sabbath
+evening amidst the Sussex hills. This cemetery is, indeed,
+a veritable tumult of tombs.</p>
+
+<p>Another thing that presently comes painfully home
+to one is the lack of individuality among all these dead.
+Not a necessary lack of individuality so much as a deliberate
+avoidance of it. As one wanders along the steep, narrow
+pathways one is more and more profoundly impressed by
+the wholesale flavour of the mourning, the stereotyping of
+the monuments. The place is too modern for <i>memento
+mori</i> and the hour-glass and the skull. Instead, Slap
+&amp; Dash, that excellent firm of monumental masons,
+everywhere crave to be remembered. Truly, the firm of
+Slap &amp; Dash have much to answer for among these
+graves, and they do not seem to be ashamed of it.</p>
+
+<p>From one elevated point in this cemetery one can
+count more than a hundred urns, getting at last weary
+and confused with the receding multitude. The urn is
+not dissimilar to the domestic mantel ornament, and
+always a stony piece of textile fabric is feigned to be
+thrown over its shoulder. At times it is wreathed in
+stony flowers. The only variety is in the form. Sometimes
+your urn is broad and squat, a Silenus among urns;
+sometimes fragile and high-shouldered, like a slender old
+maid; here an "out-size" in urns stalwart and strong, and
+there a dwarf peeping quaintly from its wrapping. The
+obelisks, too, run through a long scale of size and refinement.
+But the curious man finds no hidden connection between
+the carriage of the monument and the character of the dead.
+Messrs. Slap &amp; Dash apparently take the urn or obelisk
+that comes readiest to hand. One wonders dimly why
+mourners have this overwhelming proclivity for Messrs.
+Slap &amp; Dash and their obelisk and urn.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The reason why the firm produces these articles may be
+guessed at. They are probably easy to make, and require
+scarcely any skill. The contemplative man has a dim
+vision of a grimy shed in a back street, where a human
+being passes dismally through life the while he chips out
+an unending succession of these cheap urns and obelisks
+for his employers' retailing. But the question why
+numberless people will profane the memory of their
+departed by these public advertisements of Slap &amp; Dash,
+and their evil trade, is a more difficult problem. For
+surely nothing could be more unmeaning or more
+ungainly than the monumental urn, unless it be the
+monumental obelisk. The plain cross, by contrast, has
+the tenderest meaning, and is a simple and fitting
+monument that no repetition can stale.</p>
+
+<p>The artistic cowardice of the English is perhaps the
+clue to the mystery. Your Englishman is always afraid
+to commit himself to criticism without the refuge of a
+<i>tu quoque</i>. He is covered dead, just as he is covered
+living, with the "correct thing." A respectable stock-in-trade
+is proffered him by the insinuating shopman, to
+whom it is our custom to go. He is told this is selling
+well, or that is much admired. Heaven defend that he
+should admire on his own account! He orders the stock
+urn or the stock slab because it is large and sufficiently
+expensive for his means and sorrow, and because he
+knows of nothing better. So we mourn as the stonemason
+decrees, or after the example and pattern of the Smiths
+next door. But some day it will dawn upon us that a
+little thought and a search after beauty are far more
+becoming than an order and a cheque to the nearest
+advertising tradesman. Or it may be we shall conclude
+that the anonymous peace of a grassy mould is better
+than his commercial brutalities, and so there will be an
+end of him.</p>
+
+<p>One may go from end to end of this cemetery and find
+scarcely anything beautiful, appropriate, or tender. A
+lion, ill done, and yet to some degree impressive, lies
+complacently above a menagerie keeper, and near this
+is a tomb of some imagination, with reliefs of the life of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+Christ. In one place a grotesque horse, with a head disproportionately
+vast, is to be seen. Perhaps among all
+these monuments the one to Mrs. Blake is the most
+pleasing. It is a simply and quaintly executed kneeling
+figure, with a certain quiet and pathetic reverence of pose
+that is strangely restful against the serried vulgarity
+around it.</p>
+
+<p>But the tradesman ghoul will not leave us; he follows
+us up and down, indecently clamouring his name and
+address, and at last turns our meditation to despair.
+Certain stock devices become as painful as popular
+autotypes. There is the lily broken on its stalk; we
+meet it here on a cross and there on an obelisk, presently
+on the pedestal of an urn. There is the hand pointing
+upward, here balanced on the top of an obelisk and
+there upon a cross. The white-robed angel, free from the
+remotest shadow of expression, meets us again and again.
+"All this is mine," says the tradesman ghoul. "Behold
+the names of me&mdash;Slap &amp; Dash here, the Ugliness
+Company there, and this the work of the Cheap and
+Elegant Funeral Association. This is where we slew the
+art of sculpture. These are our trophies that sculpture is
+no more. All this marble might have been beautiful, all
+this sorrow might have been expressive, had it not been for
+us. See, this is our border, No. A 5, and our pedestal
+No. E, and our second quality urn, along of a nice
+appropriate text&mdash;a pretty combination and a cheap
+one. Or we can do it you better in border A 3, and
+pedestal C, and a larger urn or a hangel&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The meditative man is seized with a dismal horror, and
+retreats to the gates. Even there a wooden advertisement
+grins broadly at him in his discomfiture, and shouts a
+name athwart his route. And so down the winding road
+to the valley, and then up Parliament Hill towards
+Hampstead and its breeze-whipped ponds. And the
+mind of him is full of a dim vision of days that have been,
+when sculptor and stonemason were one, when the artist
+put his work in the porch for all the world to see, when
+people had leisure to think how things should be done and
+heart to do them well, when there was beauty in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+business of life and dignity in death. And he wonders
+rather hopelessly if people will ever rise up against these
+damnable tradesmen who ruin our arts, make our lives
+costly and dismal, and advertise, advertise even on our
+graves</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+<h3><a name="HOW_I_DIED" id="HOW_I_DIED"></a>HOW I DIED</h3>
+
+
+<p>It is now ten years ago since I received my death
+warrant. All these ten years I have been, and I am,
+and shall be, I hope, for years yet, a Doomed Man. It
+only occurred to me yesterday that I had been dodging&mdash;missing
+rather than dodging&mdash;the common enemy for such
+a space of time. <i>Then</i>, I know, I respected him. It
+seemed he marched upon me, inexorable, irresistible; even
+at last I felt his grip upon me. I bowed in the shadow.
+And he passed. Ten years ago, and once since, he and I
+have been very near. But now he seems to me but a
+blind man, and we, with all our solemn folly of medicine
+and hygiene, but players in a game of Blind Man's Buff.
+The gaunt, familiar hand comes out suddenly, swiftly,
+this time surely? And it passes close to my shoulder; I
+hear someone near me cry, and it is over.... Another
+ream of paper; there is time at least for the Great Book
+still.</p>
+
+<p>Very close to the tragedy of life is the comedy,
+brightest upon the very edge of the dark, and I remember
+now with a queer touch of sympathetic amusement
+my dear departed self of the middle eighties. How the
+thing staggered me! I was full of the vast ambition of
+youth; I was still at the age when death is quite
+out of sight, when life is still an interminable vista
+of years; and then suddenly, with a gout of blood
+upon my knuckle, with a queer familiar taste in
+my mouth, that cough which had been a bother became
+a tragedy, and this world that had been so solid grew
+faint and thin. I saw through it; saw his face near to my
+own; suddenly found him beside me, when I had been
+dreaming he was far beyond there, far away over the hills.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My first phase was an immense sorrow for myself.
+It was a purely selfish emotion. You see I had been
+saving myself up, denying myself half the pride of life
+and most of its indulgence, drilling myself like a drill-sergeant,
+with my eyes on those now unattainable hills.
+Had I known it was to end so soon, I should have
+planned everything so differently. I lay in bed mourning
+my truncated existence. Then presently the sorrow
+broadened. They were so sorry, so genuinely sorry for
+me. And they considered me so much now. I had this
+and that they would never have given me before&mdash;the
+stateliest bedding, the costliest food. I could feel from
+my bed the suddenly disorganised house, the distressed
+friends, the new-born solicitude. Insensibly a realisation
+of enhanced importance came to temper my regrets for
+my neglected sins. The lost world, that had seemed so
+brilliant and attractive, dwindled steadily as the days of
+my illness wore on. I thought more of the world's loss,
+and less of my own.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the long journey; the princely style of it!
+the sudden awakening on the part of external humanity,
+which had hitherto been wont to jostle me, to help itself
+before me, to turn its back upon me, to my importance.
+"He has a diseased lung&mdash;cannot live long"....</p>
+
+<p>I was going into the dark and I was not afraid&mdash;with
+ostentation. I still regard that, though now with scarcely
+so much gravity as heretofore, as a very magnificent
+period in my life. For nearly four months I was dying
+with immense dignity. Plutarch might have recorded it.
+I wrote&mdash;in touchingly unsteady pencil&mdash;to all my
+intimate friends, and indeed to many other people. I
+saw the littleness of hate and ambition. I forgave my
+enemies, and they were subdued and owned to it. How
+they must regret these admissions! I made many
+memorable remarks. This lasted, I say, nearly four
+months.</p>
+
+<p>The medical profession, which had pronounced my
+death sentence, reiterated it steadily&mdash;has, indeed, done
+so now this ten years. Towards the end of those four
+months, however, dying lost its freshness for me. I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+began to detect a certain habitual quality in my service.
+I had exhausted all my memorable remarks upon the
+subject, and the strain began to tell upon all of us.</p>
+
+<p>One day in the spring-time I crawled out alone, carefully
+wrapped, and with a stick, to look once more&mdash;perhaps
+for the last time&mdash;on sky and earth, and the first
+scattered skirmishers of the coming army of flowers. It
+was a day of soft wind, when the shadows of the clouds
+go sweeping over the hills. Quite casually I happened
+upon a girl clambering over a hedge, and her dress had
+caught in a bramble, and the chat was quite impromptu
+and most idyllic. I remember she had three or four
+wood anemones in her hand&mdash;"wind stars" she called
+them, and I thought it a pretty name. And we talked
+of this and that, with a light in our eyes, as young folks
+will.</p>
+
+<p>I quite forgot I was a Doomed Man. I surprised
+myself walking home with a confident stride that jarred
+with the sudden recollection of my funereal circumstances.
+For a moment I tried in vain to think what it was had
+slipped my memory. Then it came, colourless and remote.
+"Oh! Death.... He's a Bore," I said; "I've
+done with him," and laughed to think of having done with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"And why not so?" said I.</p>
+
+
+<h4>THE END</h4>
+<br />
+<br />
+
+<p><i>This book appeared some years ago at another price and in another
+form. The Publisher believes that its present guise will bring it
+within the reach of all and sundry, who, while delighting in the
+marriage of</i> wit <i>with</i> wisdom, <i>cannot complete the trilogy with the
+third desideratum of</i> wealth.</p>
+<br />
+<br />
+<p><b>PRINTED BY MORRISON AND GIBB LIMITED, EDINBURGH</b></p>
+
+
+<hr />
+<h4>Back Cover:</h4>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="./images/backcover.png" width="600" height="972"
+title="Advertisement"
+alt="Advertisement for Norman Stacey Ltd. (text below)" />
+</div>
+
+<p>To Furnish Smartly
+Without Disturbing Capital</p>
+
+<p>By means of a perfectly
+simple plan (commended
+by the Editor
+of <i>Truth</i> and many others)
+you may furnish your
+House, Chambers, or Flat
+throughout,&mdash;and to the
+extent of Linen, Silver,
+and Cutlery,&mdash;<span class="u">Out of
+Income without drawing
+upon Capital</span> by dividing
+the initial outlay into 6,
+12, or 24 monthly, or 12
+quarterly payments. At
+any period the option may
+be exercised of paying off
+the balance, and so take
+advantage of the Cash
+Discount.</p>
+
+<p>A beautifully coloured
+Catalogue given on personal
+application.</p>
+
+
+<p>
+CONSULT:<br />
+NORMAN &amp; STACEY, Ltd.,<br />
+<i>Artistic House Furnishers</i>,<br />
+118, Queen Victoria St., E.C.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Certain Personal Matters, by H. G. Wells
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+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Certain Personal Matters, by H. G. Wells
+
+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: Certain Personal Matters
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2006 [EBook #17508]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS
+
+ BY
+
+ H.G. WELLS
+
+
+
+ LONDON
+ T. FISHER UNWIN
+ PATERNOSTER SQUARE, E.C.
+ 1901
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+THOUGHTS ON CHEAPNESS AND MY AUNT CHARLOTTE 7
+
+THE TROUBLE OF LIFE 12
+
+ON THE CHOICE OF A WIFE 18
+
+THE HOUSE OF DI SORNO 22
+
+OF CONVERSATION 27
+
+IN A LITERARY HOUSEHOLD 32
+
+ON SCHOOLING AND THE PHASES OF MR. SANDSOME 36
+
+THE POET AND THE EMPORIUM 40
+
+THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS 45
+
+THE LITERARY REGIMEN 49
+
+HOUSE-HUNTING AS AN OUTDOOR AMUSEMENT 54
+
+OF BLADES AND BLADERY 59
+
+OF CLEVERNESS 63
+
+THE POSE NOVEL 67
+
+THE VETERAN CRICKETER 71
+
+CONCERNING A CERTAIN LADY 76
+
+THE SHOPMAN 80
+
+THE BOOK OF CURSES 85
+
+DUNSTONE'S DEAR LADY 90
+
+EUPHEMIA'S NEW ENTERTAINMENT (_this is illustrated_) 94
+
+FOR FREEDOM OF SPELLING 98
+
+INCIDENTAL THOUGHTS ON A BALD HEAD 104
+
+OF A BOOK UNWRITTEN 108
+
+THE EXTINCTION OF MAN 115
+
+THE WRITING OF ESSAYS 120
+
+THE PARKES MUSEUM 124
+
+BLEAK MARCH IN EPPING FOREST 128
+
+THE THEORY OF QUOTATION 132
+
+ON THE ART OF STAYING AT THE SEASIDE 135
+
+CONCERNING CHESS 140
+
+THE COAL-SCUTTLE 145
+
+BAGARROW 150
+
+THE BOOK OF ESSAYS DEDICATORY 155
+
+THROUGH A MICROSCOPE 159
+
+THE PLEASURE OF QUARRELLING 164
+
+THE AMATEUR NATURE-LOVER 169
+
+FROM AN OBSERVATORY 174
+
+THE MODE IN MONUMENTS 177
+
+HOW I DIED 182
+
+
+
+
+CERTAIN PERSONAL MATTERS
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS ON CHEAPNESS AND MY AUNT CHARLOTTE
+
+
+The world mends. In my younger days people believed in mahogany; some of
+my readers will remember it--a heavy, shining substance, having a
+singularly close resemblance to raw liver, exceedingly heavy to move,
+and esteemed on one or other count the noblest of all woods. Such of us
+as were very poor and had no mahogany pretended to have mahogany; and
+the proper hepatite tint was got by veneering. That makes one incline to
+think it was the colour that pleased people. In those days there was a
+word "trashy," now almost lost to the world. My dear Aunt Charlotte used
+that epithet when, in her feminine way, she swore at people she did not
+like. "Trashy" and "paltry" and "Brummagem" was the very worst she could
+say of them. And she had, I remember, an intense aversion to plated
+goods and bronze halfpence. The halfpence of her youth had been vast and
+corpulent red-brown discs, which it was folly to speak of as small
+change. They were fine handsome coins, and almost as inconvenient as
+crown-pieces. I remember she corrected me once when I was very young.
+"Don't call a penny a copper, dear," she said; "copper is a metal. The
+pennies they have nowadays are bronze." It is odd how our childish
+impressions cling to us. I still regard bronze as a kind of upstart
+intruder, a mere trashy pretender among metals.
+
+All my Aunt Charlotte's furniture was thoroughly good, and most of it
+extremely uncomfortable; there was not a thing for a little boy to break
+and escape damnation in the household. Her china was the only thing with
+a touch of beauty in it--at least I remember nothing else--and each of
+her blessed plates was worth the happiness of a mortal for days
+together. And they dressed me in a Nessus suit of valuable garments. I
+learned the value of thoroughly good things only too early. I knew the
+equivalent of a teacup to the very last scowl, and I have hated good,
+handsome property ever since. For my part I love cheap things, trashy
+things, things made of the commonest rubbish that money can possibly
+buy; things as vulgar as primroses, and as transitory as a morning's
+frost.
+
+Think of all the advantages of a cheap possession--cheap and nasty, if
+you will--compared with some valuable substitute. Suppose you need this
+or that. "Get a good one," advises Aunt Charlotte; "one that will last."
+You do--and it does last. It lasts like a family curse. These great
+plain valuable things, as plain as good women, as complacently assured
+of their intrinsic worth--who does not know them? My Aunt Charlotte
+scarcely had a new thing in her life. Her mahogany was avuncular; her
+china remotely ancestral; her feather beds and her bedsteads!--they were
+haunted; the births, marriages, and deaths associated with the best one
+was the history of our race for three generations. There was more in her
+house than the tombstone rectitude of the chair-backs to remind me of
+the graveyard. I can still remember the sombre aisles of that house, the
+vault-like shadows, the magnificent window curtains that blotted out the
+windows. Life was too trivial for such things. She never knew she tired
+of them, but she did. That was the secret of her temper, I think; they
+engendered her sombre Calvinism, her perception of the trashy quality of
+human life. The pretence that they were the accessories to human life
+was too transparent. _We_ were the accessories; we minded them for a
+little while, and then we passed away. They wore us out and cast us
+aside. We were the changing scenery; they were the actors who played on
+through the piece. It was even so with clothing. We buried my other
+maternal aunt--Aunt Adelaide--and wept, and partly forgot her; but her
+wonderful silk dresses--they would stand alone--still went rustling
+cheerfully about an ephemeral world.
+
+All that offended my sense of proportion, my feeling of what is due to
+human life, even when I was a little boy. I want things of my own,
+things I can break without breaking my heart; and, since one can live
+but once, I want some change in my life--to have this kind of thing and
+then that. I never valued Aunt Charlotte's good old things until I sold
+them. They sold remarkably well: those chairs like nether millstones for
+the grinding away of men; the fragile china--an incessant anxiety until
+accident broke it, and the spell of it at the same time; those silver
+spoons, by virtue of which Aunt Charlotte went in fear of burglary for
+six-and-fifty years; the bed from which I alone of all my kindred had
+escaped; the wonderful old, erect, high-shouldered, silver-faced clock.
+
+But, as I say, our ideas are changing--mahogany has gone, and repp
+curtains. Articles are made for man, nowadays, and not man, by careful
+early training, for articles. I feel myself to be in many respects a
+link with the past. Commodities come like the spring flowers, and vanish
+again. "Who steals my watch steals trash," as some poet has remarked;
+the thing is made of I know not what metal, and if I leave it on the
+mantel for a day or so it goes a deep blackish purple that delights me
+exceedingly. My grandfather's hat--I understood when I was a little boy
+that I was to have that some day. But now I get a hat for ten shillings,
+or less, two or three times a year. In the old days buying clothes was
+well-nigh as irrevocable as marriage. Our flat is furnished with
+glittering things--wanton arm-chairs just strong enough not to collapse
+under you, books in gay covers, carpets you are free to drop lighted
+fusees upon; you may scratch what you like, upset your coffee, cast your
+cigar ash to the four quarters of heaven. Our guests, at anyrate, are
+not snubbed by our furniture. It knows its place.
+
+But it is in the case of art and adornment that cheapness is most
+delightful. The only thing that betrayed a care for beauty on the part
+of my aunt was her dear old flower garden, and even there she was not
+above suspicion. Her favourite flowers were tulips, rigid tulips with
+opulent crimson streaks. She despised wildings. Her ornaments were
+simply displays of the precious metal. Had she known the price of
+platinum she would have worn that by preference. Her chains and brooches
+and rings were bought by weight. She would have turned her back on
+Benvenuto Cellini if he was not 22 carats fine. She despised
+water-colour art; her conception of a picture was a vast domain of oily
+brown by an Old Master. The Babbages at the Hall had a display of gold
+plate swaggering in the corner of the dining-room; and the visitor
+(restrained by a plush rope from examining the workmanship) was told the
+value, and so passed on. I like my art unadorned: thought and skill, and
+the other strange quality that is added thereto, to make things
+beautiful--and nothing more. A farthing's worth of paint and paper, and,
+behold! a thing of beauty!--as they do in Japan. And if it should fall
+into the fire--well, it has gone like yesterday's sunset, and to-morrow
+there will be another.
+
+These Japanese are indeed the apostles of cheapness. The Greeks lived to
+teach the world beauty, the Hebrews to teach it morality, and now the
+Japanese are hammering in the lesson that men may be honourable, daily
+life delightful, and a nation great without either freestone houses,
+marble mantelpieces, or mahogany sideboards. I have sometimes wished
+that my Aunt Charlotte could have travelled among the Japanese nation.
+She would, I know, have called it a "parcel of trash." Their use of
+paper--paper suits, paper pocket-handkerchiefs--would have made her
+rigid with contempt. I have tried, but I cannot imagine my Aunt
+Charlotte in paper underclothing. Her aversion to paper was
+extraordinary. Her Book of Beauty was printed on satin, and all her
+books were bound in leather, the boards regulated rather than decorated
+with a severe oblong. Her proper sphere was among the ancient
+Babylonians, among which massive populace even the newspapers were
+built of brick. She would have compared with the King's daughter whose
+raiment was of wrought gold. When I was a little boy I used to think she
+had a mahogany skeleton. However, she is gone, poor old lady, and at
+least she left me her furniture. Her ghost was torn in pieces after the
+sale--must have been. Even the old china went this way and that. I took
+what was perhaps a mean revenge of her for the innumerable
+black-holeings, bread-and-water dinners, summary chastisements, and
+impossible tasks she inflicted upon me for offences against her too
+solid possessions. You will see it at Woking. It is a light and graceful
+cross. It is a mere speck of white between the monstrous granite
+paperweights that oppress the dead on either side of her. Sometimes I am
+half sorry for that. When the end comes I shall not care to look her in
+the face--she will be so humiliated.
+
+
+
+
+THE TROUBLE OF LIFE
+
+
+I do not know whether this will awaken a sympathetic lassitude in, say,
+fifty per cent. of its readers, or whether my experience is unique and
+my testimony simply curious. At anyrate, it is as true as I can make it.
+Whether this is a mere mood, and a certain flagrant exhilaration my true
+attitude towards things, or this is my true attitude and the exuberant
+phase a lapse from it, I cannot say. Probably it does not matter. The
+thing is that I find life an extremely troublesome affair. I do not want
+to make any railing accusations against life; it is--to my
+taste--neither very sad nor very horrible. At times it is distinctly
+amusing. Indeed, I know nothing in the same line that can quite compare
+with it. But there is a difference between general appreciation and
+uncritical acceptance. At times I find life a Bother.
+
+The kind of thing that I object to is, as a good example, all the
+troublesome things one has to do every morning in getting up. There is
+washing. This is an age of unsolicited personal confidences, and I will
+frankly confess that if it were not for Euphemia I do not think I should
+wash at all. There is a vast amount of humbug about washing. Vulgar
+people not only profess a passion for the practice, but a physical
+horror of being unwashed. It is a sort of cant. I can understand a
+sponge bath being a novelty the first time and exhilarating the second
+and third. But day after day, week after week, month after month, and
+nothing to show at the end of it all! Then there is shaving. I have to
+get shaved because Euphemia hates me with a blue jowl, and I will admit
+I hate myself. Yet, if I were left alone, I do not think my personal
+taste would affect my decision; I will say that for myself. Either I
+hack about with a blunt razor--my razors are always blunt--until I am a
+kind of Whitechapel Horror, and with hair in tufts upon my chin like the
+top of a Bosjesman's head, or else I have to spend all the morning being
+dabbed about the face by a barber with damp hands. In either case it is
+a repulsive thing to have, eating into one's time when one might be
+living; and I have calculated that all the hair I have lost in this way,
+put end to end, would reach to Berlin. All that vital energy thrown
+away! However, "Thorns and bristles shall it bring forth to thee." I
+suppose it is part of the primal curse, and I try and stand it like a
+man. But the thing is a bother all the same.
+
+Then after shaving comes the hunt for the collar-stud. Of all idiotic
+inventions the modern collar is the worst. A man who has to write things
+for such readers as mine cannot think over-night of where he puts his
+collar-stud; he has to keep his mind at an altogether higher level.
+Consequently he walks about the bedroom, thinking hard, and dropping
+things about: here a vest and there a collar, and sowing a bitter
+harvest against the morning. Or he sits on the edge of the bed jerking
+his garments this way and that. "I shot a slipper in the air," as the
+poet sings, and in the morning it turns up in the most impossible
+quarters, and where you least expect it. And, talking of going to bed,
+before Euphemia took the responsibility over, I was always forgetting to
+wind my watch. But now that is one of the things she neglects.
+
+Then, after getting up, there is breakfast. Autolycus of the _Pall Mall
+Gazette_ may find heaven there, but I am differently constituted. There
+is, to begin with the essence of the offence--the stuff that has to be
+eaten somehow. Then there is the paper. Unless it is the face of a
+fashionable beauty, I know of nothing more absolutely uninteresting than
+a morning paper. You always expect to find something in it, and never
+do. It wastes half my morning sometimes, going over and over the thing,
+and trying to find out why they publish it. If I edited a daily I think
+I should do like my father does when he writes to me. "Things much the
+same," he writes; "the usual fussing about the curate's red socks"--a
+long letter for him. The rest margin. And, by the bye, there are letters
+every morning at breakfast, too!
+
+Now I do not grumble at letters. You can read them instead of getting on
+with your breakfast. They are entertaining in a way, and you can tear
+them up at the end, and in that respect at least they are better than
+people who come to see you. Usually, too, you need not make a reply. But
+sometimes Euphemia gets hold of some still untorn, and says in her
+dictatorial way that they _have_ to be answered--insists--says I _must_.
+Yet she knows that nothing fills me with a livelier horror than having
+to answer letters. It paralyses me. I waste whole days sometimes
+mourning over the time that I shall have to throw away presently,
+answering some needless impertinence--requests for me to return books
+lent to me; reminders from the London Library that my subscription is
+overdue; proposals for me to renew my ticket at the stores--Euphemia's
+business really; invitations for me to go and be abashed before
+impertinent distinguished people: all kinds of bothering things.
+
+And speaking of letters and invitations brings me round to friends. I
+dislike most people; in London they get in one's way in the street and
+fill up railway carriages, and in the country they stare at you--but I
+_hate_ my friends. Yet Euphemia says I _must_ "keep up" my friends. They
+would be all very well if they were really true friends and respected my
+feelings and left me alone, just to sit quiet. But they come wearing
+shiny clothes, and mop and mow at me and expect me to answer their
+gibberings. Polite conversation always appears to me to be a wicked
+perversion of the blessed gift of speech, which, I take it, was given us
+to season our lives rather than to make them insipid. New friends are
+the worst in this respect. With old friends one is more at home; you
+give them something to eat or drink, or look at, or something--whatever
+they seem to want--and just turn round and go on smoking quietly. But
+every now and then Euphemia or Destiny inflicts a new human being upon
+me. I do not mean a baby, though the sentence has got that turn
+somehow, but an introduction; and the wretched thing, all angles and
+offence, keeps bobbing about me and discovering new ways of worrying me,
+trying, I believe, to find out what topics interest me, though the fact
+is no topics interest me. Once or twice, of course, I have met human
+beings I think I could have got on with very well, after a time; but in
+this mood, at least, I doubt if any human being is quite worth the
+bother of a new acquaintance.
+
+These are just sample bothers--shaving, washing, answering letters,
+talking to people. I could specify hundreds more. Indeed, in my sadder
+moments, it seems to me life is all compact of bothers. There are the
+details of business--knowing the date approximately (an incessant
+anxiety) and the time of day. Then, having to buy things. Euphemia does
+most of this, it is true, but she draws the line at my boots and gloves
+and hosiery and tailoring. Then, doing up parcels and finding pieces of
+string or envelopes or stamps--which Euphemia might very well manage for
+me. Then, finding your way back after a quiet, thoughtful walk. Then,
+having to get matches for your pipe. I sometimes dream of a better
+world, where pipe, pouch, and matches all keep together instead of being
+mutually negatory. But Euphemia is always putting everything into some
+hiding-hole or other, which she calls its "place." Trivial things in
+their way, you may say, yet each levying so much toll on my brain and
+nervous system, and demanding incessant vigilance and activity. I
+calculated once that I wasted a masterpiece upon these mountainous
+little things about every three months of my life. Can I help thinking
+of them, then, and asking why I suffer thus? And can I avoid seeing at
+last how it is they hang together?
+
+For there is still one other bother, a kind of _bother botherum_, to
+tell of, though I hesitate at the telling. It brings this rabble herd of
+worries into line and makes them formidable; it is, so to speak, the
+Bother Commander-in-Chief. Well! Euphemia. I simply worship the ground
+she treads upon, mind, but at the same time the truth is the truth.
+Euphemia is a bother. She is a brave little woman, and helps me in
+every conceivable way. But I wish she would not. It is so obviously all
+her doing. She makes me get up of a morning--I would not stand as much
+from anybody else--and keeps a sharp eye on my chin and collar. If it
+were not for her I could sit about always with no collar or tie on in
+that old jacket she gave to the tramp, and just smoke and grow a beard
+and let all the bothers slide. I would never wash, never shave, never
+answer any letters, never go to see any friends, never do any
+work--except, perhaps, an insulting postcard to a publisher now and
+again. I would just sit about.
+
+Sometimes I think this may be peculiar in me. At other times I fancy I
+am giving voice to the secret feeling of every member of my sex. I
+suspect, then, that we would all do as the noble savage does, take our
+things off and lie about comfortable, if only someone had the courage to
+begin. It is these women--all love and reverence to Euphemia
+notwithstanding--who make us work and bother us with Things. They keep
+us decent, and remind us we have a position to support. And really,
+after all, this is not my original discovery! There is the third chapter
+of Genesis, for instance. And then who has not read Carlyle's gloating
+over a certain historical suit of leather? It gives me a queer thrill of
+envy, that Quaker Fox and his suit of leather. Conceive it, if you can!
+One would never have to quail under the scrutiny of a tailor any more.
+Thoreau, too, come to think of it, was, by way of being a prophet, a
+pioneer in this Emancipation of Man from Bothery.
+
+Then the silent gentry who brew our Chartreuse; what are they in
+retirement for? Looking back into history, with the glow of discovery in
+my eyes, I find records of wise men--everyone acknowledged they were
+wise men--who lived apart. In every age the same associate of solitude,
+silence, and wisdom. The holy hermits!... I grant it, they professed to
+flee wickedness and seek after righteousness, but now my impression is
+that they fled bothers. We all know they had an intense aversion to any
+savour of domesticity, and they never shaved, washed, dined, visited,
+had new clothes. Holiness, indeed! They were _viveurs_.... We have
+witnessed Religion without Theology, and why not an Unsectarian Thebaid?
+I sometimes fancy it needs only one brave man to begin.... If it were
+not for the fuss Euphemia would make I certainly should. But I know she
+would come and worry me worse than St. Anthony was worried until I put
+them all on again, and that keeps me from the attempt.
+
+I am curious whether mine is the common experience. I fancy, after all,
+I am only seeing in a clearer way, putting into modern phrase, so to
+speak, an observation old as the Pentateuch. And looking up I read upon
+a little almanac with which Euphemia has cheered my desk:--
+
+ "The world was sad" (sweet sadness!)
+ "The garden was a wild" (a picturesque wild)
+ "And man the hermit" (he made no complaint)
+ "Till the woman smiled."--CAMPBELL.
+
+[And very shortly after he had, as you know, all that bother about the
+millinery.]
+
+
+
+
+ON THE CHOICE OF A WIFE
+
+
+Wife-choosing is an unending business. This sounds immoral, but what I
+mean will be clearer in the context. People have lived--innumerable
+people--exhausted experience, and yet other people keep on coming to
+hand, none the wiser, none the better. It is like a waterfall more than
+anything else in the world. Every year one has to turn to and warn
+another batch about these stale old things. Yet it is one's duty--the
+last thing that remains to a man. And as a piece of worldly wisdom, that
+has nothing to do with wives, always leave a few duties neglected for
+the comfort of your age. There are such a lot of other things one can do
+when one is young.
+
+Now, the kind of wife a young fellow of eight- or nine-and-twenty
+insists on selecting is something of one-and-twenty or less,
+inexperienced, extremely pretty, graceful, and well dressed, not too
+clever, accomplished; but I need not go on, for the youthful reader can
+fill in the picture himself from his own ideal. Every young man has his
+own ideal, as a matter of course, and they are all exactly alike. Now, I
+do not intend to repeat all the stale old saws of out-of-date wiseacres.
+Most of them are even more foolish than the follies they reprove. Take,
+for instance, the statement that "beauty fades." Absurd; everyone knows
+perfectly well that, as the years creep on, beauty simply gets more
+highly coloured. And then, "beauty is only skin-deep." Fantastically
+wrong! Some of it is not that; and, for the rest, is a woman like a toy
+balloon?--just a surface? To hear that proverb from a man is to know him
+at once for a phonographic kind of fool. The fundamental and enduring
+grace of womanhood goes down to the skeleton; you cannot have a pretty
+face without a pretty skull, just as you cannot have one without a good
+temper.
+
+Yet all the same there is an excellent reason why one should shun beauty
+in a prospective wife, at anyrate obvious beauty--the kind of beauty
+people talk about, and which gets into the photographers' windows. The
+common beautiful woman has a style of her own, a favourite aspect. After
+all, she cannot be perfect. She comes upon you, dazzles you, marries
+you; there is a time of ecstasy. People envy you, continue to envy you.
+After a time you envy yourself--yourself of the day before yesterday.
+For the imperfection, the inevitable imperfection--in one case I
+remember it was a smile--becomes visible to you, becomes your especial
+privilege. That is the real reason. No beauty is a beauty to her
+husband. But with the plain woman--the thoroughly plain woman--it is
+different. At first--I will not mince matters--her ugliness is an
+impenetrable repulse. Face it. After a time little things begin to
+appear through the violent discords: little scraps of melody--a shy
+tenderness in her smile that peeps out at you and vanishes, a something
+that is winning, looking out of her eyes. You find a waviness of her
+hair that you never saw at the beginning, a certain surprising,
+pleasing, enduring want of clumsiness in part of her ear. And it is
+yours. You can see she strikes the beholder with something of a shock;
+and while the beauty of the beauty is common for all the world to
+rejoice in, you will find in your dear, plain wife beauty enough and to
+spare; exquisite--for it is all your own, your treasure-trove, your
+safely-hidden treasure....
+
+Then, in the matter of age; though young fellows do not imagine it, it
+is very easy to marry a wife too young. Marriage has been defined as a
+foolish bargain in which one man provides for another man's daughter,
+but there is no reason why this should go so far as completing her
+education. If your conception of happiness is having something pretty
+and innocent and troublesome about you, something that you can cherish
+and make happy, a pet rabbit is in every way preferable. At the worst
+that will nibble your boots. I have known several cases of the
+girl-wife, and it always began like an idyll, charmingly; the tenderest
+care on one hand, winsome worship on the other--until some little thing,
+a cut chin or a missing paper, startled the pure and natural man out of
+his veneer, dancing and blaspheming, with the most amazing consequences.
+Only a proven saint should marry a girl-wife, and his motives might be
+misunderstood. The idyllic wife is a beautiful thing to read about, but
+in practice idylls should be kept episodes; in practice the idyllic life
+is a little too like a dinner that is all dessert. A common man, after a
+time, tires of winsome worship; he craves after companionship, and a
+sympathy based on experience. The ordinary young man, with the still
+younger wife, I have noticed, continues to love her with all his
+heart--and spends his leisure telling somebody else's wife all about it.
+If in these days of blatant youth an experienced man's counsel is worth
+anything, it would be to marry a woman considerably older than oneself,
+if one must marry at all. And while upon this topic--and I have lived
+long--the ideal wife, I am persuaded, from the close observation of many
+years, is invariably, by some mishap, a widow....
+
+Avoid social charm. It was the capacity for entertaining visitors that
+ruined Paradise. It grows upon a woman. An indiscriminating personal
+magnetism is perhaps the most dreadful vice a wife can have. You think
+you have married the one woman in the world, and you find you have
+married a host--that is to say, a hostess. Instead of making a home for
+you she makes you something between an ethnographical museum and a
+casual ward. You find your rooms littered with people and teacups and
+things, strange creatures that no one could possibly care for, that seem
+scarcely to care for themselves. You go about the house treading upon
+chance geniuses, and get tipped by inexperienced guests. And even when
+she does not entertain, she is continually going out. I do not deny that
+charming people are charming, that their company should be sought, but
+seeking it in marriage is an altogether different matter.
+
+Then, I really must insist that young men do not understand the real
+truth about accomplishments. There comes a day when the most variegated
+wife comes to the end of her tunes, and another when she ends them for
+the second time; _Vita longa, ars brevis_--at least, as regards the art
+of the schoolgirl. It is only like marrying a slightly more complicated
+barrel-organ. And, for another point, watch the young person you would
+honour with your hand for the slightest inkling of economy or tidiness.
+Young men are so full of poetry and emotion that it does not occur to
+them how widely the sordid vices are distributed in the other sex. If
+you are a hotel proprietor, or a school proprietor, or a day labourer,
+such weaknesses become a strength, of course, but not otherwise. For a
+literary person--if perchance you are a literary person--it is
+altogether too dreadful. You are always getting swept and garnished,
+straightened up and sent out to be shaved. And home--even your
+study--becomes a glittering, spick-and-span mechanism. But you know the
+parable of the seven devils?
+
+To conclude, a summary. The woman you choose should be plain, as plain
+as you can find, as old or older than yourself, devoid of social gifts
+or accomplishments, poor--for your self-respect--and with a certain
+amiable untidiness. Of course no young man will heed this, but at least
+I have given my counsel, and very excellent reasons for that counsel.
+And possibly I shall be able to remind him that I told him as much, in
+the course of a few years' time. And, by the bye, I had almost
+forgotten! Never by any chance marry a girl whose dresses do up at the
+back, unless you can afford her a maid or so of her own.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOUSE OF DI SORNO
+
+A MANUSCRIPT FOUND IN A BOX
+
+
+And the box, Euphemia's. Brutally raided it was by an insensate husband,
+eager for a tie and too unreasonably impatient to wait an hour or so
+until she could get home and find it for him. There was, of course, no
+tie at all in that box, for all his stirring--as anyone might have
+known; but, if there was no tie, there were certain papers that at least
+suggested a possibility of whiling away the time until the Chooser and
+Distributer of Ties should return. And, after all, there is no reading
+like your accidental reading come upon unawares.
+
+It was a discovery, indeed, that Euphemia _had_ papers. At the first
+glance these close-written sheets suggested a treasonable Keynote, and
+the husband gripped it with a certain apprehension mingling with his
+relief at the opiate of reading. It was, so to speak, the privilege of
+police he exercised, so he justified himself. He began to read. But what
+is this? "She stood on the balcony outside the window, while the
+noblest-born in the palace waited on her every capricious glance, and
+watched for an unbending look to relieve her hauteur, but in vain." None
+of your snippy-snappy Keynote there!
+
+Then he turned over a page or so of the copy, doubting if the privilege
+of police still held good. Standing out by virtue of a different ink,
+and coming immediately after "bear her to her proud father," were the
+words, "How many yards of carpet 3/4 yds. wide will cover room, width 16
+ft., length 27-1/2 ft.?" Then he knew he was in the presence of the
+great romance that Euphemia wrote when she was sixteen. He had heard
+something of it before. He held it doubtfully in his hands, for the
+question of conscience still troubled him. "Bah!" he said abruptly, "not
+to find it irresistible was to slight the authoress and her skill." And
+with that he sat plump down among the things in the box very comfortably
+and began reading, and, indeed, read until Euphemia arrived. But she, at
+the sight of his head and legs, made several fragmentary and presumably
+offensive remarks about crushing some hat or other, and proceeded with
+needless violence to get him out of the box again. However, that is my
+own private trouble. We are concerned now with the merits of Euphemia's
+romance.
+
+The hero of the story is a Venetian, named (for some unknown reason)
+Ivan di Sorno. So far as I ascertained, he is the entire house of Di
+Sorno referred to in the title. No other Di Sornos transpired. Like
+others in the story, he is possessed of untold wealth, tempered by a
+profound sorrow, for some cause which remains unmentioned, but which is
+possibly internal. He is first displayed "pacing a sombre avenue of ilex
+and arbutus that reflected with singular truth the gloom of his
+countenance," and "toying sadly with the jewelled hilt of his dagger."
+He meditates upon his loveless life and the burthen of riches. Presently
+he "paces the long and magnificent gallery," where a "hundred
+generations of Di Sornos, each with the same flashing eye and the same
+marble brow, look down with the same sad melancholy upon the
+beholder"--a truly monotonous exhibition. It would be too much for
+anyone, day after day. He decides that he will travel. Incognito.
+
+The next chapter is headed "In Old Madrid," and Di Sorno, cloaked to
+conceal his grandeur, "moves sad and observant among the giddy throng."
+But "Gwendolen"--the majestic Gwendolen of the balcony--"marked his
+pallid yet beautiful countenance." And the next day at the bull-fight
+she "flung her bouquet into the arena, and turning to Di Sorno"--a
+perfect stranger, mind you--"smiled commandingly." "In a moment he had
+flung himself headlong down among the flashing blades of the toreadors
+and the trampling confusion of bulls, and in another he stood before
+her, bowing low with the recovered flowers in his hand. 'Fair sir,' she
+said, 'methinks my poor flowers were scarce worth your trouble.'" A very
+proper remark. And then suddenly I put the manuscript down.
+
+My heart was full of pity for Euphemia. Thus had she gone a-dreaming. A
+man of imposing physique and flashing eye, who would fling you oxen here
+and there, and vault in and out of an arena without catching a breath,
+for his lady's sake--and here I sat, the sad reality, a lean and
+slippered literary pretender, and constitutionally afraid of cattle.
+
+Poor little Euphemia! For after all is said and done, and the New Woman
+gibed out of existence, I am afraid we do undeceive these poor wives of
+ours a little after the marrying is over. It may be they have deceived
+themselves, in the first place, but that scarcely affects their
+disappointment. These dream-lovers of theirs, these monsters of
+unselfishness and devotion, these tall fair Donovans and dark
+worshipping Wanderers! And then comes the rabble rout of us poor human
+men, damning at our breakfasts, wiping pens upon our coat sleeves,
+smelling of pipes, fearing our editors, and turning Euphemia's private
+boxes into public copy. And they take it so steadfastly--most of them.
+They never let us see the romance we have robbed them of, but turn to
+and make the best of it--and us--with such sweet grace. Only now and
+then--as in the instance of a flattened hat--may a cry escape them. And
+even then----
+
+But a truce to reality! Let us return to Di Sorno.
+
+This individual does not become enamoured of Gwendolen, as the crude
+novel reader might anticipate. He answers her "coldly," and his eye
+rests the while on her "tirewoman, the sweet Margot." Then come scenes
+of jealousy and love, outside a castle with heavily mullioned windows.
+The sweet Margot, though she turns out to be the daughter of a bankrupt
+prince, has one characteristic of your servant all the world over--she
+spends all her time looking out of the window. Di Sorno tells her of his
+love on the evening of the bull-fight, and she cheerfully promises to
+"learn to love him," and therafter he spends all his days and nights
+"spurring his fiery steed down the road" that leads by the castle
+containing the young scholar. It becomes a habit with him--in all, he
+does it seventeen times in three chapters. Then, "ere it is too late,"
+he implores Margot to fly.
+
+Gwendolen, after a fiery scene with Margot, in which she calls her a
+"petty minion,"--pretty language for a young gentlewoman,--"sweeps with
+unutterable scorn from the room," never, to the reader's huge
+astonishment, to appear in the story again, and Margot flies with Di
+Sorno to Grenada, where the Inquisition, consisting apparently of a
+single monk with a "blazing eye," becomes extremely machinatory. A
+certain Countess di Morno, who intends to marry Di Sorno, and who has
+been calling into the story in a casual kind of way since the romance
+began, now comes prominently forward. She has denounced Margot for
+heresy, and at a masked ball the Inquisition, disguised in a yellow
+domino, succeeds in separating the young couple, and in carrying off
+"the sweet Margot" to a convent.
+
+"Di Sorno, half distraught, flung himself into a cab and drove to all
+the hotels in Grenada" (he overlooked the police station), and, failing
+to find Margot, becomes mad. He goes about ejaculating "Mad, mad!" than
+which nothing could be more eloquent of his complete mental inversion.
+In his paroxysms the Countess di Morno persuades him to "lead her to the
+altar," but on the way (with a certain indelicacy they go to church in
+the same conveyance) she lets slip a little secret. So Di Sorno jumps
+out of the carriage, "hurling the crowd apart," and, "flourishing his
+drawn sword," "clamoured at the gate of the Inquisition" for Margot. The
+Inquisition, represented by the fiery-eyed monk, "looked over the gate
+at him." No doubt it felt extremely uncomfortable.
+
+Now it was just at this thrilling part that Euphemia came home, and the
+trouble about the flattened hat began. I never flattened her hat. It was
+in the box, and so was I; but as for deliberate flattening----It was
+just a thing that happened. She should not write such interesting
+stories if she expects me to go on tiptoe through the world looking
+about for her hats. To have that story taken away just at that
+particular moment was horrible. There was fully as much as I had read
+still to come, so that a lot happened after this duel of Sword _v._
+Fiery Eye. I know from a sheet that came out of place that Margot
+stabbed herself with a dagger ("richly jewelled"), but of all that came
+between I have not the faintest suspicion. That is the peculiar interest
+of it. At this particular moment the one book I want to read in all the
+world is the rest of this novel of Euphemia's. And simply, on the score
+of a new hat needed, she keeps it back and haggles!
+
+
+
+
+OF CONVERSATION
+
+AN APOLOGY
+
+
+I must admit that in conversation I am not a brilliant success. Partly,
+indeed, that may be owing to the assiduity with which my aunt suppressed
+my early essays in the art: "Children," she said, "should be seen but
+not heard," and incontinently rapped my knuckles. To a larger degree,
+however, I regard it as intrinsic. This tendency to silence, to go out
+of the rattle and dazzle of the conversation into a quiet apart, is
+largely, I hold, the consequence of a certain elevation and breadth and
+tenderness of mind; I am no blowfly to buzz my way through the universe,
+no rattle that I should be expected to delight my fellow-creatures by
+the noises I produce. I go about to this social function and that,
+deporting myself gravely and decently in silence, taking, if possible, a
+back seat; and, in consequence of that, people who do not understand me
+have been heard to describe me as a "stick," as "shy," and by an
+abundance of the like unflattering terms. So that I am bound almost in
+self-justification to set down my reasons for this temperance of mine in
+conversation.
+
+Speech, no doubt, is a valuable gift, but at the same time it is a gift
+that may be abused. What is regarded as polite conversation is, I hold,
+such an abuse. Alcohol, opium, tea, are all very excellent things in
+their way; but imagine continuous alcohol, an incessant opium, or to
+receive, ocean-like, a perennially flowing river of tea! That is my
+objection to this conversation: its continuousness. You have to keep on.
+You find three or four people gathered together, and instead of being
+restful and recreative, sitting in comfortable attitudes and at peace
+with themselves and each other, and now and again, perhaps three or four
+times in an hour, making a worthy and memorable remark, they are all
+haggard and intent upon keeping this fetish flow agoing. A fortuitous
+score of cows in a field are a thousand times happier than a score of
+people deliberately assembled for the purposes of happiness. These
+conversationalists say the most shallow and needless of things, impart
+aimless information, simulate interest they do not feel, and generally
+impugn their claim to be considered reasonable creatures. Why, when
+people assemble without hostile intentions, it should be so imperative
+to keep the trickling rill of talk running, I find it impossible to
+imagine. It is a vestige of the old barbaric times, when men murdered at
+sight for a mere whim; when it was good form to take off your sword in
+the antechamber, and give your friend your dagger-hand, to show him it
+was no business visit. Similarly, you keep up this babblement to show
+your mind has no sinister concentration, not necessarily because you
+have anything to say, but as a guarantee of good faith. You have to make
+a noise all the time, like the little boy who was left in the room with
+the plums. It is the only possible explanation.
+
+To a logical mind there is something very distressing in this social law
+of gabble. Out of regard for Mrs. A, let us say, I attend some festival
+she has inaugurated. There I meet for the first time a young person of
+pleasant exterior, and I am placed in her company to deliver her at a
+dinner-table, or dance her about, or keep her out of harm's way, in a
+cosy nook. She has also never seen me before, and probably does not want
+particularly to see me now. However, I find her nice to look at, and she
+has taken great pains to make herself nice to look at, and why we cannot
+pass the evening, I looking at her and she being looked at, I cannot
+imagine. But no; we must talk. Now, possibly there are topics she knows
+about and I do not--it is unlikely, but suppose so; on these topics she
+requires no information. Again, I know about other topics things unknown
+to her, and it seems a mean and priggish thing to broach these, since
+they put her at a disadvantage. Thirdly, comes a last group of subjects
+upon which we are equally informed, and upon which, therefore, neither
+of us is justified in telling things to the other. This classification
+of topics seems to me exhaustive.
+
+These considerations, I think, apply to all conversations. In every
+conversation, every departure must either be a presumption when you talk
+into your antagonist's special things, a pedantry when you fall back
+upon your own, or a platitude when you tell each other things you both
+know. I don't see any other line a conversation can take. The reason why
+one has to keep up the stream of talk is possibly, as I have already
+suggested, to manifest goodwill. And in so many cases this could be
+expressed so much better by a glance, a deferential carriage, possibly
+in some cases a gentle pressure of the hand, or a quiet persistent
+smile. And suppose there is some loophole in my reasoning--though I
+cannot see it--and that possible topics exist, how superficial and
+unexact is the best conversation to a second-rate book!
+
+Even with two people you see the objection, but when three or four are
+gathered together the case is infinitely worse to a man of delicate
+perceptions. Let us suppose--I do not grant it--that there is a possible
+sequence of things to say to the person A that really harmonise with A
+and yourself. Grant also that there is a similar sequence between
+yourself and B. Now, imagine yourself and A and B at the corners of an
+equilateral triangle set down to talk to each other. The kind of talk
+that A appreciates is a discord with B, and similarly B's sequence is
+impossible in the hearing of A. As a matter of fact, a real conversation
+of three people is the most impossible thing in the world. In real life
+one of the three always drops out and becomes a mere audience, or a mere
+partisan. In real life you and A talk, and B pretends to be taking a
+share by interjecting interruptions, or one of the three talks a
+monologue. And the more subtle your sympathy and the greater your
+restraint from self-assertion, the more incredible triple and quadruple
+conversation becomes.
+
+I have observed that there is even nowadays a certain advance towards my
+views in this matter. Men may not pick out antagonists, and argue to the
+general audience as once they did: there is a tacit taboo of
+controversy, neither may you talk your "shop," nor invite your
+antagonist to talk his. There is also a growing feeling against
+extensive quotations or paraphrases from the newspapers. Again,
+personalities, scandal, are, at least in theory, excluded. This narrows
+the scope down to the "last new book," "the last new play," "impressions
+de voyage," and even here it is felt that any very ironical or satirical
+remarks, anything unusual, in fact, may disconcert your adversary. You
+ask: Have you read the _Wheels of Chance_? The answer is "Yes." "Do you
+like it?" "A little vulgar, I thought." And so forth. Most of this is
+stereo. It is akin to responses in church, a prescription, a formula.
+And, following out this line of thought, I have had a vision of the
+twentieth century dinner. At a distance it is very like the nineteenth
+century type; the same bright light, the same pleasant deglutition, the
+same hum of conversation; but, approaching, you discover each diner has
+a little drum-shaped body under his chin--his phonograph. So he dines
+and babbles at his ease. In the smoking-room he substitutes his anecdote
+record. I imagine, too, the suburban hostess meeting the new maiden: "I
+hope, dear, you have brought a lot of conversation," just as now she
+asks for the music. For my own part, I must confess I find this dinner
+conversation particularly a bother. If I could eat with my eye it would
+be different.
+
+I lose a lot of friends through this conversational difficulty. They
+think it is my dulness or my temper, when really it is only my refined
+mind, my subtlety of consideration. It seems to me that when I go to see
+a man, I go to see him--to enjoy his presence. If he is my friend, the
+sight of him healthy and happy is enough for me. I don't want him to
+keep his vocal cords, and I don't want to keep my own vocal cords, in
+incessant vibration all the time I am in his company. If I go to see a
+man, it distracts me to have to talk and it distracts me to hear him
+talking. I can't imagine why one should not go and sit about in people's
+rooms, without bothering them and without their bothering you to say all
+these stereotyped things. Quietly go in, sit down, look at your man
+until you have seen him enough, and then go. Why not?
+
+Let me once more insist that this keeping up a conversation is a sign of
+insecurity, of want of confidence. All those who have had real friends
+know that when the friendship is assured the gabble ceases. You are not
+at the heart of your friend, if either of you cannot go off comfortably
+to sleep in the other's presence. Speech was given us to make known our
+needs, and for imprecation, expostulation, and entreaty. This pitiful
+necessity we are under, upon social occasions, to say something--however
+inconsequent--is, I am assured, the very degradation of speech.
+
+
+
+
+IN A LITERARY HOUSEHOLD
+
+
+In the literary household of fiction and the drama, things are usually
+in a distressing enough condition. The husband, as you know, has a
+hacking cough, and the wife a dying baby, and they write in the
+intervals of these cares among the litter of the breakfast things.
+Occasionally a comic, but sympathetic, servant brings in an
+armful--"heaped up and brimming over"--of rejected MSS., for, in the
+dramatic life, it never rains but it pours. Instead of talking about
+editors in a bright and vigorous fashion, as the recipients of
+rejections are wont, the husband groans and covers his face with his
+hands, and the wife, leaving the touching little story she is
+writing--she posts this about 9 p.m., and it brings in a publisher and
+L100 or so before 10.30--comforts him by flopping suddenly over his
+shoulder. "Courage," she says, stroking his hyacinthine locks (whereas
+all real literary men are more or less grey or bald). Sometimes, as in
+_Our Flat_, comic tradesmen interrupt the course of true literature with
+their ignoble desire for cash payment, and sometimes, as in _Our Boys_,
+uncles come and weep at the infinite pathos of a bad breakfast egg. But
+it's always a very sordid, dusty, lump-in-your-throaty affair, and no
+doubt it conduces to mortality by deterring the young and impressionable
+from literary vices. As for its truth, that is another matter
+altogether.
+
+Yet it must not be really imagined that a literary household is just
+like any other. There is the brass paper-fastener, for instance. I have
+sometimes thought that Euphemia married me with an eye to these
+conveniences. She has two in her grey gloves, and one (with the head
+inked) in her boot in the place of a button. Others I suspect her of.
+Then she fastened the lamp shade together with them, and tried one day
+to introduce them instead of pearl buttons as efficient anchorage for
+cuffs and collars. And she made a new handle for the little drawer under
+the inkstand with one. Indeed, the literary household is held together,
+so to speak, by paper-fasteners, and how other people get along without
+them we are at a loss to imagine.
+
+And another point, almost equally important, is that the husband is
+generally messing about at home. That is, indeed, to a superficial
+observer, one of the most remarkable characteristics of the literary
+household. Other husbands are cast out in the morning to raven for
+income and return to a home that is swept and garnished towards the end
+of the day; but the literary husband is ever in possession. His work
+must not be disturbed even when he is merely thinking. The study is
+consequently a kind of domestic cordite factory, and you are never
+certain when it may explode. The concussion of a dust-pan and brush may
+set it going, the sweeping of a carpet in the room upstairs. Then behold
+a haggard, brain-weary man, fierce and dishevelled, and full of
+shattered masterpiece--expostulating. Other houses have their day of
+cleaning out this room, and their day for cleaning out that; but in the
+literary household there is one uniform date for all such functions, and
+that is "to-morrow." So that Mrs. Mergles makes her purifying raids with
+her heart in her mouth, and has acquired a way of leaving the pail and
+brush, or whatever artillery she has with her, in a manner that
+unavoidably engages the infuriated brute's attention and so covers her
+retreat.
+
+It is a problem that has never been probably solved, this discord of
+order and orderly literary work. Possibly it might be done by making the
+literary person live elsewhere or preventing literary persons from
+having households. However it might be done, it is not done. This is a
+thing innocent girls exposed to the surreptitious proposals of literary
+men do not understand. They think it will be very fine to have
+photographs of themselves and their "cosy nooks" published in magazines,
+to illustrate the man's interviews, and the full horror of having this
+feral creature always about the house, and scarcely ever being able to
+do any little thing without his knowing it, is not brought properly home
+to them until escape is impossible.
+
+And then there is the taint of "copy" everywhere. That is really the
+fundamental distinction. It is the misfortune of literary people, that
+they have to write about something. There is no reason, of course, why
+they should, but the thing is so. Consequently, they are always looking
+about them for something to write about. They cannot take a pure-minded
+interest in anything in earth or heaven. Their servant is no servant,
+but a character; their cat is a possible reservoir of humorous
+observation; they look out of window and see men as columns walking.
+Even the sanctity of their own hearts, their self-respect, their most
+private emotions are disregarded. The wife is infected with the taint.
+Her private opinion of her husband she makes into a short story--forgets
+its origin and shows it him with pride--while the husband decants his
+heart-beats into occasional verse and minor poetry. It is amazing what a
+lot of latter-day literature consists of such breaches of confidence.
+And not simply latter-day literature.
+
+The visitor is fortunate who leaves no marketable impression behind. The
+literary entertainers eye you over, as if they were dealers in a slave
+mart, and speculate on your uses. They try to think how you would do as
+a scoundrel, and mark your little turns of phrase and kinks of thought
+to that end. The innocent visitor bites his cake and talks about
+theatres, while the meditative person in the arm-chair may be in
+imagination stabbing him, or starving him on a desert island, or
+even--horrible to tell!--flinging him headlong into the arms of the
+young lady to the right and "covering her face with a thousand
+passionate kisses." A manuscript in the rough of Euphemia's, that I
+recently suppressed, was an absolutely scandalous example of this method
+of utilising one's acquaintances. Mrs. Harborough, who was indeed
+Euphemia's most confidential friend for six weeks and more, she had
+made to elope with Scrimgeour--as steady and honourable a man as we
+know, though unpleasant to Euphemia on account of his manner of holding
+his teacup. I believe there really was something--quite harmless, of
+course--between Mrs. Harborough and Scrimgeour, and that, imparted in
+confidence, had been touched up with vivid colour here and there and
+utilised freely. Scrimgeour is represented as always holding teacups in
+his peculiar way, so that anyone would recognise him at once. Euphemia
+calls that character. Then Harborough, who is really on excellent terms
+with his wife, and, in spite of his quiet manner, a very generous and
+courageous fellow, is turned aside from his headlong pursuit of the
+fugitives across Wimbledon Common--they elope, by the bye, on
+Scrimgeour's tandem bicycle--by the fear of being hit by a golf ball. I
+pointed out to Euphemia that these things were calculated to lose us
+friends, and she promises to destroy the likeness; but I have no
+confidence in her promise. She will probably clap a violent auburn wig
+on Mrs. Harborough and make Scrimgeour squint and give Harborough a big
+beard. The point that she won't grasp is, that with that fatal facility
+for detail, which is one of the most indisputable proofs of woman's
+intellectual inferiority, she has reproduced endless remarks and
+mannerisms of these excellent people with more than photographic
+fidelity. But this is really a private trouble, though it illustrates
+very well the shameless way in which those who have the literary taint
+will bring to market their most intimate affairs.
+
+
+
+
+ON SCHOOLING AND THE PHASES OF MR. SANDSOME
+
+
+I do not know if you remember your "dates." Indeed, I do not know if
+anyone does. My own memory is of a bridge; like that bridge of
+Goldsmith's, standing firm and clear on its hither piers and then
+passing into a cloud. In the beginning of days was "William the
+Conqueror, 1066," and the path lay safe and open to Henry the Second;
+then came Titanic forms of kings, advancing and receding, elongating and
+dwindling, exchanging dates, losing dates, stealing dates from battles
+and murders and great enactments--even inventing dates, vacant years
+that were really no dates at all. The things I have suffered--prisons,
+scourgings, beating with rods, wild masters, in bounds often, a hundred
+lines often, standing on forms and holding out books often--on account
+of these dates! I knew, and knew well before I was fifteen, what these
+"heredity" babblers are only beginning to discover--that the past is the
+curse of the present. But I never knew my dates--never. And I marvel now
+that all little boys do not grow up to be Republicans, seeing how much
+they suffer for the mere memory of Kings.
+
+Then there were pedigrees, and principal parts and conjugations, and
+county towns. Every county had a county town, and it was always on a
+river. Mr. Sandsome never allowed us a town without that colophon. I
+remember in my early manhood going to Guildford on the Wey, and trying
+to find that unobtrusive rivulet. I went over the downs for miles. It is
+not only the Wey I have had a difficulty in finding. There are certain
+verses--Heaven help me, but I have forgotten them!--about "_i_ vel _e_
+dat" (_was_ it dat?) "utrum malis"--if I remember rightly--and all that
+about _amo, amas, amat_. There was a multitude of such things I
+acquired, and they lie now, in the remote box-rooms and lumber recesses
+of my mind, a rusting armoury far gone in decay. I have never been able
+to find a use for them. I wonder even now why Mr. Sandsome equipped me
+with them. Yet he seemed to be in deadly earnest about this learning,
+and I still go in doubt. In those early days he impressed me, chiefly in
+horizontal strips, with the profoundest respect for his mental and
+physical superiority. I credited him then, and still incline to believe
+he deserved to be credited, with a sincere persuasion that unless I
+learnt these things I should assuredly go--if I may be frank--to the
+devil. It may be so. I may be living in a fool's paradise,
+prospering--like that wicked man the Psalmist disliked. Some unsuspected
+gulf may open, some undreamt-of danger thrust itself through the
+phantasmagoria of the universe, and I may learn too late the folly of
+forgetting my declensions.
+
+I remember Mr. Sandsome chiefly as sitting at his desk, in a little room
+full of boys, a humming hive whose air was thick with dust, as the
+slanting sunbeams showed. When we were not doing sums or writing copies,
+we were always learning or saying lessons. In the early morning Mr.
+Sandsome sat erect and bright, his face animated, his ruddy eyes keen
+and observant, the cane hanging but uncertainly upon its hook. There was
+a standing up of classes, a babble of repetition, now and then a crisis.
+How long the days were then! I have heard that scientific
+people--Professor C. Darwin is their leader, unless I err--which
+probably I do, for names and dates I have hated from my youth up--say
+the days grow longer. Anyhow, whoever says it, it is quite wrong. But as
+the lank hours of that vast schooltime drawled on, Mr. Sandsome lost
+energy, drooped like a flower,--especially if the day was at all
+hot,--his sandy hair became dishevelled, justice became nerveless,
+hectic, and hasty. Finally came copybooks; and yawns and weird rumblings
+from Mr. Sandsome. And so the world aged to the dinner-hour.
+
+When I had been home--it was a day school, for my aunt, who had an
+appetite for such things, knew that boarding-schools were sinks of
+iniquity--and returned, I had Mr. Sandsome at another phase. He had
+dined--for we were simple country folk. The figurative suggestions of
+that "phase" are irresistible--the lunar quality. May I say that Mr.
+Sandsome was at his full? We now stood up, thirty odd of us altogether,
+to read, reading out of books in a soothing monotone, and he sat with
+his reading-book before him, ruddy as the setting sun, and slowly,
+slowly settling down. But now and then he would jerk back suddenly into
+staring wakefulness as though he were fishing--with himself as bait--for
+schoolboy crimes in the waters of oblivion--and fancied a nibble. That
+was a dangerous time, full of anxiety. At last he went right under and
+slept, and the reading grew cheerful, full of quaint glosses and
+unexpected gaps, leaping playfully from boy to boy, instead of
+travelling round with a proper decorum. But it never ceased, and little
+Hurkley's silly little squeak of a voice never broke in upon its mellow
+flow. (It took a year for Hurkley's voice to break.) Any such
+interruption and Mr. Sandsome woke up and into his next phase
+forthwith--a disagreeable phase always, and one we made it our business
+to postpone as long as possible.
+
+During that final period, the last quarter, Mr. Sandsome was distinctly
+malignant. It was hard to do right; harder still to do wrong. A feverish
+energy usually inspired our government. "Let us try to get some work
+done," Mr. Sandsome would say--and I have even known him teach things
+then. More frequently, with a needless bitterness, he set us upon
+impossible tasks, demanding a colossal tale of sums perhaps, scattering
+pens and paper and sowing the horrors of bookkeeping, or chastising us
+with the scorpions of parsing and translation. And even in wintry
+weather the little room grew hot and stuffy, and we terminated our
+schoolday, much exhausted, with minds lax, lounging attitudes, and red
+ears. What became of Mr. Sandsome after the giving-out of home-work, the
+concluding prayer, and the aftermath of impositions, I do not know. I
+stuffed my books, such as came to hand--very dirty they were inside, and
+very neat out with my Aunt Charlotte's chintz covers--into my green
+baize bag, and went forth from the mysteries of schooling into the great
+world, up the broad white road that went slanting over the Down.
+
+I say "the mysteries of schooling" deliberately. I wondered then, I
+wonder still, what it was all for. Reading, almost my only art, I learnt
+from Aunt Charlotte; a certain facility in drawing I acquired at home
+and took to school, to my own undoing. "Undoing," again, is
+deliberate--it was no mere swish on the hand, gentle reader. But the
+things I learnt, more or less partially, at school, lie in my mind, like
+the "Sarsen" stones of Wiltshire--great, disconnected, time-worn chunks
+amidst the natural herbage of it. "The Rivers of the East Coast; the
+Tweed, the Tyne, the Wear, the Tees, the Humber"--why is that, for
+instance, sticking up among my ferns and wild flowers? It is not only
+useless but misleading, for the Humber is not another Tweed. I sometimes
+fancy the world may be mad--yet that seems egotistical. The fact remains
+that for the greater part of my young life Mr. Sandsome got an appetite
+upon us from nine till twelve, and digested his dinner, at first
+placidly and then with petulance, from two until five--and we thirty odd
+boys were sent by our twenty odd parents to act as a sort of chorus to
+his physiology. And he was fed (as I judge) more than sufficiently,
+clothed, sheltered, and esteemed on account of this relation. I think,
+after all, there must have been something in that schooling. I can't
+believe the world mad. And I have forgotten it--or as good as forgotten
+it--all! At times I feel a wild impulse to hunt up all those
+chintz-covered books, and brush up my dates and paradigms, before it is
+too late.
+
+
+
+
+THE POET AND THE EMPORIUM
+
+
+"I am beginning life," he said, with a sigh. "Great Heavens! I have
+spent a day--_a day!_--in a shop. Three bedroom suites and a sideboard
+are among the unanticipated pledges of our affection. Have you lithia?
+For a man of twelve limited editions this has been a terrible day."
+
+I saw to his creature comforts. His tie was hanging outside his
+waistcoat, and his complexion was like white pasteboard that has got
+wet. "Courage," said I. "It will not occur again----"
+
+"It will," said he. "We have to get there again tomorrow. We have--what
+is it?--carpets, curtains----"
+
+He produced his tablets. I was amazed. Those receptacles of choice
+thoughts!
+
+"The amber sunlight splashing through the leaky--leafy interlacing
+green," he read. "No!--that's not it. Ah, here! Curtains!
+Drawing-room--not to cost more than thirty shillings! And there's all
+the Kitchen Hardware! (Thanks.) Dining-room chairs--query--rush bottoms?
+What's this? G.L.I.S.--ah! "Glistering thro' deeps of
+glaucophane"--that's nothing. Mem. to see can we afford Indian
+needlework chairs--57s. 6d.? It's dreadful, Bellows!"
+
+He helped himself to a cigarette.
+
+"Find the salesman pleasant?" said I.
+
+"Delightful. Assumed I was a spendthrift millionaire at first. Produced
+in an off-hand way an eighty-guinea bedroom suite--we're trying to do
+the entire business, you know, on about two hundred pounds. Well--that's
+ten editions, you know. Came down, with evidently dwindling respect, to
+things that were still ruinously expensive. I told him we wanted an
+idyll--love in a cottage, and all that kind of thing. He brushed that on
+one side, said idols were upstairs in the Japanese Department, and that
+perhaps we might _do_ with a servant's set of bedroom furniture. Do with
+a set! He was a gloomy man with (I should judge) some internal pain. I
+tried to tell him that there was quite a lot of middle-class people like
+myself in the country, people of limited or precarious means, whose
+existence he seemed to ignore; assured him some of them led quite
+beautiful lives. But he had no ideas beyond wardrobes. I quite forgot
+the business of shopping in an attempt to kindle a little human
+enthusiasm in his heart. We were in a great vast place full of
+wardrobes, with a remote glittering vista of brass bedsteads--skeleton
+beds, you know--and I tried to inspire him with some of the poetry of
+his emporium; tried to make him imagine these beds and things going east
+and west, north and south, to take sorrow, servitude, joy, worry,
+failing strength, restless ambition in their impartial embraces. He only
+turned round to Annie, and asked her if she thought she could _do_ with
+'enamelled.' But I was quite taken with my idea----Where is it? I left
+Annie to settle with this misanthrope, amidst his raw frameworks of the
+Homes of the Future."
+
+He fumbled with his tablets. "Mats for hall--not to exceed 3s. 9d....
+Kerbs ... inquire tiled hearth ... Ah! Here we are: 'Ballade of the
+Bedroom Suite':--
+
+ "'Noble the oak you are now displaying,
+ Subtly the hazel's grainings go,
+ Walnut's charm there is no gainsaying,
+ Red as red wine is your rosewood's glow;
+ Brave and brilliant the ash you show,
+ Rich your mahogany's hepatite shine,
+ Cool and sweet your enamel: But oh!
+ _Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_'
+
+"They have 'em in the catalogue at five guineas, with a picture--quite
+as good they are as the more expensive ones. To judge by the picture."
+
+"But that's scarcely the idea you started with," I began.
+
+"Not; it went wrong--ballades often do. The preoccupation of the
+'Painted Pine' was too much for me. What's this? 'N.B.--Sludge sells
+music stools at--' No. Here we are (first half unwritten):--
+
+ "'White enamelled, like driven snow,
+ Picked with just one delicate line.
+ Price you were saying is? Fourteen!--No!
+ _Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_'
+
+"Comes round again, you see! Then _L'Envoy_:--
+
+ "'Salesman, sad is the truth I trow:
+ Winsome walnut can never be mine.
+ Poets are cheap. And their poetry. So
+ _Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_'
+
+"Prosaic! As all true poetry is, nowadays. But, how I tired as the
+afternoon moved on! At first I was interested in the shopman's amazing
+lack of imagination, and the glory of that fond dream of mine--love in a
+cottage, you know--still hung about me. I had ideas come--like that
+Ballade--and every now and then Annie told me to write notes. I think my
+last gleam of pleasure was in choosing the drawing-room chairs. There is
+scope for fantasy in chairs. Then----"
+
+He took some more whisky.
+
+"A kind of grey horror came upon me. I don't know if I can describe it.
+We went through vast vistas of chairs, of hall-tables, of machine-made
+pictures, of curtains, huge wildernesses of carpets, and ever this cold,
+unsympathetic shopman led us on, and ever and again made us buy this or
+that. He had a perfectly grey eye--the colour of an overcast sky in
+January--and he seemed neither to hate us nor to detest us, but simply
+to despise us, to feel such an overwhelming contempt for our petty means
+and our petty lives, as an archangel might feel for an apple-maggot. It
+made me think...."
+
+He lit a fresh cigarette.
+
+"I had a kind of vision. I do not know if you will understand. The
+Warehouse of Life, with our Individual Fate hurrying each of us through.
+Showing us with a covert sneer all the good things that we cannot
+afford. A magnificent Rosewood love affair, for instance, deep and
+rich, fitted complete, some hours of perfect life, some acts of perfect
+self-sacrifice, perfect self-devotion.... You ask the price."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?" I quoted.
+
+"That's it. All the things one might do, if the purse of one's courage
+were not so shallow. If it wasn't for the lack of that coinage, Bellows,
+every man might be magnificent. There's heroism, there's such nobility
+as no one has ever attained to, ready to hand. Anyone, if it were not
+for this lack of means, might be a human god in twenty-four hours....
+You see the article. You cannot buy it. No one buys it. It stands in the
+emporium, I suppose, for show--on the chance of a millionaire. And the
+shopman waves his hand to it on your way to the Painted Pine.
+
+"Then you meet other couples and solitary people going about, each with
+a gloomy salesman leading. The run of them look uncomfortable; some are
+hot about the ears and in the spiteful phase of ill-temper; all look
+sick of the business except the raw new-comers. It's the only time they
+will ever select any furniture, their first chance and their last. Most
+of their selections are hurried a little. The salesman must not be kept
+all day.... Yet it goes hard with you if you buy your Object in Life and
+find it just a 'special line' made to sell.... We're all amateurs at
+living, just as we are all amateurs at furnishing--or dying. Some of the
+poor devils one meets carry tattered little scraps of paper, and fumble
+conscientiously with stumpy pencils. It's a comfort to see how you go,
+even if you do have to buy rubbish. 'If we have _this_ so good, dear, I
+don't know _how_ we shall manage in the kitchen,' says the careful
+housewife.... So it is we do our shopping in the Great Emporium."
+
+"You will have to rewrite your Ballade," said I, "and put all that in."
+
+"I wish I could," said the poet.
+
+"And while you were having these very fine moods?"
+
+"Annie and the shopman settled most of the furniture between them.
+Perhaps it's just as well. I was never very good at the practical
+details of life.... Cigarette's out! Have you any more matches?"
+
+"Horribly depressed you are!" I said.
+
+"There's to-morrow. Well, well...."
+
+And then he went off at a tangent to tell me what he expected to make by
+his next volume of poems, and so came to the congenial business of
+running down his contemporaries, and became again the cheerful little
+Poet that I know.
+
+
+
+
+THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS
+
+
+During the early Victorian revival of chivalry the Language of Flowers
+had some considerable vogue. The Romeo of the mutton-chop whiskers was
+expected to keep this delicate symbolism in view, and even to display
+his wit by some dainty conceits in it. An ignorance of the code was
+fraught with innumerable dangers. A sprig of lilac was a suggestion, a
+moss-rosebud pushed the matter, was indeed evidence to go to court upon;
+and unless Charlotte parried with white poplar--a by no means accessible
+flower--or apricot blossom, or failing these dabbed a cooling dock-leaf
+at the fellow, he was at her with tulip, heliotrope, and honeysuckle,
+peach-blossom, white jonquil, and pink, and a really overpowering and
+suffocating host of attentions. I suppose he got at last to
+three-cornered notes in the vernacular; and meanwhile what could a poor
+girl do? There was no downright "No!" in the language of flowers,
+nothing equivalent to "Go away, please," no flower for "Idiot!" The only
+possible defence was something in this way: "Your cruelty causes me
+sorrow," "Your absence is a pleasure." For this, according to the code
+of Mr. Thomas Miller (third edition, 1841, with elegantly coloured
+plates) you would have to get a sweet-pea blossom for Pleasure, wormwood
+for Absence, and indicate Sorrow by the yew, and Cruelty by the
+stinging-nettle. There is always a little risk of mixing your predicates
+in this kind of communication, and he might, for instance, read that his
+Absence caused you Sorrow, but he could scarcely miss the point of the
+stinging-nettle. That and the gorse carefully concealed were about the
+only gleams of humour possible in the language. But then it was the
+appointed tongue of lovers, and while their sickness is upon them they
+have neither humour nor wit.
+
+This Mr. Thomas Miller wrote abundant flowers of language in his book,
+and the plates were coloured by hand. By the bye, what a blessed thing
+colour-printing is! These hand-tinted plates, to an imaginative person,
+are about as distressing as any plates can very well be. Whenever I look
+at these triumphs of art over the beauties of nature, with all their
+weary dabs of crimson, green, blue, and yellow, I think of wretched,
+anaemic girls fading their youth away in some dismal attic over a
+publisher's, toiling through the whole edition tint by tint, and being
+mocked the while by Mr. Miller's alliterative erotics. And they _are_
+erotics! In one place he writes, "Beautiful art thou, O Broom! on the
+breezy bosom of the bee-haunted heath"; and throughout he buds and
+blossoms into similar delights. He wallows in doves and coy toyings and
+modest blushes, and bowers and meads. He always adds, "Wonderful boy!"
+to Chatterton's name as if it were a university degree (W.B.), and he
+invariably refers to Moore as the Bard of Erin, and to Milton as the
+Bard of Paradise--though Bard of the Bottomless Pit would be more
+appropriate. However, we are not concerned with Mr. Miller's language so
+much as with a very fruitful suggestion he throws out, that "it is
+surely worth while to trace a resemblance between the flower and the
+emblem it represents" (a turn like that is nothing to Mr. Miller) "which
+shall at least have some show of reason in it."
+
+Come to think of it, there is something singularly unreasonable about
+almost all floral symbolism. There is your forget-me-not, pink in the
+bud, and sapphire in the flower, with a fruit that breaks up into four,
+the very picture of inconstancy and discursiveness. Yet your lover, with
+a singular blindness, presents this to his lady when they part. Then the
+white water-lily is supposed to represent purity of heart, and, mark
+you, it is white without and its centre is all set about with
+innumerable golden stamens, while in the middle lies, to quote the words
+of that distinguished botanist, Mr. Oliver, "a fleshy disc." Could
+there be a better type of sordid and mercenary deliberation maintaining
+a fair appearance? The tender apple-blossom, rather than Pretence, is
+surely a reminder of Eden and the fall of love's devotion into inflated
+worldliness. The poppy which flaunts its violent colours athwart the
+bearded corn, and which frets and withers like the Second Mrs. Tanqueray
+so soon as you bring it to the shelter of a decent home, is made the
+symbol of Repose. One might almost think Aime Martin and the other great
+authorities on this subject wrote in a mood of irony.
+
+The daisy, too, presents you Innocence, "companion of the milk-white
+lamb," Mr. Miller calls it. I am sorry for the milk-white lamb. It was
+one of the earliest discoveries of systematic botany that the daisy is a
+fraud, a complicated impostor. _The daisy is not a flower at all._ It is
+a favourite trap in botanical examinations, a snare for artless young
+men entering the medical profession. Each of the little yellow things in
+the centre of the daisy is a flower in itself,--if you look at one with
+a lens you will find it not unlike a cowslip flower,--and the white rays
+outside are a great deal more than the petals they ought to be if the
+Innocence theory is to hold good. There is no such thing as an innocent
+flower; they are all so many deliberate advertisements to catch the eye
+of the undecided bee, but any flower almost is simpler than this one. We
+would make it the emblem of artistic deception, and the confidence trick
+expert should wear it as his crest.
+
+The violet, again, is a greatly overrated exemplar. It stimulates a
+certain bashfulness, hangs its head, and passed as modest among our
+simple grandparents. Its special merit is its perfume, and it pretends
+to wish to hide that from every eye. But, withal, the fragrance is as
+far-reaching as any I know. It droops ingenuously. "How _could_ you come
+to me," it seems to say, "when all these really brilliant flowers invite
+you?" Mere fishing for compliments. All the while it is being sweet, to
+the very best of its undeniable ability. Then it comes, too, in early
+spring, without a chaperon, and catches our hearts fresh before they
+are jaded with the crowded beauties of May. A really modest flower would
+wait for the other flowers to come first. A subtle affectation is surely
+a different thing from modesty. The violet is simply artful, the young
+widow among flowers, and to hold up such a flower as an example is not
+doing one's duty by the young. For true modesty commend me to the agave,
+which flowers once only in half a hundred years, as one may see for
+oneself at the Royal Botanical Gardens.
+
+Enough has been said to show what scope there is for revision of this
+sentimental Volapuk. Mr. Martin himself scarcely goes so far as I have
+done, though I have merely worked out his suggestion. His only
+revolutionary proposal is to displace the wind star by the "rathe
+primrose" for Forsaken, on the strength of a quotation familiar to every
+reader of Mason's little text-book on the English language. For the rest
+he followed his authorities, and has followed them now to the remote
+recesses of the literary lumber-room and into the twopenny book-box.
+From that receptacle one copy of him was disinterred only a day or so
+ago; a hundred and seventy pages of prose, chiefly alliterative, several
+coloured plates, enthusiastic pencil-marking of a vanished somebody,
+and, besides, an early Victorian flavour of dust and a dim vision of a
+silent conversation in a sunlit flower garden--altogether I think very
+cheap at twopence. The fashion has changed altogether now. In these days
+we season our love-making with talk about heredity, philanthropy, and
+sanitation, and present one another with Fabian publications instead of
+wild flowers. But in the end, I fancy, the business comes to very much
+the same thing.
+
+
+
+
+THE LITERARY REGIMEN
+
+
+At the risk of offending the young beginner's illusions, he must be
+reminded of one or two homely but important facts bearing upon literary
+production. Homely as they are, they explain much that is at first
+puzzling. This perplexing question of distinction; the quality of being
+somehow _fresh_--individual. Really it is a perfectly simple matter. It
+is common knowledge that, after a prolonged fast, the brain works in a
+feeble manner, the current of one's thoughts is pallid and shallow, it
+is difficult to fix the attention and impossible to mobilise the full
+forces of the mind. On the other hand, immediately after a sound meal,
+the brain feels massive, but static. Tea is conducive to a gentle flow
+of pleasing thoughts, and anyone who has taken Easton's syrup of the
+hypophosphites will recall at once the state of cerebral erethrism, of
+general mental alacrity, that followed on a dose. Again, champagne
+(followed perhaps by a soupcon of whisky) leads to a mood essentially
+humorous and playful, while about three dozen oysters, taken fasting,
+will in most cases produce a profound and even ominous melancholy. One
+might enlarge further upon this topic, on the brutalising influence of
+beer, the sedative quality of lettuce, the stimulating consequences of
+curried chicken; but enough has been said to point our argument. It is,
+that such facts as this can surely indicate only one conclusion, and
+that is the entire dependence of literary qualities upon the diet of the
+writer.
+
+I may remind the reader, in confirmation of this suggestion, of what is
+perhaps the most widely known fact about Carlyle, that on one memorable
+occasion he threw his breakfast out of the window. Why did he throw his
+breakfast out of the window? Surely his friends have cherished the story
+out of no petty love of depreciatory detail? There are, however, those
+who would have us believe it was mere childish petulance at a chilly
+rasher or a hard-boiled egg. Such a supposition is absurd. On the other
+hand, what is more natural than an outburst of righteous indignation at
+the ruin of some carefully studied climax of feeding? The thoughtful
+literary beginner who is not altogether submerged in foolish theories of
+inspiration and natural genius will, we fancy, see pretty clearly that I
+am developing what is perhaps after all the fundamental secret of
+literary art.
+
+To come now to more explicit instructions. It is imperative, if you wish
+to write with any power and freshness at all, that you should utterly
+ruin your digestion. Any literary person will confirm this statement. At
+any cost the thing must be done, even if you have to live on German
+sausage, onions, and cheese to do it. So long as you turn all your
+dietary to flesh and blood you will get no literature out of it. "We
+learn in suffering what we teach in song." This is why men who live at
+home with their mothers, or have their elder sisters to see after them,
+never, by any chance, however great their literary ambition may be,
+write anything but minor poetry. They get their meals at regular hours,
+and done to a turn, and that plays the very devil--if you will pardon
+the phrase--with one's imagination.
+
+A careful study of the records of literary men in the past, and a
+considerable knowledge of living authors, suggests two chief ways of
+losing one's digestion and engendering literary capacity. You go and
+live in humble lodgings,--we could name dozens of prominent men who have
+fed a great ambition in this way,--or you marry a nice girl who does not
+understand housekeeping. The former is the more efficacious method,
+because, as a rule, the nice girl wants to come and sit on your knee all
+day, and that is a great impediment to literary composition. Belonging
+to a club--even a literary club--where you can dine is absolute ruin to
+the literary beginner. Many a bright young fellow, who has pushed his
+way, or has been pushed by indiscreet friends, into the society of
+successful literary men, has been spoilt by this fatal error, and he has
+saved his stomach to lose his reputation.
+
+Having got rid of your digestion, then, the common condition of all good
+literature, the next thing is to arrange your dietary for the particular
+literary effect you desire. And here we may point out the secrecy
+observed in such matters by literary men. Stevenson fled to Samoa to
+hide his extremely elaborate methods, and to keep his kitchen servants
+out of the reach of bribery. Even Sir Walter Besant, though he is fairly
+communicative to the young aspirant, has dropped no hints of the plain,
+pure, and wholesome menu he follows. Sala professed to eat everything,
+but that was probably his badinage. Possibly he had one staple, and took
+the rest as condiment. Then what did Shakespeare live on? Bacon? And Mr.
+Barrie, though he has written a delightful book about his pipe and
+tobacco, full of suggestion to the young humorist, lets out nothing or
+next to nothing of his meat and drink. His hints about pipes are very
+extensively followed, and nowadays every ambitious young pressman smokes
+in public at least one well-burnt briar with an eccentric stem--even at
+some personal inconvenience. But this jealous reticence on the part of
+successful men--you notice they never let even the interviewer see their
+kitchens or the debris of a meal--necessarily throws one back upon
+rumour and hypothesis in this matter. Mr. Andrew Lang, for instance, is
+popularly associated with salmon, but that is probably a wilful
+delusion. Excessive salmon, far from engendering geniality, will be
+found in practice a vague and melancholy diet, tending more towards the
+magnificent despondency of Mr. Hall Caine.
+
+Nor does Mr. Haggard feed entirely on raw meat. Indeed, for lurid and
+somewhat pessimistic narrative, there is nothing like the ordinary
+currant bun, eaten new and in quantity. A light humorous style is best
+attained by soda-water and dry biscuits, following cafe-noir. The
+soda-water may be either Scotch or Irish as the taste inclines. For a
+florid, tawdry style the beginner must take nothing but boiled water,
+stewed vegetables, and an interest in the movements against vivisection,
+opium, alcohol, tobacco, sarcophagy, and the male sex.
+
+For contributions to the leading reviews, boiled pork and cabbage may be
+eaten, with bottled beer, followed by apple dumpling. This effectually
+suppresses any tendency to facetiousness, or what respectable English
+people call _double entendre_, and brings you _en rapport_ with the
+serious people who read these publications. So soon as you begin to feel
+wakeful and restless discontinue writing. For what is vulgarly known as
+the _fin-de-siecle_ type of publication, on the other hand, one should
+limit oneself to an aerated bread shop for a week or so, with the
+exception of an occasional tea in a literary household. All people fed
+mainly on scones become clever. And this regimen, with an occasional
+debauch upon macaroons, chocolate, and cheap champagne, and brisk daily
+walks from Oxford Circus, through Regent Street, Piccadilly, and the
+Green Park, to Westminster and back, should result in an animated
+society satire.
+
+It is not known what Mr. Kipling takes to make him so peculiar. Many of
+us would like to know. Possibly it is something he picked up in the
+jungle--berries or something. A friend who made a few tentative
+experiments to this end turned out nothing beyond a will, and that he
+dictated and left incomplete. (It was scarcely on the lines of an
+ordinary will, being blasphemous, and mentioning no property except his
+inside.) For short stories of the detective type, strong cold tea and
+hard biscuits are fruitful eating, while for a social science novel one
+should take an abundance of boiled rice and toast and water.
+
+However, these remarks are mainly by way of suggestion. Every writer in
+the end, so soon as his digestion is destroyed, must ascertain for
+himself the peculiar diet that suits him best--that is, which disagrees
+with him the most. If everything else fails he might try some chemical
+food. "Jabber's Food for Authors," by the bye, well advertised, and with
+portraits of literary men, in their drawing-rooms, "Fed entirely on
+Jabber's Food," with medical certificates of its unwholesomeness, and
+favourable and expurgated reviews of works written on it, ought to be a
+brilliant success among literary aspirants. A small but sufficient
+quantity of arsenic might with advantage be mixed in.
+
+
+
+
+HOUSE-HUNTING AS AN OUTDOOR AMUSEMENT
+
+
+Since Adam and Eve went hand in hand out of the gates of Paradise, the
+world has travailed under an infinite succession of house-hunts. To-day
+in every eligible suburb you may see New Adams and New Eves by the
+score, with rusty keys and pink order-forms in hand, wandering still, in
+search of the ideal home. To them it is anything but an amusement. Most
+of these poor pilgrims look simply tired, some are argumentative in
+addition, but all are disappointed, anxious, and unhappy, their hands
+dirty with prying among cisterns, and their garments soiled from cellar
+walls. All, in the exaltation of the wooing days, saw at least the
+indistinct reflection of the perfect house, but now the Quest is
+irrevocably in hand they seek and do not find. And such a momentous
+question it is to them. Are they not choosing the background, the air
+and the colour, as it were, of the next three or four years, the
+cardinal years, too! of their lives?
+
+Perhaps the exquisite exasperation of the business for the man who hunts
+among empty houses for a home is, that it is so entirely a choice of
+second-hand, or at least ready-made goods. To me, at least, there is a
+decided suggestion of the dead body in your empty house that has once
+been occupied. Here, like pale ghosts upon the wall paper, are outlined
+the pictures of the departed tenant; here are the nails of the invisible
+curtains, this dent in the wall is all that is sensible of a vanished
+piano. I could fancy all these things creeping back to visibility as the
+light grew dim. Someone was irritable in the house, perhaps, and a
+haunting fragrance of departed quarrels is to be found in the loose
+door-handles, and the broken bell-pull. Then the blind in the bedroom
+has a broken string. He was a beer-drinker, for the drip of the tap has
+left its mark in the cellar; a careless man, for this wall is a record
+of burst water-pipes; and rough in his methods, as his emendation of the
+garden gate--a remedy rather worse than the disease--shows. The mark of
+this prepotent previous man is left on the house from cellar to attic.
+It is his house really, not mine. And against these haunting
+individualities set the horrible wholesale flavour, the obvious
+dexterous builder's economies of a new house. Yet, whatever your
+repulsion may be, the end is always the same. After you have asked for
+your ideal house a hundred times or so you begin to see you do not get
+it. You go the way of your kind. All houses are taken in despair.
+
+But such disgusts as this are for the man who really aims at taking a
+house. The artist house-hunter knows better than that. He hunts for the
+hunt's sake, and does not mar his work with a purpose. Then
+house-hunting becomes a really delightful employment, and one strangely
+neglected in this country. I have heard, indeed, of old ladies who
+enlivened the intervals of their devotions in this manner, but to the
+general run of people the thing is unknown. Yet a more entertaining way
+of spending a half-holiday--having regard to current taste--it should be
+difficult to imagine. An empty house is realistic literature in the
+concrete, full of hints and allusions if a little wanting in tangible
+humanity, and it outdoes the modern story in its own line, by beginning
+as well as ending in a note of interrogation. That it is not more
+extensively followed I can only explain by supposing that its merits are
+generally unsuspected. In which case this book should set a fashion.
+
+One singular thing the house-hunter very speedily discovers is, that the
+greater portion of the houses in this country are owned by old gentlemen
+or old ladies who live next door. After a certain age, and especially
+upon retired tradespeople, house property, either alone or in common
+with gardening, exercises an irresistible fascination. You always know
+you are going to meet a landlord or landlady of this type when you read
+on your order to view, "Key next door but one." Calling next door but
+one, you are joined after the lapse of a few minutes by a bald, stout
+gentleman, or a lady of immemorial years, who offers to go over "the
+property" with you. Apparently the intervals between visits to view are
+spent in slumber, and these old people come out refreshed and keen to
+scrutinise their possible new neighbours. They will tell you all about
+the last tenant, and about the present tenants on either side, and about
+themselves, and how all the other houses in the neighbourhood are damp,
+and how they remember when the site of the house was a cornfield, and
+what they do for their rheumatism. As one hears them giving a most
+delightful vent to their loquacity, the artistic house-hunter feels all
+the righteous self-applause of a kindly deed. Sometimes they get
+extremely friendly. One old gentleman--to whom anyone under forty must
+have seemed puerile--presented the gentle writer with three fine large
+green apples as a kind of earnest of his treatment: apples, no doubt, of
+some little value, since they excited the audible envy of several little
+boys before they were disposed of.
+
+Sometimes the landlord has even superintended the building of the house
+himself, and then it often has peculiar distinctions--no coal cellar, or
+a tower with turrets, or pillars of ornamental marble investing the
+portico with disproportionate dignity. One old gentleman, young as old
+gentlemen go, short of stature, of an agreeable red colour, and with
+short iron-grey hair, had a niche over the front door containing a piece
+of statuary. It gave one the impression of the Venus of Milo in
+chocolate pyjamas. "It was nood at first," said the landlord, "but the
+neighbourhood is hardly educated up to art, and objected. So I gave it
+that brown paint."
+
+On one expedition the artistic house-hunter was accompanied by Euphemia.
+Then it was he found Hill Crest, a vast edifice at the incredible rent
+of L40 a year, with which a Megatherial key was identified. It took the
+two of them, not to mention an umbrella, to turn this key. The rent was
+a mystery, and while they were in the house--a thunderstorm kept them
+there some time--they tried to imagine the murder. From the top windows
+they could see the roofs of the opposite houses in plan.
+
+"I wonder how long it would take to get to the top of the house from the
+bottom?" said Euphemia.
+
+"Certainly longer than we could manage every day," said the artistic
+house-hunter. "Fancy looking for my pipe in all these rooms. Starting
+from the top bedroom at the usual time, I suppose one would arrive
+downstairs to breakfast about eleven, and then we should have to be
+getting upstairs again by eight o'clock if we wanted any night's rest
+worth having. Or we might double or treble existence, live a Gargantuan
+life to match the house, make our day of forty-eight hours instead of
+twenty-four. By doubling everything we should not notice the hole it
+made in our time getting about the place. Perhaps by making dinner last
+twice as long, eating twice as much, and doing everything on the scale
+of two to one, we might adapt ourselves to our environment in time, grow
+twice as big."
+
+"_Then_ we might be very comfortable here," said Euphemia.
+
+They went downstairs again. By that time it was thundering and raining
+heavily. The rooms were dark and gloomy. The big side door, which would
+not shut unless locked from the outside, swayed and banged as the gusts
+of wind swept round the house. But they had a good time in the front
+kitchen, playing cricket with an umbrella and the agent's order crumpled
+into a ball. Presently the artistic house-hunter lifted Euphemia on to
+the tall dresser, and they sat there swinging their feet patiently until
+the storm should leave off and release them.
+
+"I should feel in this kitchen," said Euphemia, "like one of my little
+dolls must have felt in the dolls'-house kitchen I had once. The top of
+her head just reached the level of the table. There were only four
+plates on the dresser, but each was about half her height across----"
+
+"Your reminiscences are always entertaining," said the artistic
+house-hunter; "still they fail to explain the absorbing mystery of this
+house being to let at L40 a year." The problem raised his curiosity, but
+though he made inquiries he found no reason for the remarkably low rent
+or the continued emptiness of the house. It was a specimen puzzle for
+the house-hunter. A large house with a garden of about half an acre, and
+with accommodation for about six families, going begging for L40 a year.
+Would it let at eighty? Some such problem, however, turns up in every
+house-hunt, and it is these surprises that give the sport its particular
+interest and delight. Always provided the mind is not unsettled by any
+ulterior notion of settling down.
+
+
+
+
+OF BLADES AND BLADERY
+
+
+The Blade is not so much a culture as a temperament, and Bladery--if the
+thing may have the name--a code of sentiments rather than a ritual. It
+is the rococo school of behaviour, the flamboyant gentleman, the
+gargoyle life. The Blade is the tribute innocence pays to vice. He may
+look like a devil and belong to a church. And the clothing of the Blade,
+being symbolical, is a very important part of him. It must show not only
+a certain tastiness, but also decision in the accent, courage in the
+pattern, and a Dudley Hardihood of outline. A Blade must needs take the
+colour of his social standing, but all Blades have the same essential
+qualities. And all Blades have this quality, that they despise and
+contemn other Blades from the top downward. (But where the bottommost
+Blade comes no man can tell.)
+
+A well-bred Blade--though he be a duke--tends to wear his hat tilted a
+little over the right eyebrow, and a piece of hair is pulled
+coquettishly down just below the brim. His collar is high, and a very
+large bow is worn slightly askew. This may be either cream-coloured or
+deep blue, with spots of white, or it may be red, or buff, but not
+green, because of badinage. The Blade of the middle class displays a
+fine gold watch-chain, and his jacket and vest may be of a rough black
+cloth or blue serge. The trousering may be of a suit with the jacket, or
+tasteful, and the shoes must be long. The betting man, adorned, is a
+perfect Blade. There is often a large and ornamental stick, which is
+invariably carried head downwards. And note, that the born Blade
+instinctively avoids any narrowness of pose. In walking he thrusts out
+his shoulders, elbows, and knees, and it is rather the thing to
+dominate a sphere of influence beyond this by swinging his stick. At
+first the beginner will find this weapon a little apt to slip from the
+hand and cause inconvenience to the general public; but he must not mind
+that. After a few such misadventures he will acquire dexterity.
+
+All Blades smoke--publicly at least. To smoke a white meerschaum in the
+streets, however, is very inferior form. The proper smoking is a briar,
+and, remember, it is not smart to have a new pipe. So soon as he buys
+it, the Blade takes his pipe home, puts it on a glowing fire to burn the
+rim, scrapes this away, burns it again, and so on until it looks a
+sullen desperado of a pipe--a pipe with a wild past. Sometimes he cannot
+smoke a pipe. In this case he may--for his stomach's sake--smoke a
+cigarette. And, besides, there is something cynical about a cigarette.
+For the very young Blade there are certain makes of cigarette that burn
+well--they are mixed with nitre--and these may be smoked by holding them
+in the left hand and idly swinging them to and fro in the air. If it
+were not for the public want of charity, I would recommend a well-known
+brand. A Blade may always escape a cigar by feigning a fastidious taste.
+"None of your Cabanas" is rather good style.
+
+The Blade, it must be understood--especially by the Blade's
+friends--spends his time in a whirl of dissipation. That is the
+symbolism of the emphatic obliquity of the costume. First, he drinks.
+The Blade at Harrow, according to a reliable authority, drinks cherry
+brandy and even champagne; other Blades consume whisky-and-soda; the
+less costly kind of Blade does it on beer. And here the beginner is
+often at a loss. Let us say he has looked up the street and down,
+ascertained that there are no aunts in the air, and then plunged into
+his first public-house. How shall he ask for his liquor? "I will take a
+glass of ale, if you please, Miss," seems tame for a Blade. It may be
+useful to know a more suitable formula. Just at present, we may assure
+the Blade neophyte, it is all the rage to ask for "Two of swipes,
+ducky." Go in boldly, bang down your money as loudly as possible, and
+shout that out at the top of your voice. If it is a barman, though, you
+had better not say "ducky." The slang will, we can assure him, prove
+extremely effective.
+
+Then the Blade gambles; but over the gambling of the Blade it is well to
+draw a veil--a partially translucent and coquettish veil, through which
+we can see the thing dimly, and enhanced in its enormity. You must
+patronise the Turf, of course, and have money on horses, or you are no
+Blade at all, but a mere stick. The Harrow Blade has his book on all the
+big races in the calendar; and the great and noble game of Nap--are not
+Blades its worshippers wherever the sun shines and a pack of cards is
+obtainable? Baccarat, too. Many a glorious Blade has lost his whole
+term's pocket-money at a single sitting at that noble game. And the
+conversation of the Blade must always be brilliant in the extreme, like
+the flashing of steel in the sunlight. It is usually cynical and
+worldly, sometimes horrible enough to make a governess shudder, but
+always epigrammatic. Epigrams and neat comparisons are much easier to
+make than is vulgarly supposed. "Schoolmasters hang about the crops of
+knowledge like dead crows about a field, examples and warnings to greedy
+souls." "Marriage is the beginning of philosophy, and the end is, 'Do
+not marry.'" "All women are constant, but some discover mistakes." "One
+is generally repentant when one is found out, and remorseful when one
+can't do it again." A little practice, and this kind of thing may be
+ground out almost without thinking. Occasionally, in your conversation
+with ladies, you may let an oath slip. (Better not let your aunt hear
+you.) Apologise humbly at once, of course. But it will give them a
+glimpse of the lurid splendour of your private life.
+
+And that brings us to the central thing of the Blade's life, the eternal
+Feminine! Pity them, be a little sorry for them--the poor souls cannot
+be Blades. They must e'en sit and palpitate while the Blade flashes. The
+accomplished Blade goes through life looking unspeakable wickedness at
+everything feminine he meets, old and young, rich and poor, one with
+another. He reeks with intrigue. Every Blade has his secrets and
+mysteries in this matter--remorse even for crimes. You do not know all
+that his handsome face may hide. Even he does not know. He may have sat
+on piers and talked to shop-girls, kissed housemaids, taken barmaids to
+music halls, conversed with painted wickedness in public places--nothing
+is too much for him. And oh! the reckless protestations of love he has
+made, the broken promises, the broken hearts! Yet men must be Blades,
+though women may weep; and every Blade must take his barmaid to a music
+hall at least once, even if she be taller than himself. Until then his
+manhood is not assured.
+
+Just one hint in conclusion. A Blade who collects stamps, or keeps tame
+rabbits, or eats sweets, oranges, or apples in the streets, or calls
+names publicly after his friends, is no Blade at all, but a boy still.
+So, with our blessing, he swaggers on his way and is gone. A Don Juan as
+fresh as spring, a rosebud desperado. May he never come upon just cause
+for repentance!
+
+
+
+
+OF CLEVERNESS
+
+APROPOS OF ONE CRICHTON
+
+
+Crichton is an extremely clever person--abnormally, indeed almost
+unnaturally, so. He is not merely clever at this or that, but clever all
+round; he gives you no consolations. He goes about being needlessly
+brilliant. He caps your jests and corrects your mistakes, and does your
+special things over again in newer and smarter ways. Any really
+well-bred man who presumed so far would at least be plain or physically
+feeble, or unhappily married by way of apology, but the idea of so much
+civility seems never to have entered Crichton's head. He will come into
+a room where we are jesting perhaps, and immediately begin to flourish
+about less funny perhaps but decidedly more brilliant jests, until at
+last we retire one by one from the conversation and watch him with
+savage, weary eyes over our pipes. He invariably beats me at chess,
+invariably. People talk about him and ask my opinion of him, and if I
+venture to criticise him they begin to look as though they thought I was
+jealous. Grossly favourable notices of his books and his pictures crop
+up in the most unlikely places; indeed I have almost given up newspapers
+on account of him. Yet, after all----
+
+This cleverness is not everything. It never pleases me, and I doubt
+sometimes if it pleases anyone. Suppose you let off some clever little
+thing, a subtlety of expression, a paradox, an allusive suggestive
+picture; how does it affect ordinary people? Those who are less clever
+than yourself, the unspecialised, unsophisticated average people, are
+simply annoyed by the puzzle you set them; those who are cleverer find
+your cleverness mere obvious stupidity; and your equals, your
+competitors in cleverness, are naturally your deadly rivals. The fact is
+this cleverness, after all, is merely egotism in its worst and unwisest
+phase. It is an incontinence of brilliance, graceless and aggressive, a
+glaring swagger. The drunken helot of cleverness is the creature who
+goes about making puns. A mere step above comes the epigram, the
+isolated epigram framed and glazed. Then such impressionist art as
+Crichton's pictures, mere puns in paint. What they mean is nothing, they
+arrest a quiet decent-minded man like myself with the same spasmodic
+disgust as a pun in literature--the subject is a transparent excuse;
+they are mere indecent and unedifying exhibitions of himself. He thinks
+it is something superlative to do everything in a startling way. He
+cannot even sign his name without being offensive. He lacks altogether
+the fundamental quality of a gentleman, the magnanimity to be
+commonplace. I----
+
+On the score of personal dignity, why should a young man of respectable
+antecedents and some natural capacity stoop to this kind of thing? To be
+clever is the last desperate resort of the feeble, it is the merit of
+the ambitious slave. You cannot conquer _vi et armis_, you cannot
+stomach a decent inferiority, so you resort to lively, eccentric, and
+brain-wearying brilliance to ingratiate yourself. The cleverest animal
+by far is the monkey, and compare that creature's undignified activity
+with the mountainous majesty of the elephant!
+
+And I cannot help thinking, too, that cleverness must be the greatest
+obstacle a man can possibly have in his way upward in the world. One
+never sees really clever people in positions of trust, never widely
+influential or deeply rooted. Look, for instance, at the Royal Academy,
+at the Judges, at----But there! The very idea of cleverness is an
+all-round readiness and looseness that is the very negation of
+stability.
+
+Whenever Crichton has been particularly exasperating, getting himself
+appreciated in a new quarter, or rising above his former successes, I
+find some consolation in thinking of my Uncle Augustus. He was the
+glory of our family. Even Aunt Charlotte's voice drooped a little in the
+mention of his name. He was conspicuous for an imposing and even
+colossal stupidity: he rose to eminence through it, and, what is more,
+to wealth and influence. He was as reliable, as unlikely to alter his
+precise position, or do anything unexpected, as the Pyramids of Egypt. I
+do not know any topic upon which he was not absolutely uninformed, and
+his contributions to conversation, delivered in that ringing baritone of
+his, were appallingly dull. Often I have seen him utterly flatten some
+cheerful clever person of the Crichton type with one of his simple
+garden-roller remarks--plain, solid, and heavy, which there was no
+possibility either of meeting or avoiding. He was very successful in
+argument, and yet he never fenced. He simply came down. It was, so to
+speak, a case of small sword _versus_ the avalanche. His moral inertia
+was tremendous. He was never excited, never anxious, never jaded; he was
+simply massive. Cleverness broke upon him like shipping on an ironbound
+coast. His monument is like him--a plain large obelisk of coarse
+granite, unpretending in its simple ugliness and prominent a mile off.
+Among the innumerable little white sorrows of the cemetery it looks
+exactly as he used to look among clever people.
+
+Depend upon it cleverness is the antithesis of greatness. The British
+Empire, like the Roman, was built up by dull men. It may be we shall be
+ruined by clever ones. Imagine a regiment of lively and eccentric
+privates! There never was a statesman yet who had not some ballast of
+stupidity, and it seems to me that part at least of the essentials of a
+genius is a certain divine dulness. The people we used to call the
+masters--Shakespeare, Raphael, Milton, and so forth--had a certain
+simplicity Crichton lacks. They do not scintillate nearly so much as he
+does, and they do not give that same uncomfortable feeling of internal
+strain. Even Homer nods. There are restful places in their work, broad
+meadows of breezy flatness, calms. But Crichton has no Pacific Ocean to
+mitigate his everlasting weary passage of Cape Horn: it is all point
+and prominence, point and prominence.
+
+No doubt this Crichton is having a certain vogue now, but it cannot
+last. I wish him no evil, of course, but I cannot help thinking he will
+presently have had his day. This epoch of cleverness must be very near
+its last flare. The last and the abiding thought of humanity is peace. A
+dull man will presently be sought like the shadow of a great rock in a
+thirsty land. Dulness will be the New Genius. "Give us dull books,"
+people will cry, "great dull restful pictures. We are weary, very
+weary." This hectic, restless, incessant phase in which we
+travail--_fin-de-siecle_, "decadent," and all the rest of it--will pass
+away. A chubby, sleepy literature, large in aim, colossal in execution,
+rotund and tranquil will lift its head. And this Crichton will become a
+classic, Messrs. Mudie will sell surplus copies of his works at a
+reduction, and I shall cease to be worried by his disgusting success.
+
+
+
+
+THE POSE NOVEL
+
+
+I watched the little spurts of flame jet out from between the writhing
+pages of my manuscript, watched the sheets coil up in their fiery
+anguish and start one from another. I helped the fire to the very vitals
+of the mass by poking the brittle heap, and at last the sacrifice was
+over, the flames turned from pink to blue and died out, the red glow
+gave place to black, little luminous red streaks coiled across the
+charred sheets and vanished at the margins, and only the ashes of my
+inspiration remained. The ink was a lustrous black on the dull blackness
+of the burnt paper. I could still read this much of my indiscretion
+remaining, "He smiled at them all and said nothing."
+
+"Fool!" I said, and stirred the crackling mass into a featureless heap
+of black scraps. Then with my chin on my fists and elbows on knees I
+stared at the end of my labours.
+
+I suppose, after all, there has been some profit out of the thing. Satan
+finds some mischief still for idle hands to do, and one may well thank
+Heaven it was only a novel. Still, it means many days out of my life,
+and I would be glad to find some positive benefit accruing. Clearly, in
+the first place, I have eased my mind of some execrable English. I am
+cleaner now by some dozen faulty phrases that I committed and saw
+afterwards in all the nakedness of typewriting. (Thank Heaven for
+typewriting! Were it not for that, this thing had gone to the scoffing
+of some publisher's reader, and another had known my shame.) And I shall
+not write another pose novel.
+
+I am inclined to think these pose novels the wild oats of authorship. We
+sit down in the heyday of our youth to write the masterpiece.
+Obviously, it must be a novel about a man and a woman, and something as
+splendid as we can conceive of in that way. We look about us. We do not
+go far for perfection. One of the brace holds the pen and the other is
+inside his or her head; and so Off! to the willing pen. Only a few years
+ago we went slashing among the poppies with a walking-stick, and were,
+we said boldly and openly, Harolds and Hectors slaying our thousands.
+Now of course we are grown up to self-respect, and must needs be a
+little disingenuous about it. But as the story unfolds there is no
+mistaking the likeness, in spite of the transfiguration. This bold,
+decided man who performs such deeds of derring-do in the noisome slum,
+knocks down the burly wife-beater, rescues an unmistakable Miss Clapton
+from the knife of a Lascar, and is all the while cultivating a virtuous
+consumption that stretches him on an edifying, pathetic, and altogether
+beautiful deathbed in the last chapter----My dear Authorling, cry my
+friends, we hear the squeak of that little voice of yours in every word
+he utters. Is _that_ what you aspire to be, that twopence-coloured
+edition of yourself? Heaven defend you from your desires!
+
+Yet there was a singular fascination in writing the book; to be in
+anticipation my own sympathetic historian, to joy with my joys yet to
+come, and sorrow with my sorrows, to bear disaster like a man, and at
+last to close my own dear eyes, and with a swelling heart write my own
+epitaph. The pleasure remained with me until I reached the end. How
+admirably I strutted in front of myself! And I and the better self of me
+that was flourishing about in the book--we pretended not to know each
+other for what we were. He was myself with a wig and a sham visiting
+card, and I owed it to myself to respect my disguise. I made him with
+very red hair--my hair is fairly dark--and shifted his university from
+London to Cambridge. Clearly it could not be the same person, I argued.
+But I endowed him with all the treasures of myself; I made him say all
+the good things I might have said had I thought of them opportunely, and
+all the noble thoughts that occurred to me afterwards occurred to him
+at the time. He was myself--myself at a premium, myself without any
+drawbacks, the quintessence and culmination of me. And yet somehow when
+he came back from the typewriter he seemed a bit of an ass.
+
+Probably every tadpole author writes a pose novel--at least I hope so
+for the sake of my self-respect. Most, after my fashion, burn the thing,
+or benevolent publishers lose it. It is an ill thing if by some accident
+the tadpole tale survives the tadpole stage. The authoress does the
+feminine equivalent, but I should judge either that she did it more
+abundantly or else that she burned less. Has she never swept past you
+with a scornful look, disdained you in all the pride of her beauty,
+rippled laughter at you, or amazed you with her artless girlishness? And
+even after the early stages some of the trick may survive, unless I read
+books with malice instead of charity. I must confess, though, that I
+have a weakness for finding mine author among his puppets. I conceive
+him always taking the best parts, like an actor-manager or a little boy
+playing with his sisters. I do not read many novels with sincere belief,
+and I like to get such entertainment from them as I can. So that these
+artless little self-revelations are very sweet and precious to me among
+all the lay figures, tragedy and comedy. Since the deception is
+transparent I make the most of the transparency, and love to see the
+clumsy fingers on the strings of the marionettes. And this will be none
+the less pleasant now that I have so narrowly escaped giving this
+entertainment to others.
+
+I suppose this stage is a necessary one. We begin with ignorance and the
+imagination, the material of the pose novel. Later come self-knowledge,
+disappointments and self-consciousness, and the prodigals of fiction
+stay themselves upon the husks of epigram and cynicism, and in the place
+of artless aspiration are indeed in plain black and white very desperate
+characters. It is after all only another pose--the pose of not posing.
+We, the common clay of the world of letters, must needs write in this
+way, because we cannot forget our foolish little selves in our work.
+But some few there are who sit as gods above their private universes,
+and write without passion or vanity. At least, so I have been told.
+These be the true artists of letters, the white windows upon the truth
+of things. We by comparison are but stained glass in our own honour, and
+do but obstruct the view with our halos and attitudes. Yet even
+Shakespeare, the critics tell us--and they say they know--posed in the
+character of Hamlet.
+
+After all, the pose novel method has at times attained to the level of
+literature. Charlotte Bronte might possibly have found no other topic
+had she disdained the plain little woman with a shrewish tongue; and
+where had Charles Kingsley been if the vision of a curate rampant had
+not rejoiced his heart? Still, I am not sorry that this novel is burned.
+Even now it was ridiculous, and the time might have come when this book,
+full of high, if foolish aims, and the vain vast promise of well-meaning
+youth, had been too keen a reproach to be endured. Three volumes of good
+intentions! It is too much. There was more than a novel burning just
+now. After this I shall be in a position to take a humorist's view of
+life.
+
+
+
+
+THE VETERAN CRICKETER
+
+
+My old cricketer was seized, he says, some score of years ago now, by
+sciatica, clutched indeed about the loins thereby, and forcibly
+withdrawn from the practice of the art; since when a certain
+predisposition to a corpulent habit has lacked its natural check of
+exercise, and a broadness almost Dutch has won upon him. Were it not for
+this, which renders his contours and his receding aspect unseemly, he
+would be indeed a venerable-looking person, having a profile worthy of a
+patriarch, tinged though it may be with an unpatriarchal jollity, and a
+close curly beard like that of King David. He lives by himself in a
+small cottage outside the village--hating women with an unaccountable
+detestation--and apparently earns a precarious livelihood, and certainly
+the sincere aversion of the country side, by umpiring in matches, and
+playing whist and "Nap" with such as will not be so discreet and
+economical as to bow before his superior merit.
+
+His neighbours do not like him, because he will not take their cricket
+or their whist seriously, because he will persist in offering counsel
+and the stimulus of his gift of satire. All whist than his he avers is
+"Bumble-puppy." His umpiring is pedagogic in tone; he fails to see the
+contest in the game. To him, who has heard his thousands roar as the
+bails of the best of All England went spinning, these village matches
+are mere puerile exercises to be corrected. His corrections, too, are
+Olympian, done, as it were, in red ink, vivid, and without respect of
+persons. Particularly he gibes. He never uses vulgar bad language
+himself, but has a singular power of engendering it in others. He has a
+word "gaby," which he will sometimes enlarge to "stuppid gaby," the
+which, flung neatly into a man who has just missed a catch, will fill
+the same with a whirl of furious curses difficult to restrain. And if
+perchance one should escape, my ancient cricketer will be as startled as
+Cadmus at the crop he has sown. And not only startled but pained at
+human wickedness and the follies of a new generation. "Why can't you
+play without swearing, Muster Gibbs?" he will say, catching the
+whispered hope twenty yards away, and proclaiming it to a censorious
+world. And so Gibbs, our grocer and draper, and one made much of by the
+vicar, is shamed before the whole parish, and damned even as he desired.
+
+To our vicar, a well-meaning, earnest, and extremely nervous man, he
+displays a methodical antagonism. Our vicar is the worst of all possible
+rural vicars--unripe, a glaring modern, no classical scholar, no lover
+of nature, offensively young and yet not youthful, an indecent
+politician. He was meant to labour amid Urban Myriads, to deal with
+Social Evils, Home Rule, the Woman Question, and the Reunion of
+Christendom, attend Conferences and go with the _Weltgeist_--damn
+him!--wherever the _Weltgeist_ is going. He presents you jerkily--a tall
+lean man of ascetic visage and ample garments, a soul clothed not so
+much in a fleshy body as in black flaps that ever trail behind its
+energy. Where they made him Heaven knows. No university owns him. It may
+be he is a renegade Dissenting minister, neither good Church nor
+wholesome Nonconformity. Him my cricketer regards with malignant
+respect. Respect he shows by a punctilious touching of his hat brim,
+directed to the sacred office; all the rest is malignity, and aimed at
+the man that fills it. They come into contact on the cricket-field, and
+on the committee of our reading-room. For our vicar, in spite of a
+tendency to myopia, conceives it his duty to encourage cricket by his
+participation. _Duty_--to encourage cricket! So figure the scene to
+yourself. The sunlit green, and a match in progress,--the ball has just
+snipped a stump askew,--my ancient, leaning on a stout cabbage stick,
+and with the light overcoat that is sacred to umpires upon his arm.
+
+"_Out_, Billy Durgan," says he, and adds, _ex cathedra_, "and one you
+ought to ha' hit for four."
+
+Then appears our vicar in semi-canonicals, worn "to keep up his
+position," or some such folly, nervous about the adjustment of his hat
+and his eyeglasses. He approaches the pitch, smiling the while to show
+his purely genial import and to anticipate and explain any amateurish
+touches. He reaches the wicket and poses himself, as the convenient book
+he has studied directs. "You'll be caught, Muster Shackleforth, if you
+keep your shoulder up like that," says the umpire. "Ya-a-ps! that's
+worse!"--forgetting himself in his zeal for attitude. And then a voice
+cries "Play!"
+
+The vicar swipes wildly, cuts the ball for two, and returns to his
+wicket breathless but triumphant. Next comes a bye, and then over. The
+misguided cleric, ever pursuing a theory of foolish condescension to his
+betters at the game, and to show there is no offence at the "Yaaps,"
+takes the opportunity, although panting, of asking my ancient if his
+chicks--late threatened with staggers--are doing well. What would he
+think if my cricketer retaliated by asking, in the pause before the
+sermon, how the vicarage pony took his last bolus? The two men do not
+understand one another. My cricketer waves the hens aside, and revenges
+himself, touching his hat at intervals, by some offensively obvious
+remarks--as to a mere beginner--about playing with a straight bat. And
+the field sniggers none too furtively. I sympathise with his malice.
+Cricket is an altogether too sacred thing to him to be tampered with on
+merely religious grounds. However, our vicar gets himself caught at the
+first opportunity, and so being removed from my veteran's immediate
+environment, to their common satisfaction, the due ritual of the great
+game is resumed.
+
+My ancient cricketer abounds in reminiscence of the glorious days that
+have gone for ever. He can still recall the last echoes of the
+"throwing" controversy that agitated Nyren, when over-arm bowling began,
+and though he never played himself in a beaver hat, he can, he says,
+recollect seeing matches so played. In those days everyone wore tall
+hats--the policeman, the milkman, workmen of all sorts. Some people I
+fancy must have bathed in them and gone to bed wearing them. He recalls
+the Titans of that and the previous age, and particularly delights in
+the legend of Noah Mann, who held it a light thing to walk twenty miles
+from Northchapel to Hambledon to practise every Tuesday afternoon, and
+wander back after dark. He himself as a stripling would run a matter of
+four miles, after a day's work in the garden where he was employed, to
+attend an hour's practice over the downs before the twilight made the
+balls invisible. And afterwards came Teutonic revelry or wanderings
+under the summer starlight, as the mood might take him. For there was a
+vein of silent poetry in the youth of this man.
+
+He hates your modern billiard-table pitch, and a batting of dexterous
+snickery. He likes "character" in a game, gigantic hitting forward,
+bowler-planned leg catches, a cunning obliquity in a wicket that would
+send the balls mysteriously askew. But dramatic breaks are now a thing
+unknown in trade cricket. One legend of his I doubt; he avers that once
+at Brighton, in a match between Surrey and Sussex, he saw seven wickets
+bowled by some such aid in two successive overs. I have never been able
+to verify this. I believe that, as a matter of fact, the thing has never
+occurred, but he tells it often in a fine crescendo of surprise, and the
+refrain, "Out HE came." His first beginning is a cheerful
+anecdote of a crew of "young gentlemen" from Cambridge staying at the
+big house, and a challenge to the rustic talent of "me and Billy Hall,"
+who "played a bit at that time," "of me and Billy Hall" winning the
+pitch and going in first, of a memorable if uncivil stand at the wickets
+through a long hot afternoon, and a number of young gentlemen from
+Cambridge painfully discovering local talent by exhaustive fielding in
+the park, a duty they honourably discharged.
+
+I am fond of my old cricketer, in spite of a certain mendacious and
+malign element in him. His yarns of gallant stands and unexpected turns
+of fortune, of memorable hits and eccentric umpiring, albeit tending
+sometimes incredibly to his glory, are full of the flavour of days well
+spent, of bright mornings of play, sunlit sprawlings beside the score
+tent, warmth, the flavour of bitten grass stems, and the odour of
+crushed turf. One seems to hear the clapping hands of village ancients,
+and their ululations of delight. One thinks of stone jars with cool
+drink swishing therein, of shouting victories and memorable defeats, of
+eleven men in a drag, and tuneful and altogether glorious home-comings
+by the light of the moon. His were the Olympian days of the sport, when
+noble squires were its patrons, and every village a home and nursery of
+stalwart cricketers, before the epoch of special trains, gate-money,
+star elevens, and the tumultuous gathering of idle cads to jabber at a
+game they cannot play.
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING A CERTAIN LADY
+
+
+This lady wears a blue serge suit and a black hat, without flippancy;
+she is a powerfully built lady and generally more or less flushed, and
+she is aunt, apparently, to a great number of objectionable-looking
+people. I go in terror of her. Yet the worm will turn at last, and so
+will the mild, pacific literary man. Her last outrage was too much even
+for my patience. It was committed at Gloucester Road Station the other
+afternoon. I was about to get into a train for Wimbledon,--and there are
+only two of them to the hour,--and, so far as I could see, the whole
+world was at peace with me. I felt perfectly secure. The aegis of the
+_pax Britannica_--if you will pardon the expression--was over me. For
+the moment the thought of the lady in the blue serge was quite out of my
+mind. I had just bought a newspaper, and had my hand on the carriage
+door. The guard was fluttering his flag.
+
+Then suddenly she swooped out of space, out of the infinite unknown, and
+hit me. She always hits me when she comes near me, and I infer she hits
+everyone she comes across. She hit me this time in the chest with her
+elbow and knocked me away from the door-handle. She hit me very hard;
+indeed, she was as fierce as I have ever known her. With her there were
+two nieces and a nephew, and the nephew hit me too. He was a horrid
+little boy in an Eton suit of the kind that they do not wear at Eton,
+and he hit me with his head and pushed at me with his little pink hands.
+The nieces might have been about twenty-two and thirteen respectively,
+and I infer that they were apprenticed to her. All four people seemed
+madly excited. "It's just starting!" they screamed, and the train was,
+indeed, slowly moving. Their object--so far as they had an object and
+were not animated by mere fury--appeared to be to assault me and then
+escape in the train. The lady in blue got in and then came backwards out
+again, sweeping the smaller girl behind her upon the two others, who
+were engaged in hustling me. "It's 'smoking!'" she cried. I could have
+told her that, if she had asked instead of hitting me. The elder girl,
+by backing dexterously upon me, knocked my umbrella out of my hand, and
+when I stooped to pick it up the little boy knocked my hat off. I will
+confess they demoralised me with their archaic violence. I had some
+thought of joining in their wild amuck, whooping, kicking out madly,
+perhaps assaulting a porter,--I think the lady in blue would have been
+surprised to find what an effective addition to her staff she had picked
+up,--but before I could collect my thoughts sufficiently to do any
+definite thing the whole affair was over. A porter was slamming doors on
+them, the train was running fast out of the station, and I was left
+alone with an unmannerly newsboy and an unmannerly porter on the
+platform. I waited until the porter was out of the way, and then I hit
+the newsboy for laughing at me, but even with that altercation it was a
+tedious wait for the next train to Wimbledon.
+
+This is the latest of my encounters with this lady, but it has decided
+me to keep silence no longer. She has been persecuting me now for years
+in all parts of London. It may be I am her only victim, but, on the
+other hand, she may be in the habit of annoying the entire class of
+slender and inoffensive young men. If so, and they will communicate with
+me through the publishers of this little volume, we might do something
+towards suppressing her, found an Anti-Energetic-Lady-League, or
+something of that sort. For if there was ever a crying wrong that
+clamoured for suppression it is this violent woman.
+
+She is, even now, flagrantly illegal. She might be given in charge for
+hitting people at any time, and be warned, or fined, or given a week.
+But somehow it is only when she is overpast and I am recovering my wits
+that I recollect that she might be dealt with in this way. She is the
+chartered libertine of British matrons, and assaulteth where she
+listeth. The blows I have endured from her? She fights people who are
+getting into 'buses. It is no mere accidental jostling, but a deliberate
+shouldering, poking with umbrellas, and clawing. It is her delight to go
+to the Regent Circus corner of Piccadilly, about half-past seven in the
+evening, accompanied by a genteel rout of daughters, and fill up whole
+omnibuses with them. At that hour there are work-girls and tired clerks,
+and the like worn-out anaemic humanity trying to get home for an hour or
+so of rest before bed, and they crowd round the 'buses very eagerly.
+They are little able to cope with her exuberant vitality, being
+ill-nourished and tired from the day's work, and she simply mows through
+them and fills up every vacant place they covet before their eyes. Then,
+I can never count change even when my mind is tranquil, and she knows
+that, and swoops threateningly upon me in booking offices and
+stationers' shops. When I am dodging cabs at crossings she will appear
+from behind an omnibus or carriage and butt into me furiously. She holds
+her umbrella in her folded arms just as the Punch puppet does his staff,
+and with as deadly effect. Sometimes she discards her customary navy
+blue and puts on a glittering bonnet with bead trimmings, and goes and
+hurts people who are waiting to enter the pit at theatres, and
+especially to hurt me. She is fond of public shows, because they afford
+such possibilities of hurting me. Once I saw her standing partly on a
+seat and partly on another lady in the church of St. George's, Hanover
+Square, partly, indeed, watching a bride cry, but chiefly, I expect,
+scheming how she could get round to me and hurt me. Then there was an
+occasion at the Academy when she was peculiarly aggressive. I was
+sitting next my lame friend when she marked me. Of course she came at
+once and sat right upon us. "Come along, Jane," I heard her say, as I
+struggled to draw my flattened remains from under her; "this gentleman
+will make room."
+
+My friend was not so entangled and had escaped on the other side. She
+noticed his walk. "Oh, don't _you_ get up," she said. "_This_
+gentleman," she indicated my convulsive struggles to free myself, "will
+do that. _I did not see that you were a cripple._"
+
+It may be some of my readers will recognise the lady now. It can be--for
+the honour of womankind--only one woman. She is an atavism, a survival
+of the age of violence, a Palaeolithic squaw in petticoats. I do not know
+her name and address or I would publish it. I do not care if she kills
+me the next time she meets me, for the limits of endurance have been
+passed. If she kills me I shall die a martyr in the cause of the Queen's
+peace. And if it is only one woman, then it was the same lady, more than
+half intoxicated, that I saw in the Whitechapel Road cruelly
+ill-treating a little costermonger. If it was not she it was certainly
+her sister, and I do not care who knows it.
+
+What to do with her I do not know. A League, after all, seems
+ineffectual; she would break up any League. I have thought of giving her
+in charge for assault, but I shrink from the invidious publicity of
+that. Still, I am in grim earnest to do something. I think at times that
+the compulsory adoption of a narrow doorway for churches and places of
+public entertainment might be some protection for quiet, inoffensive
+people. How she would rage outside to be sure! Yet that seems a great
+undertaking.
+
+But this little paper is not so much a plan of campaign as a preliminary
+defiance. Life is a doubtful boon while one is never safe from assault,
+from hitting and shoving, from poking with umbrellas, being sat upon,
+and used as a target for projectile nephews and nieces. I warn
+her--possibly with a certain quaver in my voice--that I am in revolt. If
+she hits me again----I will not say the precise thing I will do, but I
+warn her, very solemnly and deliberately, that she had better not hit me
+again.
+
+And so for the present the matter remains.
+
+
+
+
+THE SHOPMAN
+
+
+If I were really opulent, I would not go into a shop at all--I would
+have a private secretary. If I were really determined, Euphemia would do
+these things. As it is, I find buying things in a shop the most
+exasperating of all the many trying duties of life. I am sometimes
+almost tempted to declare myself Adamite to escape it. The way the
+shopman eyes you as you enter his den, the very spread of his fingers,
+irritate me. "What can I have the pleasure?" he says, bowing forward at
+me, and with his eye on my chin--and so waits.
+
+Now I hate incomplete sentences, and confound his pleasure! I don't go
+into a shop to give a shopman pleasure. But your ordinary shopman must
+needs pretend you delight and amuse him. I say, trying to display my
+dislike as plainly as possible, "Gloves." "Gloves, yessir," he says. Why
+should he? I suppose he thinks I require to be confirmed in my
+persuasion that I want gloves. "Calf--kid--dogskin?" How should _I_ know
+the technicalities of his traffic? "Ordinary gloves," I say, disdaining
+his petty distinctions. "About what price, sir?" he asks.
+
+Now that always maddens me. Why should I be expected to know the price
+of gloves? I'm not a commercial traveller nor a wholesale dealer, and I
+don't look like one. Neither am I constitutionally parsimonious nor
+petty. I am a literary man, unworldly, and I wear long hair and a soft
+hat and a peculiar overcoat to indicate the same to ordinary people.
+Why, I say, should I know the price of gloves? I know they are some
+ordinary price--elevenpence-halfpenny, or three-and-six, or
+seven-and-six, or something--one of those prices that everything is
+sold at--but further I don't go. Perhaps I say elevenpence-halfpenny at
+a venture.
+
+His face lights up with quiet malice. "Don't keep them, sir," he says. I
+can tell by his expression that I am ridiculously low, and so being
+snubbed. I think of trying with three-and-six, or seven-and-six; the
+only other probable prices for things that I know, except a guinea and
+five pounds. Then I see the absurdity of the business, and my anger
+comes surging up.
+
+"Look here!" I say, as bitterly as possible. "I don't come here to play
+at Guessing Games. Never mind your prices. I want some gloves. Get me
+some!"
+
+This cows him a little, but very little. "May I ask your size, sir?" he
+says, a trifle more respectfully.
+
+One would think I spent all my time remembering the size of my gloves.
+However, it is no good resenting it. "It's either seven or nine," I say
+in a tired way.
+
+He just begins another question, and then he catches my eye and stops
+and goes away to obtain some gloves, and I get a breathing space. But
+why do they keep on with this cross-examination? If I knew exactly what
+I wanted--description, price, size--I should not go to a shop at all, it
+would save me such a lot of trouble just to send a cheque to the Stores.
+The only reason why I go into a tradesman's shop is because I don't know
+what I want exactly, am in doubt about the name or the size, or the
+price, or the fashion, and want a specialist to help me. The only reason
+for having shopmen instead of automatic machines is that one requires
+help in buying things. When I want gloves, the shopman ought to
+understand his business sufficiently well to know better than I do what
+particular kind of gloves I ought to be wearing, and what is a fair
+price for them. I don't see why I should teach him what is in fashion
+and what is not. A doctor does not ask you what kind of operation you
+want and what price you will pay for it. But I really believe these
+outfitter people would let me run about London wearing white cotton
+gloves and a plaid comforter without lifting a finger to prevent me.
+
+And, by the bye, that reminds me of a scandalous trick these salesmen
+will play you. Sometimes they have not the thing you want, and then they
+make you buy other things. I happen to have, through no fault of my own,
+a very small head, and consequently for one long summer I wore a little
+boy's straw hat about London with the colours of a Paddington Board
+School, simply because a rascal outfitter hadn't my size in a proper
+kind of headgear, and induced me to buy the thing by specious
+representations. He must have known perfectly well it was not what I
+ought to wear. It seems never to enter into a shopman's code of honour
+that he ought to do his best for his customer. Since that, however, I
+have noticed lots of people about who have struck me in a new light as
+triumphs of the salesman, masterpieces in the art of incongruity; age in
+the garb of youth, corpulence put off with the size called "slender
+men's"; unhappy, gentle, quiet men with ties like oriflammes, breasts
+like a kingfisher's, and cataclysmal trouser patterns. Even so, if the
+shopkeeper had his will, should we all be. Those poor withered maiden
+ladies, too, who fill us with a kind of horror, with their juvenile
+curls, their girlish crudity of colouring, their bonnets, giddy,
+tottering, hectic. It overcomes me with remorse to think that I myself
+have accused them of vanity and folly. It overcomes me with pain to hear
+the thoughtless laugh aloud after them, in the public ways. For they are
+simply short-sighted trustful people, the myopic victims of the salesman
+and saleswoman. The little children gibe at them, pelt even.... And
+somewhere in the world a draper goes unhung.
+
+However, the gloves are bought. I select a pair haphazard, and he
+pretends to perceive they fit perfectly by putting them over the back of
+my hand. I make him assure me of the fit, and then buy the pair and
+proceed to take my old ones off and put the new on grimly. If they split
+or the fingers are too long--glovemakers have the most erratic
+conceptions of the human finger--I have to buy another pair.
+
+But the trouble only begins when you have bought your thing. "Nothing
+more, sir?" he says. "Nothing," I say. "Braces?" he says. "No, thank
+you," I say. "Collars, cuffs?" He looks at mine swiftly but keenly, and
+with an unendurable suspicion.
+
+He goes on, item after item. Am I in rags, that I should endure this
+thing? And I get sick of my everlasting "No, thank you"--the monotony
+shows up so glaringly against his kaleidoscope variety. I feel all the
+unutterable pettiness, the mean want of enterprise of my poor little
+purchase compared with the catholic fling he suggests. I feel angry with
+myself for being thus played upon, furiously angry with him. "_No, no_!"
+I say.
+
+"These tie-holders are new." He proceeds to show me his infernal
+tie-holders. "They prevent the tie puckering," he says with his eye on
+mine. It's no good. "How much?" I say.
+
+This whets him to further outrage. "Look here, my man!" I say at last,
+goaded to it, "I came here for gloves. After endless difficulties I at
+last induced you to let me have gloves. I have also been intimidated, by
+the most shameful hints and insinuations, into buying that _beastly_
+tie-holder. I'm not a child that I don't know my own needs. Now _will_
+you let me go? How much do you want?"
+
+That usually checks him.
+
+The above is a fair specimen of a shopman--a favourable rendering. There
+are other things they do, but I simply cannot write about them because
+it irritates me so to think of them. One infuriating manoeuvre is to
+correct your pronunciation. Another is to make a terrible ado about your
+name and address--even when it is quite a well-known name.
+
+After I have bought things at a shop I am quite unfit for social
+intercourse. I have to go home and fume. There was a time when Euphemia
+would come and discuss my purchase with a certain levity, but on one
+occasion....
+
+Some day these shopmen will goad me too far. It's almost my only
+consolation, indeed, to think what I am going to do when I do break out.
+There is a salesman somewhere in the world, he going on his way and I
+on mine, who will, I know, prove my last straw. It may be he will read
+this--amused--recking little of the mysteries of fate.... Is killing a
+salesman murder, like killing a human being?
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF CURSES
+
+
+Professor Gargoyle, you must understand, has travelled to and fro in the
+earth, culling flowers of speech: a kind of recording angel he is, but
+without any sentimental tears. To be plain, he studies swearing. His
+collection, however, only approaches completeness in the western
+departments of European language. Going eastward he found such an
+appalling and tropical luxuriance of these ornaments as to despair at
+last altogether of even a representative selection. "They do not curse,"
+he says, "at door-handles, and shirt-studs, and such other trifles as
+will draw down the meagre discharge of an Occidental, but when they do
+begin----
+
+"I hired a promising-looking man at Calcutta, and after a month or so
+refused to pay his wages. He was unable to get at me with the big knife
+he carried, because the door was locked, so he sat on his hams outside
+under the verandah, from a quarter-past six in the morning until nearly
+ten, cursing--cursing in one steady unbroken flow--an astonishing spate
+of blasphemy. First he cursed my family, from me along the female line
+back to Eve, and then, having toyed with me personally for a little
+while, he started off along the line of my possible posterity to my
+remotest great-grandchildren. Then he cursed me by this and that. My
+hand ached taking it down, he was so very rich. It was a perfect
+anthology of Bengali blasphemy--vivid, scorching, and variegated. Not
+two alike. And then he turned about and dealt with different parts of
+me. I was really very fortunate in him. Yet it was depressing to think
+that all this was from one man, and that there are six hundred million
+people in Asia."
+
+"Naturally," said the Professor in answer to my question, "these
+investigations involve a certain element of danger. The first condition
+of curse-collecting is to be unpopular, especially in the East, where
+comminatory swearing alone is practised, and you have to offend a man
+very grievously to get him to disgorge his treasure. In this country,
+except among ladies in comparatively humble circumstances, anything like
+this fluent, explicit, detailed, and sincere cursing, aimed,
+missile-fashion, at a personal enemy, is not found. It was quite common
+a few centuries ago; indeed, in the Middle Ages it was part of the
+recognised procedure. Aggrieved parties would issue a father's curse,
+an orphan's curse, and so forth, much as we should take out a county
+court summons. And it played a large part in ecclesiastical policy too.
+At one time the entire Church militant here on earth was swearing in
+unison, and the Latin tongue, at the Republic of Venice--a very splendid
+and imposing spectacle. It seems to me a pity to let these old customs
+die out so completely. I estimate that more than half these Gothic forms
+have altogether passed out of memory. There must have been some splendid
+things in Erse and Gaelic too; for the Celtic mind, with its more vivid
+sense of colour, its quicker transitions, and deeper emotional quality,
+has ever over-cursed the stolid Teuton. But it is all getting forgotten.
+
+"Indeed, your common Englishman now scarcely curses at all. A more
+colourless and conventional affair than what in England is called
+swearing one can scarcely imagine. It is just common talk, with some
+half-dozen orthodox bad words dropped in here and there in the most
+foolish and illogical manner. Fancy having orthodox unorthodox words! I
+remember one day getting into a third-class smoking carriage on the
+Metropolitan Railway about one o'clock, and finding it full of rough
+working men. Everything they said was seasoned with one incredibly
+stupid adjective, and no doubt they thought they were very desperate
+characters. At last I asked them not to say that word again. One
+forthwith asked me 'What the ----'--I really cannot quote these
+puerilities--'what the idiotic _cliche_ that mattered to me?' So I
+looked at him quietly over my glasses, and I began. It was a revelation
+to these poor fellows. They sat open-mouthed, gasping. Then those that
+were nearest me began to edge away, and at the very next station they
+all bundled out of the carriage before the train stopped, as though I
+had some infectious disease. And the thing was just a rough imperfect
+rendering of some mere commonplaces, passing the time of day as it were,
+with which the heathen of Aleppo used to favour the servants of the
+American missionary. Indeed," said Professor Gargoyle, "if it were not
+for women there would be nothing in England that one could speak of as
+swearing at all."
+
+"I say," said I, "is not that rather rough on the ladies?"
+
+"Not at all; they have agreed to consider certain words, for no very
+good reason, bad words. It is a pure convention; it has little or
+nothing to do with the actual meaning, because for every one of these
+bad words there is a paraphrase or synonym considered to be quite
+suitable for polite ears. Hence the feeblest creature can always produce
+a sensation by breaking the taboo. But women are learning how to undo
+this error of theirs now. The word 'damn,' for instance, is, I hear,
+being admitted freely into the boudoir and feminine conversation; it is
+even considered a rather prudish thing to object to this word. Now, men,
+especially feeble men, hate doing things that women do. As a
+consequence, men who go about saying 'damn' are now regarded by their
+fellow-men as only a shade less effeminate than those who go about
+saying 'nasty' and 'horrid.' The subtler sex will not be long in
+noticing what has happened to this objectionable word. When they do they
+will, of course, forthwith take up all the others. It will be a little
+startling perhaps at first, but in the end there will be no swearing
+left. I have no doubt there will be those who will air their petty wit
+on the pioneer women, but where a martyr is wanted a woman can always be
+found to offer herself. She will clothe herself in cursing, like the
+ungodly, and perish in that Nessus shirt, a martyr to pure language. And
+then this dull cad swearing--a mere unnecessary affectation of
+coarseness--will disappear. And a very good job too.
+
+"There is a pretty department of the subject which I might call grace
+swearing. 'Od's fish,' cried the king, when he saw the man climbing
+Salisbury spire; 'he shall have a patent for it--no one else shall do
+it.' One might call such little things Wardour Street curses. 'Od's
+bodkins' is a ladylike form, and 'Od's possles' a variety I met in the
+British Museum. Every gentleman once upon a time aspired to have his own
+particular grace curse, just as he liked to have his crest, and his
+bookplate, and his characteristic signature. It fluttered pleasantly
+into his conversation, as Mr. Whistler's butterfly comes into his
+pictures--a signature and a delight. 'Od's butterfly!' I have sometimes
+thought of a little book of grace-words and heraldic curses, printed
+with wide margins on the best of paper. Its covers should be of soft red
+leather, stamped with little gold flowers. It might be made a birthday
+book, or a pocket diary--'Daily Invocations.'
+
+"Coming back to wrathy swearing, I must confess I am sorry to see it
+decay. It was such a thoroughly hygienic and moral practice. You see, if
+anything annoying happens to a man, or if any powerful emotion seizes
+him, his brain under the irritation begins to disengage energy at a
+tremendous rate. He has to use all his available force of control in
+keeping the energy in. Some of it will leak away into the nerves of his
+face and distort his features, some may set his tear-glands at work,
+some may travel down his vagus nerve and inhibit his heart's action so
+that he faints, or upset the blood-vessels in his head and give him a
+stroke. Or if he pens it up, without its reaching any of these vents, it
+may rise at last to flood-level, and you will have violent assaults, the
+breaking of furniture, 'murther' even. For all this energy a good
+flamboyant, ranting swear is Nature's outlet. All primitive men and most
+animals swear. It is an emotional shunt. Your cat swears at you because
+she does not want to scratch your face. And the horse, because he cannot
+swear, drops dead. So you see my reason for regretting the decay of
+this excellent and most wholesome practice....
+
+"However, I must be getting on. Just now I am travelling about London
+paying cabmen their legal fares. Sometimes one picks up a new variant,
+though much of it is merely stereo."
+
+And with that, flinging a playful curse at me, he disappeared at once
+into the tobacco smoke from which I had engendered him. An amusing and
+cheerful person on the whole, though I will admit his theme was a little
+undesirable.
+
+
+
+
+DUNSTONE'S DEAR LADY
+
+
+The story of Dunstone is so slight, so trivial in its cardinal
+incidents, such a business of cheap feathers and bits of ribbon on the
+surface, that I should hesitate to tell it, were it not for its
+Inwardness, what one might call the symbolism of the thing. Frankly, I
+do not clearly see what that symbolism is, but I feel it hovering in
+some indefinable way whenever I recall his case. It is one of those
+things that make a man extend his arm and twiddle his fingers, and say,
+blinking, "Like _that_, you know." So do not imagine for one moment that
+this is a shallow story, simply because it is painted, so to speak, not
+in heart's blood but in table claret.
+
+Dunstone was a strong, quiet kind of man--a man of conspicuous
+mediocrity, and rising rapidly, therefore, in his profession. He was
+immensely industrious, and a little given to melancholia in private
+life. He smoked rather too many cigars, and took his social occasions
+seriously. He dressed faultlessly, with a scrupulous elimination of
+style. Unlike Mr. Grant Allen's ideal man, he was not constitutionally a
+lover; indeed, he seemed not to like the ordinary girl at all--found her
+either too clever or too shallow, lacking a something. I don't think
+_he_ knew quite what it was. Neither do I--it is a case for extended
+hand and twiddling fingers. Moreover, I don't think the ordinary girl
+took to Dunstone very much.
+
+He suffered, I fancy, from a kind of mental greyness; he was all subtle
+tones; the laughter of girls jarred upon him; foolish smartness or
+amiable foolishness got on his nerves; he detested, with equal
+sincerity, bright dressing, artistic dabbling, piety, and the glow of
+health. And when, as his confidential friend--confidential, that is, so
+far as his limits allowed--I heard that he intended to marry, I was
+really very much surprised.
+
+I expected something quintessential; I was surprised to find she was a
+visiting governess. Harringay, the artist, thought there was nothing in
+her, but Sackbut, the art critic, was inclined to admire her bones. For
+my own part, I took rather a liking to her. She was small and thin, and,
+to be frank, I think it was because she hardly got enough to eat--of the
+delicate food she needed. She was shabby, too, dressed in rusty
+mourning--she had recently lost her mother. But she had a sweet, low
+voice, a shrinking manner, rather a graceful carriage, I thought, and,
+though she spoke rarely, all she said was sweet and sane. She struck me
+as a refined woman in a blatant age. The general effect of her upon me
+was favourable; upon Dunstone it was tremendous. He lost a considerable
+proportion of his melancholia, and raved at times like a common man. He
+called her in particular his "Dear Lady" and his "Sweet Lady," things
+that I find eloquent of what he found in her. What that was I fancy I
+understand, and yet I cannot say it quite. One has to resort to the
+extended arm and fingers vibratile.
+
+Before he married her--which he did while she was still in
+half-mourning--there was anxiety about her health, and I understood she
+needed air and exercise and strengthening food. But she recovered
+rapidly after her marriage, her eyes grew brighter, we saw less of
+Sackbut's "delicious skeleton." And then, in the strangest way, she
+began to change. It is none of my imagining; I have heard the change
+remarked upon by half a dozen independent observers. Yet you would think
+a girl of three-and-twenty (as she certainly was) had attained her
+development as a woman. I have heard her compared to a winter bud, cased
+in its sombre scales, until the sun shone, and the warm, moist winds
+began to blow. I noticed first that the delicate outline of her cheek
+was filling, and then came the time when she reverted to colour in her
+dress.
+
+Her first essays were charitably received. Her years of struggle, her
+year of mourning, had no doubt dwarfed her powers in this direction;
+presently her natural good taste would reassert itself. But the next
+effort and the next were harder to explain. It was not the note of
+nervousness or inexperience we saw; there was an undeniable decision,
+and not a token of shame. The little black winter bud grew warm-coloured
+above, and burst suddenly into extravagant outlines and chromatic
+confusion. Harringay, who is a cad, first put what we were all feeling
+into words. "I've just seen Dunstone and his donah," he said. Clearly
+she was one of those rare women who cannot dress. And that was not all.
+A certain buoyancy, hitherto unsuspected, crept into her manner, as the
+corpuscles multiplied in her veins--an archness. She talked more, and
+threw up a spray of playfulness. And, with a growing energy, she began
+to revise the exquisite aesthetic balance of Dunstone's house. She even
+enamelled a chair.
+
+For a year or so I was in the East. When I returned Mrs. Dunstone amazed
+me. In some odd way she had grown, she had positively grown. She was
+taller, broader, brighter--infinitely brighter. She wore a diamond
+brooch in the afternoon. The "delicious skeleton" had vanished in
+plumpness. She moved with emphasis. Her eye--which glittered--met mine
+bravely, and she talked as one who would be heard. In the old days you
+saw nothing but a rare timid glance from under the pretty lids. She
+talked now of this and that, of people of "good family," and the
+difficulty of getting a suitable governess for her little boy. She said
+she objected to meeting people "one would not care to invite to one's
+house." She swamped me with tea and ruled the conversation, so that
+Dunstone and I, who were once old friends, talked civil twaddle for the
+space of one hour--theatres, concerts, and assemblies chiefly--and then
+parted again. The furniture had all been altered--there were two "cosy
+nooks" in the room after the recipe in the _Born Lady_. It was plain to
+me, it is plain to everyone, I find, that Mrs. Dunstone is, in the sun
+of prosperity, rapidly developing an extremely florid vulgarity. And
+afterwards I discovered that she had forgotten her music, and evidently
+enjoyed her meals. Yet I for one can witness that five years ago there
+was _that_ about her--I can only extend my arm with quivering digits.
+But it was something very sweet and dainty, something that made her
+white and thoughtful, and marked her off from the rest of womankind. I
+sometimes fancy it may have been anaemia in part, but it was certainly
+poverty and mourning in the main.
+
+You may think that this is a story of disillusionment. When I first
+heard the story, I thought so too. But, so far as Dunstone goes, that is
+not the case. It is rare that I see him now, but the other day we smoked
+two cigars apiece together. And in a moment of confidence he spoke of
+her. He said how anxious he felt for her health, called her his "Dainty
+Little Lady," and spoke of the coarseness of other women. I am afraid
+this is not a very eventful story, and yet there is _that_----That very
+convenient gesture, an arm protruded and flickering fingers, conveys my
+meaning best. Perhaps you will understand.
+
+
+
+
+EUPHEMIA'S NEW ENTERTAINMENT
+
+
+Euphemia has great ideas of putting people at their ease, a thousand
+little devices for thawing the very stiffest among them with a home-like
+glow. Far be it from me to sing her praises, but I must admit that at
+times she is extremely successful in this--at times almost too
+successful. That tea-cake business, for instance. No doubt it's a genial
+expedient to make your guests toast his own tea-cake: down he must go
+upon his knees upon your hearthrug, and his poses will melt away like
+the dews of the morning before the rising sun. Nevertheless, when it
+comes to roasting a gallant veteran like Major Augustus, deliberately
+roasting him, in spite of the facts that he has served his country nobly
+through thirty irksome years of peace, and that he admires Euphemia with
+a delicate fervour--roasting him, I say, alive, as if he were a
+Strasburg goose, or suddenly affixing a delicate young genius to the
+hither end of a toasting-fork while he is in the midst of a really very
+subtle and tender conversation, the limits of social warmth seem to be
+approaching dangerously near. However, this scarcely concerns Euphemia's
+new entertainment.
+
+This new entertainment is modelling in clay. Euphemia tells me it is to
+be quite the common thing this winter. It is intended especially for the
+evening, after a little dinner. As the reader is aware, the evening
+after a little dinner is apt to pall. A certain placid contentment
+creeps over people. I don't know in what organ originality resides; but
+it's a curious thing, and one I must leave to the consideration of
+psychologists, that people's output of original remarks appears to be
+obstructed in some way after these gastronomic exercises. Then a little
+dinner always confirms my theory of the absurdity of polygonal
+conversation. Music and songs, too, have their drawbacks, especially gay
+songs; they invariably evoke a vaporous melancholy. Card-playing
+Euphemia objects to because her uncle, the dean, is prominent in
+connection with some ridiculous association for the suppression of
+gambling; and in what are called "games" no rational creature esteeming
+himself an immortal soul would participate. In this difficulty it was
+that Euphemia--decided, I fancy, by the possession of certain really
+very becoming aprons--took up this business of clay-modelling.
+
+You have a lump of greyish clay and a saucer of water and certain small
+tools of wood (for which I cannot discover the slightest use in the
+world) given you, and Euphemia puts on a very winning bib. Then,
+moistening the clay until it acquires sufficient plasticity, and
+incidentally splashing your cuffs and coat-sleeves with an agreeably
+light tinted mud, you set to work. At first people are a little
+disgusted at the apparent dirtiness of the employment, and also perhaps
+rather diffident. The eldest lady says weakly deprecatory things, and
+the feeblest male is jocular after his wont. But it is remarkable how
+soon the charm of this delightful occupation seizes hold of you. For
+really the sensations of moulding this plastic matter into shape are
+wonderfully and quite unaccountably pleasing. It is ever so much easier
+than drawing things--"anyone can do it," as the advertisement people
+say--and the work is so much more substantial in its effects. Technical
+questions arise. In moulding a head, do you take a lump and fine it
+down, or do you dab on the features after the main knob of it is shaped?
+
+So soon as your guests realise the plastic possibilities before them, a
+great silence, a delicious absorption comes over them. Some rash person
+states that he is moulding an Apollo, or a vase, or a bust of Mr.
+Gladstone, or an elephant, or some such animal. The wiser ones go to
+work in a speculative spirit, aiming secretly at this perhaps, but quite
+willing to go on with that, if Providence so wills it. Buddhas are good
+subjects; there is a certain genial rotundity not difficult to attain,
+and the pyramidal build of the idol is well suited to the material. You
+can start a Buddha, and hedge to make it a loaf of bread if the features
+are unsatisfactory. For slender objects a skeletal substructure of bent
+hairpins or matches is advisable. The innate egotism of the human animal
+becomes very conspicuous. "His tail is too large," says the lady with
+the fish, in self-criticism. "I haven't put his tail on yet--that's his
+trunk," answers the young man with the elephant.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+It's a pretty sight to see the first awakening of the artistic passion
+in your guests--the flush of discovery, the glow of innocent pride as
+the familiar features of Mr. Gladstone emerge from the bust of Clytie.
+An accidental stroke of the thumbnail develops new marvels of
+expression. (By the bye, it's just as well to forbid deliberate attempts
+at portraiture.) And I know no more becoming expression for everyone
+than the look of intent and pleasing effort--a divine touch almost--that
+comes over the common man modelling. For my own part, I feel a being
+infinitely my own superior when I get my fingers upon the clay. And,
+incidentally, how much pleasanter this is than writing articles--to see
+the work grow altogether under your hands; to begin with the large
+masses and finish with the details, as every artist should! Just to show
+how easy the whole thing is, I append a little sketch of the first work
+I ever did. I had had positively no previous instruction. Unfortunately
+the left ear of the animal--a cat, by the bye--has fallen off. (The
+figure to the left is the back view of a Buddha.)
+
+However, I have said enough to show the charm of the new amusement. It
+will prove a boon to many a troubled hostess. The material is called
+modelling-clay, and one may buy it of any dealer in artists' materials,
+several pounds for sixpence. This has to be renewed at intervals, as a
+good deal is taken away by the more careless among your guests upon
+their clothes.
+
+
+
+
+FOR FREEDOM OF SPELLING
+
+THE DISCOVERY OF AN ART
+
+
+It is curious that people do not grumble more at having to spell
+correctly. Yet one may ask, Do we not a little over-estimate the value
+of orthography? This is a natural reflection enough when the maker of
+artless happy phrases has been ransacking the dictionary for some
+elusive wretch of a word which in the end proves to be not yet
+naturalised, or technical, or a mere local vulgarity; yet one does not
+often hear the idea canvassed in polite conversation. Dealers in small
+talk, of the less prolific kind, are continually falling back upon the
+silk hat or dress suit, or some rule of etiquette or other convention as
+a theme, but spelling seems to escape them. The suspicion seems quaint,
+but one may almost fancy that an allusion to spelling savoured a little
+of indelicacy. It must be admitted, though where the scruples come from
+would be hard to say, that there is a certain diffidence even here in
+broaching my doubts in the matter. For some inexplicable reason spelling
+has become mixed up with moral feeling. One cannot pretend to explain
+things in a little paper of this kind; the fact is so. Spelling is not
+appropriate or inappropriate, elegant or inelegant; it is right or
+wrong. We do not greatly blame a man for turn-down collars when the
+vogue is erect; nor, in these liberal days, for theological
+eccentricity; but we esteem him "Nithing" and an outcast if he but drop
+a "p" from opportunity. It is not an anecdote, but a scandal, if we say
+a man cannot spell his own name. There is only one thing esteemed worse
+before we come to the deadly crimes, and that is the softening of
+language by dropping the aspirate.
+
+After all, it is an unorthodox age. We are all horribly afraid of being
+bourgeois, and unconventionality is the ideal of every respectable
+person. It is strange that we should cling so steadfastly to correct
+spelling. Yet again, one can partly understand the business, if one
+thinks of the little ways of your schoolmaster and schoolmistress. This
+sanctity of spelling is stamped upon us in our earliest years. The
+writer recalls a period of youth wherein six hours a week were given to
+the study of spelling, and four hours to all other religious
+instruction. So important is it, that a writer who cannot spell is
+almost driven to abandon his calling, however urgent the thing he may
+have to say, or his need of the incidentals of fame. Yet in the crisis
+of such a struggle rebellious thoughts may arise. Even this: Why, after
+all, should correct spelling be the one absolutely essential literary
+merit? For it is less fatal for an ambitious scribe to be as dull as
+Hoxton than to spell in diverse ways.
+
+Yet correct spelling of English has not been traced to revelation; there
+was no grammatical Sinai, with a dictionary instead of tables of stone.
+Indeed, we do not even know certainly when correct spelling began, which
+word in the language was first spelt the right way, and by whom. Correct
+spelling may have been evolved, or it may be the creation of some master
+mind. Its inventor, if it had an inventor, is absolutely forgotten.
+Thomas Cobbett would have invented it, but that he was born more than
+two centuries too late, poor man. All that we certainly know is that,
+contemporaneously with the rise of extreme Puritanism, the belief in
+orthography first spread among Elizabethan printers, and with the
+Hanoverian succession the new doctrine possessed the whole length and
+breadth of the land. At that time the world passed through what
+extension lecturers call, for no particular reason, the classical epoch.
+Nature--as, indeed, all the literature manuals testify--was in the
+remotest background then of human thought. The human mind, in a mood of
+the severest logic, brought everything to the touchstone of an orderly
+reason; the conception of "correctness" dominated all mortal affairs.
+For instance, one's natural hair with its vagaries of rat's tails,
+duck's tails, errant curls, and baldness, gave place to an orderly wig,
+or was at least decently powdered. The hoop remedied the deficiencies of
+the feminine form, and the gardener clipped his yews into
+respectability. All poetry was written to one measure in those days, and
+a Royal Academy with a lady member was inaugurated that art might become
+at least decent. Dictionaries began. The crowning glory of Hanoverian
+literature was a Great Lexicographer.
+
+In those days it was believed that the spelling of every English word
+had been settled for all time. Thence to the present day, though the
+severities then inaugurated, so far as metre and artistic composition
+are concerned, been generously relaxed--though we have had a Whistler, a
+Walt Whitman, and a Wagner--the rigours of spelling have continued
+unabated. There is just one right way of spelling, and all others are
+held to be not simply inelegant or undesirable, but wrong; and
+unorthodox spelling, like original morality, goes hand in hand with
+shame.
+
+Yet even at the risk of shocking the religious convictions of some, may
+not one ask whether spelling is in truth a matter of right and wrong at
+all? Might it not rather be an art? It is too much to advocate the
+indiscriminate sacking of the alphabet, but yet it seems plausible that
+there is a happy medium between a reckless debauch of errant letters and
+our present dead rigidity. For some words at anyrate may there not be
+sometimes one way of spelling a little happier, sometimes another? We do
+something of this sort even now with our "phantasy" and "fantasie," and
+we might do more. How one would spell this word or that would become, if
+this latitude were conceded, a subtle anxiety of the literary exquisite.
+People are scarcely prepared to realise what shades of meaning may be
+got by such a simple device. Let us take a simple instance. You write,
+let us say, to all your cousins, many of your friends, and even, it may
+be, to this indifferent intimate and that familiar enemy, "My dear
+So-and-so." But at times you feel even as you write, sometimes, that
+there is something too much and sometimes something lacking. You may
+even get so far in the right way occasionally as to write, "My dr.
+So-and-so," when your heart is chill. And people versed in the arts of
+social intercourse know the subtle insult of misspelling a person's
+name, or flicking it off flippantly with a mere waggling wipe of the
+pen. But these are mere beginnings.
+
+Let the reader take a pen in hand and sit down and write, "My very dear
+wife." Clean, cold, and correct this is, speaking of orderly affection,
+settled and stereotyped long ago. In such letters is butcher's meat also
+"very dear." Try now, "Migh verrie deare Wyfe." Is it not immediately
+infinitely more soft and tender? Is there not something exquisitely
+pleasant in lingering over those redundant letters, leaving each word,
+as it were, with a reluctant caress? Such spelling is a soft, domestic,
+lovingly wasteful use of material. Or, again, if you have no wife, or
+object to an old-fashioned conjugal tenderness, try "Mye owne sweete
+dearrest Marrie." There is the tremble of a tenderness no mere
+arrangement of trim everyday letters can express in those double
+_r's_. "Sweete" my ladie must be; sweet! why pump-water and inferior
+champagne, spirits of nitrous ether and pancreatic juice are "sweet."
+For my own part I always spell so, with lots of f's and g's and such
+like tailey, twirley, loopey things, when my heart is in the tender
+vein. And I hold that a man who will not do so, now he has been shown
+how to do it, is, in plain English, neither more nor less than a prig.
+The advantages of a varied spelling of names are very great.
+Industrious, rather than intelligent, people have given not a little
+time, and such minds as they have, to the discussion of the right
+spelling of our great poet's name. But he himself never dreamt of tying
+himself down to one presentation of himself, and was--we have his hand
+for it--Shakespeare, Shakspear, Shakespear, Shakspeare, and so forth, as
+the mood might be. It would be almost as reasonable to debate whether
+Shakespeare smiled or frowned. My dear friend Simmongues is the same.
+He is "Sims," a mere slash of the pen, to those he scorns, Simmonds or
+Simmongs to his familiars, and Simmons, A.T. Simmons, Esq., to all
+Europe.
+
+From such mere introductory departures from precision, such petty
+escapades as these, we would we might seduce the reader into an utter
+debauch of spelling. But a sudden Maenad dance of the letters on the
+page, gleeful and iridescent spelling, a wild rush and procession of
+howling vowels and clattering consonants, might startle the half-won
+reader back into orthodoxy. Besides, there is another reader--the
+printer's reader--to consider. For if an author let his wit run to these
+matters, he must write elaborate marginal exhortations to this
+authority, begging his mercy, to let the little flowers of spelling
+alone. Else the plough of that Philistine's uniformity will utterly root
+them out.
+
+Such high art of spelling as is thus hinted at is an art that has still
+to gather confidence and brave the light of publicity. A few, indeed,
+practise it secretly for love--in letters and on spare bits of paper.
+But, for the most part, people do not know that there is so much as an
+art of spelling possible; the tyranny of orthography lies so heavily on
+the land. Your common editors and their printers are a mere orthodox
+spelling police, and at the least they rigorously blot out all the
+delightful frolics of your artist in spelling before his writings reach
+the public eye. But commonly, as I have proved again and again, the
+slightest lapse into rococo spelling is sufficient to secure the
+rejection of a manuscript without further ado.
+
+And to end,--a word about Phonographers. It may be that my title has led
+the reader to anticipate some mention of these before. They are a kind
+of religious sect, a heresy from the orthodox spelling. They bind one
+another by their mysteries and a five-shilling subscription in a
+"soseiti to introduis an impruvd method of spelinj." They come across
+the artistic vision, they and their Soseiti, with an altogether
+indefinable offence. Perhaps the essence of it is the indescribable
+meanness of their motive. For this phonography really amounts to a
+study of the cheapest way of spelling words. These phonographers are
+sweaters of the Queen's English, living meanly on the selvage of honest
+mental commerce by clipping the coin of thought. But enough of them.
+They are mentioned here only to be disavowed. They would substitute one
+narrow orthodoxy for another, and I would unfold the banner of freedom.
+Spell, my brethren, as you will! Awake, arise, O language living in
+chains; let Butter's spelling be our Bastille! So with a prophetic
+vision of liberated words pouring out of the dungeons of a
+spelling-book, this plea for freedom concludes. What trivial arguments
+there are for a uniform spelling I must leave the reader to discover.
+This is no place to carp against the liberation I foresee, with the glow
+of the dawn in my eyes.
+
+
+
+
+INCIDENTAL THOUGHTS ON A BALD HEAD
+
+
+I was asked to go, quite suddenly, and found myself there before I had
+time to think of what it might be. I understood her to say it was a
+meeting of some "Sunday society," some society that tried to turn the
+Sabbath from a day of woe to a day of rejoicing. "St. George's Hall,
+Langham Place," a cab, and there we were. I thought they would be
+picturesque Pagans. But the entertainment was the oddest it has ever
+been my lot to see, a kind of mystery. The place was dark, except for a
+big circle of light on a screen, and a dismal man with a long stick was
+talking about the effects of alcohol on your muscles. He talked and
+talked, and people went to sleep all about us. Euphemia's face looked so
+very pretty in the dim light that I tried to talk to her and hold her
+hand, but she only said "Ssh!" And then they began showing pictures on
+the screen--the most shocking things!--stomachs, and all that kind of
+thing. They went on like that for an hour, and then there was a lot of
+thumping with umbrellas, and they turned the lights up and we went home.
+Curious way of spending Sunday afternoon, is it not?
+
+But you may imagine I had a dismal time all that hour. I understood the
+people about me were Sceptics, the kind of people who don't believe
+things--a singular class, and, I am told, a growing one. These excellent
+people, it seems, have conscientious objections to going to chapel or
+church, but at the same time the devotional habit of countless
+generations of pious forerunners is strong in them. Consequently they
+have invented things like these lectures to go to, with a professor
+instead of a priest, and a lantern slide of a stomach by way of
+altar-piece; and alcohol they make their Devil, and their god is
+Hygiene--a curious and instructive case of mental inertia. I understand,
+too, there are several other temples of this Cult in London--South Place
+Chapel and Essex Hall, for instance, where they worship the Spirit of
+the Innermost. But the thing that struck me so oddly was the number of
+bald heads glimmering faintly in the reflected light from the lantern
+circle. And that set me thinking upon a difficulty I have never been
+able to surmount.
+
+You see these people, and lots of other people, too, believe in a thing
+they call Natural Selection. They think, as part of that belief, that
+men are descended from hairy simian ancestors; assert that even a
+hundred thousand years ago the ancestor was hairy--hairy, heavy, and
+almost as much a brute as if he lived in Mr. Arthur Morrison's
+Whitechapel. For my own part I think it a pretty theory, and would
+certainly accept it were it not for one objection. The thing I cannot
+understand is how our ancestor lost that hair. I see no reason why he
+should not have kept his hair on. According to the theory of natural
+selection, materially favourable variations survive, unfavourable
+disappear; the only way in which the loss is to be accounted for is by
+explaining it as advantageous; but where is the advantage of losing your
+hair? The disadvantages appear to me to be innumerable. A thick covering
+of hair, like that of a Capuchin monkey, would be an invaluable
+protection against sudden changes of temperature, far better than any
+clothing can be. Had I that, for instance, I should be rid of the
+perpetual cold in the head that so disfigures my life; and the
+multitudes who die annually of chills, bronchitis, and consumption, and
+most of those who suffer from rheumatic pains, neuralgia, and so forth,
+would not so die and suffer. And in the past, when clothing was less
+perfect and firing a casual commodity, the disadvantages of losing hair
+were all the greater. In very hot countries hair is perhaps even more
+important in saving the possessor from the excessive glare of the sun.
+Before the invention of the hat, thick hair on the head at least was
+absolutely essential to save the owner of the skull from sunstroke.
+That, perhaps, explains why the hair has been retained there, and why it
+is going now that we have hats, but it certainly does not explain why it
+has gone from the rest of the body.
+
+One--remarkably weak--explanation has been propounded: an appeal to our
+belief in human vanity. He picked it out by the roots, because he
+thought he was prettier without. But that is no reason at all. Suppose
+he did, it would not affect his children. Professor Weismann has at
+least convinced scientific people of this: that the characters acquired
+by a parent are rarely, if ever, transmitted to its offspring. An
+individual given to such wanton denudation would simply be at a
+disadvantage with his decently covered fellows, would fall behind in the
+race of life, and perish with his kind. Besides, if man has been at such
+pains to uncover his skin, why have quite a large number of the most
+respected among us such a passionate desire to have it covered up again?
+
+Yet that is the only attempted explanation I have ever come upon, and
+the thing has often worried me. I think it is just as probably a change
+in dietary. I have noticed that most of your vegetarians are
+shock-headed, ample-bearded men, and I have heard the Ancestor was
+vegetarian. Or it may be, I sometimes fancy, a kind of inherent
+disposition on the part of your human animal to dwindle. That came back
+in my memory vividly as I looked at the long rows of Sceptics, typical
+Advanced people, and marked their glistening crania. I recalled other
+losses. Here is Humanity, thought I, growing hairless, growing bald,
+growing toothless, unemotional, irreligious, losing the end joint of the
+little toe, dwindling in its osseous structures, its jawbone and brow
+ridges, losing all the full, rich curvatures of its primordial beauty.
+
+It seems almost like what the scientific people call a Law. And by
+strenuous efforts the creature just keeps pace with his losses--devises
+clothes, wigs, artificial teeth, paddings, shoes--what civilised being
+could use his bare feet for his ordinary locomotion? Imagine him on a
+furze-sprinkled golf links. Then stays, an efficient substitute for the
+effete feminine backbone. So the thing goes on. Long ago his superficies
+became artificial, and now the human being shrinks like a burning cigar,
+and the figure he has abandoned remains distended with artificial ashes,
+dead dry protections against the exposures he so unaccountably fears.
+Will he go on shrinking, I wonder?--become at last a mere lurking atomy
+in his own recesses, a kind of hermit crab, the bulk of him a complex
+mechanism, a thing of rags and tatters and papier-mache, stolen from the
+earth and the plant-world and his fellow beasts? And at last may he not
+disappear altogether, none missing him, and a democracy of honest
+machinery, neatly clad and loaded up with sound principles of action,
+walk to and fro in a regenerate world? Thus it was my mind went dreaming
+in St. George's Hall. But presently, as I say, came the last word about
+stomachs, and the bald men woke up, rattled their umbrellas, said it was
+vastly interesting, and went toddling off home in an ecstasy of advanced
+Liberalism. And we two returned to the place whence we came.
+
+
+
+
+OF A BOOK UNWRITTEN
+
+
+Accomplished literature is all very well in its way, no doubt, but much
+more fascinating to the contemplative man are the books that have not
+been written. These latter are no trouble to hold; there are no pages to
+turn over. One can read them in bed on sleepless nights without a
+candle. Turning to another topic, primitive man in the works of the
+descriptive anthropologist is certainly a very entertaining and quaint
+person, but the man of the future, if we only had the facts, would
+appeal to us more strongly. Yet where are the books? As Ruskin has said
+somewhere, _a propos_ of Darwin, it is not what man has been, but what
+he will be, that should interest us.
+
+The contemplative man in his easy-chair, pondering this saying, suddenly
+beholds in the fire, through the blue haze of his pipe, one of these
+great unwritten volumes. It is large in size, heavy in lettering,
+seemingly by one Professor Holzkopf, presumably Professor at
+Weissnichtwo. "The Necessary Characters of the Man of the Remote Future
+deduced from the Existing Stream of Tendency" is the title. The worthy
+Professor is severely scientific in his method, and deliberate and
+cautious in his deductions, the contemplative man discovers as he
+pursues his theme, and yet the conclusions are, to say the least,
+remarkable. We must figure the excellent Professor expanding the matter
+at great length, voluminously technical, but the contemplative
+man--since he has access to the only copy--is clearly at liberty to make
+such extracts and abstracts as he chooses for the unscientific reader.
+Here, for instance, is something of practicable lucidity that he
+considers admits of quotation. "The theory of evolution," writes the
+Professor, "is now universally accepted by zoologists and botanists, and
+it is applied unreservedly to man. Some question, indeed, whether it
+fits his soul, but all agree it accounts for his body. Man, we are
+assured, is descended from ape-like ancestors, moulded by circumstances
+into men, and these apes again were derived from ancestral forms of a
+lower order, and so up from the primordial protoplasmic jelly. Clearly
+then, man, unless the order of the universe has come to an end, will
+undergo further modification in the future, and at last cease to be man,
+giving rise to some other type of animated being. At once the
+fascinating question arises, What will this being be? Let us consider
+for a little the plastic influences at work upon our species.
+
+"Just as the bird is the creature of the wing, and is all moulded and
+modified to flying, and just as the fish is the creature that swims, and
+has had to meet the inflexible conditions of a problem in hydrodynamics,
+so man is the creature of the brain; he will live by intelligence, and
+not by physical strength, if he live at all. So that much that is purely
+'animal' about him is being, and must be, beyond all question,
+suppressed in his ultimate development. Evolution is no mechanical
+tendency making for perfection, according to the ideas current in the
+year of grace 1897; it is simply the continual adaptation of plastic
+life, for good or evil, to the circumstances that surround it.... We
+notice this decay of the animal part around us now, in the loss of teeth
+and hair, in the dwindling hands and feet of men, in their smaller jaws,
+and slighter mouths and ears. Man now does by wit and machinery and
+verbal agreement what he once did by bodily toil; for once he had to
+catch his dinner, capture his wife, run away from his enemies, and
+continually exercise himself, for love of himself, to perform these
+duties well. But now all this is changed. Cabs, trains, trams, render
+speed unnecessary, the pursuit of food becomes easier; his wife is no
+longer hunted, but rather, in view of the crowded matrimonial market,
+seeks him out. One needs wits now to live, and physical activity is a
+drug, a snare even; it seeks artificial outlets, and overflows in
+games. Athleticism takes up time and cripples a man in his competitive
+examinations, and in business. So is your fleshly man handicapped
+against his subtler brother. He is unsuccessful in life, does not marry.
+The better adapted survive."
+
+The coming man, then, will clearly have a larger brain, and a slighter
+body than the present. But the Professor makes one exception to this.
+"The human hand, since it is the teacher and interpreter of the brain,
+will become constantly more powerful and subtle as the rest of the
+musculature dwindles."
+
+Then in the physiology of these children of men, with their expanding
+brains, their great sensitive hands and diminishing bodies, great
+changes were necessarily worked. "We see now," says the Professor, "in
+the more intellectual sections of humanity an increasing sensitiveness
+to stimulants, a growing inability to grapple with such a matter as
+alcohol, for instance. No longer can men drink a bottleful of port; some
+cannot drink tea; it is too exciting for their highly-wrought nervous
+systems. The process will go on, and the Sir Wilfrid Lawson of some near
+generation may find it his duty and pleasure to make the silvery spray
+of his wisdom tintinnabulate against the tea-tray. These facts lead
+naturally to the comprehension of others. Fresh raw meat was once a dish
+for a king. Now refined persons scarcely touch meat unless it is
+cunningly disguised. Again, consider the case of turnips; the raw root
+is now a thing almost uneatable, but once upon a time a turnip must have
+been a rare and fortunate find, to be torn up with delirious eagerness
+and devoured in ecstasy. The time will come when the change will affect
+all the other fruits of the earth. Even now, only the young of mankind
+eat apples raw--the young always preserving ancestral characteristics
+after their disappearance in the adult. Some day even boys will regard
+apples without emotion. The boy of the future, one must believe, will
+gaze on an apple with the same unspeculative languor with which he now
+regards a flint"--in the absence of a cat.
+
+"Furthermore, fresh chemical discoveries came into action as modifying
+influences upon men. In the prehistoric period even, man's mouth had
+ceased to be an instrument for grasping food; it is still growing
+continually less prehensile, his front teeth are smaller, his lips
+thinner and less muscular; he has a new organ, a mandible not of
+irreparable tissue, but of bone and steel--a knife and fork. There is no
+reason why things should stop at partial artificial division thus
+afforded; there is every reason, on the contrary, to believe my
+statement that some cunning exterior mechanism will presently masticate
+and insalivate his dinner, relieve his diminishing salivary glands and
+teeth, and at last altogether abolish them."
+
+Then what is not needed disappears. What use is there for external ears,
+nose, and brow ridges now? The two latter once protected the eye from
+injury in conflict and in falls, but in these days we keep on our legs,
+and at peace. Directing his thoughts in this way, the reader may
+presently conjure up a dim, strange vision of the latter-day face: "Eyes
+large, lustrous, beautiful, soulful; above them, no longer separated by
+rugged brow ridges, is the top of the head, a glistening, hairless dome,
+terete and beautiful; no craggy nose rises to disturb by its unmeaning
+shadows the symmetry of that calm face, no vestigial ears project; the
+mouth is a small, perfectly round aperture, toothless and gumless,
+jawless, unanimal, no futile emotions disturbing its roundness as it
+lies, like the harvest moon or the evening star, in the wide firmament
+of face." Such is the face the Professor beholds in the future.
+
+Of course parallel modifications will also affect the body and limbs.
+"Every day so many hours and so much energy are required for digestion;
+a gross torpidity, a carnal lethargy, seizes on mortal men after dinner.
+This may and can be avoided. Man's knowledge of organic chemistry widens
+daily. Already he can supplement the gastric glands by artificial
+devices. Every doctor who administers physic implies that the bodily
+functions may be artificially superseded. We have pepsine, pancreatine,
+artificial gastric acid--I know not what like mixtures. Why, then,
+should not the stomach be ultimately superannuated altogether? A man
+who could not only leave his dinner to be cooked, but also leave it to
+be masticated and digested, would have vast social advantages over his
+food-digesting fellow. This is, let me remind you here, the calmest,
+most passionless, and scientific working out of the future forms of
+things from the data of the present. At this stage the following facts
+may perhaps stimulate your imagination. There can be no doubt that many
+of the Arthropods, a division of animals more ancient and even now more
+prevalent than the Vertebrata, have undergone more phylogenetic
+modification"--a beautiful phrase--"than even the most modified of
+vertebrated animals. Simple forms like the lobsters display a primitive
+structure parallel with that of the fishes. However, in such a form as
+the degraded 'Chondracanthus,' the structure has diverged far more
+widely from its original type than in man. Among some of these most
+highly modified crustaceans the whole of the alimentary canal--that is,
+all the food-digesting and food-absorbing parts--form a useless solid
+cord: the animal is nourished--it is a parasite--by absorption of the
+nutritive fluid in which it swims. Is there any absolute impossibility
+in supposing man to be destined for a similar change; to imagine him no
+longer dining, with unwieldy paraphernalia of servants and plates, upon
+food queerly dyed and distorted, but nourishing himself in elegant
+simplicity by immersion in a tub of nutritive fluid?
+
+"There grows upon the impatient imagination a building, a dome of
+crystal, across the translucent surface of which flushes of the most
+glorious and pure prismatic colours pass and fade and change. In the
+centre of this transparent chameleon-tinted dome is a circular white
+marble basin filled with some clear, mobile, amber liquid, and in this
+plunge and float strange beings. Are they birds?
+
+"They are the descendants of man--at dinner. Watch them as they hop on
+their hands--a method of progression advocated already by
+Bjornsen--about the pure white marble floor. Great hands they have,
+enormous brains, soft, liquid, soulful eyes. Their whole muscular
+system, their legs, their abdomens, are shrivelled to nothing, a
+dangling, degraded pendant to their minds."
+
+The further visions of the Professor are less alluring.
+
+"The animals and plants die away before men, except such as he preserves
+for his food or delight, or such as maintain a precarious footing about
+him as commensals and parasites. These vermin and pests must succumb
+sooner or later to his untiring inventiveness and incessantly growing
+discipline. When he learns (the chemists are doubtless getting towards
+the secret now) to do the work of chlorophyll without the plant, then
+his necessity for other animals and plants upon the earth will
+disappear. Sooner or later, where there is no power of resistance and no
+necessity, there comes extinction. In the last days man will be alone on
+the earth, and his food will be won by the chemist from the dead rocks
+and the sunlight.
+
+"And--one may learn the full reason in that explicit and painfully right
+book, the _Data of Ethics_--the irrational fellowship of man will give
+place to an intellectual co-operation, and emotion fall within the
+scheme of reason. Undoubtedly it is a long time yet, but a long time is
+nothing in the face of eternity, and every man who dares think of these
+things must look eternity in the face."
+
+Then the earth is ever radiating away heat into space, the Professor
+reminds us. And so at last comes a vision of earthly cherubim, hopping
+heads, great unemotional intelligences, and little hearts, fighting
+together perforce and fiercely against the cold that grips them tighter
+and tighter. For the world is cooling--slowly and inevitably it grows
+colder as the years roll by. "We must imagine these creatures," says the
+Professor, "in galleries and laboratories deep down in the bowels of the
+earth. The whole world will be snow-covered and piled with ice; all
+animals, all vegetation vanished, except this last branch of the tree of
+life. The last men have gone even deeper, following the diminishing heat
+of the planet, and vast metallic shafts and ventilators make way for the
+air they need."
+
+So with a glimpse of these human tadpoles, in their deep close gallery,
+with their boring machinery ringing away, and artificial lights glaring
+and casting black shadows, the Professor's horoscope concludes. Humanity
+in dismal retreat before the cold, changed beyond recognition. Yet the
+Professor is reasonable enough, his facts are current science, his
+methods orderly. The contemplative man shivers at the prospect, starts
+up to poke the fire, and the whole of this remarkable book that is not
+written vanishes straightway in the smoke of his pipe. This is the great
+advantage of this unwritten literature: there is no bother in changing
+the books. The contemplative man consoles himself for the destiny of the
+species with the lost portion of Kubla Khan.
+
+
+
+
+THE EXTINCTION OF MAN
+
+
+It is part of the excessive egotism of the human animal that the bare
+idea of its extinction seems incredible to it. "A world without _us_!"
+it says, as a heady young Cephalaspis might have said it in the old
+Silurian sea. But since the Cephalaspis and the Coccosteus many a fine
+animal has increased and multiplied upon the earth, lorded it over land
+or sea without a rival, and passed at last into the night. Surely it is
+not so unreasonable to ask why man should be an exception to the rule.
+From the scientific standpoint at least any reason for such exception is
+hard to find.
+
+No doubt man is undisputed master at the present time--at least of most
+of the land surface; but so it has been before with other animals. Let
+us consider what light geology has to throw upon this. The great land
+and sea reptiles of the Mesozoic period, for instance, seem to have been
+as secure as humanity is now in their pre-eminence. But they passed away
+and left no descendants when the new orders of the mammals emerged from
+their obscurity. So, too, the huge Titanotheria of the American
+continent, and all the powerful mammals of Pleistocene South America,
+the sabre-toothed lion, for instance, and the Machrauchenia suddenly
+came to a finish when they were still almost at the zenith of their
+rule. _And in no case does the record of the fossils show a really
+dominant species succeeded by its own descendants._ What has usually
+happened in the past appears to be the emergence of some type of animal
+hitherto rare and unimportant, and the extinction, not simply of the
+previously ruling species, but of most of the forms that are at all
+closely related to it. Sometimes, indeed, as in the case of the extinct
+giants of South America, they vanished without any considerable rivals,
+victims of pestilence, famine, or, it may be, of that cumulative
+inefficiency that comes of a too undisputed life. So that the analogy of
+geology, at anyrate, is against this too acceptable view of man's
+certain tenure of the earth for the next few million years or so.
+
+And, after all, even now man is by no means such a master of the
+kingdoms of life as he is apt to imagine. The sea, that mysterious
+nursery of living things, is for all practical purposes beyond his
+control. The low-water mark is his limit. Beyond that he may do a little
+with seine and dredge, murder a few million herrings a year as they come
+in to spawn, butcher his fellow air-breather, the whale, or haul now and
+then an unlucky king-crab or strange sea-urchin out of the deep water,
+in the name of science; but the life of the sea as a whole knows him
+not, plays out its slow drama of change and development unheeding him,
+and may in the end, in mere idle sport, throw up some new terrestrial
+denizens, some new competitor for space to live in and food to live
+upon, that will sweep him and all his little contrivances out of
+existence, as certainly and inevitably as he has swept away auk, bison,
+and dodo during the last two hundred years.
+
+For instance, there are the Crustacea. As a group the crabs and lobsters
+are confined below the high-water mark. But experiments in air-breathing
+are no doubt in progress in this group--we already have tropical
+land-crabs--and as far as we know there is no reason why in the future
+these creatures should not increase in size and terrestrial capacity. In
+the past we have the evidence of the fossil _Paradoxides_ that creatures
+of this kind may at least attain a length of six feet, and, considering
+their intense pugnacity, a crab of such dimensions would be as
+formidable a creature as one could well imagine. And their amphibious
+capacity would give them an advantage against us such as at present is
+only to be found in the case of the alligator or crocodile. If we
+imagine a shark that could raid out upon the land, or a tiger that could
+take refuge in the sea, we should have a fair suggestion of what a
+terrible monster a large predatory crab might prove. And so far as
+zoological science goes we must, at least, admit that such a creature is
+an evolutionary possibility.
+
+Then, again, the order of the Cephalopods, to which belong the
+cuttle-fish and the octopus (sacred to Victor Hugo), may be, for all we
+can say to the contrary, an order with a future. Their kindred, the
+Gastropods, have, in the case of the snail and slug, learnt the trick of
+air-breathing. And not improbably there are even now genera of this
+order that have escaped the naturalist, or even well-known genera whose
+possibilities in growth and dietary are still unknown. Suppose some day
+a specimen of a new species is caught off the coast of Kent. It excites
+remark at a Royal Society soiree, engenders a Science Note or so, "A
+Huge Octopus!" and in the next year or so three or four other specimens
+come to hand, and the thing becomes familiar. "Probably a new and larger
+variety of _Octopus_ so-and-so, hitherto supposed to be tropical," says
+Professor Gargoyle, and thinks he has disposed of it. Then conceive some
+mysterious boating accidents and deaths while bathing. A large animal of
+this kind coming into a region of frequent wrecks might so easily
+acquire a preferential taste for human nutriment, just as the Colorado
+beetle acquired a new taste for the common potato and gave up its old
+food-plants some years ago. Then perhaps a school or pack or flock of
+_Octopus gigas_ would be found busy picking the sailors off a stranded
+ship, and then in the course of a few score years it might begin to
+stroll up the beaches and batten on excursionists. Soon it would be a
+common feature of the watering-places--possibly at last commoner than
+excursionists. Suppose such a creature were to appear--and it is, we
+repeat, a possibility, if perhaps a remote one--how could it be fought
+against? Something might be done by torpedoes; but, so far as our past
+knowledge goes, man has no means of seriously diminishing the numbers of
+any animal of the most rudimentary intelligence that made its fastness
+in the sea.
+
+Even on land it is possible to find creatures that with a little
+modification might become excessively dangerous to the human ascendency.
+Most people have read of the migratory ants of Central Africa, against
+which no man can stand. On the march they simply clear out whole
+villages, drive men and animals before them in headlong rout, and kill
+and eat every living creature they can capture. One wonders why they
+have not already spread the area of their devastations. But at present
+no doubt they have their natural checks, of ant-eating birds, or what
+not. In the near future it may be that the European immigrant, as he
+sets the balance of life swinging in his vigorous manner, may kill off
+these ant-eating animals, or otherwise unwittingly remove the checks
+that now keep these terrible little pests within limits. And once they
+begin to spread in real earnest, it is hard to see how their advance
+could be stopped. A world devoured by ants seems incredible now, simply
+because it is not within our experience; but a naturalist would have a
+dull imagination who could not see in the numerous species of ants, and
+in their already high intelligence, far more possibility of strange
+developments than we have in the solitary human animal. And no doubt the
+idea of the small and feeble organism of man, triumphant and
+omnipresent, would have seemed equally incredible to an intelligent
+mammoth or a palaeolithic cave bear.
+
+And, finally, there is always the prospect of a new disease. As yet
+science has scarcely touched more than the fringe of the probabilities
+associated with the minute fungi that constitute our zymotic diseases.
+But the bacilli have no more settled down into their final quiescence
+than have men; like ourselves, they are adapting themselves to new
+conditions and acquiring new powers. The plagues of the Middle Ages, for
+instance, seem to have been begotten of a strange bacillus engendered
+under conditions that sanitary science, in spite of its panacea of
+drainage, still admits are imperfectly understood, and for all we know
+even now we may be quite unwittingly evolving some new and more terrible
+plague--a plague that will not take ten or twenty or thirty per cent.,
+as plagues have done in the past, but the entire hundred.
+
+No; man's complacent assumption of the future is too confident. We
+think, because things have been easy for mankind as a whole for a
+generation or so, we are going on to perfect comfort and security in the
+future. We think that we shall always go to work at ten and leave off at
+four, and have dinner at seven for ever and ever. But these four
+suggestions, out of a host of others, must surely do a little against
+this complacency. Even now, for all we can tell, the coming terror may
+be crouching for its spring and the fall of humanity be at hand. In the
+case of every other predominant animal the world has ever seen, I
+repeat, the hour of its complete ascendency has been the eve of its
+entire overthrow. But if some poor story-writing man ventures to figure
+this sober probability in a tale, not a reviewer in London but will tell
+him his theme is the utterly impossible. And, when the thing happens,
+one may doubt if even then one will get the recognition one deserves.
+
+
+
+
+THE WRITING OF ESSAYS
+
+
+The art of the essayist is so simple, so entirely free from canons of
+criticism, and withal so delightful, that one must needs wonder why all
+men are not essayists. Perhaps people do not know how easy it is. Or
+perhaps beginners are misled. Rightly taught it may be learnt in a brief
+ten minutes or so, what art there is in it. And all the rest is as easy
+as wandering among woodlands on a bright morning in the spring.
+
+Then sit you down if you would join us, taking paper, pens, and ink; and
+mark this, your pen is a matter of vital moment. For every pen writes
+its own sort of essay, and pencils also after their kind. The ink
+perhaps may have its influence too, and the paper; but paramount is the
+pen. This, indeed, is the fundamental secret of essay-writing. Wed any
+man to his proper pen, and the delights of composition and the birth of
+an essay are assured. Only many of us wander through the earth and never
+meet with her--futile and lonely men.
+
+And, of all pens, your quill for essays that are literature. There is a
+subtle informality, a delightful easiness, perhaps even a faint
+immorality essentially literary, about the quill. The quill is rich in
+suggestion and quotation. There are quills that would quote you
+Montaigne and Horace in the hands of a trades-union delegate. And those
+quirky, idle noises this pen makes are delightful, and would break your
+easy fluency with wit. All the classical essayists wrote with a quill,
+and Addison used the most expensive kind the Government purchased. And
+the beginning of the inferior essay was the dawn of the cheap steel
+pen.
+
+The quill nibs they sell to fit into ordinary pen-holders are no true
+quills at all, lacking dignity, and may even lead you into the New
+Humour if you trust overmuch to their use. After a proper quill commend
+me to a stumpy BB pencil; you get less polish and broader effects, but
+you are still doing good literature. Sometimes the work is close--Mr.
+George Meredith, for instance, is suspected of a soft pencil--and always
+it is blunter than quill work and more terse. With a hard pencil no man
+can write anything but a graceless style--a kind of east wind air it
+gives--and smile you cannot. So that it is often used for serious
+articles in the half-crown reviews.
+
+There follows the host of steel pens. That bald, clear, scientific
+style, all set about with words like "evolution" and "environment,"
+which aims at expressing its meaning with precision and an exemplary
+economy of words, is done with fine steel nibs--twelve a penny at any
+stationer's. The J pen to the lady novelist, and the stylograph to the
+devil--your essayist must not touch the things. So much for the pen. If
+you cannot write essays easily, that is where the hitch comes in. Get a
+box of a different kind of pen and begin again, and so on again and
+again until despair or joy arrests you.
+
+As for a typewriter, you could no more get an essay out of a typewriter
+than you could play a sonata upon its keys. No essay was ever written
+with a typewriter yet, nor ever will be. Besides its impossibility, the
+suggestion implies a brutal disregard of the division of labour by which
+we live and move and have our being. If the essayist typewrite, the
+unemployed typewriter, who is commonly a person of superior education
+and capacity, might take to essays, and where is your living then? One
+might as reasonably start at once with the Linotype and print one's wit
+and humour straight away. And taking the invasion of other trades one
+step further one might, after an attempt to sell one's own newspaper,
+even get to the pitch of having to read it oneself. No; even essayists
+must be reasonable. If its mechanical clitter-clatter did not render
+composition impossible, the typewriter would still be beneath the honour
+of a literary man.
+
+Then for the paper. The luxurious, expensive, small-sized cream-laid
+note is best, since it makes your essay choice and compact; and, failing
+that, ripped envelopes and the backs of bills. Some men love ruled
+paper, because they can write athwart the lines, and some take the
+fly-leaves of their friends' books. But whosoever writes on cheap sermon
+paper full of hairs should write far away from the woman he loves, lest
+he offend her ears. It is good, however, for a terse, forcible style.
+
+The ink should be glossy black as it leaves your pen, for polished
+English. Violet inks lead to sham sentiment, and blue-black to
+vulgarity. Red ink essays are often good, but usually unfit for
+publication.
+
+This is as much almost as anyone need know to begin essay writing. Given
+your proper pen and ink, or pencil and paper, you simply sit down and
+write the thing. The value of an essay is not its matter, but its mood.
+You must be comfortable, of course; an easy-chair with arm-rests,
+slippers, and a book to write upon are usually employed, and you must be
+fed recently, and your body clothed with ease rather than grandeur. For
+the rest, do not trouble to stick to your subject, or any subject; and
+take no thought for the editor or the reader, for your essay should be
+as spontaneous as the lilies of the field.
+
+So long as you do not begin with a definition you may begin anyhow. An
+abrupt beginning is much admired, after the fashion of the clown's entry
+through the chemist's window. Then whack at your reader at once, hit him
+over the head with the sausages, brisk him up with the poker, bundle him
+into the wheelbarrow, and so carry him away with you before he knows
+where you are. You can do what you like with a reader then, if you only
+keep him nicely on the move. So long as you are happy your reader will
+be so too. But one law must be observed: an essay, like a dog that
+wishes to please, must have a lively tail, short but as waggish as
+possible. Like a rocket, an essay goes only with fizzle and sparks at
+the end of it. And, know, that to stop writing is the secret of writing
+an essay; the essay that the public loves dies young.
+
+
+
+
+THE PARKES MUSEUM
+
+THE PLACE TO SPEND A HAPPY DAY
+
+
+By way of jest, my morning daily paper constantly includes in its menu
+of "To-day" the Parkes Museum, Margaret Street, adding, seductively,
+"free"; and no doubt many a festive Jonas Chuzzlewit has preened himself
+for a sight-seeing, and all unaware of the multitudes of Margaret
+Streets--surely only Charlottes of that ilk are more abundant--has
+started forth, he and his feminine, to find this Parkes Museum. One may
+even conceive a rare Bank Holiday thoughtfully put aside for the quest,
+and spent all vainly in the asking of policemen, and in traversing this
+vast and tiresome metropolis, from Margaret Street to Margaret Street,
+the freshness of the morning passing into the dry heat of the day,
+fatigue spreading from the feet upwards, discussion, difference, denial,
+"words," and a day of recreation dying at last into a sunset of lurid
+sulks. Such possibility was too painful to think of, and a philanthropic
+inquirer has at last by persistent investigation won the secret of the
+Missing Museum and opened the way to it for all future investigators.
+
+The Margaret Street in question is an apparently derelict thoroughfare,
+opening into Great Portland Street. Immemorial dust is upon its
+pavements, and a profound silence broods over its vacant roadway. The
+blinds of its houses are mostly down, and, where the blackness of some
+window suggests a dark interior, no face appears to reassure us in our
+doubt of humanity within. It may be that somewhen in the past the entire
+population of this street set out on a boating party up the river, and
+was overset by steam launches, and so never returned, or perchance it
+has all been locked up for a long term of imprisonment--though the
+houses seem almost too respectable for that; or the glamour of the
+Sleeping Beauty is upon it all. Certainly we saw the figure of a porter
+in an attitude of repose in the little glass lodge in the museum
+doorway. He _may_ have been asleep. But we feared to touch him--and
+indeed slipped very stealthily by him--lest he should suddenly crumble
+into dust.
+
+And so to the Museum and its wonders. This Parkes Museum is a kind of
+armoury of hygiene, a place full of apparatus for being healthy--in
+brief, a museum of sanitary science. To that large and growing class of
+people who take no thought of anything but what they eat and what they
+drink, and wherewithal they should be clothed, it should prove intensely
+interesting. Apart from the difficulty of approach we cannot understand
+how it is so neglected by an intelligent public. You can see germicides
+and a model convict prison, Pentonville cells in miniature, statistical
+diagrams and drain pipes--if only there was a little more about
+heredity, it would be exactly the kind of thing that is popular in
+literature now, as literature goes. And yet excepting ourselves and the
+sleeping porter--if he was sleeping--and the indistinct and motionless
+outline, visible through a glass door, of a human body sitting over a
+book, there was not a suggestion or memory of living humanity about the
+place.
+
+The exhibits of food are especially remarkable. We cleaned the glass
+case with our sleeves and peered at the most appetising revelations.
+There are dozens of little bottles hermetically sealed, containing such
+curios as a sample of "Bacon Common (Gammon) Uncooked," and then the
+same cooked--it looked no nicer cooked--Irish sausage, pork sausage,
+black pudding, Welsh mutton, and all kinds of rare and exquisite
+feeding. There are ever so many cases of this kind of thing. We saw, for
+instance, further along, several good specimens of the common oyster
+shell (_Ostrea edulis_), cockle shells, and whelks, both "almonds" and
+"whites," and then came breadstuffs. The breadstuffs are particularly
+impressive, of a grey, scientific aspect, a hard, hoary antiquity. We
+always knew that stale bread was good for one, but yet the Parkes Museum
+startled us with the antique pattern it recommended. There was a muffin,
+too, identified and labelled, but without any Latin name, a captured
+crumpet, a collection of buns, a dinner-roll, and a something novel to
+us, called Pumpernickel, that we had rather be without, or rather--for
+the expression is ambiguous--that we had rather not be without, but
+altogether remote from. And all these things have been tested by an
+analyst, with the most painful results. Nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, and
+the like nasty chemical things seem indeed to have occurred in
+everything he touched. Those sturdy mendicants who go about complaining
+that they cannot get food should visit this Parkes Museum and see what
+food is really like, and learn contentment with their lot.
+
+There were no real vegetables, but only the ideals of a firm of
+seedsmen, made of wax and splendidly coloured, with something of the
+boldness and vigour of Michael Angelo about the modelling of them. And
+among other food stuffs were sweetmeats and yellow capers, liver flukes,
+British wines, and snuff. At last we felt replete with food stuffs, and
+went on to see the models to illustrate ventilation, and the exhibits of
+hygienic glazed tiles arranged around a desert lecture-theatre. Hygienic
+tiles stimulate the eye vigorously rather than relax it by any aesthetic
+weakness; and the crematory appliances are so attractive as they are,
+and must have such an added charm of neatness and brightness when
+alight, that one longs to lose a relative or so forthwith, for the mere
+pleasure of seeing them in operation.
+
+A winding staircase designed upon hygienic principles, to bump your head
+at intervals, takes one to a little iron gallery full of the most
+charming and varied display of cooking-stoves and oil-lamps. Here, also,
+there are flaunted the resources of civilisation for the Prevention of
+Accidents, which resources are four, namely, a patent fire-escape, a
+patent carriage pole, a coal plate, and a dog muzzle. But the labels,
+though verbose, are scarcely full enough. They do not tell you, for
+instance, if you wish to prevent cramp while bathing, whether the dog
+muzzle or the coal plate should be employed, nor do they show how the
+fire-escape will prevent the explosion of a paraffin lamp. However, this
+is a detail. We feel assured that no intelligent person will regret a
+visit to this most interesting and instructive exhibition. It offers you
+valuable hints how to live, and suggests the best and tidiest way in
+which you can, when dead, dispose of your body. We feel assured that the
+public only needs this intimation of its whereabouts to startle the
+death-like slumbers of Margaret Street with an unaccustomed tumult. And
+the first to arrive will, no doubt, find legibly and elegantly written
+in the dust that covers the collection the record of its discovery by
+Euphemia and me.
+
+
+
+
+BLEAK MARCH IN EPPING FOREST
+
+
+All along the selvage of Epping Forest there was excitement. Before the
+swallows, before the violets, long before the cuckoo, with only untimely
+honeysuckle bushes showing a trace of green, two trippers had been seen
+traversing the district, making their way towards High Beech, and
+settling awhile near the Forest Hotel. Whether they were belated
+survivals from last season or exceptionally early hatchings of the
+coming year, was a question of considerable moment to the natives, and
+has since engaged the attention of the local Natural History Society.
+But we know that, as a matter of fact, they were of little omen, being
+indeed but insignificant people from Hampstead and not true trippers at
+all, who were curious to see this forest in raw winter.
+
+For some have argued that there is no Epping Forest at all in the
+winter-time; that it is, in fact, taken up and put away, and that
+agriculture is pursued there. Others assert that the Forest is shrouded
+with wrappers, even as a literary man's study is shrouded by dusty women
+when they clean him out. Others, again, have supposed that it is a
+delightful place in winter, far more delightful than in summer, but that
+this is not published, because no writing man hath ever been there in
+the cold season. And much more of unreal speculation, but nothing which
+bore upon it the stamp of truth. So these two--and I am one of the
+two--went down to Epping Forest to see that it was still there, and how
+it fared in the dismal weather.
+
+The sky was a greasy grey that guttered down to the horizon, and the
+wind smote damp and chill. There was a white fringe of ice in the
+cart-wheel ruts, but withal the frost was not so crisp as to prevent a
+thin and slippery glaze of softened clay upon the road. The decaying
+triumphal arch outside the station sadly lacked a coat of paint, and was
+indistinctly regretful of remote royal visits and processions gone for
+ever. Then we passed shuddering by many vacant booths that had once
+resounded with the revelry of ninepenny teas and the gingerbeer cork's
+staccato, and their forms were piled together and their trestles
+overturned. And the wind ravened, and no human beings were to be seen.
+So up the hill to the left, and along the road leading by devious
+windings between the black hedges and through clay wallows to the hilly
+part round High Beech.
+
+But upon the shoulder of a hill we turned to a gate to scrape off the
+mud that made our boots unwieldy. At that moment came a threadbare place
+in the cloudy curtain that was sweeping across the sun, and our shadows
+showed themselves for an instant to comfort us. The amber patch of
+sunlight presently slipped from us and travelled down the meadows
+towards the distant blue of the hills by Waltham Abbey, touching with
+miraculous healing a landscape erst dead and shrouded in grey. This
+transitory gleam of light gladdened us mightily at the time, but it made
+the after-sky seem all the darker.
+
+So through the steep and tortuous village to High Beech, and then
+leaving the road we wandered in among big trees and down slopes ankle
+deep with rustling leaves towards Chingford again. Here was pleasanter
+walking than the thawing clay, but now and then one felt the threat of
+an infinite oozy softness beneath the stiff frozen leaves. Once again
+while we were here the drifting haze of the sky became thinner, and the
+smooth green-grey beech stems and rugged oak trunks were brightly
+illuminated. But only for a moment, and thereafter the sky became not
+simply unsympathetic but ominous. And the misery of the wind grew apace.
+
+Presently we wandered into that sinister corner of the Forest where the
+beech trees have grown so closely together that they have had perforce
+to lift their branches vertically. Divested of leaves, the bare grey
+limbs of these seem strangely restless. These trees, reaching so
+eagerly upward, have an odd resemblance to the weird figures of horror
+in which William Blake delighted--arms, hands, hair, all stretch
+intensely to the zenith. They seem to be straining away from the spot to
+which they are rooted. It is a Laocoon grouping, a wordless concentrated
+struggle for the sunlight, and disagreeably impressive. The trippers
+longed to talk and were tongue-tied; they looked now and then over their
+shoulders. They were glad when the eerie influence was passed, though
+they traversed a morass to get away from it.
+
+Then across an open place, dismal with the dun hulls of lost cows and
+the clatter of their bells, over a brook full of dead leaves and edged
+with rusty clay, through a briery thicket that would fain have detained
+us, and so to a pathway of succulent green, that oozed black under our
+feet. Here some poor lost wayfarer has blazed his way with rustic seats,
+now rheumatic and fungus-eaten. And here, too, the wind, which had
+sought us howling, found us at last, and stung us sharply with a shower
+of congealing raindrops. This grew to a steady downfall as the open
+towards Chingford station was approached at last, after devious winding
+in the Forest. Then, coming upon the edge of the wood and seeing the
+lone station against the grey sky, we broke into a shout and began
+running. But it is dismal running on imperfectly frozen clay, in rain
+and a gusty wind. We slipped and floundered, and one of us wept sore
+that she should never see her home again. And worse, the only train
+sleeping in the station was awakened by our cries, and, with an eldritch
+shriek at the unseasonable presence of trippers, fled incontinently
+Londonward.
+
+Smeared with clay and dead leaves almost beyond human likeness, we
+staggered into the derelict station, and found from an outcast porter
+that perhaps another train might after the lapse of two hours accumulate
+sufficiently to take us back to Gospel Oak and a warm world again. So we
+speered if there were amusements to be got in this place, and he told us
+"some very nice walks." To refrain from homicide we left the station,
+and sought a vast red hotel that loomed through the drift on a steep
+hill, and in the side of this a door that had not been locked. Happily
+one had been forgotten, and, entering at last, we roused a hibernating
+waiter, and he exhumed us some of his winter victual. In this way we
+were presently to some degree comforted, and could play chess until a
+train had been sent for our relief. And this did at last happen, and
+towards the hour of dinner we rejoined our anxious friends, and all the
+evening time we boasted of a pleasant day and urged them to go even as
+we had gone.
+
+
+
+
+THE THEORY OF QUOTATION
+
+
+The nobler method of quotation is not to quote at all. For why should
+one repeat good things that are already written? Are not the words in
+their fittest context in the original? Clearly, then, your new setting
+cannot be quite so congruous, which is, forthwith, an admission of
+incongruity. Your quotation is evidently a plug in a leak, an apology
+for a gap in your own words. But your vulgar author will even go out of
+his way to make the clothing of his thoughts thus heterogeneous. He
+counts every stolen scrap he can work in an improvement--a literary
+caddis worm. Yet would he consider it improvement to put a piece of even
+the richest of old tapestry or gold embroidery into his new pair of
+breeks?
+
+The passion for quotation is peculiar to literature. We do not glory to
+quote our costume, dress in cast-off court robes, or furnish our houses
+from the marine store. Neither are we proud of alien initials on the
+domestic silver. We like things new and primarily our own. We have a
+wholesome instinct against infection, except, it seems, in the matter of
+ideas. An authorling will deliberately inoculate his copy with the
+inverted comma bacillus, till the page swims unsteadily, counting the
+fever a glow of pure literary healthiness. Yet this reproduction,
+rightly considered, is merely a proof that his appetite for books has
+run beyond his digestion. Or his industry may be to seek. You expect an
+omelette, and presently up come the unbroken eggs. A tissue of quotation
+wisely looked at is indeed but a motley garment, eloquent either of a
+fool, or an idle knave in a fool's disguise.
+
+Nevertheless at times--the truth must be told--we must quote. As for
+admitting that we have quoted, that is another matter altogether. But
+the other man's phrase will lie at times so close in one's mind to the
+trend of one's thoughts, that, all virtue notwithstanding, they must
+needs run into the groove of it. There are phrases that lie about in the
+literary mind like orange peel on a pavement. You are down on them
+before you know where you are. But does this necessitate acknowledgment
+to the man, now in Hades, who sucked that orange and strewed the peel in
+your way? Rather, is it not more becoming to be angry at his careless
+anticipation?
+
+One may reasonably look at it in this way. What business has a man to
+think of things right in front of you, poke his head, as it were, into
+your light? What right has he to set up dams and tunnel out
+swallow-holes to deflect the current of your thoughts? Surely you may
+remove these obstructions, if it suits you, and put them where you will.
+Else all literature will presently be choked up, and the making of books
+come to an end. One might as well walk ten miles out of one's way
+because some deaf oaf or other chose to sit upon a necessary stile.
+Surely Shakespeare or Lamb, or what other source you contemplate, has
+had the thing long enough? Out of the road with them. Turn and turn
+about.
+
+And inverted commas are so inhospitable. If you _must_ take in another
+man's offspring, you should surely try to make the poor foundlings feel
+at home. Away with such uncharitable distinctions between the children
+of the house and the stranger within your gates. I never see inverted
+commas but I think of the necessary persecuted mediaeval Jew in yellow
+gabardine.
+
+At least, never put the name of the author you quote. Think of the
+feelings of the dead. Don't let the poor spirit take it to heart that
+its monumental sayings would pass unrecognised without your
+advertisement. You mean well, perhaps, but it is in the poorest taste.
+Yet I have seen Patience on a Monument honourably awarded to William
+Shakespeare, and fenced in by commas from all intercourse with the
+general text.
+
+There is something so extremely dishonest, too, in acknowledging
+quotations. Possibly the good people who so contrive that such
+signatures as "Shakespeare," "Homer," or "St. Paul," appear to be
+written here and there to parts of their inferior work, manage to
+justify the proceeding in their conscience; but it is uncommonly like
+hallmarking pewter on the strength of an infinitesimal tinge of silver
+therein. The point becomes at once clear if we imagine some obscure
+painter quoting the style of Raphael and fragments of his designs, and
+acknowledging his indebtedness by appending the master's signature.
+Blank forgery! And a flood of light was thrown on the matter by a chance
+remark of one of Euphemia's aunts--she is a great reader of pure
+fiction--anent a popular novel: "I am sure it must be a nice book," said
+she, "or she could not get all these people to write the mottoes for the
+chapters."
+
+No, it is all very well to play with one's conscience. I have known men
+so sophisticated as to assert that unacknowledged quotation was wrong.
+But very few really reasonable people will, I think, refuse to agree
+with me that the only artistic, the only kindly, and the only honest
+method of quotation is plagiary. If you cannot plagiarise, surely it
+were better not to quote.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE ART OF STAYING AT THE SEASIDE
+
+A MEDITATION AT EASTBOURNE
+
+
+To stay at the seaside properly, one should not think. But even in
+staying at the seaside there are intervals, waking moments when meals
+come, even if there are no appointed meal-times. Moreover, now and then,
+one must go to buy tobacco, a matter one can trust to no hireling, lest
+he get it dry. It cannot be always seaside, even as it cannot be always
+May, and through the gaps thought creeps in. Going over the cliff and
+along the parade, and down by the circulating library to the cigar
+divan, where they sell Parique tobacco, the swinging of one's legs seems
+to act like a pendulum to the clockwork of one's brain. One meditates
+all the way, and chiefly on how few people there are who can really--to
+a critical adept--be said to stay at the seaside.
+
+People seem to think that one can take a ticket to Eastbourne, or
+Bognor, or Ventnor, and come and stay at the seaside straight away, just
+as I have known new-hatched undergraduates tell people they were going
+to play billiards. Thousands and thousands of people think they have
+stayed at the seaside, and have not, just as thousands of people
+erroneously imagine they have played whist. For the latter have played
+not whist, but Bumble-puppy, and the former have only frequented a
+watering-place for a time. Your true staying at the seaside is an art,
+demanding not only railway fares but special aptitude, and, moreover,
+needing culture, like all worthy arts.
+
+The most insurmountable difficulty of the beginner is the classical
+simplicity of the whole thing. To stay at the seaside properly you just
+spread yourself out on the extreme edge of the land and let the sunlight
+soak in. Your eyes are fixed upon the horizon. Some have it that your
+head should be towards the sea, but the best authorities think that this
+determines blood to that region, and so stimulates thought. This is all
+the positive instruction; the rest is prohibition. You must not think,
+and you must not move, neither may you go to sleep. In a few minutes the
+adept becomes as a god, even as a god that sits upon the lotus leaf. New
+light and colour come into the sky and sea, and the surges chant his
+praises. But those who are not of the elect get pins and needles all
+over them.
+
+It must be freely admitted that staying at the seaside such as this,
+staying at the seaside in its perfection, is a thing for a select few.
+You want a broad stretch of beach and all the visible sea to yourself.
+You cannot be disturbed by even the most idyllic children trying to bury
+you with sand and suchlike playfulness, nor by boatloads of the
+democracy rowing athwart your sea and sky. And the absence of friend or
+wife goes without saying. I notice down here a very considerable
+quantity of evidently married pairs, and the huge majority of the rest
+of the visitors run in couples, and are to all appearances engaged. If
+they are not, I would submit that they ought to be. Probably there is a
+certain satisfaction in sitting by the sea with the girl you are in love
+with, or your wife for the matter of that, just as many people
+undoubtedly find tea with milk and sugar very nice. But the former is no
+more the way to get the full and perfect pleasure of staying at the
+seaside than the latter is the way to get the full and perfect flavour
+of the tea. True staying at the seaside is neither the repetition of old
+conversations in new surroundings nor the exposure of one's affections
+to ozone. It is something infinitely higher. It is pure quiescence. It
+is the experience of a waking inanition savouring of Buddha and the
+divine.
+
+Now, staying at the seaside is so rarely done well, because of the
+littleness of man. To do it properly needs many of the elements of
+greatness. Your common man, while he has life in him, can let neither
+himself nor the universe alone. He must be asserting himself in some
+way, even if it is only by flinging pebbles at a stick. That
+self-forgetfulness which should be a delight is a terror to him. He
+brings dogs down to the beach to stand between him and the calm of
+nature, and yelp. He does worse than that.
+
+The meditative man going daily over by the cliff and along the parade,
+to get his ounce of tobacco, has a sad spectacle of what human beings
+may be driven to in this way. One sees altogether some hundreds of
+people there who have heard perhaps that staying at the seaside is good,
+and who have, anyhow, got thus far towards it, and stopped. They have
+not the faintest idea how to make themselves happy. The general
+expression is veiled curiosity. They sit--mostly with their backs to the
+sea--talking poorly of indifferent topics and watching one another. Most
+obviously they want hints of what to do with themselves. Behind them is
+a bank of flowers like those in Battersea Park, and another parallel
+parade, and beyond are bathing-machines. The pier completely cuts the
+horizon out of the background. There is a stout lady, in dark blue,
+bathing. The only glances directed seaward are furtive ones at her. Many
+seem to be doubting whether this is not what they came down for. Others
+lean dubiously to the invitations of the boatmen. Others again listen to
+vocalists and dramatic outcasts who, for ha'pence, render obvious the
+reason of their professional degradation. It seems eccentric to travel
+seventy or eighty miles to hear a man without a voice demonstrate that
+he is unfit to have one, but they do. Anyone curious in these matters
+need only go to a watering-place to see and, what is worse, to hear for
+himself. After an excursion train to Eastbourne, upwards of a thousand
+people have been seen thus heaped together over an oblong space of a
+mile long by twenty yards wide. Only three miles away there was a
+towering white cliff overhanging a practically desert beach; and one
+seagull circled above one solitary, motionless, supine man, really
+staying at the seaside.
+
+You cannot walk six miles anywhere along the south coast without coming
+upon one of these heaps of people, called a watering-place. There will
+be a town of houses behind wherein the people lodge, until, as they
+think, they have stayed a sufficient time at the sea, and they return,
+hot, cross, and mystified, to London. The sea front will be bricked or
+paved for a mile or so, and there will be rows of boats and
+bathing-machines, and other contrivances to screen off the view of the
+sea. And, as we have indicated, watering-places and staying by the
+seaside are incompatible things. The true stayer by the seaside goes
+into the watering-place because he must; because there is little food,
+and that uncooked, and no tobacco, between the cliffs and the sea.
+Having purchased what he needs he flees forth again. What time the whole
+selvage of England becomes watering-place, there will be no more staying
+by the seaside at all in the land. But this is a gloomy train of thought
+that we will not pursue.
+
+There have been those who assert that one end of staying at the seaside
+is bathing; but it is easy to show that this is not so. Your proper
+bathing-place is up the river, where the trees bend to the green and
+brown shadows of the water. There the bath is sweet, fresh out of the
+sky, or but just filtered through the blue hills of the distant
+water-shed; and it is set about with flowers. But the sea--the sea has
+stood there since the beginning of things, and with small prospect of
+change, says Mr. Kipling, to all eternity. The water in the sea,
+geologists tell us, has _not been changed for fifty million years_! The
+same chemist who sets me against all my food with his chemical names
+speaks of the sea as a weak solution of drowned men. Be that as it may,
+it leaves the skin harsh with salt, and the hair sticky. Moreover, it is
+such a promiscuous bathing-place. However, we need scarcely depreciate
+the sea as a bath, for what need is there of that when the river is
+clearly better? No one can deny that the river is better. People who
+bathe in the sea bathe by mistake, because they have come to the side of
+the sea, and know not how else to use it.
+
+So, too, with the boating. It is hard to imagine how human beings who
+have drifted down streams, and watched the brown fish in the shallows,
+and peered through the tall sedges at the forget-me-nots, and fought
+with the ropes of the water-lilies, and heard the ripple under the bows,
+can ever think of going to and fro, pitching spasmodically, in front of
+a watering-place. And as for fishing--they catch fish at sea, indeed,
+but it is not fishing at all; neither rods nor flies have they, and
+there is an end to that matter.
+
+An Eastbourne meditative man returning to where he stays, with his daily
+ounce of tobacco already afire, sees in the streets what are called by
+the natives "cherry-bangs," crowded with people, and, further,
+cabriolets and such vehicles holding parties and families. The good
+folks are driving away from the sea for the better part of the day,
+going to Battle and other places inland. The puzzle of what to do with
+their sea is too much for them, and they are going away for a little to
+rest their minds. Regarded as a centre of drives one might think an
+inland place would be preferable to a seaside town, which at best
+commands but a half-circle. However that may be, the fact remains that
+one of the chief occupations of your common visitor to the seaside is
+going away from it. Than this fact there can be nothing more conclusive
+in support of my argument that ordinary people are absolutely ignorant
+and incapable of staying by the seaside.
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING CHESS
+
+
+The passion for playing chess is one of the most unaccountable in the
+world. It slaps the theory of natural selection in the face. It is the
+most absorbing of occupations, the least satisfying of desires, an
+aimless excrescence upon life. It annihilates a man. You have, let us
+say, a promising politician, a rising artist, that you wish to destroy.
+Dagger or bomb are archaic, clumsy, and unreliable--but teach him,
+inoculate him with chess! It is well, perhaps, that the right way of
+teaching chess is so little known, that consequently in most cases the
+plot fails in the performance, the dagger turns aside. Else we should
+all be chess-players--there would be none left to do the business of the
+world. Our statesmen would sit with pocket boards while the country went
+to the devil, our army would bury itself in chequered contemplation, our
+bread-winners would forget their wives in seeking after impossible
+mates. The whole world would be disorganised. I can fancy this
+abominable hypnotism so wrought into the constitution of men that the
+cabmen would go trying to drive their horses in Knights' moves up and
+down Charing Cross Road. And now and again a suicide would come to hand
+with the pathetic inscription pinned to his chest: "I checked with my
+Queen too soon. I cannot bear the thought of it." There is no remorse
+like the remorse of chess.
+
+Only, happily, as we say, chess is taught the wrong way round. People
+put out the board before the learner with all the men in battle array,
+sixteen a side, with six different kinds of moves, and the poor wretch
+is simply crushed and appalled. A lot of things happen, mostly
+disagreeable, and then a mate comes looming up through the haze of
+pieces. So he goes away awestricken but unharmed, secretly believing
+that all chess-players are humbugs, and that intelligent chess, which is
+neither chancy nor rote-learned, is beyond the wit of man. But clearly
+this is an unreasonable method of instruction. Before the beginner can
+understand the beginning of the game he must surely understand the end;
+how can he commence playing until he knows what he is playing for? It is
+like starting athletes on a race, and leaving them to find out where the
+winning-post is hidden.
+
+Your true teacher of chess, your subtle chess-poisoner, your cunning
+Comus who changes men to chess-players, begins quite the other way
+round. He will, let us say, give you King, Queen, and Pawn placed out in
+careless possible positions. So you master the militant possibilities of
+Queen and Pawn without perplexing complications. Then King, Queen, and
+Bishop perhaps; King, Queen, and Knight; and so on. It ensures that you
+always play a winning game in these happy days of your chess childhood,
+and taste the one sweet of chess-playing, the delight of having the
+upper hand of a better player. Then to more complicated positions, and
+at last back to the formal beginning. You begin to see now to what end
+the array is made, and understand why one Gambit differeth from another
+in glory and virtue. And the chess mania of your teacher cleaveth to you
+thenceforth and for evermore.
+
+It is a curse upon a man. There is no happiness in chess--Mr. St. George
+Mivart, who can find happiness in the strangest places, would be at a
+loss to demonstrate it upon the chess-board. The mild delight of a
+pretty mate is the least unhappy phase of it. But, generally, you find
+afterwards that you ought to have mated two moves before, or at the time
+that an unforeseen reply takes your Queen. No chess-player sleeps well.
+After the painful strategy of the day one fights one's battles over
+again. You see with more than daylight clearness that it was the Rook
+you should have moved, and not the Knight. No! it is impossible! no
+common sinner innocent of chess knows these lower deeps of remorse. Vast
+desert boards lie for the chess-player beyond the gates of horn.
+Stalwart Rooks ram headlong at one, Knights hop sidelong, one's Pawns
+are all tied, and a mate hangs threatening and never descends. And once
+chess has been begun in the proper way, it is flesh of your flesh, bone
+of your bone; you are sold, and the bargain is sealed, and the evil
+spirit hath entered in.
+
+The proper outlet for the craving is the playing of games, and there is
+a class of men--shadowy, unhappy, unreal-looking men--who gather in
+coffee-houses, and play with a desire that dieth not, and a fire that is
+not quenched. These gather in clubs and play Tournaments, such
+tournaments as he of the Table Round could never have imagined. But
+there are others who have the vice who live in country places, in remote
+situations--curates, schoolmasters, rate collectors--who go consumed
+from day to day and meet no fit companion, and who must needs find some
+artificial vent for their mental energy. No one has ever calculated how
+many sound Problems are possible, and no doubt the Psychical Research
+people would be glad if Professor Karl Pearson would give his mind to
+the matter. All the possible dispositions of the pieces come to such a
+vast number, however, that, according to the theory of probability, and
+allowing a few thousand arrangements each day, the same problem ought
+never to turn up more than twice in a century or so. As a matter of
+fact--it is probably due to some flaw in the theory of probability--the
+same problem has a way of turning up in different publications several
+times in a month or so. It may be, of course, that, after all, quite
+"sound" problems are limited in number, and that we keep on inventing
+and reinventing them; that, if a record were kept, the whole system, up
+to four or five moves, might be classified, and placed on record in the
+course of a few score years. Indeed, if we were to eliminate those with
+conspicuously bad moves, it may be we should find the number of
+reasonable games was limited enough, and that even our brilliant Lasker
+is but repeating the inspirations of some long-buried Persian, some mute
+inglorious Hindoo, dead and forgotten ages since. It may be over every
+game there watches the forgotten forerunners of the players, and that
+chess is indeed a dead game, a haunted game, played out centuries ago,
+even, as beyond all cavil, is the game of draughts.
+
+The artistic temperament, the gay irresponsible cast of mind, does what
+it can to lighten the gravity of this too intellectual game. To a mortal
+there is something indescribably horrible in these champions with their
+four moves an hour--the bare thought of the mental operations of the
+fifteen minutes gives one a touch of headache. Compulsory quick moving
+is the thing for gaiety, and that is why, though we revere Steinitz and
+Lasker, it is Bird we love. His victories glitter, his errors are
+magnificent. The true sweetness of chess, if it ever can be sweet, is to
+see a victory snatched, by some happy impertinence, out of the shadow of
+apparently irrevocable disaster. And talking of cheerfulness reminds me
+of Lowson's historical game of chess. Lowson said he had been cheerful
+sometimes--but, drunk! Perish the thought! Challenged, he would have
+proved it by some petty tests of pronunciation, some Good Templar's
+shibboleths. He offered to walk along the kerb, to work any problem in
+mathematics we could devise, finally to play MacBryde at chess. The
+other gentleman was appointed judge, and after putting the antimacassar
+over his head ("jush wigsh") immediately went to sleep in a disorderly
+heap on the sofa. The game was begun very solemnly, so I am told.
+MacBryde, in describing it to me afterwards, swayed his hands about with
+the fingers twiddling in a weird kind of way, and said the board went
+like that. The game was fierce but brief. It was presently discovered
+that both kings had been taken. Lowson was hard to convince, but this
+came home to him. "Man," he is reported to have said to MacBryde, "I'm
+just drunk. There's no doubt in the matter. I'm feeling very ashamed of
+myself." It was accordingly decided to declare the game drawn. The
+position, as I found it next morning, is an interesting one. Lowson's
+Queen was at K Kt 6, his Bishop at Q B 3, he had several Pawns, and his
+Knight occupied a commanding position at the intersection of four
+squares. MacBryde had four Pawns, two Rooks, a Queen, a draught, and a
+small mantel ornament arranged in a rough semicircle athwart the board.
+I have no doubt chess exquisites will sneer at this position, but in my
+opinion it is one of the cheerfulest I have ever seen. I remember I
+admired it very much at the time, in spite of a slight headache, and it
+is still the only game of chess that I recall with undiluted pleasure.
+And yet I have played many games.
+
+
+
+
+THE COAL-SCUTTLE
+
+A STUDY IN DOMESTIC AESTHETICS
+
+
+Euphemia, who loves to have home dainty and delightful, would have no
+coals if she could dispense with them, much less a coal-scuttle. Indeed,
+it would seem she would have no fireplace at all, if she had her will.
+All the summer she is happy, and the fireplace is anything but the place
+for a fire; the fender has vanished, the fireirons are gone, it is
+draped and decorated and disguised. So would dear Euphemia drape and
+disguise the whole iron framework of the world, with that decorative and
+decent mind of hers, had she but the scope. There are exotic ferns
+there, spreading their fanlike fronds, and majolica glows and gleams;
+and fabrics, of which Morris is the actual or spiritual begetter,
+delight the eye. In summer-time our fireplace is indeed a thing of
+beauty, but, alas for the solar system! it is not a joy for ever. The
+sun at last recedes beyond the equinoxes, and the black bogey who has
+slept awakens again. Euphemia restores the fender kerb and the brazen
+dogs and the fireirons that will clatter; and then all the winter,
+whenever she sits before the fire, her trouble is with her. Even when
+the red glow of the fire lights up her features most becomingly, and
+flattery is in her ear, every now and then a sidelong glance at her ugly
+foe shows that the thought of it is in her mind, and that the crumpled
+roseleaf, if such a phrase may be used for a coal-scuttle, insists on
+being felt. And she has even been discovered alone, sitting elbows on
+knees, and chin on her small clenched fist, frowning at it, puzzling how
+to circumvent the one enemy of her peace.
+
+"_It_" is what Euphemia always calls this utensil, when she can bring
+herself to give the indescribable an imperfect vent in speech. But
+commonly the feeling is too deep for words. Her war with this foeman in
+her household, this coarse rebel in her realm of soft prettiness, is one
+of those silent ones, those grim struggles without outcry or threat or
+appeal for quarter that can never end in any compromise, never find a
+rest in any truce, except the utter defeat of her antagonist. And how
+she has tried--the happy thoughts, the faint hopes, the new departures
+and outflanking movements! And even to-day there the thing defies her--a
+coal-box, with a broad smile that shows its black teeth, thick and
+squat, filling a snug corner and swaggering in unmanly triumph over the
+outrage upon her delicacy that it commits.
+
+One of Euphemia's brightest ideas was to burn wood. Logs make even a
+picturesque pile in a corner--look "uncommon." But there are objections
+to wood. Wood finely divided burns with gay quirks and jets of flame,
+and making cheerful crackling noises the while; but its warmth and
+brightness are as evanescent as love's young dream. And your solid log
+has a certain irritating inertness. It is an absentee fuel, spending its
+fire up the chimney, and after its youthful clouds of glory turns but a
+cheerless side of black and white char towards the room. And, above all,
+the marital mind is strangely exasperated by the log. Smite it with the
+poker, and you get but a sullen resonance, a flight of red sparks, a
+sense of an unconquerable toughness. It is worse than coke. The crisp
+fracture of coal, the spitting flames suddenly leaping into existence
+from the shiny new fissures, are altogether wanting. Old-seasoned timber
+burns indeed most delightfully, but then it is as ugly as coal, and
+withal very dear. So Euphemia went back to coal again with a sigh.
+Possibly if Euphemia had been surrounded by the wealth she deserves this
+trouble would not have arisen. A silent servant, bearing the due dose of
+fresh fuel, would have come gliding from a mysterious Beneath, restored
+the waning animation of the grate, and vanished noiselessly again. But
+this was beyond the range of Euphemia's possibilities. And so we are
+face to face with this problem of the scuttle again.
+
+At first she would feign there was no such thing as coal. It was too
+horrible. Only a Zola would admit it. It was the epoch of concealment.
+The thing purchased was like a little cupboard on four legs; it might
+have held any convenient trifle; and there was a shelf upon the top and
+a book of poetry and a piece of crackled Satsuma. You took a little
+brass handle and pulled it down, and the front of the little cupboard
+came forward, and there you found your coal. But a dainty little
+cupboard can no more entertain black coal and inelegant firewood and
+keep its daintiness than a mind can entertain black thoughts and yet be
+sweet. This cabinet became demoralised with amazing quickness; it became
+incontinent with its corruptions, a hinge got twisted, and after a time
+it acquired the habit of suddenly, and with an unpleasant oscillatory
+laughing noise, opening of its own accord and proclaiming its horrid
+secret to Euphemia's best visitors. An air of wickedness, at once
+precocious and senile, came upon it; it gaped and leered at Euphemia as
+the partner of her secret with such a familiar air of "I and you" that
+she could stand it no longer, and this depraved piece of furniture was
+banished at last from her presence, and relegated to its proper sphere
+of sham gentility below stairs, where it easily passed itself upon the
+cook as an exquisite. Euphemia tried to be sensible then, and
+determined, since she must have coal in her room, to let no false
+modesty intervene, but to openly proclaim its presence to all the world.
+
+The next thing, therefore, was a cylinder of brass, broadly open above,
+saying to the world, as it were, "Look! I contain coal." And there were
+brass tongs like sugar tongs wherewith Euphemia would regale the fire
+and brighten it up, handing it a lump at a time in the prettiest way.
+But brass dints. The brazen thing was quiet and respectable enough
+upstairs, but ever and again it went away to be filled. What happened on
+these holiday jaunts Euphemia has never ascertained. But a chance blow
+or worse cause ran a crease athwart the forehead of the thing, and
+below an almost imperceptible bulging hinted at a future corpulency. And
+there was complaint of the quantity of polishing it needed, and an
+increasing difficulty in keeping it bright. And except when it was full
+to the brim, the lining was unsightly; and this became more so. One day
+Ithuriel must have visited Euphemia's apartment, and the tarnished
+brilliancy of the thing stood confessed. For some days there was an
+interregnum, and a coal-scuttle from downstairs--a black unstable thing
+on flat foot and with a vast foolish nether lip--did its duty with
+inelegant faithfulness.
+
+Then Euphemia had a really pretty fancy. She procured one of those big
+open garden baskets and painted it a pleasant brown, and instead of a
+garden fork she had a little half horticultural scoop. In this basket
+she kept her coals, and she tied a pink ribbon on the handle. One might
+fancy she had been in some dewy garden and had dug a few coals as one
+might dig up bulbs, and brought them in and put them down. It attracted
+attention from all her visitors, and set a kind of fashion in the
+neighbourhood. For a time Euphemia was almost contented. But one day a
+malignant woman called, and looked at this device through her gilt
+eye-glasses, while she secretly groped in the dark of her mind for an
+unpleasant thing to say. Then suddenly she remarked, "Why not put your
+coal in a bassinette? Or keep it _all_ on the floor?" Euphemia's face
+fell. The thing was undeniably very like a cradle, in the light of this
+suggestion; the coal certainly did seem a little out of place there; and
+besides, if there were more than three or four lumps they had a way of
+tumbling over the edge upon the carpet when the fire was replenished.
+The tender shoot of Euphemia's satisfaction suddenly withered and died.
+
+So the struggle has gone on. Sometimes it has been a wrought iron tripod
+with a subtle tendency to upset in certain directions; sometimes a
+coal-box; once even the noisy old coal-box of japanned tin, making more
+noise than a Salvation Army service, and strangely decorated with "art"
+enamels, had a turn. At present Euphemia is enduring a walnut "casket,"
+that since its first week of office has displayed an increasing
+indisposition to shut. But things cannot stay like this. The worry and
+anxiety and vexation, Euphemia declares, are making her old before her
+time. A delicate woman should not be left alone to struggle against
+brazen monsters. A closed gas stove is happily impossible, but the
+husband of the household is threatened with one of those beastly sham
+fires, wherein gas jets flare among firebrick--a mechanical fire without
+vitality or variety, that never dances nor crackles nor blazes, a
+monotonous horror, a fire you cannot poke. That is what it will
+certainly come to if the problem remains unsolved.
+
+
+
+
+BAGARROW
+
+
+Frankly, I detest this Bagarrow. Yet it is quite generally conceded that
+Bagarrow is a very well-meaning fellow. But the trouble is to understand
+him. To do that I have been at some pains, and yet I am still a mere
+theorist. An anthropometric estimate of the man fails to reveal any
+reason for the distinction of my aversion. He is of passable height,
+breadth, and density, and, save for a certain complacency of expression,
+I find no salient objection in his face. He has bluish eyes and a
+whitish skin, and average-coloured hair--none of them distinctly
+indictable possessions. It is something in his interior and unseen
+mechanism, I think, that must be wrong; some internal lesion that finds
+expression in his acts.
+
+His mental operations, indeed, were at first as inconceivable to me as a
+crab's or a cockchafer's. That is where all the trouble came in. For
+that reason alone they fascinated me and aggrieved me. From the
+conditions of our acquaintance--we were colleagues--I had to study him
+with some thoroughness, observing him under these circumstances and
+those. I have, by the bye, sometimes wondered idly how he would react to
+alcohol--a fluid he avoids. It would, I am sure, be an entirely novel
+and remarkable kind of Drunk, and I am also certain it would be an
+offensive one. But I can't imagine it; I have no data. I could as soon
+evolve from my inner consciousness an intoxicated giraffe. But, as I
+say, this interesting experience has hitherto been denied me.
+
+Now my theory of Bagarrow is this, that he has a kind of disease in his
+ideals, some interruption of nutrition that has left them small and
+emasculate. He aims, it appears, at a state called "Really Nice" or the
+"True Gentleman," the outward and visible signs of which are a
+conspicuous quietness of costume, gloves in all weathers, and a
+tightly-rolled umbrella. But coupled in some way with this is a queer
+smack of the propagandist, a kind of dwarfed prophetic passion. That is
+the particular oddness of him. He displays a timid yet persistent desire
+to foist this True Gentleman of his upon an unwilling world, to make you
+Really Nice after his own pattern. I always suspect him of trying to
+convert me by stealth when I am not looking.
+
+So far as I can see, Bagarrow's conception of this True Gentleman of his
+is at best a compromise, mainly holiness, but a tinted kind of
+holiness--goodness in clean cuffs and with something neat in ties. He
+renounces the flesh and the devil willingly enough, but he wants to keep
+up a decent appearance. Now a stark saint I can find sympathy for. I
+respect your prophet unkempt and in a hair shirt denouncing Sin--and
+mundane affairs in general--with hoarse passion and a fiery hate. I
+would not go for my holidays with nor make a domestic pet of such a man,
+but I respect him. But Bagarrow's pose is different. Bagarrow would call
+that carrying things to extremes. His is an unobtrusive virtue, a
+compromising dissent, inaggressive aggressions on sin. So I take it. And
+at times he puts it to you in a drawling argument, a stream of
+Bagarrowisms, until you have to hurt his feelings--happily he is always
+getting his feelings hurt--just to stop the flow of him.
+
+"Life," said Bagarrow, in a moment of expansiveness, "is scarcely worth
+living unless you are doing good to someone." That I take to be the
+keystone of him. "I want to be a Good Influence upon all the people I
+meet." I do not think it has ever dawned upon him that he himself is any
+way short of perfection; and, so far as I can see, the triumph and end
+of his good influence is cleanliness of cuff, compactness of umbrella,
+and general assimilation to the Bagarrow ideal.
+
+Hear him upon one's social duties--this living soul in this world of
+wonders! "In moderation," said Bagarrow, opening out to questions on
+that matter, "social relaxation is desirable, and I will even go so far
+as to admit that I think it well to have at hand some pleasant expedient
+for entertaining people and passing the time. A humorous song or a
+recitation--provided it is in really good taste--is harmless enough, and
+sometimes it may even be turned to good account. And everyone should try
+to master some instrument or other. The flute, perhaps, is as convenient
+as any; for the fiddle and piano, you know, are difficult and expensive
+to learn, and require constant practice. A little legerdemain is also a
+great acquisition for a man. Some may differ from me in that," continued
+Bagarrow, "but I see no harm in it. There are hundreds of perfectly
+proper and innocent tricks with coins and bits of paper, and pieces of
+string, that will make an evening pass most delightfully. One may get
+quite a little reputation as an entertainer with these things."
+
+"And it is," pursued Bagarrow, quite glowing with liberality, "just a
+little pharisaical to object to card tricks. There are quantities of
+really quite clever and mathematical things that one may do with a
+chosen card, dealing the pack into heaps and counting slowly. Of course
+it is not for mere pleasuring that I learn these things. It gives anyone
+with a little tact an opportunity for stopping card-playing. When the
+pack is brought in, and all the party are intent upon gaming, you may
+seize your opportunity and take the cards, saying, 'Let me show you a
+little trick,' or, 'Have you seen Maskelyne's new trick with the cards?'
+Before anyone can object you are displaying your skill to their
+astonished eyes, and in their wonder at your cleverness the
+objectionable game may be indefinitely postponed."
+
+"Yet so set at times is your gambler upon his abominable pursuit," says
+Bagarrow, "that in practice even this ingenious expedient has been known
+to fail." He tried it once, it seems, in a race train to Kempton Park,
+and afterwards he had to buy a new hat. That incident, indeed, gives you
+the very essence of Bagarrow in his insidious attacks on evil. I
+remember that on another occasion he went out of his way to promise a
+partially intoxicated man a drink; and taking him into a public-house
+ordered two lemon squashes! Drinks! He liked lemon squash himself and he
+did not like beer, and he thought he had only to introduce the poor
+fallen creature to the delights of temperance to ensure his conversion
+there and then. I think he expected the man to fall upon him, crying "My
+benefactor!" But he did not say "My benefactor," at anyrate, though he
+fell upon him, cheerfully enough.
+
+To avoid the appearance of priggishness, which he dreads with some
+reason, he even went so far as to procure a herb tobacco, which he
+smokes with the help of frequent sulphur matches. This he recommends to
+us strongly. "Won't you try it?" he says, with a winning smile. "Just
+once." And he is the only man I ever met who drinks that facetious
+fluid, non-alcoholic beer. Once he proposed to wean me upon that from my
+distinctive vice, which led indeed to our first rupture. "_I_ find it
+delicious," he said in pathetic surprise.
+
+It is one of his most inveterate habits to tell you quietly what he
+does, or would do under the circumstances. Seeing you at Kipling, he
+will propound the proposition that "all true literature has a distinct
+aim." His test of literary merit is "What good does it do you?" He is a
+great lender of books, especially of Carlyle and Ruskin, which authors
+for some absolutely inscrutable reason he considers provocative of
+Bagarrowism, and he goes to the County Council lectures on dairy-work,
+because it encourages others to improve themselves. But I have said
+enough to display him, and of Bagarrow at least--as I can well
+testify--it is easy to have more than enough. Indeed, after whole days
+with him I have gone home to dream of the realisation of his ideals, a
+sort of Bagarrow millennium, a world of Bagarrows. All kinds of
+men--Falstaffs, Don Quixotes, Alan Stewarts, John the Baptists, John
+Knoxes, Quilps, and Benvenuto Cellinis--all, so to speak, Bagarrowed,
+all with clean cuffs, tight umbrellas, and temperate ways, passing to
+and fro in a regenerate earth.
+
+And so he goes on his way through this wonderful universe with his eyes
+fixed upon two or three secondary things, without the lust or pride of
+life, without curiosity or adventure, a mere timid missionary of a
+religion of "Nicer Ways," a quiet setter of a good example. I can assure
+you this is no exaggeration, but a portrait. It seems to me that the
+thing must be pathological, that he and this goodness of his have
+exactly the same claim upon Lombroso, let us say, as the born criminal.
+He is born good, a congenital good example, a sufferer from atrophy of
+his original sin. The only hope I can see for Bagarrow, short of murder,
+is forcible trepanning. He ought to have the seat of his ideals lanced,
+and all this wash about doing good to people by stealth taken away. It
+may be he might prove a very decent fellow then--if there was anything
+left of him, that is.
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF ESSAYS DEDICATORY
+
+
+I have been bothered about this book this three months. I have written
+scarcely anything since Llewellyn asked me for it, for when he asked me
+I had really nothing on hand. I had just published every line I had ever
+written, at my own expense, with Prigsbys. Yet three months should
+suffice for one of Llewellyn's books, which consist chiefly of decorous
+fly-leaves and a dedication or so, and margins. Of course you know
+Llewellyn's books--the most delightful things in the market: the
+sweetest covers, with little gilt apples and things carelessly
+distributed over luminous grey, and bright red initials, and all these
+delightful fopperies. But it was the very slightness of these bibelots
+that disorganised me. And perhaps, also, the fact that no one has ever
+asked me for a book before.
+
+I had no trouble with the title though--"Lichens." I have wondered the
+thing was never used before. Lichens, variegated, beautiful, though on
+the most arid foundations, half fungoid, half vernal--the very name for
+a booklet of modern verse. And that, of course, decided the key of the
+cover and disposed of three or four pages. A fly-leaf, a leaf with
+"Lichens" printed fair and beautiful a little to the left of the centre,
+then a title-page--"Lichens. By H.G. Wells. London: MDCCCXCV. Stephen
+Llewellyn." Then a restful blank page, and then--the Dedication. It was
+the dedication stopped me. The title-page, it is true, had some points
+of difficulty. Should the Christian name be printed in full or not, for
+instance; but it had none of the fatal fascination of the dedicatory
+page. I had, so to speak, to look abroad among the ranks of men, and
+make one of those fretful forgotten millions--immortal. It seemed a
+congenial task.
+
+I went to work forthwith.
+
+It was only this morning that I realised the magnitude of my
+accumulations. Ever since then--it was three months ago--I have been
+elaborating this Dedication. I turned the pile over, idly at first.
+Presently I became interested in tracing my varying moods, as they had
+found a record in the heap.
+
+This struck me--
+
+[Illustration: A Handwritten dedication, "To my Dearest Friend"
+followed by three successive names, two crossed out, then the whole
+dedication struck out]
+
+Then again, a little essay in gratitude came to hand--
+
+ TO
+ PROFESSOR AUGUSTUS FLOOD,
+ Whose Admirable Lectures on
+ Palaeontology
+ First turned my Attention to
+ Literature.
+
+There was a tinge of pleasantry in the latter that pleased me very
+greatly when I wrote it, and I find immediately overlying it another
+essay in the same line--
+
+ To the Latter-day Reviewer,
+ These Pearls.
+
+For some days I was smitten with the idea of dedicating my little
+booklet to one of my numerous personal antagonists, and conveying some
+subtly devised insult with an air of magnanimity. I thought, for
+instance, of Blizzard--
+
+ SIR JOSEPH BLIZZARD,
+The most distinguished, if not the greatest, of contemporary
+ anatomists.
+
+
+I think it was "X.L.'s" book, _Aut Diabolus aut Nihil_, that set me upon
+another line. There is, after all, your reader to consider in these
+matters, your average middle-class person to impress in some way. They
+say the creature is a snob, and absolutely devoid of any tinge of
+humour, and I must confess that I more than half believe it. At anyrate,
+it was that persuasion inspired--
+
+ To the Countess of X.,
+ In Memory of Many Happy Days.
+
+I know no Countess of X., as a matter of fact, but if the public is such
+an ass as to think better of my work for the suspicion, I do not care
+how soon I incur it. And this again is a pretty utilisation of the waste
+desert of politics--
+
+ MY DEAR SALISBURY,--Pray accept this unworthy tribute of
+ my affectionate esteem.
+
+There were heaps of others. And looking at those heaps it suddenly came
+sharp and vivid before my mind that there--there was the book I needed,
+already written! A blank page, a dedication, a blank page, a dedication,
+and so on. I saw no reason to change the title. It only remained to
+select the things, and the book was done. I set to work at once, and in
+a very little while my bibelot was selected. There were dedications
+fulsome and fluid, dedications acrid and uncharitable, dedications in
+verse and dedications in the dead languages: all sorts and conditions of
+dedications, even the simple "To J.H. Gabbles"--so suggestive of the
+modest white stones of the village churchyard. Altogether I picked out
+one hundred and three dedications. At last only one thing remained to
+complete the book. And that was--the Dedication. You will scarcely
+credit it, but that worries me still....
+
+I am almost inclined to think that Dedications are going out of
+fashion.
+
+
+
+
+THROUGH A MICROSCOPE
+
+SOME MORAL REFLECTIONS
+
+
+This dabbler person has recently disposed of his camera and obtained a
+microscope--a short, complacent-looking implement it is, of brass--and
+he goes about everywhere now with little glass bottles in his pocket,
+ready to jump upon any stray polly-woggle he may find, and hale it home
+and pry into its affairs. Within his study window are perhaps half a
+dozen jars and basins full of green scum and choice specimens of black
+mud in which his victims live. He persists in making me look through
+this instrument, though I would rather I did not. It seems to me a kind
+of impropriety even when I do it. He gets innumerable things in a drop
+of green water, and puts it on a glass slip under the object glass, and,
+of course, they know nothing of the change in their condition, and go on
+living just as they did before they were observed. It makes me feel at
+times like a public moralist, or Peeping Tom of Coventry, or some such
+creature.
+
+Certainly there are odd things enough in the water. Among others,
+certain queer green things that are neither plants nor animals. Most of
+the time they are plants, quiet green threads matted together, but every
+now and then the inside comes out of one, so to speak, and starts off
+with a fine red eye and a long flickering tail, to see the world. The
+dabbler says it's quite a usual thing among the lower plants--_Algae_ he
+calls them, for some reason--to disgorge themselves in this way and go
+swimming about; but it has quite upset my notions of things. If the
+lower plants, why not the higher? It may be my abominable imagination,
+but since he told me about these--swarm spores I think he called
+them--I don't feel nearly so safe with my geraniums as I did.
+
+A particularly objectionable thing in these water drops, the dabbler
+insists upon my spying at is the furious activity of everything you see
+in them. You look down his wretched tube, and there, bright and yellow
+with the lamplight in the round field of the microscope, is a perfect
+riot of living things. Perhaps it's the water he got from Hampstead, and
+a dozen flat things the shape of shortbreads will be fussing about.
+They are all quite transparent and colourless, and move about like
+galleys by means of a lot of minute oars that stick out all over them.
+Never a moment's rest. And, presently, one sees that even the green
+plant threads are wriggling across the field. The dabbler tries to
+moralise on this in the vein of Charles Kingsley, and infer we have much
+to learn from these ridiculous creatures; but, so far as I can see, it's
+a direct incentive to sloth to think how low in the scale of creation
+these things are, in spite of all their fussing. If they had sat about
+more and thought, they might be fishing the dabbler out of ponds and
+examining him instead of his examining them. Your energetic people might
+do worse things than have a meditative half-hour at the microscope. Then
+there are green things with a red spot and a tail, that creep about like
+slugs, and are equally transparent. _Euglena viridis_ the dabbler calls
+them, which seems unnecessary information. In fact all the things he
+shows me are transparent. Even the little one-eyed Crustacea, the size
+of a needle-point, that discredit the name of Cyclops. You can see their
+digestion and muscle and nerve, and, in fact, everything. It's at least
+a blessing we are not the same. Fancy the audible comments of the
+temperance advocate when you get in the bus! No use pulling yourself
+together then. "Pretty full!" And "Look," people would say, "his wife
+gives him cold mutton."
+
+Speaking of the name of Cyclops reminds me that these scientific people
+have been playing a scurvy trick upon the classics behind our backs. It
+reminds one of Epistemon's visit to Hades, when he saw Alexander a
+patcher of clouts and Xerxes a crier of mustard. Aphrodite, the dabbler
+tells me, is a kind of dirty mud-worm, and much dissected by spectacled
+pretenders to the London B.Sc.; every candidate, says the syllabus, must
+be able to dissect, to the examiner's satisfaction, and demonstrate upon
+Aphrodite, Nereis, Palaemon. Were the gods ever so insulted? Then the
+snaky Medusa and Pandora, our mother, are jelly-fish; Astraea is still to
+be found on coral reefs, a poor thing, and much browsed upon by parrot
+fish; and Doris and Tethys and Cydippe are sea slugs. It's worse than
+Heine's vision of the gods grown old. They can't be content with the
+departed gods merely. Evadne is a water flea--they'll make something out
+of Mrs. Sarah Grand next; and Autolycus, my Autolycus! is a polymorphic
+worm, whatever subtlety of insult "polymorphic worm" may convey.
+
+However, I wander from the microscope. These shortbread things are
+fussing about hither and thither across the field, and now and then an
+amoeba comes crawling into view. These are invertebrate jelly-like
+things of no particular shape, and they keep on thrusting out a part
+here, and withdrawing a part there, and changing and advancing just as
+though they were popular democratic premiers. Then diatoms keep gliding
+athwart the circle. These diatoms are, to me at least, the most
+perplexing things in the universe. Imagine a highly ornamental thing in
+white and brown, the shape of a spectacle case, without any limbs or
+other visible means of progression, and without any wriggling of the
+body, or indeed any apparent effort at all, gliding along at a smart
+pace. That's your diatom. The dabbler really knows nothing of how they
+do it. He mumbles something about Buetschli and Grenfell. Imagine the
+thing on a larger scale, Cleopatra's Needle, for instance, travelling on
+its side up the Thames Embankment, and all unchaperoned, at the rate of
+four or five miles an hour.
+
+There's another odd thing about these microscope things which redeems,
+to some extent at least, their singular frankness. To use the decorous
+phrase of the text-book, "They multiply by fission." Your amoeba or
+vorticella, as the case may be, splits in two. Then there are two amoebae
+or vorticellae. In this way the necessity of the family, that
+middle-class institution so abhorrent to the artistic mind, is avoided.
+In my friend's drop of ditch-water, as in heaven, there is neither
+marrying nor giving in marriage. There are no waste parents, which
+should appeal to the scholastic mind, and the simple protozoon has none
+of that fitful fever of falling in love, that distressingly tender state
+that so bothers your mortal man. They go about their business with an
+enviable singleness of purpose, and when they have eaten and drunk, and
+attained to the fulness of life, they divide and begin again with
+renewed zest the pastime of living.
+
+In a sense they are immortal. For we may look at this matter in another
+light, and say our exuberant protozoon has shed a daughter, and remains.
+In that case the amoeba I look at may have crawled among the slime of
+the Silurian seas when the common ancestor of myself and the royal
+family was an unassuming mud-fish like those in the reptile house in the
+Zoo. His memoirs would be interesting. The thought gives a solemn tint
+to one's meditations. If the dabbler wash him off this slide into his
+tube of water again, this trivial creature may go on feeding and growing
+and dividing, and presently be thrown away to wider waters, and so
+escape to live ... after I am dead, after my masterpieces are forgotten,
+after our Empire has passed away, after the human animal has passed
+through I know not what vicissitudes. It may be he will still, with the
+utmost nonchalance, be pushing out his pseudopodia, and ingesting
+diatoms when the fretful transitory life of humanity has passed
+altogether from the earth. One may catch him in specimen tubes by the
+dozen; but still, when one thinks of this, it is impossible to deny him
+a certain envious, if qualified, respect.
+
+And all the time these creatures are living their vigorous, fussy little
+lives; in this drop of water they are being watched by a creature of
+whose presence they do not dream, who can wipe them all out of existence
+with a stroke of his thumb, and who is withal as finite, and sometimes
+as fussy and unreasonably energetic, as themselves. He sees them, and
+they do not see him, because he has senses they do not possess, because
+he is too incredibly vast and strange to come, save as an overwhelming
+catastrophe, into their lives. Even so, it may be, the dabbler himself
+is being curiously observed.... The dabbler is good enough to say that
+the suggestion is inconceivable. I can imagine a decent amoeba saying
+the same thing.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLEASURE OF QUARRELLING
+
+
+Your cultivated man is apt to pity the respectable poor, on the score of
+their lack of small excitements, and even in the excess of his generous
+sympathy to go a Toynbee-Halling in their cause. And Sir Walter Besant
+once wrote a book about Hoxton, saying, among other things, how
+monotonous life was there. That is your modern fallacy respecting the
+lower middle class. One might multiply instances. The tenor of the pity
+is always the same.
+
+"No music," says the cultivated man, "no pictures, no books to read nor
+leisure to read in. How can they pass their lives?"
+
+The answer is simple enough, as Emily Bronte knew. They quarrel. And an
+excellent way of passing the time it is; so excellent, indeed, that the
+pity were better inverted. But we all lack the knowledge of our chiefest
+needs. In the first place, and mainly, it is hygienic to quarrel, it
+disengages floods of nervous energy, the pulse quickens, the breathing
+is accelerated, the digestion improved. Then it sets one's stagnant
+brains astir and quickens the imagination; it clears the mind of
+vapours, as thunder clears the air. And, finally, it is a natural
+function of the body. In his natural state man is always quarrelling--by
+instinct. Not to quarrel is indeed one of the vices of our civilisation,
+one of the reasons why we are neurotic and anaemic, and all these things.
+And, at last, our enfeebled palates have even lost the capacity for
+enjoying a "jolly good row."
+
+There can be no more melancholy sight in the world than that of your
+young man or young woman suffering from suppressed pugnacity. Up to the
+end of the school years it was well with them; they had ample scope for
+this wholesome commerce, the neat give and take of offence. In the
+family circle, too, there are still plentiful chances of acquiring the
+taste. Then, suddenly, they must be gentle and considerate, and all the
+rest of it. A wholesome shindy, so soon as toga and long skirts arrive,
+is looked upon as positively wrong; even the dear old institution of the
+"cut" is falling into disrepute. The quarrelling is all forced back into
+the system, as it were; it poisons the blood. This is why our literature
+grows sinister and bitter, and our daughters yearn after this and that,
+write odd books, and ride about on bicycles in remarkable clothes. They
+have shut down the safety valve, they suffer from the present lamentable
+increase of gentleness. They must find some outlet, or perish. If they
+could only put their arms akimbo and tell each other a piece of their
+minds for a little, in the ancient way, there can be not the slightest
+doubt that much of this _fin-de-siecle_ unwholesomeness would disappear.
+
+Possibly this fashion of gentleness will pass. Yet it has had increasing
+sway now for some years. An unhealthy generation has arisen--among the
+more educated class at least--that quarrels little, regards the function
+as a vice or a nuisance, as the East-ender does a taste for fine art or
+literature. We seem indeed to be getting altogether out of the way of
+it. Rare quarrels, no doubt, occur to everyone, but rare quarrelling is
+no quarrelling at all. Like beer, smoking, sea-bathing, cycling, and the
+like delights, you cannot judge of quarrelling by the early essay. But
+to show how good it is--did you ever know a quarrelsome person give up
+the use? Alcohol you may wean a man from, and Barrie says he gave up the
+Arcadia Mixture, and De Quincey conquered opium. But once you are set as
+a quarreller you quarrel and quarrel till you die.
+
+How to quarrel well and often has ever been something of an art, and it
+becomes more of an art with the general decline of spirit. For it takes
+two to make a quarrel. Time was when you turned to the handiest human
+being, and with small care or labour had the comfortable warmth you
+needed in a minute or so. There was theology, even in the fifties it was
+ample cause with two out of three you met. Now people will express a
+lamentable indifference. Then politics again, but a little while ago fat
+for the fire of any male gathering, is now a topic of mere tepidity. So
+you are forced to be more subtle, more patient in your quarrelling. You
+play like a little boy playing cricket with his sisters, with those who
+do not understand. A fellow-votary is a rare treat. As a rule you have
+to lure and humour your antagonist like a child. The wooing is as
+intricate and delicate as any wooing can well be. To quarrel now,
+indeed, requires an infinity of patience. The good old days of
+thumb-biting--"Do you bite your thumbs at us, sir?" and so to clash and
+stab--are gone for ever.
+
+There are certain principles in quarrelling, however, that the true
+quarreller ever bears in mind, and which, duly observed, do much to
+facilitate encounters. In the first place, cultivate Distrust. Have
+always before you that this is a wicked world, full of insidious people,
+and you never know what villainous encroachments upon you may be hidden
+under fair-seeming appearances. That is the flavour of it. At the first
+suspicion, "stick up for your rights," as the vulgar say. And see that
+you do it suddenly. Smite promptly, and the surprise and sting of your
+injustice should provoke an excellent reply. And where there is least
+ground for suspicion, there, remember, is the most. The right hand of
+fellowship extended towards you is one of the best openings you have.
+"Not such a fool," is the kind of attitude to assume, and "You don't put
+upon _me_ so easy." Your adversary resents this a little, and, rankling,
+tries to explain. You find a personal inference in the expostulation.
+
+Next to a wariness respecting your interests is a keen regard for your
+honour. Have concealed in the privacy of your mind a code of what is due
+to you. Expand or modify it as occasion offers. Be as it were a
+collector of what are called "slights," and never let one pass you.
+Watch your friend in doorways, passages; when he eats by you, when he
+drinks with you, when he addresses you, when he writes you letters. It
+will be hard if you cannot catch him smuggling some deadly insult into
+your presence. Tax him with it. He did not think, forsooth! Tell him no
+gentleman would do such a thing, thinkingly or not; that you certainly
+will not stand it again. Say you will show him. He will presently argue
+or contradict. So to your climax.
+
+Then, again, there is the personal reference. "Meaning me, sir?" Your
+victim with a blithe heart babbles of this or that. You let him meander
+here and there, watching him as if you were in ambush. Presently he
+comes into your spring. "Of course," you say, "I saw what you were
+driving at just this minute, when you mentioned mustard in salad
+dressing, but if I am peppery I am not mean. And if I have a thing to
+say I say it straight out." A good gambit this, and well into him from
+the start. The particular beauty of this is that you get him apologetic
+at first, and can score heavily before he rises to the defensive.
+
+Then, finally, there is your abstract cause, once very fruitful indeed,
+but now sadly gone in decay, except perhaps in specialist society. As an
+example, let there be one who is gibing genially at some topic or other,
+at Japanese king-crabs, or the inductive process, or any other topic
+which cannot possibly affect you one atom. Then is the time to drop all
+these merely selfish interests, and to champion the cause of truth. Fall
+upon him in a fine glow of indignation, and bring your contradiction
+across his face--whack!--so that all the table may hear. Tell him, with
+his pardon, that the king-crab is no more a crab than you are a
+jelly-fish, or that Mill has been superseded these ten years. Ask: "How
+can you say such things?" From thence to his general knowledge is a
+short flight, and so to his veracity, his reasoning powers, his mere
+common sense. "Let me tell you, sir," is the special incantation for the
+storm.
+
+These are the four chief ways of quarrelling, the four gates to this
+delightful city. For it is delightful, once your 'prentice days are
+past. In a way it is like a cold bath on a winter's morning, and you
+glow all day. In a way it is like football, as the nimble aggravation
+dances to and fro. In a way it is like chess. Indeed, all games of skill
+are watered quarrels, quarrel and soda, come to see them in a proper
+light. And without quarrelling you have not fully appreciated your
+fellow-man. For in the ultimate it is the train and complement of Love,
+the shadow that rounds off the delight we take in poor humanity. It is
+the vinegar and pepper of existence, and long after our taste for sweets
+has vanished it will be the solace of our declining years.
+
+
+
+
+THE AMATEUR NATURE-LOVER
+
+
+It is possible that an education entirely urban is not the best
+conceivable preparation for descriptive articles upon the country. On
+the other hand, your professional nature-lover is sometimes a little
+over-familiar with his subject. He knows the names of all the things,
+and he does not spare you. Besides, he is subtle. The prominent features
+are too familiar to him, and he goes into details. What respectable
+townsman, for instance, knows what "scabiosa" is? It sounds very
+unpleasant. Then the professional nature-lover assumes that you know
+trees. No Englishman can tell any tree from any other tree, except a
+very palpable oak or poplar. So that we may at least, as an experiment,
+allow a good Londoner to take his unsophisticated eyes out into the
+sweet country for once, and try his skill at nature-loving, though his
+botany has been learned over the counter of flower-shops, and his
+zoology on Saturday afternoons when they have the band in the Gardens.
+He makes his way, then, over by Epsom Downs towards Sutton, trying to
+assimilate his mood to the proper flavour of appreciation as he goes,
+and with a little notebook in the palm of his hand to assist an
+ill-trained memory. And the burthen of his song is of course the autumn
+tints.
+
+The masses of trees towards Epsom and Ewell, with the red houses and
+Elizabethan facades peeping through their interstices, contain, it would
+seem, every conceivable colour, except perhaps sky-blue; there are
+brilliant yellow trees, and a kind of tree of the most amazing gamboge
+green, almost the green of spring come back, and tan-coloured trees,
+deep brown, red, and deep crimson trees. Here and there the wind has
+left its mark, and the grey-brown branches and their purple tracery of
+twigs, with a suggestion of infinite depth behind, show through the
+rents in the leafy covering. There are deep green trees--the amateur
+nature-lover fancies they may be yews--with their dense warm foliage
+arranged in horizontal masses, like the clouds low down in a sunset; and
+certain other evergreens, one particularly, with a bluish-green covering
+of upstanding needles, are intensely conspicuous among the flame tints
+around. On a distant church tower, and nearer, disputing the possession
+of a gabled red house with a glowing creeper, is some ivy; and never is
+the perennial green of ivy so delightful as it is now, when all else is
+alight with the sombre fire of the sunset of the year....
+
+The amateur nature-lover proceeds over the down, appreciating all this
+as hard as he can appreciate, and anon gazing up at the grey and white
+cloud shapes melting slowly from this form to that, and showing lakes,
+and wide expanses, and serene distances of blue between their gaps. And
+then he looks round him for a zoological item. Underfoot the grass of
+the down is recovering from the summer drought and growing soft and
+green again, and plentiful little flattened snail shells lie about, and
+here and there a late harebell still nods in the breeze. Yonder bolts a
+rabbit, and then something whizzes by the amateur nature-lover's ear.
+
+They shoot here somewhere, he remembers suddenly; and then looking
+round, in a palpitating state, is reassured by the spectacle of a lone
+golfer looming over the brow of the down, and gesticulating black and
+weird against the sky. The Londoner, with an abrupt affectation of
+nonchalance, flings himself flat upon his back, and so remains
+comparatively safe until the golfer has passed. These golfers are
+strange creatures, rabbit-coloured, except that many are bright red
+about the middle, and they repel and yet are ever attracted by a devil
+in the shape of a little white ball, which leads them on through toothed
+briars, sharp furzes, pricking goss, and thorns; cursing the thing,
+weeping even, and anon laughing at their own foolish rambling;
+muttering, heeding no one to the right or left of their
+career,--demented creatures, as though these balls were their souls,
+that they ever sought to lose, and ever repented losing. And silent,
+ever at the heel of each, is a familiar spirit, an eerie human hedgehog,
+all set about with walking-sticks, a thing like a cylindrical
+umbrella-stand with a hat and boots and a certain suggestion of leg. And
+so they pass and are gone.
+
+Rising, the amateur nature-lover finds he has been reclining on a
+puff-ball. These puff-balls are certainly the most remarkable example of
+adaptation to circumstances known to English botanists. They grow
+abundantly on golf grounds, and are exactly like golf-balls in external
+appearance. They are, however, Pharisees and whited sepulchres, and
+within they are full of a soft mess of a most unpleasant appearance--the
+amateur nature-lover has some on him now--which stuff contains the
+spores. It is a case of what naturalists call "mimicry"--one of nature's
+countless adaptations. The golf-player smites these things with force,
+covering himself with ridicule--and spores, and so disseminating this
+far-sighted and ingenious fungus far and wide about the links.
+
+The amateur nature-lover passes off the down, and towards Banstead
+village. He is on the watch for characteristic objects of the
+countryside, and rustling through the leaves beneath a chestnut avenue
+he comes upon an old boot. It is a very, very old boot, all its blacking
+washed off by the rain, and two spreading chestnut leaves, yellow they
+are with blotches of green, with their broad fingers extended, rest upon
+it, as if they would protect and altogether cover the poor old boot in
+its last resting-place. It is as if Mother Nature, who lost sight of her
+product at the tanner's yard, meant to claim her own trampled child
+again at last, after all its wanderings. So we go on, noting a sardine
+tin gleaming brightly in the amber sunlight, through a hazel hedge, and
+presently another old boot. Some hawthorn berries, some hoary clematis
+we notice--and then another old boot. Altogether, it may be remarked, in
+this walk the amateur nature-lover saw eleven old boots, most of them
+dropped in the very sweetest bits of hedge tangle and grassy corner
+about Banstead.
+
+It is natural to ask, "Whence come all these old boots?" They are, as
+everyone knows, among the commonest objects in a country walk, so
+common, indeed, that the professional nature-lover says very little
+about them. They cannot grow there, they cannot be dropped from
+above--they are distinctly earth-worn boots. I have inquired of my own
+domestic people, and caused inquiry to be made in a large number of
+households, and there does not appear to be any regular custom of taking
+boots away to remote and picturesque spots to abandon them. Some
+discarded boots of my own were produced, but they were quite different
+from the old boot of the outer air. These home-kept old boots were
+lovely in their way, hoary with mould running into the most exquisite
+tints of glaucophane and blue-grey, but it was a different way
+altogether from that of the wild boot.
+
+A friend says, that these boots are cast away by tramps. People, he
+states, give your tramp old boots and hats in great profusion, and the
+modesty of the recipient drives him to these picturesque and secluded
+spots to effect the necessary change. But no nature-lover has ever
+observed the tramp or tramp family in the act of changing their clothes,
+and since there are even reasons to suppose that their garments are not
+detachable, it seems preferable to leave the wayside boot as a pleasant
+flavouring of mystery to our ramble. Another point, which also goes to
+explode this tramp theory, is that these countryside boots _never occur
+in pairs_, as any observer of natural history can testify....
+
+So our Cockney Jefferies proceeds, presently coming upon a cinder path.
+They use cinders a lot about Sutton, to make country paths with; it
+gives you an unexpected surprise the first time it occurs. You drop
+suddenly out of a sweetly tangled lane into a veritable bit of the Black
+Country, and go on with loathing in your soul for your fellow-creatures.
+There is also an abundance of that last product of civilisation, barbed
+wire. Oh that I were Gideon! with thorns and briers of the wilderness
+would I teach these elders of Sutton! But a truce to dark thoughts!
+
+We take our last look at the country from the open down above Sutton.
+Blue hills beyond blue hills recede into the remote distance; from
+Banstead Down one can see into Oxfordshire. Windsor Castle is in minute
+blue silhouette to the left, and to the right and nearer is the Crystal
+Palace. And closer, clusters red-roofed Sutton and its tower, then
+Cheam, with its white spire, and further is Ewell, set in a variegated
+texture of autumn foliage. Water gleams--a silver thread--at Ewell, and
+the sinking sun behind us catches a window here and there, and turns it
+into an eye of flame. And so to Sutton station and home to Cockneydom
+once more.
+
+
+
+
+FROM AN OBSERVATORY
+
+
+It will be some time yet before the rising of the moon. Looking down
+from the observatory one can see the pathways across the park dotted out
+in yellow lamps, each with a fringe of dim green; and further off, hot
+and bright, is the tracery of the illuminated streets, through which the
+people go to and fro. Save for an occasional stirring, or a passing
+voice speaking out of the dimness beneath me, the night is very still.
+Not a cloud is to be seen in the dark midwinter sky to hide one speck of
+its broad smears of star dust and its shining constellations.
+
+As the moon rises, heaven will be flooded with blue light, and one after
+another the stars will be submerged and lost, until only a solitary
+shining pinnacle of brightness will here and there remain out of the
+whole host of them. It is curious to think that, were the moon but a
+little brighter and truly the ruler of the night, rising to its empire
+with the setting of the sun, we should never dream of the great stellar
+universe in which our little solar system swims--or know it only as a
+traveller's tale, a strange thing to be seen at times in the Arctic
+Circle. Nay, if the earth's atmosphere were some few score miles higher,
+a night-long twilight would be drawn like an impenetrable veil across
+the stars. By a mere accident of our existence we see their multitude
+ever and again, when the curtains of the daylight and moonlight, and of
+our own narrow pressing necessities, are for a little while drawn back.
+Then, for an interval, we look, as if out of a window, into the great
+deep of heaven. So far as physical science goes, there is nothing in the
+essential conditions of our existence to necessitate that we should have
+these transitory glimpses of infinite space. We can imagine men just
+like ourselves without such an outlook. But it happens that we have it.
+
+If we had not this vision, if we had always so much light in the sky
+that we could not perceive the stars, our lives, so far as we can infer,
+would be very much as they are now; there would still be the same needs
+and desires, the same appliances for our safety and satisfaction; this
+little gaslit world below would scarcely miss the stars now, if they
+were blotted out for ever. But our science would be different in some
+respects had we never seen them. We should still have good reason, in
+Foucault's pendulum experiment, for supposing that the world rotated
+upon its axis, and that the sun was so far relatively fixed; but we
+should have no suspicion of the orbital revolution of the world. Instead
+we should ascribe the seasonal differences to a meridional movement of
+the sun. Our spectroscopic astronomy--so far as it refers to the
+composition of the sun and moon--would stand precisely where it does,
+but the bulk of our mathematical astronomy would not exist. Our calendar
+would still be in all essential respects as it is now; our year with the
+solstices and equinoxes as its cardinal points. The texture of our
+poetry might conceivably be the poorer without its star spangles; our
+philosophy, for the want of a nebular hypothesis. These would be the
+main differences. Yet, to those who indulge in speculative dreaming, how
+much smaller life would be with a sun and a moon and a blue beyond for
+the only visible, the only thinkable universe. And it is, we repeat,
+from the scientific standpoint a mere accident that the present--the
+daylight--world periodically opens, as it were, and gives us this
+inspiring glimpse of the remoteness of space.
+
+One may imagine countless meteors and comets streaming through the solar
+system, unobserved by those who dwelt under such conditions as have just
+been suggested, or some huge dark body from the outer depths sweeping
+straight at that little visible universe, and all unsuspected by the
+inhabitants. One may imagine the scientific people of such a world, calm
+in their assurance of the permanence of things, incapable almost of
+conceiving any disturbing cause. One may imagine how an imaginative
+writer who doubted that permanence would be pooh-poohed. "Cannot we see
+to the uttermost limits of space?" they might argue, "and is it not
+altogether blue and void?" Then, as the unseen visitor draws near, begin
+the most extraordinary perturbations. The two known heavenly bodies
+suddenly fail from their accustomed routine. The moon, hitherto
+invariably full, changes towards its last quarter--and then, behold! for
+the first time the rays of the greater stars visibly pierce the blue
+canopy of the sky. How suddenly--painfully almost--the minds of thinking
+men would be enlarged when this rash of the stars appeared.
+
+And what then if _our_ heavens were to open? Very thin indeed is the
+curtain between us and the unknown. There is a fear of the night that is
+begotten of ignorance and superstition, a nightmare fear, the fear of
+the impossible; and there is another fear of the night--of the starlit
+night--that comes with knowledge, when we see in its true proportion
+this little life of ours with all its phantasmal environment of cities
+and stores and arsenals, and the habits, prejudices, and promises of
+men. Down there in the gaslit street such things are real and solid
+enough, the only real things, perhaps; but not up here, not under the
+midnight sky. Here for a space, standing silently upon the dim, grey
+tower of the old observatory, we may clear our minds of instincts and
+illusions, and look out upon the real.
+
+And now to the eastward the stars are no longer innumerable, and the sky
+grows wan. Then a faint silvery mist appears above the housetops, and at
+last in the midst of this there comes a brilliantly shining line--the
+upper edge of the rising moon.
+
+
+
+
+THE MODE IN MONUMENTS
+
+STRAY THOUGHTS IN HIGHGATE CEMETERY
+
+
+On a sharp, sunlight morning, when the white clouds are drifting swiftly
+across the luminous blue sky, there is no finer walk about London than
+the Highgate ridge. One may stay awhile on the Archway looking down upon
+the innumerable roofs of London stretching southward into the haze, and
+shining here and there with the reflection of the rising sun, and then
+wander on along the picturesque road by the college of Saint Aloysius to
+the new Catholic church, and so through the Waterlow Park to the
+cemetery. The Waterlow Park is a pleasant place, full of children and
+aged persons in perambulators during the middle hours of the day, and in
+the summer evening time a haunt of young lovers; but your early wanderer
+finds it solitary save for Vertumnus, who, with L.C.C. on the front of
+him, is putting in crocuses. So we wander down to the little red lodge,
+whence a sinuous road runs to Hampstead, and presently into the close
+groves of monuments that whiten the opposite slope.
+
+How tightly these white sepulchres are packed here! How different this
+congestion of sorrow from the mossy latitude of God's Acre in the
+country! The dead are crammed together as closely as the living seemed
+in that bird's-eye view from the Archway. There is no ample shadow of
+trees, no tangled corners where mother earth may weave flower garlands
+over her returning children. The monuments positively jostle and elbow
+each other for frontage upon the footways. And they are so rawly clean
+and assertive. Most of them are conspicuously new whitened, with
+freshly-blackened or newly-gilt inscriptions, bare of lichen, moss, or
+mystery, and altogether so restless that it seems to the meditative man
+that the struggle for existence, for mere standing room and a show in
+the world, still rages among the dead. The unstable slope of the hill,
+with its bristling array of obelisks, crosses and urns, craning one
+above another, is as directly opposed to the restfulness of the village
+churchyard with its serene outspreading yews as midday Fleet Street to a
+Sabbath evening amidst the Sussex hills. This cemetery is, indeed, a
+veritable tumult of tombs.
+
+Another thing that presently comes painfully home to one is the lack of
+individuality among all these dead. Not a necessary lack of
+individuality so much as a deliberate avoidance of it. As one wanders
+along the steep, narrow pathways one is more and more profoundly
+impressed by the wholesale flavour of the mourning, the stereotyping of
+the monuments. The place is too modern for _memento mori_ and the
+hour-glass and the skull. Instead, Slap & Dash, that excellent firm of
+monumental masons, everywhere crave to be remembered. Truly, the firm of
+Slap & Dash have much to answer for among these graves, and they do not
+seem to be ashamed of it.
+
+From one elevated point in this cemetery one can count more than a
+hundred urns, getting at last weary and confused with the receding
+multitude. The urn is not dissimilar to the domestic mantel ornament,
+and always a stony piece of textile fabric is feigned to be thrown over
+its shoulder. At times it is wreathed in stony flowers. The only variety
+is in the form. Sometimes your urn is broad and squat, a Silenus among
+urns; sometimes fragile and high-shouldered, like a slender old maid;
+here an "out-size" in urns stalwart and strong, and there a dwarf
+peeping quaintly from its wrapping. The obelisks, too, run through a
+long scale of size and refinement. But the curious man finds no hidden
+connection between the carriage of the monument and the character of the
+dead. Messrs. Slap & Dash apparently take the urn or obelisk that comes
+readiest to hand. One wonders dimly why mourners have this overwhelming
+proclivity for Messrs. Slap & Dash and their obelisk and urn.
+
+The reason why the firm produces these articles may be guessed at. They
+are probably easy to make, and require scarcely any skill. The
+contemplative man has a dim vision of a grimy shed in a back street,
+where a human being passes dismally through life the while he chips out
+an unending succession of these cheap urns and obelisks for his
+employers' retailing. But the question why numberless people will
+profane the memory of their departed by these public advertisements of
+Slap & Dash, and their evil trade, is a more difficult problem. For
+surely nothing could be more unmeaning or more ungainly than the
+monumental urn, unless it be the monumental obelisk. The plain cross, by
+contrast, has the tenderest meaning, and is a simple and fitting
+monument that no repetition can stale.
+
+The artistic cowardice of the English is perhaps the clue to the
+mystery. Your Englishman is always afraid to commit himself to criticism
+without the refuge of a _tu quoque_. He is covered dead, just as he is
+covered living, with the "correct thing." A respectable stock-in-trade
+is proffered him by the insinuating shopman, to whom it is our custom to
+go. He is told this is selling well, or that is much admired. Heaven
+defend that he should admire on his own account! He orders the stock urn
+or the stock slab because it is large and sufficiently expensive for his
+means and sorrow, and because he knows of nothing better. So we mourn as
+the stonemason decrees, or after the example and pattern of the Smiths
+next door. But some day it will dawn upon us that a little thought and a
+search after beauty are far more becoming than an order and a cheque to
+the nearest advertising tradesman. Or it may be we shall conclude that
+the anonymous peace of a grassy mould is better than his commercial
+brutalities, and so there will be an end of him.
+
+One may go from end to end of this cemetery and find scarcely anything
+beautiful, appropriate, or tender. A lion, ill done, and yet to some
+degree impressive, lies complacently above a menagerie keeper, and near
+this is a tomb of some imagination, with reliefs of the life of Christ.
+In one place a grotesque horse, with a head disproportionately vast, is
+to be seen. Perhaps among all these monuments the one to Mrs. Blake is
+the most pleasing. It is a simply and quaintly executed kneeling figure,
+with a certain quiet and pathetic reverence of pose that is strangely
+restful against the serried vulgarity around it.
+
+But the tradesman ghoul will not leave us; he follows us up and down,
+indecently clamouring his name and address, and at last turns our
+meditation to despair. Certain stock devices become as painful as
+popular autotypes. There is the lily broken on its stalk; we meet it
+here on a cross and there on an obelisk, presently on the pedestal of an
+urn. There is the hand pointing upward, here balanced on the top of an
+obelisk and there upon a cross. The white-robed angel, free from the
+remotest shadow of expression, meets us again and again. "All this is
+mine," says the tradesman ghoul. "Behold the names of me--Slap & Dash
+here, the Ugliness Company there, and this the work of the Cheap and
+Elegant Funeral Association. This is where we slew the art of sculpture.
+These are our trophies that sculpture is no more. All this marble might
+have been beautiful, all this sorrow might have been expressive, had it
+not been for us. See, this is our border, No. A 5, and our pedestal No.
+E, and our second quality urn, along of a nice appropriate text--a
+pretty combination and a cheap one. Or we can do it you better in border
+A 3, and pedestal C, and a larger urn or a hangel----"
+
+The meditative man is seized with a dismal horror, and retreats to the
+gates. Even there a wooden advertisement grins broadly at him in his
+discomfiture, and shouts a name athwart his route. And so down the
+winding road to the valley, and then up Parliament Hill towards
+Hampstead and its breeze-whipped ponds. And the mind of him is full of a
+dim vision of days that have been, when sculptor and stonemason were
+one, when the artist put his work in the porch for all the world to see,
+when people had leisure to think how things should be done and heart to
+do them well, when there was beauty in the business of life and dignity
+in death. And he wonders rather hopelessly if people will ever rise up
+against these damnable tradesmen who ruin our arts, make our lives
+costly and dismal, and advertise, advertise even on our graves.
+
+
+
+
+HOW I DIED
+
+
+It is now ten years ago since I received my death warrant. All these ten
+years I have been, and I am, and shall be, I hope, for years yet, a
+Doomed Man. It only occurred to me yesterday that I had been
+dodging--missing rather than dodging--the common enemy for such a space
+of time. _Then_, I know, I respected him. It seemed he marched upon me,
+inexorable, irresistible; even at last I felt his grip upon me. I bowed
+in the shadow. And he passed. Ten years ago, and once since, he and I
+have been very near. But now he seems to me but a blind man, and we,
+with all our solemn folly of medicine and hygiene, but players in a game
+of Blind Man's Buff. The gaunt, familiar hand comes out suddenly,
+swiftly, this time surely? And it passes close to my shoulder; I hear
+someone near me cry, and it is over.... Another ream of paper; there is
+time at least for the Great Book still.
+
+Very close to the tragedy of life is the comedy, brightest upon the very
+edge of the dark, and I remember now with a queer touch of sympathetic
+amusement my dear departed self of the middle eighties. How the thing
+staggered me! I was full of the vast ambition of youth; I was still at
+the age when death is quite out of sight, when life is still an
+interminable vista of years; and then suddenly, with a gout of blood
+upon my knuckle, with a queer familiar taste in my mouth, that cough
+which had been a bother became a tragedy, and this world that had been
+so solid grew faint and thin. I saw through it; saw his face near to my
+own; suddenly found him beside me, when I had been dreaming he was far
+beyond there, far away over the hills.
+
+My first phase was an immense sorrow for myself. It was a purely selfish
+emotion. You see I had been saving myself up, denying myself half the
+pride of life and most of its indulgence, drilling myself like a
+drill-sergeant, with my eyes on those now unattainable hills. Had I
+known it was to end so soon, I should have planned everything so
+differently. I lay in bed mourning my truncated existence. Then
+presently the sorrow broadened. They were so sorry, so genuinely sorry
+for me. And they considered me so much now. I had this and that they
+would never have given me before--the stateliest bedding, the costliest
+food. I could feel from my bed the suddenly disorganised house, the
+distressed friends, the new-born solicitude. Insensibly a realisation of
+enhanced importance came to temper my regrets for my neglected sins. The
+lost world, that had seemed so brilliant and attractive, dwindled
+steadily as the days of my illness wore on. I thought more of the
+world's loss, and less of my own.
+
+Then came the long journey; the princely style of it! the sudden
+awakening on the part of external humanity, which had hitherto been wont
+to jostle me, to help itself before me, to turn its back upon me, to my
+importance. "He has a diseased lung--cannot live long"....
+
+I was going into the dark and I was not afraid--with ostentation. I
+still regard that, though now with scarcely so much gravity as
+heretofore, as a very magnificent period in my life. For nearly four
+months I was dying with immense dignity. Plutarch might have recorded
+it. I wrote--in touchingly unsteady pencil--to all my intimate friends,
+and indeed to many other people. I saw the littleness of hate and
+ambition. I forgave my enemies, and they were subdued and owned to it.
+How they must regret these admissions! I made many memorable remarks.
+This lasted, I say, nearly four months.
+
+The medical profession, which had pronounced my death sentence,
+reiterated it steadily--has, indeed, done so now this ten years. Towards
+the end of those four months, however, dying lost its freshness for me.
+I began to detect a certain habitual quality in my service. I had
+exhausted all my memorable remarks upon the subject, and the strain
+began to tell upon all of us.
+
+One day in the spring-time I crawled out alone, carefully wrapped, and
+with a stick, to look once more--perhaps for the last time--on sky and
+earth, and the first scattered skirmishers of the coming army of
+flowers. It was a day of soft wind, when the shadows of the clouds go
+sweeping over the hills. Quite casually I happened upon a girl
+clambering over a hedge, and her dress had caught in a bramble, and the
+chat was quite impromptu and most idyllic. I remember she had three or
+four wood anemones in her hand--"wind stars" she called them, and I
+thought it a pretty name. And we talked of this and that, with a light
+in our eyes, as young folks will.
+
+I quite forgot I was a Doomed Man. I surprised myself walking home with
+a confident stride that jarred with the sudden recollection of my
+funereal circumstances. For a moment I tried in vain to think what it
+was had slipped my memory. Then it came, colourless and remote. "Oh!
+Death.... He's a Bore," I said; "I've done with him," and laughed to
+think of having done with him.
+
+"And why not so?" said I.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+ _This book appeared some years ago at another price and in another
+ form. The Publisher believes that its present guise will bring it
+ within the reach of all and sundry, who, while delighting in the
+ marriage of_ wit _with_ wisdom, _cannot complete the trilogy with
+ the third desideratum of_ wealth.
+
+
+
+PRINTED BY MORRISON AND GIBB LIMITED, EDINBURGH
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Front Book Cover]
+
+CERTAIN
+PERSONAL
+MATTERS
+
+
+By
+
+H.G. WELLS
+_Author of the "Time Machine"_
+
+
+
+LONDON
+T. FISHER UNWIN
+PATERNOSTER SQUARE
+
+_Price One Shilling_
+_Also issued in Cloth, price 2s._
+
+
+[Illustration: Back Book Cover]
+
+
+To Furnish Smartly Without Disturbing Capital
+
+[Illustration: BED-TIME]
+
+
+By means of a perfectly simple plan (commended by the Editor of _Truth_
+and many others) you may furnish your House, Chambers, or Flat
+throughout,--and to the extent of Linen, Silver, and Cutlery,--_Out of
+Income without drawing upon Capital_ by dividing the initial outlay into
+6, 12, or 24 monthly, or 12 quarterly payments. At any period the option
+may be exercised of paying off the balance, and so take advantage of the
+Cash Discount.
+
+A beautifully coloured Catalogue given on personal application.
+
+
+CONSULT:
+NORMAN & STACEY, Ltd.,
+_Artistic House Furnishers_,
+118, Queen Victoria St., E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Certain Personal Matters, by H. G. Wells
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