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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:51:33 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:51:33 -0700
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152,
+June 20, 1917, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152, June 20, 1917
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Owen Seaman
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2006 [EBook #17629]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lesley Halamek and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 152.
+
+
+June 20th, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+=CHARIVARIA.=
+
+
+A man who purchased sandwiches at a railway restaurant and afterwards
+threw them into the road was fined five shillings at Grimsby Police
+Court last week. His explanation--that he did not know they might
+injure the road--was not accepted by the Court.
+
+ * * *
+
+We cannot help thinking that too much fuss has been made about trying
+to stop Messrs. RAMSAY MACDONALD and JOWETT from leaving England. So
+far as we can gather they did not threaten to return to this country
+afterwards.
+
+ * * *
+
+A North of England man, obviously wishing to appear unusual, still
+persists in the stupid story that he did not hear the Messines
+explosion.
+
+ * * *
+
+We can think of no finer example of the humility of true greatness
+than KING CONSTANTINE'S decision to abdicate.
+
+ * * *
+
+There were forty thousand fewer paupers in 1916 than in 1915,
+according to figures recently published. The difference is accounted
+for by the number of revue-writers who have resumed their agricultural
+occupations.
+
+ * * *
+
+In a small town in Australia, says a news item, over two tons of mice
+were killed in two days. For some unknown reason, which perhaps the
+Censor can explain, the name of the cat is withheld.
+
+ * * *
+
+"Eliminate the middleman," demands a contemporary. It might prove a
+simpler affair, after all, than the present system of suppressing the
+inner man.
+
+ * * *
+
+Mr. GINNELL, M.P., is responsible for the statement that "bringing
+an action against the police in Ireland is like bringing one against
+Satan in hell." The chief obstacle in the latter case is of course the
+total absence of learned counsel in that locality.
+
+ * * *
+
+The KAISER, it appears, has lost no time in commiserating with his
+troops on their magnificent victory at Messines.
+
+ * * *
+
+The title which Mr. JOHN HASSALL wrote under one of his sketches
+suggested the words for a song which has now been written. It is
+only fair to the artist to say that he was not aware that his quite
+innocent title would lead to this.
+
+ * * *
+
+The National Service staff at St. Ermin's Hotel, Westminster, has been
+reduced by half. It is now expected that the unemployed half will
+volunteer for National Service.
+
+ * * *
+
+Berlin announces that all through-lines in Germany are running. The
+case of the HINDENBURG Line seems to be infectious.
+
+ * * *
+
+"No cheese," says _The Evening News_, "has quite the bite of Cheddar."
+At the same time, unless it wags its tail to show that it is friendly,
+we feel that every cheese with a bite like that would be much safer if
+muzzled.
+
+ * * *
+
+Triplets were born in Manchester last week. The father is going on as
+well as can be expected.
+
+ * * *
+
+Complaint has been made by a member of the Hounslow Burial Committee
+of courting couples occupying seats in the cemetery. The killjoy!
+
+ * * *
+
+We can only suppose it was the hot weather that tempted a newsagent
+correspondent to ask whether Lord NORTHCLIFFE had gone to America on
+"sail or return."
+
+ * * *
+
+Mr. BALFOUR, we are told, while staying at Washington, visited eleven
+public buildings and interviewed nine representative Americans on one
+day. There is some talk of his being elected an honorary American.
+
+ * * *
+
+We wish to deny the foolish rumour that when he arrived in London
+from his American tour and was asked if he had had a good voyage,
+he remarked, "Sure thing, sonny. All the little Mister Congressmen
+gathered around, and it suited your Uncle Dudley very nicely and some
+more. Yep!"
+
+ * * *
+
+An old lady was recently fined two pounds for putting out crumbs for
+birds. Had the bread-crumbs been put outside, instead of inside, the
+birds, no offence, it seems, would have been committed.
+
+ * * *
+
+Newspapers in Germany may now be sold only to subscribers for one
+month or more. A similar measure for England is opposed on the ground
+that it would be most inadvisable to check the practice at present in
+vogue among patriotic supporters of the Coalition Government of buying
+_The Morning Post_ and _The Daily News_ on alternate days.
+
+ * * *
+
+Bobbing for eels is being pursued with much enthusiasm on the Norfolk
+Broads. Two-bobbing for haddocks in Kensington is sport enough for
+most of us.
+
+ * * *
+
+Large numbers of the German prisoners taken at Messines wore new boots
+and new uniforms. Other improvements included a less ragged rendering
+of the well-known recitation, "Kamerad!"
+
+ * * *
+
+Asked what bait could be used for coarse fish, the late
+FOOD-CONTROLLER suggested one "made from bran, with a limited quantity
+of oatmeal." The correspondent has now written to inquire whether the
+fish have been officially informed of the new diet.
+
+ * * *
+
+Four shillings a hundredweight is being paid for old omnibus tickets,
+but there are still a few people who use these vehicles for pleasure,
+without any motive of gain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Visitor_. "YES, BUT WHAT'S THE POINT OF WHITEWASHING
+THE TREE TRUNKS?"
+
+_Amateur Gardener_. "I CAN'T SAY FOR CERTAIN; BUT I _THINK_ THE IDEA
+IS TO KEEP THE BATS FROM KNOCKING THEIR HEADS IN THE DARK."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=Suspended Animation.=
+
+ "LAUNDRY.--Girl to hang up and make herself useful."--_Liverpool
+ Echo_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "For myself, I have very good reasons for not being in khaki. I
+ live on a farm near the Grand Falls of the St. John River. These
+ falls are second to Niagara in size and splendour, and attract
+ visitors from all over the country."--_Canadian Paper_.
+
+He must have told the recruiting-officer that he was subject to
+cataract.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=T.M.G.=
+
+ Farewell, my CONSTANTINE! A guardian navy
+ Facilitates your exit on the blue;
+ For Greece has been this long while in the gravy
+ And he that put her there was plainly you;
+ "TINO MUST GO!" was writ for all to see,
+ Or, briefly, "T.M.G."
+
+ Whither, dear Sir, do you propose to sally?
+ To Switzerland's recuperative air,
+ To sip condensed milk in a private chalet
+ Or pluck the lissom chamois from his lair,
+ Or on the summit of a neutral Alp
+ Recline your crownless scalp?
+
+ Or did you ask from him you love so dearly
+ A royal haven fenced from rude alarms,
+ Even though WILLIAM should reserve you merely
+ A bedroom at "The Hohenzollern Arms,"
+ Having for poor relations on the loose
+ No sort of further use?
+
+ Beware! I gather he might clasp his TINO
+ Only too warmly to his heaving chest,
+ Saying, "O how reward such merits? _We_ know!
+ Thou shalt command an Army in the West!
+ Yes, thou shalt bear upon the British Front
+ The pick of all the brunt."
+
+ Frankly, if I were you, I wouldn't chance it.
+ Fighting has never really been your forte;
+ Witness Larissa, and your rapid transit,
+ Chivied by slow foot-sloggers of the Porte;
+ Far better make for Denmark o'er the foam;
+ There is no place like home.
+
+ Try some ancestral palace, well-appointed;
+ For choice the one where _Hamlet_ nursed his spite,
+ Who found the times had grown a bit disjointed
+ And he was not the man to put 'em right;
+ And there consult on that enchanted shore
+ The ghosts of Elsinore.
+
+O.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=LESSONS OF THE WAR.=
+
+I.
+
+(_Acting upon instructions received from the 3rd Self-help Division
+the 9th Self-help Brigade issues its orders for a Raid._)
+
+ 9TH SELF-HELP BRIGADE OPERATION ORDER No. 49.
+ _August 1st, 1920_.
+
+Ref. Maps. LONDON 1/40000 shoot 27^d S.W. and (Special) 1/500
+(BROADMEAD).
+
+1. The 9th Self-help Brigade will carry out a Raid upon BROADMEAD
+HOUSE, BROADMEAD SQUARE, W., on the night of 12/13 August.
+
+2. The Raid will be carried out by the BILL SIKES and ROBIN HOOD
+Battalions. The CHARLIE PEACE Bn. will be in close support, and the
+DICK TURPIN Bn. in reserve.
+
+3. The four sides of the house will be attacked simultaneously, the
+BILL SIKES Bn. attacking with one Coy. each on the North and West, and
+the ROBIN HOOD on the South and East.
+
+4. The noise of entry will be covered by a barrage of street cries and
+taxi whistles. "Q." will arrange.
+
+5. Zero hour will be notified later.
+
+6. The grounds and approaches will be reconnoitred thoroughly and as
+many friends as possible made in the neighbourhood. Every opportunity
+of reconnoitring the house itself, either through friendship or by
+substitution for legitimate plumbers, window-cleaners, piano-tuners,
+etc., will be taken.
+
+7. The Brigades on the Right and Left will co-operate by starting a
+street fight and a small fire respectively at some convenient distance
+from the scene of operations.
+
+8. At Zero _minus_ one hour, a cordon of outposts will be established
+at a radius of 500 yards from the house, with strong points at the
+street corners. "Q." will arrange for a supply of hedging-gloves.
+
+9. The general scheme of approach will be on the lines as laid down in
+the "Self-help Corps Standard Formation of Attack" (OK 340/CV/429).
+
+10. Commanding Officers will submit a detailed scheme for the attack
+(with sketch maps) not later than 4 P.M. on August 6th.
+
+11. Mopping-up parties will be detailed to deal with all dug-outs
+known to be occupied. Prisoners will not be taken, but undue roughness
+is to be discouraged as likely to bring discredit upon the service.
+Steps will be taken, however, to ensure the immediate, if temporary,
+silence of the obstreperous. O.C. Chloroform will arrange.
+
+12. The Dog emplacement at G 36 A 0.8 will be dealt with by the
+Brigade Dog-fancier.
+
+13. Brigade Cooks will be detailed in specified areas to act as decoys
+for Policemen.
+
+14. All information as to the plans, intentions, appearance, habits
+and dispositions of inhabitants will be found in Appendix I. Some
+good interior photographs of the house have been obtained by Corps
+photographers acting as window-cleaners.
+
+15. As foreshadowed in the Self-help Corps Intelligence Summary of
+June 29th most of the family will be away at the seaside by the date
+fixed for the Raid.
+
+16. A teetotal Guard will be placed over all cellars.
+
+17. Advanced Report Centre will be at G 25 D 93 ("The Peck and
+Jackdaw").
+
+18. A site for a forward dump will be chosen--preferably on the
+BAYSWATER-BROADMEAD Road. "Q" will arrange.
+
+19. Practice Raids will be carried out upon a model of the objective
+which will be erected at the depot.
+
+20. Parties detailed for Glass-cutting, Safe-opening, etc., etc., will
+draw the necessary tools from the Main Dump at K 25 A on the 12th
+inst. "Q" will arrange.
+
+21. Dress: Fighting Order with Rubber Soles.
+
+22. A non-committal hot meal (without onions) will be served to all
+before starting. "Q" will arrange.
+
+23. Results of the Raid will be collected and dumped at Advanced
+Brigade dump at G 36 A. "Q" will arrange for necessary transport.
+Distribution of proceeds will be made in accordance with G.R.O. 15.
+"_G_" _Staff will arrange_.
+
+24. Please acknowledge. _Issued at 5.15 P.M._
+
+ Copies to
+ Diary I.
+ Diary II., etc., etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Detroit aldermen yesterday adopted a resolution asking for the
+ freedom of Ireland from British rule.
+
+ It is addressed to the president and was introduced by Alderman
+ Walsh.
+
+ Other Irish patriots eager for the freedom of Erin who did sign
+ the resolution were Jacob Guthard, William H.C. Hinkle, Joseph H.
+ Bahorski, Joseph A. Miotke, Anthony Nowe, Herman Zink, Charles
+ Braun, Charles A. Kocher, Oscar A. Dodt, John C. Bleil, Ralph G.
+ Mitter, Alexander Dill, John A. Kronk, Herman Schultz, Albert G.
+ Kunz, Frederick W. Wendell and Oscar Riopelle."
+
+ _Detroit Free Press_.
+
+Your true Irish patriot doesn't mind what country he comes from.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: HOIST WITH HIS OWN PETARD.
+
+MR. RAMSAY MACDONALD (_Champion of Independent Labour_). "OF COURSE
+I'M ALL FOR PEACEFUL PICKETING--ON PRINCIPLE. BUT IT MUST BE APPLIED
+TO THE PROPER PARTIES."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=BLANCHE'S LETTERS.=
+
+WAR FEVER.
+
+_Park Lane_.
+
+[Illustration: THE LAST STRAW.]
+
+Dearest DAPHNE,--Juno ffarrington's wedding to the Oldcastles' boy,
+Portcullis, the other day, quite the best done of Allotment Weddings
+that are having a little vogue just now. Juno's white satin gown was
+embroidered with mustard and cress and spring onions in their natural
+colours, her veil was kept in place by a coronal of lettuce leaves,
+and, instead of a Prayer-Book or a posy, she carried a little
+ivory-and-silver spade. The effect was _absolutely!_ The 'maids had on
+Olga's latest in Allotment Wedding frocks, carried out in potato-brown
+charmeuse and cabbage-green chiffon; also they'd garden-hats, tied
+under the chin with ribbon-grass and with a big cluster of radishes at
+the left side, and each of them carried a bunch of small salad and a
+darling little crystal-and-silver watering-pot (Portcullis's gifts).
+The Duke of Southlands gave his daughter away, and Juno _insisted_ on
+his wearing a smock-frock and carrying a trowel, and just as the dear
+Bishop said, "Who giveth this woman?" the poor old darling dropped his
+trowel with a crash and rather spoilt things.
+
+The wedding-cake was a great big war loaf stuck with flags. Juno cut
+it in old-fashioned style with Portcullis's sword. While we were doing
+ourselves well with war-bread and margarine, boiled eggs and plenty of
+champagne, the Controller of Wedding Breakfasts blew in (it's a new
+post, and he's two hundred and fifty able-bodied young assistants).
+He was curious to see what we were having, and cautioned us against
+throwing any rice after our bride and 'groom. "But how absurd, you
+ricky person!" chipped in Popsy, Lady Ramsgate, who, of course, is
+Juno's great-aunt. "_We_ never throw rice at our wedding-people!
+_That_'s only done by the outlying tribes of barbarians." It was a
+pity she attracted his notice, for he was down on her directly for
+having on a toque almost entirely made of young turnips and carrots.
+He said it was "an infraction of rule 150, cap. 4,500 of the Safety of
+the Empire Act, forbidding the use of the people's food for personal
+adornment."
+
+The Allotment expression, which is the correct one now, is a look of
+interest and expectation, because what one's planted is coming up.
+_Some_ people rather spoil their Allotment expression by a _puzzled_
+look. _Et pourquoi_? dear, they've _quite_ forgotten what they
+planted, and, though they _pretend_ they know _exactly_ what it is
+that's coming up, they really haven't the slightest!
+
+My last photo is considered to show the Allotment expression in utter
+perfection. (It's been in _People of Position, Mayfair Murmurs_, and
+several other weeklies.) I'm standing in my potato-patch (my Allotment
+toilette is finished off by a pair of _enthralling_ little hob-nailed
+boots!) and I'm holding a rake and a hoe and a digging-fork in one
+hand and a garden-hose in the other; there's a wheel-barrow beside me,
+and I'm looking at the potato-plants with the _true_ Allotment smile,
+my dearest. I sent a copy of this picky to Norty, and under it I wrote
+those famous last words of some celebrated Frenchman (I forget whether
+it was MOLIÈRE or MIRABEAU or NAPOLEON): "_Je vais chercher un grand
+peut-être!_"
+
+Wee-Wee is frightfully worried about Bo-Bo being so overworked. He
+used to be at the head of the Department for Telling People What to
+Do, and he and his five hundred assistants were worked half dead;
+and _now_ he's at the head of a still newer department, the one for
+Telling People What They're _Not_ to Do, and, though he's eight
+hundred clerks to help him, Wee-Wee says the strain is too great for
+words. He goes to Whitehall at ten every day and comes back at three!
+And then he has the Long-Ago treatment that's being used so much now
+for war-frayed nerves. The idea is to get people as far away from the
+present as poss. So when Bo-Bo comes in from Whitehall he lies down on
+a fearful old worm-eaten oak settle in a dim room hung with moth-eaten
+tapestry, and Wee-Wee reads CHAUCER to him, and sings ghastly little
+folk-songs, accompanying herself on a thing called a _crwth_--(it's a
+tremendously primitive sort of harp, but I can't believe that even a
+_crwth_ meant to make such a horrible noise as Wee-Wee makes on it!).
+Myself, I don't consider Bo-Bo a bit the better for the Long-Ago
+treatment, and there's certainly a wild look in his eyes that wasn't
+there before!
+
+_M'amie_, would you like to hear the simply _odious_ storyette of
+Somebody's Cousin? Well, so you shall. Somebody is by way of being an
+intimate foe of mine, and Somebody's Cousin has long been a thorn in
+the flesh and a shaking of the head to his people. Before the War
+he belonged to the League for Taking Everything Lying Down, the
+Fellowship for Preventing People from Standing up against Foreign
+Aggression, and the Brotherhood for Giving up All Our Advantages to
+Aliens. He was of military age, and when war came, after giving vent
+to some completely detestable sentiments, he crossed to the U.S. and
+naturalised himself there, constantly attacking the country that was
+unlucky enough to produce him.
+
+[Illustration: _Recruit_. "EXCUSE ME, SIR, I FEEL GREATLY EXHAUSTED BY
+THIS EXERCISE."
+
+_Instructor_. "DO YOU, DEARIE? WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO PLAY AT?
+KISS-IN-THE-RING?"]
+
+When the U.S. came in, he shed his citizenship in a hurry, fled to
+South America, and naturalised himself in a republic that had sworn
+by all its gods to keep out of the War _à tout prix_. This republic,
+however, changed its mind later and followed its big northern brother
+into the War, _et voilà_! Somebody's Cousin was at a loose end again.
+He afterwards naturalised himself in half-a-dozen small far-away
+nations that all finally came in, and _then, chérie_, he drifted down
+to the islands of the South Pacific (the favourite ocean of _his_
+sort!) and had himself made an Ollyoola. (The Ollyoolas are a tribe
+that has _never in all its past history_ been known to go to war). He
+was made an Ollyoola with all the native rites, dancing and shrieking
+and so on, and he wore the correct Ollyoola dress (a few shells and
+his hair trained on sticks to stand straight up).
+
+And _now_ comes the point of this storyette: Only a few weeks after
+Somebody's Cousin had become a full-blooded Ollyoola (I think
+that's the proper phrase), the Ollyoolas suddenly fell out with the
+Patti-Tattis (on the next island) and went to war, for _absolutely the
+first time_, with a _ferocity_, my Daphne, that seems to have been
+saving up through all their centuries of peacefulness!
+
+Nothing's been heard since of Somebody's Cousin!
+
+ Ever thine,
+ BLANCHE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "AIRMEN'S ORDEAL IN THE NORTH SEA.
+
+ FIVE DAYS ON A PIECE OF CHOCOLATE."
+
+ _Continental Daily Mail_.
+
+Rather a precarious perch.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "'GIB.' SHELLS FALL IN MOROCCO.
+
+ MADRID.--Near Algeciras 20 shells fell from the batteries of
+ Gibraltar. There were no victims, and no damage was caused.
+ The authorities at Gibraltar have given satisfactory
+ explanations."--_Evening Paper_.
+
+Still, we should like to know the nature of the explosive that blew
+Algeciras across the Straits.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KINSMEN AND NAMESAKES.
+
+An official circular, commenting on the presentation at the Scala, in
+film form, of _The Crisis_, by Mr. WINSTON CHURCHILL, the American
+novelist, adds the interesting statement, "the author is of course a
+distant cousin of the Right Hon. Winston Churchill, M.P."; This sounds
+a little ungracious. Why "of course _distant_?" But perhaps the gifted
+novelist shares the opinion held by Lord BERESFORD of the politician
+who did not write _The Crisis_, but is always trying to make one.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the account of a military wedding in _The West London Press_:--
+
+ "The bridegroom was wearing a simple draped gown of lavender-blue
+ crepe georgette, with a mushroom-shaped hat in the same shade,
+ wreathed with small coloured flowers and draped with a blue lace
+ veil."
+
+Some mufti!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "When the Lord Provost ruled that the mater was not urgent, the
+ Labourists created something of a scene."--_Glasgow Citizen_.
+
+Quite justifiably, in view of the imminence of "Baby Week."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=THE DISSUADERS.=
+
+For many years--ever since the first piece of chalk was applied to
+the first wall and advertising began its bombastic career--the
+advertiser's tendency has been to commend his wares, if not to excess,
+at any rate with no want of generosity. Everyone must have noticed it.
+But war changes many things besides Cabinets, and if the paper
+famine is to continue there will shortly be a totally novel kind of
+advertising to be seen, where dissuasion holds the highest place. For
+unless something happens those journals which have already done
+much to reduce circulation will have to do more and actually decry
+themselves. Such counsels as those which follow may before long meet
+the eyes, and, it is possible, influence the minds, of the great
+B.P.:--
+
+ * * *
+
+ THE PROPRIETORS OF
+
+ _THE TIMES_
+
+ Urge you to spend your money
+ elsewhere.
+
+ _THE TIMES_
+
+ may have the best foreign correspondence,
+ the latest news, the greatest
+ variety of letters (in types of all sizes),
+ the funniest dramatic criticisms, the
+ sternest leading articles, and the only
+ newspaper proprietor now acting as a
+ plenipotentiary in America;
+
+ BUT
+
+ you are implored not to buy it.
+
+ Remember its virtues for future use,
+ when skies are brighter, but disregard
+ them to-day.
+
+ * * *
+
+ We appeal to the great-hearted Public
+ to make a real effort and refrain from
+ buying
+
+ _THE OBSERVER._
+
+ Sunday may be only half a Sunday
+ without it;
+
+ But indulge in a little self-sacrifice.
+
+ Not only eat less bread
+ But
+ Read less GARVIN.
+
+ * * *
+
+ DOWN SPECTATORS!
+
+ Give
+
+ _THE SPECTATOR_
+
+ A WIDE BERTH.
+
+ There are reasons why it must be published
+ regularly
+
+ But there are no reasons why you
+ should buy it.
+
+ There is no better, saner, or soberer
+ Critic of Life; but what of it?
+
+ We print all the latest Canine and
+ Feline news; but never mind.
+
+ If you won't, as seems probable, down
+ your glass, down your _Spectator_.
+
+ * * *
+
+ HELP TO WIN THE WAR
+
+ BY NOT BUYING
+
+ _THE DAILY CHRONICLE_.
+
+ * * *
+
+ Whatever Sixpenny weekly you buy
+ don't let it be
+
+ _THE NATION_.
+
+ Owing to its persecution by the present
+ incapable Government _The Nation_ is
+ achieving an embarrassing popularity.
+
+ Please forget it.
+
+ Let your only
+
+ NATION
+
+ Be your determi-
+
+ Nation
+
+ NOT TO BUY IT.
+
+ * * *
+
+ THE PROPRIETORS OF
+
+ _THE STAR_
+
+ urge you not to buy it any more until
+ the War is over and paper is cheap again.
+
+ Buy _The Evening News_ instead.
+
+ * * *
+
+ DON'T BUY
+
+ _THE SPHERE_.
+
+ IT IS ONLY SEVENPENCE A WEEK,
+
+ BUT DON'T BUY IT.
+
+ It is full of Pictures of the War, but
+ you can do without them. It has
+ punctual literary judgments of astounding
+ finality by "C.K.S.," but they
+ can wait.
+
+ Do anything in reason, but don't buy
+
+ _The Sphere_.
+
+The depreciation, you observe, is not always quite whole-heartedly
+done. But it must be remembered that the habit of self-praise cannot
+be broken down in a minute, and this is only a beginning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PAN PIPES.
+
+ In the green spaces of the listening trees
+ Pan sits at ease,
+ Watching with lazy eyes
+ Little blue butterflies
+ That flicker sidelong in the fitful breeze;
+ While on his pipe he plays
+ Quaint trills, and roundelays
+ With dropping cadences;
+ And shy red squirrels rub against his knees.
+
+ And, thro' the city's tumult and the beat
+ Of hurrying feet,
+ Those whom the god loves hear
+ Pan's pipe, insistent, clear;
+ Echoes of elfin laughter, high and sweet;
+ Catch in the sparrows' cries
+ Those tinkling melodies
+ That sing where brooklets meet,
+ And the wood's glamour colours the grey street.
+
+
+=A LOCAL FOOD-CONTROLLER.=
+
+"No partner for you this evening, Sir," said the Inspector. "Mr.
+Tibbits has just telephoned through that he has rheumatism badly
+again."
+
+I know Tibbits' rheumatism. I also know he plays off his heat in the
+club billiard handicap to-night. I can imagine him writhing round
+the table. Still I remember the first rule of the force--under no
+circumstances give another policeman away.
+
+"You'll have to take Dartmouth Street by yourself, Sir," continues the
+Inspector.
+
+"What's it like?"
+
+"Bit of a street market. All right--just tact and keep them moving."
+
+I reach Dartmouth Street. It is a thronged smelly thoroughfare. I pass
+along modestly, hoping that every one will ignore me.
+
+But a gentleman who is selling fish detects me and calls "'Ere, Boss,
+move this ole geezer on."
+
+"What's the trouble?" I inquire.
+
+The old geezer turns rapidly on me. "'Ere 'e's gone and sold me two
+'errings for tuppence 'alfpenny which was that salt my 'usband went
+near mad, what with the pubs bein' shut all afternoon, an' now 'e's
+popped the fender jus' to get rid of 'is thirst."
+
+"I told you to soak 'em in three waters," says the fishmonger.
+
+"'Ow much beer is my 'usband to soak 'imself in--tell me that?"
+
+It is time for tact. I whisper in the lady's ear, "Come along--don't
+argue with a man like that. He's beneath you."
+
+She comes away. I am triumphant. But she turns round and cries, "This
+gentleman as _is_ a gentleman says I ain't to lower meself by talkin'
+to a 'ound like you."
+
+I move on. I doubt if the fishmonger will be pleased by the lady's
+representation of my few words, and I make a mental note to keep away
+from his stall. All at once another lady, who for some obscure reason
+is carrying a bucket, grips me by the arm.
+
+"I'm goin' to 'ave the law on my side, I am," she declares
+emphatically, "an' then I'll smash 'is bloomin' fice in."
+
+I am swayed towards a fruit-stall.
+
+"Look at them," says the irate lady, holding out three potatoes.
+"Rotten--at thrippence a pound. My 'usband 'e'd 'ave set abaht me if
+I'd give 'im them for 'is dinner."
+
+The fruiterer takes a lofty moral standard. "I sold yer them fer seed
+pertaters, I did. If yer 'usband eats them 'e's worse than a Un."
+
+"Seed pertaters, was they? Where was I to grow 'em? In a mug on the
+mantelpiece?"
+
+"'Ow was I ter know yer 'adn't a 'lotment?"
+
+"You'll need no 'lotment. It's a cemet'ry you'll want when my 'usband
+knows you've called 'im a Un."
+
+"Now, now," I interpose tactfully. "Perhaps you can exchange them,
+then you'll have the lady for a regular customer."
+
+"I don't want the blighter fer a reglar customer," says the fruiterer.
+
+Three potatoes whirl past me at the fruiterer. The lady with the
+bucket departs rapidly.
+
+"Lemme get at 'er," cries the irate fruiterer.
+
+"You wouldn't hit a woman," I protest.
+
+"Wouldn't I?" says the infuriated fruiterer.
+
+I interpose--verbally. "You'll get everything stolen," I say, "from
+your stall if you leave it."
+
+"I'll leave you in charge."
+
+"I'm needed down my beat," I reply, and stalk on instantly, leaving a
+sadly disillusioned man behind me.
+
+I reach a queue outside a grocer's shop.
+
+"There now," says a stout lady, "give 'er in charge."
+
+The queue all speak at once.
+
+"She's a 'oarder, she is. Got 'arf-a-pound o' sugar already in 'er
+basket and only 'erself and 'er 'usband at 'ome, while I got five
+kids."
+
+A lady down the queue caps this with seven kids, and in the distance a
+lady in a fur cap claims ten, and is at once engaged by her neighbours
+in a bitter controversy as to whether three in France should count in
+sugar buying.
+
+All the time the hoarder stands with nose in the air, the picture of
+lofty indifference.
+
+Tact--tact--I remember the Inspector's advice.
+
+"Excuse me, Madam," I say, "but in these times we all have to make
+sacrifices. You already have sugar. Some of your friends have none.
+Under the circumstances--"
+
+Slowly the lady turns a withering eye on me. "I'll move nowhere no'ow
+for nobody."
+
+A lady in the background suggests that the female should be boiled in
+a sugar-sack. A more humane person expresses the hope that she will be
+bombed that night.
+
+"But, Madam, consider your friends," I proceed.
+
+"Don't you call that lot my friends! I'm 'ere fer a pound of marge,
+and get it I will if all the bloomin' speshuls come 'oo 're doin'
+reglar coppers outer jobs."
+
+Public opinion in the queue takes a sudden turn. One lady remarks that
+these speshuls are that interfering. Another alleges that she has no
+doubt I have sacks of sugar at home.
+
+I remember the Inspector's counsel about moving on, and move myself
+on.
+
+There is one man in England who proclaims himself absolutely unfitted
+to fill the Food-Controller's position.
+
+I am that modest person.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Stage Manager._"THE ELEPHANT'S PUTTING UP A VERY
+SPIRITED PERFORMANCE TO-NIGHT."
+
+_Carpenter_. "YESSIR. YOU SEE, THE NEW HIND-LEGS IS A DISCHARGED
+SOLDIER, AND THE FRONT LEGS is AN OUT-AND-OUT PACIFIST."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Broody.
+
+ "WHIST DRIVE.--A sitting of eggs was given by Mrs. ---- for the
+ lady or gentleman sitting the greatest number of times
+ consecutively."--_Worcester Daily Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In Captain ----'s boat all the men survived, although full of
+ water."--_New Zealand Paper._
+
+In the interests of temperance we protest against "although."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "RUSSIAN TROOPS MUTINY.
+
+ Petrograd, Saturday.
+
+ The Minister of War has given orders to disband the regiments, and
+ to bring the officers and men responsible before a court-marital."
+ _East Anglian Daily Times._
+
+That's right. Let their wives talk to them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "I'LL LEARN YER TO CALL ME 'LITTLE WILLIE.' MY FARVER
+DON'T ARF KNOW 'OW TO KILL GERMANS. AN' _I'LL SHOW YER WHERE HE GITS
+IT FROM!_"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=OPEN WARFARE.= Men said, "At last! at last the open battle!
+ Now shall we fight unfettered o'er the plain,
+ No more in catacombs be cooped like cattle,
+ Nor travel always in a devious drain!"
+ They were in ecstasies. But I was damping;
+ I like a trench, I have no lives to spare;
+ And in those catacombs, however cramping,
+ You did at least know vaguely where you were.
+
+ Ah, happy days in deep well-ordered alleys,
+ Where, after dining, probably with wine,
+ One felt indifferent to hostile sallies,
+ And with a pipe meandered round the line;
+ You trudged along a trench until it ended;
+ It led at least to some familiar spot;
+ It might not be the place that you'd intended,
+ But then you might as well be there as not.
+
+ But what a wilderness we now inhabit
+ Since this confounded "open" strife prevails!
+ It may be good; I do not wish to crab it,
+ But you should hear the language it entails,
+ Should see this waste of wide uncharted craters
+ Where it is vain to seek the companies,
+ Seeing the shell-holes are as like as taters
+ And no one knows where anybody is.
+
+ Oft in the darkness, palpitant and blowing,
+ Have I set out and lost the hang of things,
+ And ever thought, "Where _can_ the guide be going?"
+ But trusted long and rambled on in rings,
+ For ever climbing up some miry summit,
+ And halting there to curse the contrite guide,
+ For ever then descending like a plummet
+ Into a chasm on the other side.
+
+ Oft have I sat and wept, or sought to study
+ With hopeless gaze the uninstructive stars,
+ Hopeless because the very skies were muddy;
+ I only saw a red malicious Mars;
+ Or pulled my little compass out and pondered,
+ And set it sadly on my shrapnel hat,
+ Which, I suppose, was why the needle wandered,
+ Only, of course, I never thought of that.
+
+ And then perhaps some 5.9's start dropping,
+ As if there weren't sufficient holes about;
+ I flounder on, hysterical and sopping,
+ And come by chance to where I started out,
+ And say once more, while I have no objection
+ To other people going to Berlin,
+ Give _me_ a trench, a nice revetted section,
+ And let me stay there till the Bosch gives in!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=A Judge Speaks Out.=
+
+ "Regarding the assertions that the appellant introduced politics
+ into his sermons, it would be a bad day for this country when in
+ a political controversy when a clergyman could conceive cases in
+ which some high ideal was involved in a political controversy
+ when a clergyman could honestly and reasonably preach about
+ it."--_Yorkshire Post._
+
+We have always felt that something like this needed saying.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: COMFORT IN EXILE.
+
+IMPERIAL BROTHER-IN-LAW. "AFTER ALL, MY DEAR TINO, YOU ARE SOMETHING
+BETTER THAN A KING; YOU ARE A FIELD-MARSHAL IN MY ARMY! YOU SHALL
+PRESENTLY HAVE A COMMAND ON THE WESTERN FRONT."
+
+TINO _(without enthusiasm)_. "THANK YOU VERY MUCH."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.=
+
+_Monday, June 11th_.--I am told that it was WILLIE REDMOND'S ambition
+to be the Father of the House; indeed, that by some arithmetical
+process peculiar to himself be claimed, although only elected in 1883,
+to be already entitled to that venerable honour.
+
+In reality he was the Eternal Boy, from the far-off time when it was
+his nightly delight with youthful exuberance to cheek Mr. Speaker
+BRAND until the moment of his glorious death in Flanders, whither he
+had gone at an age when most of his compeers were content to play the
+critic in a snug corner of the smoking-room.
+
+Personal affection combined with admiration for his gallantry to
+inspire the speeches in which the PRIME MINISTER, Mr. ASQUITH and Sir
+EDWARD CARSON enshrined the most remarkable tribute ever paid to a
+private Member.
+
+Sir GEORGE GREENWOOD'S affection for the animal creation is commonly
+supposed to be such that he would not countenance the slaughter of the
+meanest thing that crawls--not even those miserable creatures who hold
+that SHAKSPEARE'S plays were written by SHAKSPEARE. It was therefore
+with pained regret that I heard him attempting to support his
+objection to the activities of sparrow-clubs by the argument that,
+if the birds were destroyed, large numbers of grubs and caterpillars
+would be left alive. After this I shall not be surprised to hear that
+he has been summoned by the R.S.P.C.A. for brutality to a slug.
+
+What I most admire in the CHIEF SECRETARY FOR IRELAND is his wonderful
+self-restraint. When Mr. GINNELL stridently inquired whether to
+institute legal process against the police in Ireland was not like
+bringing an action against Satan in hell, the ordinary man would
+have been tempted to reply: "The hon. Member probably has sources of
+information not accessible to me." Mr. DUKE contented himself
+with mildly suggesting that the hon. Member should "apply his own
+intelligence to that matter." Perhaps, however, he meant much the same
+thing.
+
+[Illustration: _IN RE_ AN ACTION AGAINST SATAN.
+
+(MR. H.E. DUKE, K.C.)]
+
+Half the sitting was taken up with discussing whether Messrs. JOWETT
+and RAMSAY MACDONALD should be given passports to Russia. Mr. BONAR
+LAW clinched the matter by saying that the Russian Government wanted
+them. Well, _de gustibus_, etc.
+
+_Tuesday, June 12th_.--Perhaps the most wonderful revelation of the
+War has been the adaptability of the British working-man. Mr. CATHCART
+WASON called attention to the case of a professional gardener who,
+having been recruited for home service, had first been turned into a
+bricklayer's assistant, then into an assistant-dresser, and finally
+into a munition-maker. For some time the Ministry of Munitions
+seems to have been loth to part with the services of this Admirable
+Crichton, but having learned from the Board of Agriculture that there
+was a shortage of food it has now consented to restore him to his
+original vocation.
+
+It will be a thousand pities if Captain BATHURST should persist in
+leaving the department of the FOOD-CONTROLLER. If he could only keep
+down food-prices as effectively as he does irrelevant questioners he
+would be worth his weight in "Bradburys." His latest victim is Mr.
+PENNEFATHER, who has developed a keen curiosity on the subject of
+potatoes. Did not the Government think that the high price would cause
+premature "lifting"? Were they aware that potatoes could be used for
+making rubber substitutes and cement; and would they assure the House
+that there would be an abundance of them for the next twelve months'?
+Captain BATHURST declined to figure in the _rôle_ of prophet, and, for
+the rest, remarked that the hon. Member appeared to have an insatiable
+appetite for _crambe repetita_. Mr. PENNEFATHER is understood to be
+still searching the Encyclopædia to discover the properties of this
+vegetable, with the view of putting a few posers on the subject to
+Captain BATHURST (or his successor) next week.
+
+[Illustration: CAPTAIN BATHURST REFUSES TO BE A POTATO PROPHET.]
+
+As the friends of Proportional Representation are wont to refer to
+their little pet by the affectionate diminutive of "P.R.," they
+can hardly be surprised that its appearance should lead to combats
+recalling in intensity the palmy days of the Prize Ring. It was
+designed that the Front Bench should be content to perform the
+function of judicious bottle-holder, and leave the issue to be fought
+out by the rest of the House. But Sir F.E. SMITH, like the Irishman
+who inquired, "Is this a private fight, or may anyone join in?" could
+not refrain from trailing his coat, and quickly found a doughty
+opponent in Mr. HAYES FISHER. The House so much enjoyed the unusual
+freedom of the fight that it would probably be going on still but for
+that spoil-sport, the HOME SECRETARY, who begged Members to come to a
+decision. By 149 votes to 141 "P.R." was "down and out."
+
+Mr. EUGENE WASON entered an anticipatory protest against the
+possibility that Scotland might be deprived of some of her seventy-two
+Members. "I myself," he said, "represent two whole counties,
+Clackmannan and Kinross, and I have a bit of Stirling and Perth and
+West Fife, and I am told I am to be swept out of existence." Gazing at
+his ample proportions the House felt that the Boundary Commissioners
+will have their work cut out for them.
+
+[Illustration: HEAVY WORK FOR THE BOUNDARY COMISSIONERS.
+
+MR. EUGENE WASON TO BE SWEPT AWAY.]
+
+_Wednesday, June 13th_.--Considering that barely three hours before
+the House met the "Fort of London" had been drenched with the "ghastly
+dew of aerial navies" Members showed themselves most uncommon calm.
+They exhibited, however, a little extra interest when any prominent
+personage entered the House, showing that he at least had escaped the
+bombs, and were too busy comparing notes regarding their personal
+experiences to ask many Supplementary Questions.
+
+Even Mr. BONAR LAW'S announcement that KING CONSTANTINE had abdicated
+the throne of Greece passed almost without remark; except that Mr.
+SWIFT MACNEILL anxiously inquired whether TINO, having received the
+Order of the Boot, would be allowed to retain that of the Bath.
+
+The mystery of Lord NORTHCLIFFE'S visit to the United States has been
+cleared up. Certain journals, believed to enjoy his confidence, had
+described him as "Mr. Balfour's successor." Certain other journals,
+whose confidence he does not enjoy, had declined to believe this.
+The fact, as stated by Mr. BONAR LAW, is that "it is hoped that Lord
+NORTHCLIFFE will be able to carry on the work begun by Mr. BALFOUR
+as head of the British Mission in America." He is expected "to
+co-ordinate and supervise the work of all the Departmental Missions."
+It was interesting to learn that his Lordship "will have the right of
+communicating direct with the PRIME MINISTER"--a thing which of course
+he has never done before.
+
+_Thursday, June 14th_.--Mr. KEATING, having made the remarkable
+discovery that the War has injured the prosperity of Irish seaside
+resorts, demanded the restoration of excursion trains and season
+tickets. Mr. GEORGE ROBERTS stoutly supported the Irish Railway
+Executive Committee in its refusal to encourage pleasure-traffic.
+His decision received the involuntary support of Mr. MACVEAGH, who
+attempted to back up his colleague by the singular argument that the
+existing trains in Ireland ran half-empty.
+
+The Lords spent the best part of a sunny afternoon in discussing
+whether or not the South-Eastern Eailway should be allowed to bolster
+up the Charing Cross railway bridge. In vain Lord CURZON, flying in
+the face of his Ministerial colleague, the PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF
+TRADE, urged the claims of Art; in vain he assured the House that when
+WORDSWORTH wrote of the view from Westminster, "Earth has not anything
+to show more fair," he was not thinking of that maroon-coloured
+monstrosity. The majority of their lordships, understanding that the
+proposal had something to do with "strengthening the piers," declined
+to reject it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Officer_. "AND WHAT DID YOU SAY TO PRIVATE SMITH?"
+_Witness_ (_who had discovered prisoner milking cow belonging to
+French farmer_). "I TOLD HIM TO STOP IMMEDIATELY AND PUT THE MILK
+BACK."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have received a copy of _The Glasgow Weekly Herald_, dated "May 56,
+1917." Trust a Scot to make a good thing go as far as possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Great jubilation prevailed amongst the people at finding the
+ children alive, and congratulations were extended to their parents
+ that their little ones were not lost in the cavities and chasms of
+ Knocknatubber Mountain, though straying thereon for upwards of 25
+ years."--_Nenagh Guardian_.
+
+The young "Rips"!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _National Service Volunteer_ (_late crack billiard
+player_). "MARKER, HAND ME THE REST."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+="IN PRIZE."=
+
+ A ship was built in Glasgow, and oh, she looked a daisy
+ (Just the way that some ships do!)
+ An' the only thing against 'er was she allus steered so crazy
+ (An' it's true, my Johnny Bowline, true!)
+
+ They sent 'er out in ballast to Oregon for lumber,
+ An' before she dropped 'er pilot she all but lost 'er number.
+
+ They sold 'er into Norway because she steered so funny,
+ An' she nearly went to glory before they drawed the money.
+
+ They sold 'er out o' Norway--they sold 'er into Chile,
+ An' Chile got a bargain because she steered so silly.
+
+ They chartered 'er to Germans with a bunch o' greasers forrard;
+ Old shellbacks wouldn't touch 'er because she steered so 'orrid.
+
+ She set a course for Bremen with contraband inside 'er,
+ An' she might 'ave got there some time if a cruiser 'adn't spied 'er.
+
+ She nearly drowned the boarders because she cut such capers,
+ But they found she was a German through inspectin' of 'er papers.
+
+ So they put a crew aboard 'er, which was both right an' lawful,
+ An' the prize crew 'ad a picnic, because she steered so awful.
+
+ But they brought 'er into Kirkwall, an' then they said, "Lord lumme,
+ If I ever see an 'ooker as steered so kind o' rummy!"
+
+ But she'll fetch 'er price at auction, for oh, she looks a daisy
+ (Just the way that some ships do!)
+ An' the chap as tops the biddin' won't know she steers so crazy
+ (But it's true, my Johnny Bowline, true!)
+
+C.F.S.
+
+
+=TO MR. BALFOUR ON HIS RETURN.=
+
+ Our hearts go out with all our ships that plough the deadly sea,
+ But the ship that brought us safely back the only ARTHUR B.
+ Was freighted with good wishes in a very high degree.
+
+ There are heaps of politicians who can hustle and can shriek,
+ And some, though very strong in lung, in brains are very weak,
+ But A.J.B.'s equipment is admittedly unique.
+
+ His manners are delightful, and the workings of his mind
+ Have never shown the slightest trace of self-esteem behind;
+ Nor has he had at any time a private axe to grind.
+
+ For forty years and upwards he has graced the public scene
+ Without becoming sterilized or stiffened by routine;
+ He still retains his freshness and his brain is just as keen.
+
+ His credit was not shipwrecked on the fatal Irish reef;
+ He has always been a loyal and a sympathetic chief;
+ And he has also written _The Foundations of Belief_.
+
+ As leader of the Mission to our cousins and Allies,
+ We learn with satisfaction, but without the least surprise,
+ That he proved the very cynosure of Transatlantic eyes.
+
+ For the special brand of statesman _plus_ aristocratic sage,
+ Like the model king-philosopher described in PLATO'S page,
+ Is uncommonly attractive in a democratic age.
+
+ "BALFOUR Must Go!" was once the cry of those who deemed him slack,
+ But now there's not a single scribe of that unruly pack
+ Who is not glad in every sense that BALFOUR has come back.
+
+ And as for his "successor"--the Napoleonic peer
+ Whose functions are restricted to a purely business sphere--
+ We must try to bear his absence in a spirit of good cheer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=THE INFANTICIDE.=
+
+From an economic point of view it was inexcusable. I can only hope
+that the affair will never reach the ear of the new FOOD-CONTROLLER.
+The chief culprit was undoubtedly Joan minor--I only became an
+accomplice after the fact--and I can scarcely believe that even a
+Food-Controller could be very angry with Joan minor. For one thing she
+really is so very minor. And then there's her manner; in face of it
+severity, as I have found, is out of the question. Even Joan major,
+who has been known to rout our charlady in single combat, finds it
+irresistible. Indeed when I taxed her with having a hand in the crime
+she secured an acquittal on the plea of duress.
+
+Ever since Joan minor arrived at years of understanding the weeks
+preceding the great day have been fraught with a mystery in which I
+have no share. Earnest conversations which break off guiltily the
+moment I enter the room; strained whisperings and now and again little
+uncontrollable giggles of ecstatic anticipation from Joan minor--these
+are the signs that I have learned to look for, and, being well versed
+in my part, to ignore with a sublime unconsciousness which should make
+my fortune in a melodrama of stage asides. And then, on the morning of
+my birthday, the solemn ceremonial of revelation, I would come in to
+breakfast, to find a parcel lying by my plate. At first I would not
+see it. In a tense and unnatural silence Joan minor would follow me
+with her eyes while I opened the window a few inches, closed it again,
+stroked the cat and generally behaved as though sitting down at table
+was the last thing I intended. Then, when I did take my place, "The
+post is early to-day," I would say, pushing the parcel carelessly on
+one side as I took up the paper, while Joan minor hid her face in Joan
+major's blouse lest her feelings should betray her into premature
+speech. And at last I would open it, and my amazement and delight
+would know no bounds. There was very little acting needed for that. It
+is no small thing to be spirited back to the age when birthdays really
+matter.
+
+And so this year it was with a feeling of having been cheated that I
+left the house for the office, where, in company with other old fogies
+and girl clerks, I do my unambitious bit towards downing the Hun. The
+premonitory symptoms had seemed to me unusually acute, but the morning
+had brought no parcel. My years weighed on my shoulders again, and I
+am afraid I was more than a little tart with my typist.
+
+I was kept late for dinner, and when I entered the room I found Joan
+minor sitting in her place, her eyes bright with expectation. Beside
+my place was a covered muffin dish. There was no dallying with the
+pleasure this time, for I had suddenly become young again, and could
+not have waited had I tried. I lifted the cover, and there, about the
+size of a well-nourished pea, lay the first-fruit of Joan minor's
+peculiar and personal allotment, prepared, planted and dug by Joan
+minor's own hands, a veritable and unmistakable potato.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Official of Lady War-workers' Bureau_. "WHAT SORT OF
+WORK DO YOU FEEL FITTED FOR?"
+
+_Applicant_. "I DON'T QUITE KNOW, BUT I WANT TO WEAR THESE CLOTHES."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our Official Pessimists.
+
+From an Admiralty notice:--
+
+ "It is to be particularly noted that entries are only being made
+ for 12 years' service, and not for duration of war."--_Evening
+ Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Summoned at Barry for having driven a horse whilst drunk, Antonio
+ Millonas was stated to have narrowly missed a policeman and two
+ children."--_Western Mail_.
+
+We are all in favour of prohibition for horses.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=IN A GOOD CAUSE.=
+
+The Newport Market Army Training School, Greencoat Place, Westminster,
+which has for over fifty years been training homeless and destitute
+boys to become soldiers of the KING, and has sent over two thousand
+into the Army, is in great need of funds. Mr. Punch cordially supports
+the appeal of the President of the School, H.R.H. the Duke of
+CONNAUGHT, who "sincerely hopes the public will generously support
+an Institution that has for so many years quietly and unobtrusively
+furnished a Christian home and education to poor and outcast lads, and
+has supplied the Army with so many good and gallant soldiers."
+
+Donations and inquiries should be addressed to the Secretary, the Rev.
+H.A. WILSON, 20, Great Peter Street, Westminster, S.W.1.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Credit to the Commonwealth.
+
+ "COCKATOO, Australian, splendid talker, does not
+ swear."--_Newcastle Evening Chronicle_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=THE HAT AND THE VISIT.=
+
+"Francesca," I said, "does my hat really look all right?"
+
+When I put this momentous question we were in a train, being bound on
+a visit to Frederick at his preparatory school. A sudden doubt had
+just assailed me as to my presentability. Should I, as a father, be
+looked upon as a credit or a disgrace to my son? Francesca took some
+time before she answered my question. Then she spoke.
+
+"Your hat," she said, "is well enough."
+
+"I see what it is," I said; "you think I ought to have worn a top-hat.
+There are still occasions when a top-hat may, nay, must be worn; and
+this, you think, is one of them. There are solemnities and venerations
+that only a top-hat can inspire in the naturally irreverent mind of
+youth. A father in any other hat is a ridiculously youthful object and
+has no business to inflict himself on his son. Very well. I would not
+for worlds spoil Frederick's half-holiday by shaming him in the eyes
+of his schoolfellows."
+
+"What do you propose to do about it, then? You can't alter your hat
+now."
+
+"No," I said, "I can't; but I can get out of the train at the next
+station and go home and leave you in your comparative spickness and
+your relative spanness to spend your afternoon with the boy. Or, stay,
+there must be a shop in Belfield where top-hats can be bought. It is a
+cathedral city and possesses dignitaries of the Church who still wear
+top-hats, and----"
+
+"But those are special top-hats. You couldn't go to Frederick in a
+bishop's hat, now could you?"
+
+"No-o-o," I said doubtfully, "perhaps I couldn't. But suppose I wore
+the gaiters too--wouldn't that make it all right?"
+
+"I should like," she said, "to see Frederick's face on perceiving the
+new bishop."
+
+"Francesca," I said, "you talk as if no boys ever had bishops for
+their fathers. Let me assure you, on the contrary, that there are many
+bishops who have large families of both sexes. I once stayed with a
+bishop, and I never heard anybody attempt to make a mockery of his
+gaiters."
+
+"But they were his own. He couldn't be a bishop without them."
+
+"That fact doesn't render them immune from laughter. My present hat,
+for instance, is my own, and yet you have been laughing at it ever
+since I called your attention to it."
+
+"Not at all; I have been admiring it. I said it was well enough, and
+so it is. What more can you want?"
+
+"I only hope," I said, "that Frederick will think so too. It would be
+too painful to dash the cup of half-holiday joy from a boy's lips by
+wearing an inappropriate hat."
+
+"You're too nervous altogether about the impression you're going to
+make on Frederick. Take example by me. I've got a hat on."
+
+"You have," I said fervently. "It has grazed my face more than once."
+
+"It is feeding," she said, "on your damask cheek. But I'm quite calm
+in spite of it."
+
+"But then," I said, "you never knew Rowell."
+
+"No. Who was he?"
+
+"Rowell," I said, "was a schoolfellow of mine, and he had a father."
+
+"Marvellous! And a mother too, I suppose."
+
+"Yes," I said, "but she doesn't come into the story. Rowell's father
+had a passion, it appears, for riding, and one dreadful afternoon,
+when we were playing cricket, he rode into the cricket-field. _He was
+wearing trousers, and his trousers had rucked up to his knees._ It was
+a terrific sight, and, though we all pretended not to see and were
+very sorry for young Rowell, he felt the blow most keenly. I hope my
+hat won't be like Rowell's father's trousers."
+
+"It isn't a bit like them yet," said Francesca.
+
+R.C.L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Officer_. "BUT SURELY, THOMPSON, IF THESE MUD-BILLETS
+ARE ALL ALIKE YOU OUGHT TO REMEMBER WHERE YOU PUT MY HORSE----"]
+
+[Illustration: _Batman_. "HERE HE IS, SIR."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Fireman wanted; consuming under 50 tons; wages 30s."
+
+Under the present system of rationing, this demand for moderation does
+not seem excessive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Inspecting Officer_. "IT'S NO USE YOUR TELLING ME YOU
+HAVEN'T GOT ANY POTATOES ABOUT THE PLACE. IF YOU HOLD THE END OF THIS
+TAPE I'LL VERY SOON TELL YOU HOW MANY YOU HAVE HERE."
+
+_Farmer_. "YE'LL BE A MAIN CLEVER LITTLE FELLOW, THEN. THEY WAS
+TURMUTS WHEN I PUT 'EM IN LAST BACK END."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.=
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks_.)
+
+It is my deliberate verdict that Mr. E.F. BENSON is (as my old nurse
+used to express it) "in league with Somebody he oughtn't." I hope,
+however, that he will understand this for the extorted compliment that
+it is, and not magic me into something unpleasant, or (more probably)
+write another book to prove to my own dissatisfaction that I am
+everything I least wish to be. That indeed is the gravamen of my
+charge: the diabolic ingenuity with which he makes not so much our
+pleasant vices as our little almost-virtues into whips to scourge us
+with. All this has been wrung from me by the perusal of _Mr. Teddy_
+(FISHER UNWIN). Even now I can't make up my mind whether I like it or
+not. The first half, which might be called a satire on the folly of
+being forty and not realising it, depressed me profoundly. I need not
+perhaps enlarge upon the reason. Later, Mr. BENSON made a very clever
+return upon the theme; and, with a touch of real beauty, brought
+solace to poor _Mr. Teddy_ and consolation to the middle-aged reader.
+I need give you only a slight indication of the plot, which is
+simplicity itself. Into the self-contained little community of a
+provincial society, where to have once been young is to retain a
+courtesy title to perpetual youth, there arrives suddenly the genuine
+article, a boy and girl still in the springtime of life, by contrast
+with whom the preserved immaturity of _Mr. Teddy_ and his partner,
+_Miss Daisy_, is shown for an artificial substitute. Baldly stated,
+the thesis sounds cynical and a little cruel; actually, however,
+you will here find Mr. BENSON in a kindlier mood than he sometimes
+consents to indulge. He displays, indeed, more than a little fondness
+for his disillusioned hero; the fine spirit with which _Mr. Teddy_
+faces at last the inevitable is a sure proof of the author's sympathy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You will hardly have traversed the passages of our underground railway
+system without being hurriedly aware in passing of a picture in reds
+and browns, representing a faun-like figure piping to an audience of
+three rather self-conscious rabbits. This pleasing group does not
+portray an actual scene from _Autumn_ (LANE), but is rather to be
+taken as symbolic of the atmosphere of Miss MURIEL HINE'S latest book.
+The faun, I imagine, stands for _Rollo_, the middle-aged lover of the
+country, into whose happy life other, more human, loves break with
+such devastation. What the rabbits mean is a more difficult problem. I
+jest; but as a matter of fact I should be the first to admit that Miss
+HINE has written a story that, despite a certain crudity of colouring,
+is both unconventional and alive. The attitude of the characters
+towards their parents, for example, is at least original. _Deirdre_,
+the heroine, frankly despised her mother, to whom she owed a marriage
+with the man whom she hated. The gift of a country cottage enabled
+her to escape from him to rabbits (figurative) and the simpler life.
+There, however, she fell in with _Rollo_, who loved her at sight,
+and whose daughter, _Hyacinth_, adored her father, but quite blandly
+deceived him about her own amorous adventures. A pretty tangle, you
+observe, and I am not sure that I can wholly acquit the author of
+some cowardice in her manner of cutting it. But undoubtedly _Autumn_
+remains a story to read, and remember.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Since Mr. H. PERRY ROBINSON'S name must be familiar to most of us
+by now as that of one of the very select company of journalists who
+monopolise seats at the Front, one naturally turns with interest from
+his daily despatches to a sustained narrative. His account of last
+year's battle of the Somme, which he names _The Turning Point_
+(HEINEMANN), is as lively and vigorous a recital as can well be
+imagined of events hardly the less thrilling because already
+well-known. Although he disclaims expert knowledge of strategies, he
+is at least uncommonly well qualified to appraise the things he saw.
+"Before July, 1916, our Army," he says, "was like a small hoy hoping
+to grow up and be big enough to lick a bully some day. Told to attack
+him before he felt sure of his own strength, the small boy would not
+have been sorry to wait a bit longer, but the pressure against Verdun
+and against the Russians had to be relieved, and so with steadily
+increasing skill and confidence the attack was made, and day after day
+fresh units proved themselves more than a match for the enemy." The
+result was a series of victories--Mametz, Contalmaison, Pozières,
+Guillemont, Thiepval, Beaumont-Hamel--and the writer is able to
+associate with each immortal name the regiments there engaged, all
+heroes, for "there were no stragglers." Indeed, if there is a weakness
+in the book it is that the insistent recording of the individual
+heroism of different battalions tends to become monotonous. But what
+a fault! It is a monotony of British valour crowned by a monotony of
+British triumph.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A point that will hardly avoid your notice in the plot of _In the
+Night_ (LONGMANS), by Mr. R. GORELL BARNES (now Lord GORELL), is the
+exiguous part played in its elucidation by the Great Investigator, who
+(as usual) happens to be on the spot and able to place his services
+at the disposal of the local authorities. It is, I suppose due to the
+Sherlockian tradition these unhappy persons, the local detectives,
+must always be supplemented by a superior and high-handed expert. I
+think, from his preface, that the author does not quite share my own
+taste in such matters, since he promises that his Investigator shall
+keep no secrets and observe nothing withheld from the eye of the
+reader. So faithful is the author to this undertaking that he
+practically keeps his expert hanging about with the unenlightened
+crowd, while another character, in light-hearted amateur enthusiasm,
+does all the work. But of course, in a tale of this kind, the only
+thing that really matters is the one question of spotting the
+criminal, or who killed Cock Robin. Naturally I am not going to spoil
+your fun over this by any officious whisperings. As you probably know,
+the one safe rule in such matters is to concentrate upon Cæsar's wife;
+and even in repeating this antique maxim I may have betrayed too
+much. Forget it, and you may find what happened _In the Night_
+a sufficiently intriguing problem to provide a pleasant bedtime
+entertainment that will leave your subsequent repose unimpaired.
+
+In deciding to add to what one may call the fiction of Metropolitan
+Adventures, whereof _The New Arabian Nights_ may be regarded as both
+the model and the prototype, the author of _The London Nights
+of Belsize_ (LANE) has undertaken a task which is both easy and
+difficult--easy because a sophisticated style and a lively imagination
+are the only essential qualifications, and difficult because it
+involves competition with a perfect galaxy of distinguished authors.
+There is always room for more of it, however, and, if Mr. VERNON
+RENDALL disappoints us, it is not merely because the standard has
+been set unusually high. His style is smooth and assured, and, though
+somewhat lacking in humour, his touch is light and pleasing. He begins
+well and interests us in his principal character so that we look
+forward with zest to the adventures of a personality which is
+everything that this sort of fiction requires. Here unfortunately the
+matter ends. _Belsize_, who promises so much, has no adventures worth
+the name. It is true that he rescues the _Prince of Mingrelia_, runs
+to earth a gang of highly-educated and æsthetic criminals, and does
+other things that we properly expect such men to do. But there is no
+excitement about his methods. Not to put too fine a point on it, the
+author of _Belsize_ lacks the true imagination that makes the unreal
+seem real--a very different thing from the imagination which merely
+clothes realities in a garment of mystery. Notwithstanding this
+defect, _The London Nights of Belsize_ should wile away an hour or so
+very pleasantly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Delighted Patriot (after three days' absence)_. "NOT
+MUCH TO FEAR FROM U-BOATS IF WE CAN GROW FOOD AT THIS RATE!"
+
+_Voice from, above_. "PLEASE WOULD YOU THROW OVER OUR LITTLE BOY'S
+ZEPPELIN?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If _A Regimental Surgeon in War and Prison_ (MURRAY) does not create
+so profound an impression as it would have done two years ago, the
+reason must be that our capacity for disgust at Hunnish cruelty is
+exhausted by the demands already made upon it. Captain DOLBEY was in
+the Mons retreat and assisted at what he calls "the Miracle of the
+Marne," and in writing of these events he shows a real knowledge of
+both friend and foe. Taken prisoner under circumstances entirely
+creditable to himself, he saw the inside of German prison-camps, and
+suffered the indignities and horrors for which these places have so
+justly become infamous. His experiences are described with an almost
+judicial calmness. In one case of childish revenge I trust that the
+sufferers were sustained by a sense of humour. When the picture of a
+"Prussian family having its morning hate" appeared, the prisoners were
+punished by having their deck-chairs confiscated. Mr. Punch, while
+deeply regretting this vicarious expiation of his offence, cannot help
+deriving some solace from the thought that he succeeded in penetrating
+the hide of these Teuton pachyderms. When, for a change, Captain
+DOLBEY received a kindness from German hands he acknowledges it
+frankly. He also makes one or two suggestions which I sincerely hope
+will be considered by those who are in a position to deal with them.
+Altogether an illuminating book.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+152, June 20, 1917, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152,
+June 20, 1917, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152, June 20, 1917
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Owen Seaman
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2006 [EBook #17629]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lesley Halamek and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>PUNCH,<br />OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+<h2>Vol. 152.</h2>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>June 20th, 1917.</h2>
+<hr class="full" />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page393" id="page393"></a>[pg 393]</span>
+<h2>CHARIVARIA.</h2>
+<p>
+A man who purchased sandwiches at
+a railway restaurant and afterwards
+threw them into the road was fined five
+shillings at Grimsby Police Court last
+week. His explanation&mdash;that he did
+not know they might injure the road&mdash;was
+not accepted by the Court.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+We cannot help thinking that too
+much fuss has been made about trying
+to stop Messrs. <span class="sc">Ramsay Macdonald</span>
+and <span class="sc">Jowett</span> from leaving England.
+So far as we can gather they did not
+threaten to return to this country afterwards.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+A North of England man, obviously
+wishing to appear unusual,
+still persists in the stupid
+story that he did not hear
+the Messines explosion.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+We can think of no finer
+example of the humility of
+true greatness than <span class="sc">King
+Constantine's</span> decision to
+abdicate.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+There were forty thousand
+fewer paupers in 1916 than
+in 1915, according to figures
+recently published. The difference
+is accounted for by
+the number of revue-writers
+who have resumed their agricultural
+occupations.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+In a small town in Australia,
+says a news item, over
+two tons of mice were killed
+in two days. For some unknown
+reason, which perhaps
+the Censor can explain, the
+name of the cat is withheld.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+"Eliminate the middleman," demands
+a contemporary. It might prove a simpler
+affair, after all, than the present
+system of suppressing the inner man.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Mr. <span class="sc">Ginnell</span>, M.P., is responsible
+for the statement that "bringing an
+action against the police in Ireland is
+like bringing one against Satan in hell."
+The chief obstacle in the latter case is
+of course the total absence of learned
+counsel in that locality.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+The <span class="sc">Kaiser</span>, it appears, has lost no
+time in commiserating with his troops
+on their magnificent victory at Messines.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+The title which Mr. <span class="sc">John Hassall</span>
+wrote under one of his sketches suggested
+the words for a song which has
+now been written. It is only fair to
+the artist to say that he was not aware
+that his quite innocent title would lead
+to this.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+The National Service staff at St.
+Ermin's Hotel, Westminster, has been
+reduced by half. It is now expected
+that the unemployed half will volunteer
+for National Service.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Berlin announces that all through-lines
+in Germany are running. The
+case of the <span class="sc">Hindenburg</span> Line seems to
+be infectious.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+"No cheese," says <i>The Evening News</i>,
+"has quite the bite of Cheddar." At
+the same time, unless it wags its tail
+to show that it is friendly, we feel that
+every cheese with a bite like that would
+be much safer if muzzled.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Triplets were born in Manchester
+last week. The father is going on as
+well as can be expected.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Complaint has been made by a
+member of the Hounslow Burial Committee
+of courting couples occupying
+seats in the cemetery. The killjoy!</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+We can only suppose it was the hot
+weather that tempted a newsagent
+correspondent to ask whether Lord
+<span class="sc">Northcliffe</span> had gone to America on
+"sail or return." </p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Mr. <span class="sc">Balfour</span>, we are told, while staying
+at Washington, visited eleven public
+buildings and interviewed nine representative
+Americans on one day. There
+is some talk of his being elected an
+honorary American.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+We wish to deny the foolish rumour
+that when he arrived in London from
+his American tour and was asked if he
+had had a good voyage, he remarked,
+"Sure thing, sonny. All the little
+Mister Congressmen gathered around,
+and it suited your Uncle Dudley very
+nicely and some more. Yep!"</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+An old lady was recently fined two
+pounds for putting out crumbs for
+birds. Had the bread-crumbs been put
+outside, instead of inside, the birds, no
+offence, it seems, would have been
+committed.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Newspapers in Germany may now
+be sold only to subscribers for one
+month or more. A similar measure for
+England is opposed on the
+ground that it would be most
+inadvisable to check the practice
+at present in vogue among
+patriotic supporters of the
+Coalition Government of buying
+<i>The Morning Post</i> and <i>The
+Daily News</i> on alternate days.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Bobbing for eels is being
+pursued with much enthusiasm
+on the Norfolk Broads.
+Two-bobbing for haddocks in
+Kensington is sport enough
+for most of us.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Large numbers of the German
+prisoners taken at Messines
+wore new boots and new
+uniforms. Other improvements
+included a less ragged
+rendering of the well-known
+recitation, "Kamerad!"</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Asked what bait could be
+used for coarse fish, the late
+<span class="sc">Food-Controller</span> suggested one "made
+from bran, with a limited quantity of
+oatmeal." The correspondent has now
+written to inquire whether the fish
+have been officially informed of the
+new diet.</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+<p>
+Four shillings a hundredweight is
+being paid for old omnibus tickets, but
+there are still a few people who use
+these vehicles for pleasure, without any
+motive of gain.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
+<a href="images/393.png"><img src="images/393-543.png" width="543" height="450" alt="Yes, but what's the point of whitewashing the tree trunks?" /></a>
+
+<p><i>Visitor</i>. "<span class="sc">Yes, but what's the point of whitewashing
+the tree trunks</span>?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Amateur Gardener</i>. "<span class="sc">I can't say for certain; but I <i>think</i>
+the idea is to keep the bats from knocking their heads
+in the dark</span>."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<h4>Suspended Animation.</h4>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"<span class="sc">Laundry</span>.&mdash;Girl to hang up and make
+herself useful."&mdash;<i>Liverpool Echo</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"For myself, I have very good reasons for
+not being in khaki. I live on a farm near the
+Grand Falls of the St. John River. These
+falls are second to Niagara in size and splendour,
+and attract visitors from all over the
+country."&mdash;<i>Canadian Paper</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+He must have told the recruiting-officer
+that he was subject to cataract.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page394" id="page394"></a>[pg 394]</span>
+
+<h2>T.M.G.</h2>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Farewell, my <span class="sc">Constantine</span>! A guardian navy</p>
+ <p class="i2">Facilitates your exit on the blue;</p>
+<p>For Greece has been this long while in the gravy</p>
+ <p class="i2">And he that put her there was plainly you;</p>
+<p>"<span class="sc">Tino Must Go</span>!" was writ for all to see,</p>
+ <p class="i4">Or, briefly, "T.M.G."</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Whither, dear Sir, do you propose to sally?</p>
+ <p class="i2">To Switzerland's recuperative air,</p>
+<p>To sip condensed milk in a private chalet</p>
+ <p class="i2">Or pluck the lissom chamois from his lair,</p>
+<p>Or on the summit of a neutral Alp</p>
+ <p class="i4">Recline your crownless scalp?</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Or did you ask from him you love so dearly</p>
+ <p class="i2">A royal haven fenced from rude alarms,</p>
+<p>Even though <span class="sc">William</span> should reserve you merely</p>
+ <p class="i2">A bedroom at "The Hohenzollern Arms,"</p>
+<p>Having for poor relations on the loose</p>
+ <p class="i4">No sort of further use?</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Beware! I gather he might clasp his <span class="sc">Tino</span></p>
+ <p class="i2">Only too warmly to his heaving chest,</p>
+<p>Saying, "O how reward such merits? <i>We</i> know!</p>
+ <p class="i2">Thou shalt command an Army in the West!</p>
+<p>Yes, thou shalt bear upon the British Front</p>
+ <p class="i4">The pick of all the brunt."</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Frankly, if I were you, I wouldn't chance it.</p>
+ <p class="i2">Fighting has never really been your forte;</p>
+<p>Witness Larissa, and your rapid transit,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Chivied by slow foot-sloggers of the Porte;</p>
+<p>Far better make for Denmark o'er the foam;</p>
+ <p class="i4">There is no place like home.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Try some ancestral palace, well-appointed;</p>
+ <p class="i2">For choice the one where <i>Hamlet</i> nursed his spite,</p>
+<p>Who found the times had grown a bit disjointed</p>
+ <p class="i2">And he was not the man to put 'em right;</p>
+<p>And there consult on that enchanted shore</p>
+ <p class="i4">The ghosts of Elsinore.</p> </div>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i16">O.S.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+ <hr />
+
+
+<h2>LESSONS OF THE WAR.</h2>
+
+<h4>I.</h4>
+<p>
+(<i>Acting upon instructions received from the 3rd Self-help
+Division the 9th Self-help Brigade issues its orders for
+a Raid.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sc">9th Self-help Brigade Operation Order</span> No. 49.</p>
+<p class="author"><i>August 1st, 1920</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Ref. Maps. <span class="sc">London</span> 1/40000 shoot 27<sup>d</sup> S.W. and (Special) 1/500
+(<span class="sc">Broadmead</span>).</p>
+
+<ul><li>
+<span class="outdent">1. The 9th Self-help Brigade</span> will carry out a Raid upon
+<span class="sc">Broadmead House, Broadmead Square</span>, W., on the night
+of 12/13 August.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">2. The Raid will</span> be carried out by the <span class="sc">Bill Sikes</span> and
+<span class="sc">Robin Hood</span> Battalions. The <span class="sc">Charlie Peace</span> Bn. will be
+in close support, and the <span class="sc">Dick Turpin</span> Bn. in reserve.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">3. The four sides</span> of the house will be attacked simultaneously,
+the <span class="sc">Bill Sikes</span> Bn. attacking with one Coy.
+each on the North and West, and the <span class="sc">Robin Hood</span> on the
+South and East.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">4. The noise of</span> entry will be covered by a barrage of
+street cries and taxi whistles. "Q." will arrange.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">5. Zero hour will</span> be notified later.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">6. The grounds</span> and approaches will be reconnoitred
+thoroughly and as many friends as possible made in the
+neighbourhood. Every opportunity of reconnoitring the
+house itself, either through friendship or by substitution
+for legitimate plumbers, window-cleaners, piano-tuners,
+etc., will be taken.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">7. The Brigades</span> on the Right and Left will co-operate
+by starting a street fight and a small fire respectively at
+some convenient distance from the scene of operations.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">8. At Zero</span> <i>minus</i> one hour, a cordon of outposts will be
+established at a radius of 500 yards from the house, with
+strong points at the street corners. "Q." will arrange for
+a supply of hedging-gloves.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent">9. The general</span> scheme of approach will be on the lines
+as laid down in the "Self-help Corps Standard Formation
+of Attack" (OK 340/CV/429).</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">10. Commanding</span> Officers will submit a detailed scheme
+for the attack (with sketch maps) not later than 4 P.M. on
+August 6th.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">11. Mopping-up</span> parties will be detailed to deal with all
+dug-outs known to be occupied. Prisoners will not be
+taken, but undue roughness is to be discouraged as likely
+to bring discredit upon the service. Steps will be taken,
+however, to ensure the immediate, if temporary, silence
+of the obstreperous. O.C. Chloroform will arrange.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">12. The Dog</span> emplacement at G 36 A 0.8 will be dealt
+with by the Brigade Dog-fancier.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">13. Brigade Cooks</span> will be detailed in specified areas to
+act as decoys for Policemen.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">14. All information</span> as to the plans, intentions, appearance,
+habits and dispositions of inhabitants will be found
+in Appendix I. Some good interior photographs of the
+house have been obtained by Corps photographers acting
+as window-cleaners.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">15. As foreshadowed</span> in the Self-help Corps Intelligence
+Summary of June 29th most of the family will be away
+at the seaside by the date fixed for the Raid.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">16. A teetotal</span> Guard will be placed over all cellars.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">17. Advanced Report</span> Centre will be at G 25 D 93 ("The
+Peck and Jackdaw").</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">18. A site for</span> a forward dump will be chosen&mdash;preferably
+on the <span class="sc">Bayswater-Broadmead</span> Road. "Q" will
+arrange.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">19. Practice Raids</span> will be carried out upon a model of
+the objective which will be erected at the depot.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">20. Parties detailed</span> for Glass-cutting, Safe-opening, etc.,
+etc., will draw the necessary tools from the Main Dump
+at K 25 A on the 12th inst. "Q" will arrange.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">21. Dress: Fighting</span> Order with Rubber Soles.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">22. A non-committal</span> hot meal (without onions) will be
+served to all before starting. "Q" will arrange.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">23. Results of the</span> Raid will be collected and dumped at
+Advanced Brigade dump at G 36 A. "Q" will arrange
+for necessary transport. Distribution of proceeds will be
+made in accordance with G.R.O. 15. "<i>G</i>" <i>Staff will
+arrange</i>.</li>
+<li>
+<span class="outdent1">24. Please acknowledge.</span>
+<p class="author1"><i>Issued at 5.15 P.M.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p></li>
+</ul>
+<ul class="left">
+<li>
+Copies to</li>
+<li>Diary I.</li>
+<li>Diary II., etc., etc.</li>
+</ul>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"Detroit aldermen yesterday adopted a resolution asking for the
+freedom of Ireland from British rule.</p>
+<p>
+It is addressed to the president and was introduced by Alderman
+Walsh.</p>
+<p>
+Other Irish patriots eager for the freedom of Erin who did sign
+the resolution were Jacob Guthard, William H.C. Hinkle, Joseph H.
+Bahorski, Joseph A. Miotke, Anthony Nowe, Herman Zink, Charles
+Braun, Charles A. Kocher, Oscar A. Dodt, John C. Bleil, Ralph G.
+Mitter, Alexander Dill, John A. Kronk, Herman Schultz, Albert G.
+Kunz, Frederick W. Wendell and Oscar Riopelle."</p>
+<p class="author">
+<i>Detroit Free Press</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+Your true Irish patriot doesn't mind what country he
+comes from.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page395" id="page395"></a>[pg 395]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<a href="images/395.png"><img src="images/395-358.png" width="358" height="450" alt="HOIST WITH HIS OWN PETARD." /></a>
+<h3>HOIST WITH HIS OWN PETARD.</h3>
+<p>
+<span class="sc">Mr. Ramsay Macdonald</span> (<i>Champion of Independent Labour</i>). "OF COURSE I'M ALL
+FOR PEACEFUL PICKETING&mdash;ON PRINCIPLE. BUT IT MUST BE APPLIED TO THE PROPER PARTIES."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page396" id="page396"></a>[pg 396]</span>
+
+<h2>BLANCHE'S LETTERS.</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="sc">WAR FEVER</span>.</h4>
+<p class="author">
+<i>Park Lane</i>.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sc">Dearest Daphne</span>,&mdash;Juno ffarrington's
+wedding to the Oldcastles' boy, Portcullis, the other day,
+quite the best done of Allotment Weddings that are
+having a little vogue just now. Juno's white satin gown was
+embroidered with mustard and cress and spring onions in their
+natural colours, her veil was kept in place by a coronal of
+lettuce leaves, and, instead of a Prayer-Book or a posy, she
+carried a little ivory-and-silver spade. The effect was <i>absolutely!</i>
+The 'maids had on Olga's latest in Allotment Wedding
+frocks, carried out in potato-brown charmeuse and cabbage-green
+chiffon; also they'd garden-hats, tied under the chin
+with ribbon-grass and with a big cluster of radishes at the
+left side, and each of them carried a bunch of small salad and
+a darling little crystal-and-silver watering-pot (Portcullis's gifts).
+The Duke of Southlands gave his daughter away, and Juno
+<i>insisted</i> on his wearing a smock-frock and carrying a trowel, and
+just as the dear Bishop said, "Who giveth this woman?"
+the poor old darling dropped his trowel with a crash and rather
+spoilt things.</p>
+<p>
+The wedding-cake was a great big war loaf stuck with flags.
+Juno cut it in old-fashioned style with Portcullis's sword. While
+we were doing ourselves well with war-bread and margarine,
+boiled eggs and plenty of champagne, the Controller of Wedding
+Breakfasts blew in (it's a new post, and he's two hundred
+and fifty able-bodied young assistants). He was curious to see
+what we were having, and cautioned us against throwing any
+rice after our bride and 'groom. "But how absurd, you ricky
+person!" chipped in Popsy, Lady Ramsgate, who, of course,
+is Juno's great-aunt. "<i>We</i> never throw rice at our wedding-people! <i>That</i>'s only
+done by the outlying tribes of barbarians." It was a pity she attracted
+his notice, for he was down on her directly for having on a toque almost
+entirely made of young turnips and carrots. He said it was "an infraction
+of rule 150, cap. 4,500 of the Safety of the Empire Act, forbidding
+the use of the people's food for personal adornment."</p>
+<p>
+The Allotment expression, which is the correct one now, is a look of interest
+and expectation, because what one's planted is coming up. <i>Some</i> people
+rather spoil their Allotment expression by a <i>puzzled</i> look. <i>Et pourquoi</i>?
+dear, they've <i>quite</i> forgotten what they planted, and, though they <i>pretend</i> they
+know <i>exactly</i> what it is that's coming up, they really haven't the slightest!</p>
+<p>
+My last photo is considered to show the Allotment expression in utter perfection.
+(It's been in <i>People of Position, Mayfair Murmurs</i>, and several other
+weeklies.) I'm standing in my potato-patch (my Allotment toilette is finished
+off by a pair of <i>enthralling</i> little hob-nailed
+boots!) and I'm holding a rake and a hoe and a digging-fork in one
+hand and a garden-hose in the other; there's a wheel-barrow beside me, and
+I'm looking at the potato-plants with the <i>true</i> Allotment smile, my
+dearest. I sent a copy of this picky to Norty, and under it I
+wrote those famous last words of some celebrated Frenchman
+(I forget whether it was
+<span class="sc">Molière</span> or <span class="sc">Mirabeau</span> or <span class="sc">Napoleon</span>):
+"<i>Je vais chercher un grand peut-être</i>!"</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;">
+<a href="images/396.png"><img src="images/396-209.png" width="209" height="450" alt="THE LAST STRAW." /></a>
+<h5>THE LAST STRAW.</h5>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Wee-Wee is frightfully worried about Bo-Bo being so
+overworked. He used to be at the head of the Department for
+Telling People What to Do, and he and his five hundred assistants
+were worked half dead; and <i>now</i> he's at the head of a
+still newer department, the one for Telling People What They're
+<i>Not</i> to Do, and, though he's eight hundred clerks to help
+him, Wee-Wee says the strain is too great for words. He goes
+to Whitehall at ten every day and comes back at three! And
+then he has the Long-Ago treatment that's being used so much
+now for war-frayed nerves. The idea is to get people as far away
+from the present as poss. So when Bo-Bo comes in from
+Whitehall he lies down on a fearful old worm-eaten oak settle
+in a dim room hung with moth-eaten tapestry, and Wee-Wee
+reads <span class="sc">Chaucer</span> to him, and
+sings ghastly little folk-songs, accompanying herself on a thing
+called a <i>crwth</i>&mdash;(it's a tremendously
+primitive sort of harp, but I can't believe that
+even a <i>crwth</i> meant to make such a horrible noise as Wee-Wee
+makes on it!). Myself, I don't consider Bo-Bo a bit the
+better for the Long-Ago treatment, and there's certainly a
+wild look in his eyes that wasn't there before!</p>
+<p>
+<i>M'amie</i>, would you like to hear the simply <i>odious</i> storyette
+of Somebody's Cousin? Well, so you shall. Somebody is by way of
+being an intimate foe of mine, and Somebody's Cousin has long been a
+thorn in the flesh and a shaking of the head to his people. Before the War he
+belonged to the League for Taking Everything Lying Down, the Fellowship
+for Preventing People from Standing up against Foreign Aggression, and
+the Brotherhood for Giving up All<span class="pagenum"><a name="page397" id="page397"></a>[pg 397]</span>
+Our Advantages to Aliens. He was of military age, and when war came, after
+giving vent to some completely detestable sentiments, he crossed to the U.S.
+and naturalised himself there, constantly attacking the country that was
+unlucky enough to produce him.</p>
+<p>
+When the U.S. came in, he shed his citizenship in a hurry, fled to South
+America, and naturalised himself in a republic that had sworn by all its gods
+to keep out of the War <i>à tout prix</i>. This republic, however, changed its
+mind later and followed its big northern brother into the War, <i>et voilà</i>! Somebody's
+Cousin was at a loose end again. He afterwards naturalised himself in
+half-a-dozen small far-away nations that all finally came in, and <i>then,
+chérie</i>, he drifted down to the islands of the South Pacific (the favourite ocean
+of <i>his</i> sort!) and had himself made an Ollyoola. (The Ollyoolas are a tribe
+that has <i>never in all its past history</i> been known to go to war). He was
+made an Ollyoola with all the native rites, dancing and shrieking and so on,
+and he wore the correct Ollyoola dress (a few shells and his hair trained on
+sticks to stand straight up).</p>
+<p>
+And <i>now</i> comes the point of this storyette: Only a few weeks after
+Somebody's Cousin had become a full-blooded Ollyoola (I think that's the
+proper phrase), the Ollyoolas suddenly fell out with the Patti-Tattis (on the
+next island) and went to war, for <i>absolutely the first time</i>, with a <i>ferocity</i>, my
+Daphne, that seems to have been saving up through all their centuries of peacefulness!</p>
+<p>
+Nothing's been heard since of Somebody's Cousin!</p>
+
+<p class="author">
+Ever thine,<br />
+<span class="sc">Blanche</span>.
+</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/397.png"><img src="images/397-600.png" width="600" height="444" alt="WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO PLAY AT? KISS-IN-THE-RING?" /></a>
+
+ <p><i>Recruit</i>. "<span class="sc">Excuse me, Sir, I feel greatly exhausted by this exercise</span>."</p>
+
+<p><i>Instructor</i>. "<span class="sc">Do you, dearie? What would you like to play at? Kiss-in-the-ring</span>?"</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<blockquote>"AIRMEN'S ORDEAL IN THE NORTH SEA.<br />
+
+FIVE DAYS ON A PIECE OF CHOCOLATE."</blockquote>
+<p class="author">
+<i>Continental Daily Mail</i>.</p>
+<p>
+Rather a precarious perch.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<h4>"'GIB.' SHELLS FALL IN MOROCCO.</h4>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+<span class="sc">Madrid</span>.&mdash;Near Algeciras 20 shells fell from
+the batteries of Gibraltar. There were no
+victims, and no damage was caused. The
+authorities at Gibraltar have given satisfactory
+explanations."&mdash;<i>Evening Paper</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+Still, we should like to know the nature
+of the explosive that blew Algeciras
+across the Straits.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<h4>KINSMEN AND NAMESAKES.</h4>
+<p>
+An official circular, commenting on
+the presentation at the Scala, in film
+form, of <i>The Crisis</i>, by Mr. <span class="sc">Winston
+Churchill</span>, the American novelist, adds
+the interesting statement, "the author
+is of course a distant cousin of the
+Right Hon. Winston Churchill, M.P.";
+This sounds a little ungracious. Why
+"of course <i>distant</i>?" But perhaps
+the gifted novelist shares the opinion
+held by Lord <span class="sc">Beresford</span> of the politician
+who did not write <i>The Crisis</i>,
+but is always trying to make one.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<p>
+From the account of a military
+wedding in <i>The West London Press</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"The bridegroom was wearing a simple
+draped gown of lavender-blue crepe georgette,
+with a mushroom-shaped hat in the same
+shade, wreathed with small coloured flowers
+and draped with a blue lace veil."
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+Some mufti!</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"When the Lord Provost ruled that the
+mater was not urgent, the Labourists created
+something of a scene."&mdash;<i>Glasgow Citizen</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+Quite justifiably, in view of the imminence
+of "Baby Week."</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page398" id="page398"></a>[pg 398]</span>
+
+<h2>THE DISSUADERS.</h2>
+<p>
+For many years&mdash;ever since the first
+piece of chalk was applied to the first
+wall and advertising began its bombastic
+career&mdash;the advertiser's tendency
+has been to commend his wares, if not
+to excess, at any rate with no want of
+generosity. Everyone must have noticed
+it. But war changes many things
+besides Cabinets, and if the paper
+famine is to continue there will shortly
+be a totally novel kind of advertising to
+be seen, where dissuasion holds the
+highest place. For unless something
+happens those journals which have
+already done much to reduce circulation
+will have to do more and actually
+decry themselves. Such counsels as
+those which follow may before long
+meet the eyes, and, it is possible, influence
+the minds, of the great B.P.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table width="90%" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td>
+<table border="0" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset" width="45%">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="sc">The Proprietors of</span></p>
+
+<h3><i>THE TIMES</i></h3>
+<p class="center">
+Urge you to spend your money<br />
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<h3><i>THE TIMES</i></h3>
+<p class="center">
+may have the best foreign correspondence,<br />
+the latest news, the greatest<br />
+variety of letters (in types of all sizes),<br />
+the funniest dramatic criticisms, the<br />
+sternest leading articles, and the only<br />
+newspaper proprietor now acting as a<br />
+plenipotentiary in America;<br/><br />
+
+BUT<br /><br />
+
+you are implored not to buy it.</p>
+<p class="center">
+Remember its virtues for future use,<br />
+when skies are brighter, but disregard<br />
+them to-day.</p>
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<table border="0" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset" width="45%">
+
+<p class="center">
+We appeal to the great-hearted Public<br />
+to make a real effort and refrain from<br />
+buying</p>
+
+<h3><i>THE OBSERVER.</i></h3>
+<p class="center">
+Sunday may be only half a Sunday <br />
+without it;</p>
+<p class="center">
+But indulge in a little self-sacrifice.</p>
+<p class="center">
+Not only eat less bread<br />
+But<br />
+Read less <span class="sc">Garvin</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<table border="0" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset" width="45%">
+
+<p class="center">
+DOWN SPECTATORS!</p>
+<p class="center">
+Give</p>
+
+<h3><i>THE SPECTATOR</i></h3>
+<p class="center">
+A WIDE BERTH.</p>
+<p class="center">
+There are reasons why it must be published<br />
+regularly<br />
+But there are no reasons why you<br />
+should buy it.<br /><br />
+There is no better, saner, or soberer<br />
+Critic of Life; but what of it?<br /><br />
+We print all the latest Canine and<br />
+Feline news; but never mind.<br /><br />
+If you won't, as seems probable, down<br />
+your glass, down your <i>Spectator</i>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</td>
+<td width="10%">&nbsp;</td>
+<td valign="top">
+<table border="0" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset" width="45%">
+<p class="center"><br />
+HELP TO WIN THE WAR</p>
+<p class="center">
+BY NOT BUYING</p>
+
+<h3><i>THE DAILY CHRONICLE</i>.</h3>
+
+ </td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<table border="0" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset" width="45%">
+<p class="center"><br />
+Whatever Sixpenny weekly you buy<br />
+don't let it be</p>
+
+<h3><i>THE NATION</i>.</h3>
+<p class="center">
+Owing to its persecution by the present<br />
+incapable Government <i>The Nation</i> is <br />
+achieving an embarrassing popularity.</p>
+<p class="center">
+ Please forget it.</p>
+<p class="center">
+ Let your only</p>
+<p class="center">
+ NATION</p>
+<p class="center">
+ Be your determi-</p>
+<p class="center">
+ Nation</p>
+<p class="center">
+ NOT TO BUY IT.</p>
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<table border="0" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset" width="45%">
+
+<p class="center"><br />
+THE PROPRIETORS OF</p>
+
+<h3><i>THE STAR</i></h3>
+<p class="center">
+urge you not to buy it any more until<br />
+the War is over and paper is cheap again.</p>
+<p class="center">
+Buy <i>The Evening News</i> instead.</p>
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<table border="0" summary="billboards">
+<tr>
+ <td class="inset" width="45%">
+<p class="center"><br />
+DON'T BUY</p>
+
+<h3><i>THE SPHERE</i>.</h3>
+<p class="center">
+IT IS ONLY SEVENPENCE A WEEK,</p>
+<p class="center">
+BUT DON'T BUY IT.</p>
+<p class="center">
+It is full of Pictures of the War, but<br />
+you can do without them. It has<br />
+punctual literary judgments of astounding<br />
+finality by "C.K.S.," but they<br />
+can wait.</p>
+<p class="center">
+Do anything in reason, but don't buy</p>
+<p class="center">
+<i>The Sphere</i>.</p>
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<p>
+The depreciation, you observe, is not
+always quite whole-heartedly done. But
+it must be remembered that the habit
+of self-praise cannot be broken down in
+a minute, and this is only a beginning.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<h3>PAN PIPES.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>In the green spaces of the listening trees</p>
+ <p class="i8">Pan sits at ease,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Watching with lazy eyes</p>
+ <p class="i2">Little blue butterflies</p>
+ <p>That flicker sidelong in the fitful breeze;</p>
+ <p class="i2">While on his pipe he plays</p>
+ <p class="i2">Quaint trills, and roundelays</p>
+ <p class="i2">With dropping cadences;</p>
+ <p> And shy red squirrels rub against his knees.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>And, thro' the city's tumult and the beat</p>
+ <p class="i8">Of hurrying feet,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Those whom the god loves hear</p>
+ <p class="i2">Pan's pipe, insistent, clear;</p>
+ <p>Echoes of elfin laughter, high and sweet;</p>
+ <p class="i2">Catch in the sparrows' cries</p>
+ <p class="i2">Those tinkling melodies</p>
+ <p class="i2">That sing where brooklets meet,</p>
+ <p>And the wood's glamour colours the grey street.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr />
+
+<h2>A LOCAL FOOD-CONTROLLER.</h2>
+<p>
+"No partner for you this evening,
+Sir," said the Inspector. "Mr. Tibbits
+has just telephoned through that he
+has rheumatism badly again."</p>
+<p>
+I know Tibbits' rheumatism. I also
+know he plays off his heat in the
+club billiard handicap to-night. I can
+imagine him writhing round the table.
+Still I remember the first rule of the
+force&mdash;under no circumstances give
+another policeman away.</p>
+<p>
+"You'll have to take Dartmouth
+Street by yourself, Sir," continues the
+Inspector.</p>
+<p>
+"What's it like?"</p>
+<p>
+"Bit of a street market. All right&mdash;just
+tact and keep them moving."</p>
+<p>
+I reach Dartmouth Street. It is a
+thronged smelly thoroughfare. I pass
+along modestly, hoping that every one
+will ignore me.</p>
+<p>
+But a gentleman who is selling fish
+detects me and calls "'Ere, Boss, move
+this ole geezer on."</p>
+<p>
+"What's the trouble?" I inquire.</p>
+<p>
+The old geezer turns rapidly on me.
+"'Ere 'e's gone and sold me two 'errings
+for tuppence 'alfpenny which was that
+salt my 'usband went near mad, what
+with the pubs bein' shut all afternoon,
+an' now 'e's popped the fender jus' to
+get rid of 'is thirst."</p>
+<p>
+"I told you to soak 'em in three
+waters," says the fishmonger.</p>
+<p>
+"'Ow much beer is my 'usband to
+soak 'imself in&mdash;tell me that?"</p>
+<p>
+It is time for tact. I whisper in the
+lady's ear, "Come along&mdash;don't argue
+with a man like that. He's beneath
+you."</p>
+<p>
+She comes away. I am triumphant.
+But she turns round and cries, "This
+gentleman as <i>is</i> a gentleman says I
+ain't to lower meself by talkin' to a
+'ound like you."</p>
+<p>
+I move on. I doubt if the fishmonger
+will be pleased by the lady's representation
+of my few words, and I make a
+mental note to keep away from his stall.
+All at once another lady, who for some
+obscure reason is carrying a bucket,
+grips me by the arm.</p>
+<p>
+"I'm goin' to 'ave the law on my
+side, I am," she declares emphatically,
+"an' then I'll smash 'is bloomin' fice
+in."</p>
+<p>
+I am swayed towards a fruit-stall.</p>
+<p>
+"Look at them," says the irate lady,
+holding out three potatoes. "Rotten&mdash;at
+thrippence a pound. My 'usband
+'e'd 'ave set abaht me if I'd give 'im
+them for 'is dinner."</p>
+<p>
+The fruiterer takes a lofty moral
+standard. "I sold yer them fer seed
+pertaters, I did. If yer 'usband eats
+them 'e's worse than a Un."</p>
+<p>
+"Seed pertaters, was they? Where<span class="pagenum"><a name="page399" id="page399"></a>[pg 399]</span>
+was I to grow 'em? In a mug on the
+mantelpiece?"</p>
+<p>
+"'Ow was I ter know yer 'adn't a
+'lotment?"</p>
+<p>
+"You'll need no 'lotment. It's a
+cemet'ry you'll want when my 'usband
+knows you've called 'im a Un."</p>
+<p>
+"Now, now," I interpose tactfully.
+"Perhaps you can exchange them,
+then you'll have the lady for a regular
+customer."</p>
+<p>
+"I don't want the blighter fer a reglar
+customer," says the fruiterer.</p>
+<p>
+Three potatoes whirl past me at the
+fruiterer. The lady with the bucket
+departs rapidly.</p>
+<p>
+"Lemme get at 'er," cries the irate
+fruiterer.</p>
+<p>
+"You wouldn't hit a woman," I protest.</p>
+<p>
+"Wouldn't I?" says the infuriated
+fruiterer.</p>
+<p>
+I interpose&mdash;verbally. "You'll get
+everything stolen," I say, "from your
+stall if you leave it."</p>
+<p>
+"I'll leave you in charge."</p>
+<p>
+"I'm needed down my beat," I reply,
+and stalk on instantly, leaving a sadly
+disillusioned man behind me.</p>
+<p>
+I reach a queue outside a grocer's
+shop.</p>
+<p>
+"There now," says a stout lady,
+"give 'er in charge."</p>
+<p>
+The queue all speak at once.</p>
+<p>
+"She's a 'oarder, she is. Got 'arf-a-pound
+o' sugar already in 'er basket
+and only 'erself and 'er 'usband at
+'ome, while I got five kids."</p>
+<p>
+A lady down the queue caps this
+with seven kids, and in the distance a
+lady in a fur cap claims ten, and is at
+once engaged by her neighbours in a
+bitter controversy as to whether three in
+France should count in sugar buying.</p>
+<p>
+All the time the hoarder stands with
+nose in the air, the picture of lofty
+indifference.</p>
+<p>
+Tact&mdash;tact&mdash;I remember the Inspector's
+advice.</p>
+<p>
+"Excuse me, Madam," I say, "but
+in these times we all have to make
+sacrifices. You already have sugar.
+Some of your friends have none. Under
+the circumstances&mdash;"</p>
+<p>
+Slowly the lady turns a withering
+eye on me. "I'll move nowhere no'ow
+for nobody."</p>
+<p>
+A lady in the background suggests
+that the female should be boiled in a
+sugar-sack. A more humane person
+expresses the hope that she will be
+bombed that night.</p>
+<p>
+"But, Madam, consider your friends,"
+I proceed.</p>
+<p>
+"Don't you call that lot my friends!
+I'm 'ere fer a pound of marge, and get
+it I will if all the bloomin' speshuls
+come 'oo 're doin' reglar coppers outer
+jobs."</p>
+<p>
+Public opinion in the queue takes a
+sudden turn. One lady remarks that
+these speshuls are that interfering.
+Another alleges that she has no doubt
+I have sacks of sugar at home.</p>
+<p>
+I remember the Inspector's counsel
+about moving on, and move myself on.</p>
+<p>
+There is one man in England who
+proclaims himself absolutely unfitted to
+fill the Food-Controller's position.</p>
+<p>
+I am that modest person.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/399.png"><img src="images/399-600.png" width="600" height="383" alt="THE ELEPHANT'S PUTTING UP A VERY SPIRITED PERFORMANCE TO-NIGHT." /></a>
+
+<p><i>Stage Manager. </i>"<span class="sc">The elephant's putting up a very spirited performance to-night</span>."</p>
+
+<p><i>Carpenter</i>. "<span class="sc">Yessir. You see, the new hind-legs is a discharged soldier,
+and the front legs is an out-and-out pacifist</span>."</p>
+</div>
+ <hr />
+
+
+<h4>Broody.</h4>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"<span class="sc">Whist Drive</span>.&mdash;A sitting of eggs was
+given by Mrs. &mdash;&mdash; for the lady or gentleman
+sitting the greatest number of times
+consecutively."&mdash;<i>Worcester Daily Times.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+<hr />
+
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"In Captain &mdash;&mdash;'s boat all the men survived,
+although full of water."&mdash;<i>New Zealand Paper.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+In the interests of temperance we protest
+against "although."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<h4>"RUSSIAN TROOPS MUTINY.</h4>
+
+<blockquote><p class="author">
+Petrograd, Saturday.</p>
+<p>
+The Minister of War has given orders to
+disband the regiments, and to bring the officers
+and men responsible before a court-marital."</p>
+<p class="author"><i>East Anglian Daily Times.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+That's right. Let their wives talk to
+them.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page400" id="page400"></a>[pg 400]</span>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/400.png"><img src="images/400-600.png" width="600" height="425" alt="I'll learn yer to call me 'Little Willie." /></a>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sc">"I'll learn yer to call me 'Little Willie.' My farver don't arf know 'ow to kill
+Germans. An' <i>I'll show yer where
+he gits it from!"</i></span></p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<h2>OPEN WARFARE.</h2>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>Men said, "At last! at last the open battle!</p>
+ <p class="i2">Now shall we fight unfettered o'er the plain,</p>
+ <p>No more in catacombs be cooped like cattle,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Nor travel always in a devious drain!"</p>
+ <p>They were in ecstasies. But I was damping;</p>
+ <p class="i2">I like a trench, I have no lives to spare;</p>
+ <p>And in those catacombs, however cramping,</p>
+ <p class="i2">You did at least know vaguely where you were.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>Ah, happy days in deep well-ordered alleys,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Where, after dining, probably with wine,</p>
+ <p>One felt indifferent to hostile sallies,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And with a pipe meandered round the line;</p>
+ <p>You trudged along a trench until it ended;</p>
+ <p class="i2">It led at least to some familiar spot;</p>
+ <p>It might not be the place that you'd intended,</p>
+ <p class="i2">But then you might as well be there as not.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>But what a wilderness we now inhabit</p>
+ <p class="i2">Since this confounded "open" strife prevails!</p>
+ <p>It may be good; I do not wish to crab it,</p>
+ <p class="i2">But you should hear the language it entails,</p>
+ <p>Should see this waste of wide uncharted craters</p>
+ <p class="i2">Where it is vain to seek the companies,</p>
+ <p>Seeing the shell-holes are as like as taters</p>
+ <p class="i2">And no one knows where anybody is.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>Oft in the darkness, palpitant and blowing,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Have I set out and lost the hang of things,</p>
+ <p>And ever thought, "Where <i>can</i> the guide be going?"</p>
+ <p class="i2">But trusted long and rambled on in rings,</p>
+ <p>For ever climbing up some miry summit,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And halting there to curse the contrite guide,</p>
+ <p>For ever then descending like a plummet</p>
+ <p class="i2">Into a chasm on the other side.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>Oft have I sat and wept, or sought to study</p>
+ <p class="i2">With hopeless gaze the uninstructive stars,</p>
+ <p>Hopeless because the very skies were muddy;</p>
+ <p class="i2">I only saw a red malicious Mars;</p>
+ <p>Or pulled my little compass out and pondered,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And set it sadly on my shrapnel hat,</p>
+ <p>Which, I suppose, was why the needle wandered,</p>
+ <p class="i2">Only, of course, I never thought of that.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>And then perhaps some 5·9's start dropping,</p>
+ <p class="i2">As if there weren't sufficient holes about;</p>
+ <p>I flounder on, hysterical and sopping,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And come by chance to where I started out,</p>
+ <p>And say once more, while I have no objection</p>
+ <p class="i2">To other people going to Berlin,</p>
+ <p>Give <i>me</i> a trench, a nice revetted section,</p>
+ <p class="i2">And let me stay there till the Bosch gives in!</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h4>A Judge Speaks Out.</h4>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"Regarding the assertions that the appellant introduced politics into
+his sermons, it would be a bad day for this country when in a political
+controversy when a clergyman could conceive cases in which some
+high ideal was involved in a political controversy when a clergyman
+could honestly and reasonably preach about it."&mdash;<i>Yorkshire Post.</i>
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+We have always felt that something like this needed
+saying.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page401" id="page401"></a>[pg 401]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
+<a href="images/401.png"><img src="images/401-348.png" width="348" height="450" alt="COMFORT IN EXILE." /></a>
+
+<h2>COMFORT IN EXILE.</h2>
+<p>
+<span class="sc">Imperial Brother-in-Law</span>. "AFTER ALL, MY DEAR TINO, YOU ARE SOMETHING BETTER
+THAN A KING; YOU ARE A FIELD-MARSHAL IN MY ARMY! YOU SHALL PRESENTLY
+HAVE A COMMAND ON THE WESTERN FRONT."</p>
+<p>
+<span class="sc">Tino</span> <i>(without enthusiasm)</i>. "THANK YOU VERY MUCH."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page402" id="page402"></a>[pg 402]</span>
+
+<h2>ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+<p>
+<i>Monday, June 11th</i>.&mdash;I am told that
+it was <span class="sc">Willie Redmond's</span> ambition to
+be the Father of the House; indeed, that
+by some arithmetical process peculiar
+to himself be claimed, although only
+elected in 1883, to be already entitled
+to that venerable honour.</p>
+<p>
+In reality he was the Eternal Boy,
+from the far-off time when it was his
+nightly delight with youthful exuberance
+to cheek Mr. Speaker <span class="sc">Brand</span>
+until the moment of his glorious death
+in Flanders, whither he had gone at an
+age when most of his compeers were
+content to play the critic in a snug
+corner of the smoking-room.</p>
+<p>
+Personal affection combined with
+admiration for his gallantry to inspire
+the speeches in which the <span class="sc">Prime
+Minister</span>, Mr. <span class="sc">Asquith</span> and Sir <span class="sc">Edward
+Carson</span> enshrined the most remarkable
+tribute ever paid to a private
+Member.</p>
+<p>
+Sir <span class="sc">George Greenwood's</span> affection
+for the animal creation is commonly
+supposed to be such that he would
+not countenance the slaughter of the
+meanest thing that crawls&mdash;not even
+those miserable creatures who hold
+that <span class="sc">Shakspeare's</span> plays were written
+by <span class="sc">Shakspeare</span>. It was therefore with
+pained regret that I heard him attempting
+to support his objection to the
+activities of sparrow-clubs by the argument
+that, if the birds were destroyed,
+large numbers of grubs and caterpillars
+would be left alive. After this
+I shall not be surprised to hear that he
+has been summoned by the R.S.P.C.A.
+for brutality to a slug.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 180px;">
+<a href="images/402-1.png"><img src="images/402-1-180.png" width="180" height="203" alt="In Re AN ACTION AGAINST SATAN." /></a>
+
+<p><span class="sc"><i>In Re</i> An action against Satan</span>.</p>
+
+<p>(<span class="sc">Mr. H.E. Duke</span>, K.C.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+What I most admire in the <span class="sc">Chief
+Secretary for Ireland</span> is his wonderful
+self-restraint. When Mr. <span class="sc">Ginnell</span>
+stridently inquired whether to institute
+legal process against the police in
+Ireland was not like bringing an action
+against Satan in hell, the ordinary
+man would have been tempted to reply:
+"The hon. Member probably has sources
+of information not accessible to me."
+Mr. <span class="sc">Duke</span> contented himself with mildly
+suggesting that the hon. Member should
+"apply his own intelligence to that
+matter." Perhaps, however, he meant
+much the same thing.</p>
+
+<p>
+Half the sitting was taken up with
+discussing whether Messrs. <span class="sc">Jowett</span> and
+<span class="sc">Ramsay Macdonald</span> should be given
+passports to Russia. Mr. <span class="sc">Bonar Law</span>
+clinched the matter by saying that the
+Russian Government wanted them.
+Well, <i>de gustibus</i>, etc.</p>
+<p>
+<i>Tuesday, June 12th</i>.&mdash;Perhaps the
+most wonderful revelation of the War
+has been the adaptability of the British
+working-man. Mr. <span class="sc">Cathcart Wason</span>
+called attention to the case of a professional
+gardener who, having been
+recruited for home service, had first
+been turned into a bricklayer's assistant,
+then into an assistant-dresser, and
+finally into a munition-maker. For
+some time the Ministry of Munitions
+seems to have been loth to part with
+the services of this Admirable Crichton,
+but having learned from the Board
+of Agriculture that there was a shortage
+of food it has now consented to
+restore him to his original vocation.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 180px;">
+<a href="images/403-2.png"><img src="images/403-2-180.png" width="180" height="221" alt="CAPTAIN BATHURST REFUSES TO BE A POTATO PROPHET." /></a>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Captain Bathurst refuses to be
+a potato prophet</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+It will be a thousand pities if Captain
+<span class="sc">Bathurst</span> should persist in leaving the
+department of the <span class="sc">Food-Controller</span>.
+If he could only keep down food-prices
+as effectively as he does irrelevant
+questioners he would be worth his
+weight in "Bradburys." His latest
+victim is Mr. <span class="sc">Pennefather</span>, who has
+developed a keen curiosity on the subject
+of potatoes. Did not the Government
+think that the high price would
+cause premature "lifting"? Were they
+aware that potatoes could be used
+for making rubber substitutes and
+cement; and would they assure the
+House that there would be an abundance
+of them for the next twelve
+months'? Captain <span class="sc">Bathurst</span> declined
+to figure in the <i>rôle</i> of prophet, and,
+for the rest, remarked that the hon.
+Member appeared to have an insatiable
+appetite for <i>crambe repetita</i>. Mr.
+<span class="sc">Pennefather</span> is understood to be still
+searching the Encyclopædia to discover
+the properties of this vegetable, with
+the view of putting a few posers on the
+subject to Captain <span class="sc">Bathurst</span> (or his
+successor) next week.</p>
+<p>
+As the friends of Proportional Representation
+are wont to refer to their
+little pet by the affectionate diminutive
+of "P.R.," they can hardly be surprised
+that its appearance should lead
+to combats recalling in intensity the
+palmy days of the Prize Ring. It was
+designed that the Front Bench should
+be content to perform the function of
+judicious bottle-holder, and leave the
+issue to be fought out by the rest of the
+House. But Sir F.E. <span class="sc">Smith</span>, like the
+Irishman who inquired, "Is this a
+private fight, or may anyone join in?"
+could not refrain from trailing his coat,
+and quickly found a doughty opponent
+in Mr. <span class="sc">Hayes Fisher</span>. The House so
+much enjoyed the unusual freedom of
+the fight that it would probably be
+going on still but for that spoil-sport,
+the <span class="sc">Home Secretary</span>, who begged
+Members to come to a decision. By
+149 votes to 141 "P.R." was "down
+and out."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 180px;">
+<a href="images/402-2.png"><img src="images/402-2-180.png" width="180" height="254" alt="HEAVY WORK FOR THE BOUNDARY COMISSIONERS." /></a>
+
+<p>HEAVY WORK FOR THE BOUNDARY COMISSIONERS.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">MR. Eugene Wason to be swept away</span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+Mr. <span class="sc">Eugene Wason</span> entered an anticipatory
+protest against the possibility
+that Scotland might be deprived of
+some of her seventy-two Members. "I
+myself," he said, "represent two whole
+counties, Clackmannan and Kinross,
+and I have a bit of Stirling and Perth
+and West Fife, and I am told I am to
+be swept out of existence." Gazing at
+his ample proportions the House felt
+that the Boundary Commissioners will
+have their work cut out for them.</p>
+<p>
+<i>Wednesday, June 13th</i>.&mdash;Considering
+that barely three hours before the House
+met the "Fort of London" had been
+drenched with the "ghastly dew of
+aerial navies" Members showed themselves
+most uncommon calm. They
+exhibited, however, a little extra interest
+when any prominent personage
+entered the House, showing that he at
+least had escaped the bombs, and were
+too busy comparing notes regarding
+their personal experiences to ask many
+Supplementary Questions.</p>
+<p>
+Even Mr. <span class="sc">Bonar Law's</span> announcement<span class="pagenum"><a name="page403" id="page403"></a>[pg 403]</span>
+that <span class="sc">King Constantine</span> had
+abdicated the throne of Greece passed
+almost without remark; except that Mr.
+<span class="sc">Swift MacNeill</span> anxiously inquired
+whether Tino, having received the
+Order of the Boot, would be allowed
+to retain that of the Bath.</p>
+<p>
+The mystery of Lord <span class="sc">Northcliffe's</span>
+visit to the United States has been
+cleared up. Certain journals, believed
+to enjoy his confidence, had described
+him as "Mr. Balfour's successor."
+Certain other journals, whose confidence
+he does not enjoy, had declined
+to believe this. The fact, as stated by
+Mr. <span class="sc">Bonar Law</span>, is that "it is hoped
+that Lord <span class="sc">Northcliffe</span> will be able
+to carry on the work begun by Mr.
+<span class="sc">Balfour</span> as head of the British Mission
+in America." He is expected "to co-ordinate
+and supervise the work of all
+the Departmental Missions." It was
+interesting to learn that his Lordship
+"will have the right of communicating
+direct with the <span class="sc">Prime Minister</span>"&mdash;a
+thing which of course he has never
+done before.</p>
+<p>
+<i>Thursday, June 14th</i>.&mdash;Mr. <span class="sc">Keating</span>,
+having made the remarkable discovery
+that the War has injured the prosperity
+of Irish seaside resorts, demanded the
+restoration of excursion trains and
+season tickets. Mr. <span class="sc">George Roberts</span>
+stoutly supported the Irish Railway
+Executive Committee in its refusal to
+encourage pleasure-traffic. His decision
+received the involuntary support of Mr.
+<span class="sc">MacVeagh</span>, who attempted to back up
+his colleague by the singular argument
+that the existing trains in Ireland ran
+half-empty.</p>
+<p>
+The Lords spent the best part of a
+sunny afternoon in discussing whether
+or not the South-Eastern Eailway
+should be allowed to bolster up the
+Charing Cross railway bridge. In vain
+Lord <span class="sc">Curzon</span>, flying in the face of his
+Ministerial colleague, the <span class="sc">President
+of the Board of Trade</span>, urged the
+claims of Art; in vain he assured the
+House that when <span class="sc">Wordsworth</span> wrote
+of the view from Westminster, "Earth
+has not anything to show more fair,"
+he was not thinking of that maroon-coloured
+monstrosity. The majority of
+their lordships, understanding that the
+proposal had something to do with
+"strengthening the piers," declined to
+reject it.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/403-1.png"><img src="images/403-1-600.png" width="600" height="443" alt="And what did you say to Private Smith?" /></a>
+
+<p><i>Officer</i>. "<span class="sc">And what did you say to Private Smith?"</span></p>
+<p><i>Witness</i> (<i>who had discovered prisoner milking cow belonging to French
+farmer</i>). "<span class="sc">I told him to stop immediately and put the milk back.</span>"</p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+<p>
+We have received a copy of <i>The
+Glasgow Weekly Herald</i>, dated "May
+56, 1917." Trust a Scot to make a
+good thing go as far as possible.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"Great jubilation prevailed amongst the
+people at finding the children alive, and congratulations
+were extended to their parents
+that their little ones were not lost in the cavities
+and chasms of Knocknatubber Mountain,
+though straying thereon for upwards of 25
+years."&mdash;<i>Nenagh Guardian</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+The young "Rips"!</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page404" id="page404"></a>[pg 404]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/404.png"><img src="images/404-600.png" width="600" height="340" alt="MARKER, HAND ME THE REST." /></a>
+
+<p><i>National Service Volunteer</i> (<i>late crack billiard player</i>).
+"<span class="sc">Marker, hand me the rest</span>."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<h2>"IN PRIZE."</h2>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>A ship was built in Glasgow, and oh, she looked a daisy</p>
+ <p class="i2">(Just the way that some ships do!)</p>
+ <p>An' the only thing against 'er was she allus steered so crazy</p>
+ <p class="i2">(An' it's true, my Johnny Bowline, true!)</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>They sent 'er out in ballast to Oregon for lumber,</p>
+ <p>An' before she dropped 'er pilot she all but lost 'er number.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>They sold 'er into Norway because she steered so funny,</p>
+ <p>An' she nearly went to glory before they drawed the money.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>They sold 'er out o' Norway&mdash;they sold 'er into Chile,</p>
+ <p>An' Chile got a bargain because she steered so silly.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>They chartered 'er to Germans with a bunch o' greasers forrard;</p>
+ <p>Old shellbacks wouldn't touch 'er because she steered so 'orrid.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>She set a course for Bremen with contraband inside 'er,</p>
+ <p>An' she might 'ave got there some time if a cruiser 'adn't spied 'er. </p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>She nearly drowned the boarders because she cut such capers,</p>
+ <p>But they found she was a German through inspectin' of 'er papers.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>So they put a crew aboard 'er, which was both right an' lawful,</p>
+ <p>An' the prize crew 'ad a picnic, because she steered so awful.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>But they brought 'er into Kirkwall, an' then they said, "Lord lumme,</p>
+ <p>If I ever see an 'ooker as steered so kind o' rummy!"</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+ <p>But she'll fetch 'er price at auction, for oh, she looks a daisy</p>
+ <p class="i2">(Just the way that some ships do!)</p>
+ <p>An' the chap as tops the biddin' won't know she steers so crazy</p>
+ <p class="i2">(But it's true, my Johnny Bowline, true!)</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+
+<p class="i32">C.F.S.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>TO MR. BALFOUR ON HIS RETURN.</h2>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Our hearts go out with all our ships that plough the deadly sea,</p>
+<p>But the ship that brought us safely back the only <span class="sc">Arthur B</span>.</p>
+<p>Was freighted with good wishes in a very high degree.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>There are heaps of politicians who can hustle and can shriek,</p>
+<p>And some, though very strong in lung, in brains are very weak,</p>
+<p>But A.J.B.'s equipment is admittedly unique.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>His manners are delightful, and the workings of his mind</p>
+<p>Have never shown the slightest trace of self-esteem behind;</p>
+<p>Nor has he had at any time a private axe to grind.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>For forty years and upwards he has graced the public scene</p>
+<p>Without becoming sterilized or stiffened by routine;</p>
+<p>He still retains his freshness and his brain is just as keen.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>His credit was not shipwrecked on the fatal Irish reef;</p>
+<p>He has always been a loyal and a sympathetic chief;</p>
+<p>And he has also written <i>The Foundations of Belief</i>.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>As leader of the Mission to our cousins and Allies,</p>
+<p>We learn with satisfaction, but without the least surprise,</p>
+<p>That he proved the very cynosure of Transatlantic eyes.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>For the special brand of statesman <i>plus</i> aristocratic sage,</p>
+<p>Like the model king-philosopher described in <span class="sc">Plato's</span> page,</p>
+<p>Is uncommonly attractive in a democratic age.</p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"<span class="sc">Balfour</span> Must Go!" was once the cry of those who deemed him slack,</p>
+<p>But now there's not a single scribe of that unruly pack</p>
+<p>Who is not glad in every sense that <span class="sc">Balfour</span> has come back. </p></div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>And as for his "successor"&mdash;the Napoleonic peer</p>
+<p>Whose functions are restricted to a purely business sphere&mdash;</p>
+<p>We must try to bear his absence in a spirit of good cheer.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page405" id="page405"></a>[pg 405]</span>
+
+<h2>THE INFANTICIDE.</h2>
+<p>
+From an economic point of view it
+was inexcusable. I can only hope that
+the affair will never reach the ear of
+the new <span class="sc">Food-Controller</span>. The chief
+culprit was undoubtedly Joan minor&mdash;I
+only became an accomplice after the
+fact&mdash;and I can scarcely believe that
+even a Food-Controller could be very
+angry with Joan minor. For one thing
+she really is so very minor. And then
+there's her manner; in face of it severity,
+as I have found, is out of the
+question. Even Joan major, who has
+been known to rout our charlady in
+single combat, finds it irresistible. Indeed
+when I taxed her with having
+a hand in the crime she secured an
+acquittal on the plea of duress.</p>
+<p>
+Ever since Joan minor arrived at
+years of understanding the weeks preceding
+the great day have been fraught
+with a mystery in which I have no
+share. Earnest conversations which
+break off guiltily the moment I enter
+the room; strained whisperings and
+now and again little uncontrollable
+giggles of ecstatic anticipation from
+Joan minor&mdash;these are the signs that I
+have learned to look for, and, being
+well versed in my part, to ignore with a
+sublime unconsciousness which should
+make my fortune in a melodrama of
+stage asides. And then, on the morning
+of my birthday, the solemn ceremonial
+of revelation, I would come in to breakfast,
+to find a parcel lying by my
+plate. At first I would not see it. In
+a tense and unnatural silence Joan
+minor would follow me with her eyes
+while I opened the window a few inches,
+closed it again, stroked the cat and
+generally behaved as though sitting
+down at table was the last thing I intended.
+Then, when I did take my place,
+"The post is early to-day," I would
+say, pushing the parcel carelessly on
+one side as I took up the paper, while
+Joan minor hid her face in Joan major's
+blouse lest her feelings should betray
+her into premature speech. And at
+last I would open it, and my amazement
+and delight would know no
+bounds. There was very little acting
+needed for that. It is no small thing
+to be spirited back to the age when
+birthdays really matter.</p>
+<p>
+And so this year it was with a feeling
+of having been cheated that I left
+the house for the office, where, in company
+with other old fogies and girl
+clerks, I do my unambitious bit towards
+downing the Hun. The premonitory
+symptoms had seemed to me unusually
+acute, but the morning had brought
+no parcel. My years weighed on my
+shoulders again, and I am afraid I was
+more than a little tart with my typist.</p>
+<p>
+I was kept late for dinner, and when
+I entered the room I found Joan minor
+sitting in her place, her eyes bright
+with expectation. Beside my place
+was a covered muffin dish. There
+was no dallying with the pleasure this
+time, for I had suddenly become young
+again, and could not have waited had
+I tried. I lifted the cover, and there,
+about the size of a well-nourished pea,
+lay the first-fruit of Joan minor's peculiar
+and personal allotment, prepared,
+planted and dug by Joan minor's own
+hands, a veritable and unmistakable
+potato.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<a href="images/405.png"><img src="images/405-391.png" width="391" height="450" alt="What sort of work do you feel fitted for?" /></a>
+
+<p><i>Official of Lady War-workers' Bureau</i>.
+"<span class="sc">What sort of work do you feel fitted for</span>?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Applicant</i>. "<span class="sc">I don't quite know, but I want to wear these clothes</span>."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<h4>Our Official Pessimists.</h4>
+<p>
+From an Admiralty notice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"It is to be particularly noted that entries
+are only being made for 12 years' service, and
+not for duration of war."&mdash;<i>Evening Paper</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"Summoned at Barry for having driven a
+horse whilst drunk, Antonio Millonas was
+stated to have narrowly missed a policeman
+and two children."&mdash;<i>Western Mail</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+We are all in favour of prohibition for
+horses.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<h2>IN A GOOD CAUSE.</h2>
+<p>
+The Newport Market Army Training
+School, Greencoat Place, Westminster,
+which has for over fifty years
+been training homeless and destitute
+boys to become soldiers of the <span class="sc">King</span>,
+and has sent over two thousand into
+the Army, is in great need of funds.
+Mr. Punch cordially supports the appeal
+of the President of the School,
+H.R.H. the Duke of <span class="sc">Connaught</span>, who
+"sincerely hopes the public will generously
+support an Institution that has
+for so many years quietly and unobtrusively
+furnished a Christian home and
+education to poor and outcast lads, and
+has supplied the Army with so many
+good and gallant soldiers."</p>
+<p>
+Donations and inquiries should be
+addressed to the Secretary, the Rev.
+H.A. <span class="sc">Wilson</span>, 20, Great Peter Street,
+Westminster, S.W.1.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+<h4>A Credit to the Commonwealth.</h4>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"<span class="sc">Cockatoo</span>, Australian, splendid talker, does
+not swear."&mdash;<i>Newcastle Evening Chronicle</i>.
+</p></blockquote>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page406" id="page406"></a>[pg 406]</span>
+
+<h2>THE HAT AND THE VISIT.</h2>
+<p>
+"Francesca," I said, "does my hat really look all right?"</p>
+<p>
+When I put this momentous question we were in a train,
+being bound on a visit to Frederick at his preparatory
+school. A sudden doubt had just assailed me as to my
+presentability. Should I, as a father, be looked upon as a
+credit or a disgrace to my son? Francesca took some time
+before she answered my question. Then she spoke.</p>
+<p>
+"Your hat," she said, "is well enough."</p>
+<p>
+"I see what it is," I said; "you think I ought to have
+worn a top-hat. There are still occasions when a top-hat
+may, nay, must be worn; and this, you think, is one of
+them. There are solemnities and venerations that only a
+top-hat can inspire in the naturally irreverent mind of
+youth. A father in any other hat is a ridiculously youthful
+object and has no business to inflict himself on his son.
+Very well. I would not for worlds spoil Frederick's half-holiday
+by shaming him in the eyes of his schoolfellows."</p>
+<p>
+"What do you propose to do about it, then? You can't
+alter your hat now."</p>
+<p>
+"No," I said, "I can't; but I can get out of the train at
+the next station and go home and leave you in your comparative
+spickness and your relative spanness to spend your
+afternoon with the boy. Or, stay, there must be a shop in
+Belfield where top-hats can be bought. It is a cathedral
+city and possesses dignitaries of the Church who still wear
+top-hats, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>
+"But those are special top-hats. You couldn't go to
+Frederick in a bishop's hat, now could you?"</p>
+<p>
+"No-o-o," I said doubtfully, "perhaps I couldn't. But
+suppose I wore the gaiters too&mdash;wouldn't that make it
+all right?"</p>
+<p>
+"I should like," she said, "to see Frederick's face on
+perceiving the new bishop."</p>
+<p>
+"Francesca," I said, "you talk as if no boys ever had
+bishops for their fathers. Let me assure you, on the contrary,
+that there are many bishops who have large families
+of both sexes. I once stayed with a bishop, and I never
+heard anybody attempt to make a mockery of his gaiters."</p>
+<p>
+"But they were his own. He couldn't be a bishop
+without them."</p>
+<p>
+"That fact doesn't render them immune from laughter.
+My present hat, for instance, is my own, and yet you have
+been laughing at it ever since I called your attention to it."</p>
+<p>
+"Not at all; I have been admiring it. I said it was well
+enough, and so it is. What more can you want?"</p>
+<p>
+"I only hope," I said, "that Frederick will think so too.
+It would be too painful to dash the cup of half-holiday joy
+from a boy's lips by wearing an inappropriate hat."</p>
+<p>
+"You're too nervous altogether about the impression
+you're going to make on Frederick. Take example by me.
+I've got a hat on."</p>
+<p>
+"You have," I said fervently. "It has grazed my face
+more than once."</p>
+<p>
+"It is feeding," she said, "on your damask cheek. But
+I'm quite calm in spite of it."</p>
+<p>
+"But then," I said, "you never knew Rowell."</p>
+<p>
+"No. Who was he?"</p>
+<p>
+"Rowell," I said, "was a schoolfellow of mine, and he
+had a father."</p>
+<p>
+"Marvellous! And a mother too, I suppose."</p>
+<p>
+"Yes," I said, "but she doesn't come into the story.
+Rowell's father had a passion, it appears, for riding, and
+one dreadful afternoon, when we were playing cricket, he
+rode into the cricket-field. <i>He was wearing trousers, and
+his trousers had rucked up to his knees.</i> It was a terrific
+sight, and, though we all pretended not to see and were
+very sorry for young Rowell, he felt the blow most keenly.
+I hope my hat won't be like Rowell's father's trousers."</p>
+<p>
+"It isn't a bit like them yet," said Francesca.</p>
+<p class="author">
+R.C.L.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+ <table width="600px" align="center" summary="cartoon" border="0">
+<tr>
+ <td class="left" width="300px" valign="top"><a href="images/406-1.png"><img src="images/406-1-300.png" width="300" height="315" alt="But surely, Thompson ... you ought to remember where you put my horse." border="0" /></a>
+<br />
+<i>Officer</i>. "<span class="sc">But surely, Thompson, if these mud-billets
+<i>are</i> all alike you ought to remember where you put
+my horse</span>&mdash;&mdash;"</td>
+ <td width="300px" valign="top"><a href="images/406-2.png"><img src="images/406-2-300.png" width="300" height="315" alt="Here he is, Sir." border="0" /></a>
+<br />
+<i>Batman</i>. "<span class="sc">Here he is, Sir</span>."</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<br />
+
+ <hr />
+<blockquote><p>
+"Fireman wanted; consuming under 50 tons; wages 30s."
+</p></blockquote>
+<p>
+Under the present system of rationing, this demand for
+moderation does not seem excessive.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page407" id="page407"></a>[pg 407]</span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/407.png"><img src="images/407-600.png" width="600" height="402" alt="Ye'll be a main clever little fellow, then. They was turmuts when I put 'em in last back end." /></a>
+
+<p><i>Inspecting Officer</i>. "<span class="sc">It's no use your telling me you haven't
+got any potatoes about the place. If you hold the end of
+this tape I'll very soon tell you how many you have here</span>."</p>
+<p>
+<i>Farmer</i>. "<span class="sc">Ye'll be a main clever little fellow, then. They was turmuts when
+I put 'em in last back end</span>."</p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+<h2>OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+<p class="center">
+(<i>By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks</i>.) </p>
+<p>
+It is my deliberate verdict that Mr. E.F. <span class="sc">Benson</span> is (as
+my old nurse used to express it) "in league with Somebody
+he oughtn't." I hope, however, that he will understand
+this for the extorted compliment that it is, and not magic
+me into something unpleasant, or (more probably) write
+another book to prove to my own dissatisfaction that I am
+everything I least wish to be. That indeed is the gravamen
+of my charge: the diabolic ingenuity with which he makes
+not so much our pleasant vices as our little almost-virtues
+into whips to scourge us with. All this has been wrung
+from me by the perusal of <i>Mr. Teddy</i> (<span class="sc">Fisher Unwin</span>).
+Even now I can't make up my mind whether I like it or
+not. The first half, which might be called a satire on the
+folly of being forty and not realising it, depressed me profoundly.
+I need not perhaps enlarge upon the reason.
+Later, Mr. <span class="sc">Benson</span> made a very clever return upon the
+theme; and, with a touch of real beauty, brought solace to
+poor <i>Mr. Teddy</i> and consolation to the middle-aged reader.
+I need give you only a slight indication of the plot, which
+is simplicity itself. Into the self-contained little community
+of a provincial society, where to have once been
+young is to retain a courtesy title to perpetual youth, there
+arrives suddenly the genuine article, a boy and girl still in
+the springtime of life, by contrast with whom the preserved
+immaturity of <i>Mr. Teddy</i> and his partner, <i>Miss Daisy</i>, is
+shown for an artificial substitute. Baldly stated, the thesis
+sounds cynical and a little cruel; actually, however, you
+will here find Mr. <span class="sc">Benson</span> in a kindlier mood than he sometimes
+consents to indulge. He displays, indeed, more than
+a little fondness for his disillusioned hero; the fine spirit
+with which <i>Mr. Teddy</i> faces at last the inevitable is a sure
+proof of the author's sympathy.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+<p>
+You will hardly have traversed the passages of our underground
+railway system without being hurriedly aware in
+passing of a picture in reds and browns, representing a
+faun-like figure piping to an audience of three rather self-conscious
+rabbits. This pleasing group does not portray
+an actual scene from <i>Autumn</i> (<span class="sc">Lane</span>), but is rather to be
+taken as symbolic of the atmosphere of Miss <span class="sc">Muriel
+Hine's</span> latest book. The faun, I imagine, stands for <i>Rollo</i>,
+the middle-aged lover of the country, into whose happy life
+other, more human, loves break with such devastation.
+What the rabbits mean is a more difficult problem. I jest;
+but as a matter of fact I should be the first to admit that
+Miss <span class="sc">Hine</span> has written a story that, despite a certain
+crudity of colouring, is both unconventional and alive. The
+attitude of the characters towards their parents, for example,
+is at least original. <i>Deirdre</i>, the heroine, frankly despised her
+mother, to whom she owed a marriage with the man whom
+she hated. The gift of a country cottage enabled her to
+escape from him to rabbits (figurative) and the simpler
+life. There, however, she fell in with <i>Rollo</i>, who loved her
+at sight, and whose daughter, <i>Hyacinth</i>, adored her father,
+but quite blandly deceived him about her own amorous
+adventures. A pretty tangle, you observe, and I am not
+sure that I can wholly acquit the author of some cowardice
+in her manner of cutting it. But undoubtedly <i>Autumn</i>
+remains a story to read, and remember.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+<p>
+Since Mr. H. <span class="sc">Perry Robinson's</span> name must be familiar<span class="pagenum"><a name="page408" id="page408"></a>[pg 408]</span>
+to most of us by now as that of one of the very select company
+of journalists who monopolise seats at the Front, one
+naturally turns with interest from his daily despatches to a
+sustained narrative. His account of last year's battle of the
+Somme, which he names <i>The Turning Point</i> (<span class="sc">Heinemann</span>),
+is as lively and vigorous a recital as can well be imagined
+of events hardly the less thrilling because already well-known.
+Although he disclaims expert knowledge of strategies,
+he is at least uncommonly well qualified to appraise
+the things he saw. "Before July, 1916, our Army," he says,
+"was like a small hoy hoping to grow up and be big enough
+to lick a bully some day. Told to attack him before he felt
+sure of his own strength, the small boy would not have
+been sorry to wait a bit longer, but the pressure against
+Verdun and against the Russians had to be relieved, and so
+with steadily increasing skill and confidence the attack was
+made, and day after day fresh units proved themselves
+more than a match for the enemy." The result was a
+series of victories&mdash;Mametz, Contalmaison, Pozières, Guillemont,
+Thiepval, Beaumont-Hamel&mdash;and the writer is able
+to associate with each immortal name the regiments
+there engaged, all heroes, for "there were no stragglers."
+Indeed, if there is a weakness in the book it is that the
+insistent recording of the individual heroism of different
+battalions tends to become monotonous. But what a fault!
+It is a monotony of Britishvalour crowned by a monotony
+of British triumph.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+<p>
+A point that will hardly avoid your notice in the plot
+of <i>In the Night</i> (<span class="sc">Longmans</span>),
+by Mr. R. <span class="sc">Gorell Barnes</span>
+(now Lord <span class="sc">Gorell</span>), is the
+exiguous part played in its elucidation by the Great
+Investigator, who (as usual) happens to be on the spot
+and able to place his services at the disposal of the local
+authorities. It is, I suppose due to the Sherlockian tradition
+these unhappy persons, the local detectives,
+must always be supplemented by a superior and
+high-handed expert. I think, from his preface, that the
+author does not quite share my own taste in such
+matters, since he promises that his Investigator shall
+keep no secrets and observe nothing withheld from the
+eye of the reader. So faithful is the author to this undertaking
+that he practically keeps his expert hanging about
+with the unenlightened crowd, while another character, in
+light-hearted amateur enthusiasm, does all the work. But
+of course, in a tale of this kind, the only thing that really
+matters is the one question of spotting the criminal, or
+who killed Cock Robin. Naturally I am not going to
+spoil your fun over this by any officious whisperings. As
+you probably know, the one safe rule in such matters is to
+concentrate upon Cæsar's wife; and even in repeating this
+antique maxim I may have betrayed too much. Forget it,
+and you may find what happened <i>In the Night</i> a sufficiently
+intriguing problem to provide a pleasant bedtime entertainment
+that will leave your subsequent repose unimpaired.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+<p>
+In deciding to add to what one may call the fiction of
+Metropolitan Adventures, whereof <i>The New Arabian Nights</i>
+may be regarded as both the model and the prototype, the
+author of <i>The London Nights of Belsize</i> (<span class="sc">Lane</span>) has undertaken
+a task which is both easy and difficult&mdash;easy because
+a sophisticated style and a lively imagination are the only
+essential qualifications, and difficult because it involves
+competition with a perfect galaxy of distinguished authors.
+There is always room for more of it, however, and, if
+Mr. <span class="sc">Vernon Rendall</span> disappoints us, it is not merely
+because the standard has been set unusually high. His
+style is smooth and assured, and, though somewhat lacking
+in humour, his touch is light and pleasing. He begins
+well and interests us in his principal character so that we
+look forward with zest to the adventures of a personality
+which is everything that this sort of fiction requires.
+Here unfortunately the matter ends. <i>Belsize</i>, who promises
+so much, has no adventures worth the name. It is true
+that he rescues the <i>Prince of Mingrelia</i>, runs to earth a
+gang of highly-educated and æsthetic criminals, and does
+other things that we properly expect such men to do. But
+there is no excitement about his methods. Not to put too
+fine a point on it, the author of <i>Belsize</i> lacks the true imagination
+that makes the unreal seem real&mdash;a very different
+thing from the imagination which merely clothes realities
+in a garment of mystery. Notwithstanding this defect, <i>The
+London Nights of Belsize</i> should wile away an hour or
+so very pleasantly.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+<p>
+If <i>A Regimental Surgeon in War and Prison</i> (<span class="sc">Murray</span>)
+does not create so profound an impression as it would have done two years ago,
+the reason must be that our capacity for disgust at Hunnish
+cruelty is exhausted by the demands already made
+upon it. Captain <span class="sc">Dolbey</span> was in the Mons retreat and
+assisted at what he calls "the Miracle of the Marne,"
+and in writing of these events he shows a real knowledge
+of both friend and foe. Taken prisoner under circumstances
+entirely creditable to himself, he saw the inside
+of German prison-camps, and suffered the indignities
+and horrors for which these places have so justly become
+infamous. His experiences are described with an almost
+judicial calmness. In one case of childish revenge I trust
+that the sufferers were sustained by a sense of humour.
+When the picture of a "Prussian family having its morning
+hate" appeared, the prisoners were punished by having their
+deck-chairs confiscated. Mr. Punch, while deeply regretting
+this vicarious expiation of his offence, cannot help
+deriving some solace from the thought that he succeeded
+in penetrating the hide of these Teuton pachyderms. When,
+for a change, Captain <span class="sc">Dolbey</span> received a kindness from
+German hands he acknowledges it frankly. He also makes
+one or two suggestions which I sincerely hope will be considered
+by those who are in a position to deal with them.
+Altogether an illuminating book.</p>
+
+ <hr />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 410px;">
+<a href="images/408.png"><img src="images/408-409.png" width="409" height="450" alt="Please would you throw over our little boy's Zeppelin?" /></a>
+
+<p><i>Delighted Patriot (after three days' absence)</i>. "<span class="sc">Not much to
+fear from u-boats if we can grow food at this rate</span>!"</p>
+
+<p><i>Voice from, above</i>. "<span class="sc">Please would you throw over our
+little boy's Zeppelin</span>?"</p>
+</div>
+
+ <hr />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+152, June 20, 1917, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,2030 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152,
+June 20, 1917, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152, June 20, 1917
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Owen Seaman
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2006 [EBook #17629]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lesley Halamek and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 152.
+
+
+June 20th, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+=CHARIVARIA.=
+
+
+A man who purchased sandwiches at a railway restaurant and afterwards
+threw them into the road was fined five shillings at Grimsby Police
+Court last week. His explanation--that he did not know they might
+injure the road--was not accepted by the Court.
+
+ * * *
+
+We cannot help thinking that too much fuss has been made about trying
+to stop Messrs. RAMSAY MACDONALD and JOWETT from leaving England. So
+far as we can gather they did not threaten to return to this country
+afterwards.
+
+ * * *
+
+A North of England man, obviously wishing to appear unusual, still
+persists in the stupid story that he did not hear the Messines
+explosion.
+
+ * * *
+
+We can think of no finer example of the humility of true greatness
+than KING CONSTANTINE'S decision to abdicate.
+
+ * * *
+
+There were forty thousand fewer paupers in 1916 than in 1915,
+according to figures recently published. The difference is accounted
+for by the number of revue-writers who have resumed their agricultural
+occupations.
+
+ * * *
+
+In a small town in Australia, says a news item, over two tons of mice
+were killed in two days. For some unknown reason, which perhaps the
+Censor can explain, the name of the cat is withheld.
+
+ * * *
+
+"Eliminate the middleman," demands a contemporary. It might prove a
+simpler affair, after all, than the present system of suppressing the
+inner man.
+
+ * * *
+
+Mr. GINNELL, M.P., is responsible for the statement that "bringing
+an action against the police in Ireland is like bringing one against
+Satan in hell." The chief obstacle in the latter case is of course the
+total absence of learned counsel in that locality.
+
+ * * *
+
+The KAISER, it appears, has lost no time in commiserating with his
+troops on their magnificent victory at Messines.
+
+ * * *
+
+The title which Mr. JOHN HASSALL wrote under one of his sketches
+suggested the words for a song which has now been written. It is
+only fair to the artist to say that he was not aware that his quite
+innocent title would lead to this.
+
+ * * *
+
+The National Service staff at St. Ermin's Hotel, Westminster, has been
+reduced by half. It is now expected that the unemployed half will
+volunteer for National Service.
+
+ * * *
+
+Berlin announces that all through-lines in Germany are running. The
+case of the HINDENBURG Line seems to be infectious.
+
+ * * *
+
+"No cheese," says _The Evening News_, "has quite the bite of Cheddar."
+At the same time, unless it wags its tail to show that it is friendly,
+we feel that every cheese with a bite like that would be much safer if
+muzzled.
+
+ * * *
+
+Triplets were born in Manchester last week. The father is going on as
+well as can be expected.
+
+ * * *
+
+Complaint has been made by a member of the Hounslow Burial Committee
+of courting couples occupying seats in the cemetery. The killjoy!
+
+ * * *
+
+We can only suppose it was the hot weather that tempted a newsagent
+correspondent to ask whether Lord NORTHCLIFFE had gone to America on
+"sail or return."
+
+ * * *
+
+Mr. BALFOUR, we are told, while staying at Washington, visited eleven
+public buildings and interviewed nine representative Americans on one
+day. There is some talk of his being elected an honorary American.
+
+ * * *
+
+We wish to deny the foolish rumour that when he arrived in London
+from his American tour and was asked if he had had a good voyage,
+he remarked, "Sure thing, sonny. All the little Mister Congressmen
+gathered around, and it suited your Uncle Dudley very nicely and some
+more. Yep!"
+
+ * * *
+
+An old lady was recently fined two pounds for putting out crumbs for
+birds. Had the bread-crumbs been put outside, instead of inside, the
+birds, no offence, it seems, would have been committed.
+
+ * * *
+
+Newspapers in Germany may now be sold only to subscribers for one
+month or more. A similar measure for England is opposed on the ground
+that it would be most inadvisable to check the practice at present in
+vogue among patriotic supporters of the Coalition Government of buying
+_The Morning Post_ and _The Daily News_ on alternate days.
+
+ * * *
+
+Bobbing for eels is being pursued with much enthusiasm on the Norfolk
+Broads. Two-bobbing for haddocks in Kensington is sport enough for
+most of us.
+
+ * * *
+
+Large numbers of the German prisoners taken at Messines wore new boots
+and new uniforms. Other improvements included a less ragged rendering
+of the well-known recitation, "Kamerad!"
+
+ * * *
+
+Asked what bait could be used for coarse fish, the late
+FOOD-CONTROLLER suggested one "made from bran, with a limited quantity
+of oatmeal." The correspondent has now written to inquire whether the
+fish have been officially informed of the new diet.
+
+ * * *
+
+Four shillings a hundredweight is being paid for old omnibus tickets,
+but there are still a few people who use these vehicles for pleasure,
+without any motive of gain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Visitor_. "YES, BUT WHAT'S THE POINT OF WHITEWASHING
+THE TREE TRUNKS?"
+
+_Amateur Gardener_. "I CAN'T SAY FOR CERTAIN; BUT I _THINK_ THE IDEA
+IS TO KEEP THE BATS FROM KNOCKING THEIR HEADS IN THE DARK."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=Suspended Animation.=
+
+ "LAUNDRY.--Girl to hang up and make herself useful."--_Liverpool
+ Echo_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "For myself, I have very good reasons for not being in khaki. I
+ live on a farm near the Grand Falls of the St. John River. These
+ falls are second to Niagara in size and splendour, and attract
+ visitors from all over the country."--_Canadian Paper_.
+
+He must have told the recruiting-officer that he was subject to
+cataract.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=T.M.G.=
+
+ Farewell, my CONSTANTINE! A guardian navy
+ Facilitates your exit on the blue;
+ For Greece has been this long while in the gravy
+ And he that put her there was plainly you;
+ "TINO MUST GO!" was writ for all to see,
+ Or, briefly, "T.M.G."
+
+ Whither, dear Sir, do you propose to sally?
+ To Switzerland's recuperative air,
+ To sip condensed milk in a private chalet
+ Or pluck the lissom chamois from his lair,
+ Or on the summit of a neutral Alp
+ Recline your crownless scalp?
+
+ Or did you ask from him you love so dearly
+ A royal haven fenced from rude alarms,
+ Even though WILLIAM should reserve you merely
+ A bedroom at "The Hohenzollern Arms,"
+ Having for poor relations on the loose
+ No sort of further use?
+
+ Beware! I gather he might clasp his TINO
+ Only too warmly to his heaving chest,
+ Saying, "O how reward such merits? _We_ know!
+ Thou shalt command an Army in the West!
+ Yes, thou shalt bear upon the British Front
+ The pick of all the brunt."
+
+ Frankly, if I were you, I wouldn't chance it.
+ Fighting has never really been your forte;
+ Witness Larissa, and your rapid transit,
+ Chivied by slow foot-sloggers of the Porte;
+ Far better make for Denmark o'er the foam;
+ There is no place like home.
+
+ Try some ancestral palace, well-appointed;
+ For choice the one where _Hamlet_ nursed his spite,
+ Who found the times had grown a bit disjointed
+ And he was not the man to put 'em right;
+ And there consult on that enchanted shore
+ The ghosts of Elsinore.
+
+O.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=LESSONS OF THE WAR.=
+
+I.
+
+(_Acting upon instructions received from the 3rd Self-help Division
+the 9th Self-help Brigade issues its orders for a Raid._)
+
+ 9TH SELF-HELP BRIGADE OPERATION ORDER No. 49.
+ _August 1st, 1920_.
+
+Ref. Maps. LONDON 1/40000 shoot 27^d S.W. and (Special) 1/500
+(BROADMEAD).
+
+1. The 9th Self-help Brigade will carry out a Raid upon BROADMEAD
+HOUSE, BROADMEAD SQUARE, W., on the night of 12/13 August.
+
+2. The Raid will be carried out by the BILL SIKES and ROBIN HOOD
+Battalions. The CHARLIE PEACE Bn. will be in close support, and the
+DICK TURPIN Bn. in reserve.
+
+3. The four sides of the house will be attacked simultaneously, the
+BILL SIKES Bn. attacking with one Coy. each on the North and West, and
+the ROBIN HOOD on the South and East.
+
+4. The noise of entry will be covered by a barrage of street cries and
+taxi whistles. "Q." will arrange.
+
+5. Zero hour will be notified later.
+
+6. The grounds and approaches will be reconnoitred thoroughly and as
+many friends as possible made in the neighbourhood. Every opportunity
+of reconnoitring the house itself, either through friendship or by
+substitution for legitimate plumbers, window-cleaners, piano-tuners,
+etc., will be taken.
+
+7. The Brigades on the Right and Left will co-operate by starting a
+street fight and a small fire respectively at some convenient distance
+from the scene of operations.
+
+8. At Zero _minus_ one hour, a cordon of outposts will be established
+at a radius of 500 yards from the house, with strong points at the
+street corners. "Q." will arrange for a supply of hedging-gloves.
+
+9. The general scheme of approach will be on the lines as laid down in
+the "Self-help Corps Standard Formation of Attack" (OK 340/CV/429).
+
+10. Commanding Officers will submit a detailed scheme for the attack
+(with sketch maps) not later than 4 P.M. on August 6th.
+
+11. Mopping-up parties will be detailed to deal with all dug-outs
+known to be occupied. Prisoners will not be taken, but undue roughness
+is to be discouraged as likely to bring discredit upon the service.
+Steps will be taken, however, to ensure the immediate, if temporary,
+silence of the obstreperous. O.C. Chloroform will arrange.
+
+12. The Dog emplacement at G 36 A 0.8 will be dealt with by the
+Brigade Dog-fancier.
+
+13. Brigade Cooks will be detailed in specified areas to act as decoys
+for Policemen.
+
+14. All information as to the plans, intentions, appearance, habits
+and dispositions of inhabitants will be found in Appendix I. Some
+good interior photographs of the house have been obtained by Corps
+photographers acting as window-cleaners.
+
+15. As foreshadowed in the Self-help Corps Intelligence Summary of
+June 29th most of the family will be away at the seaside by the date
+fixed for the Raid.
+
+16. A teetotal Guard will be placed over all cellars.
+
+17. Advanced Report Centre will be at G 25 D 93 ("The Peck and
+Jackdaw").
+
+18. A site for a forward dump will be chosen--preferably on the
+BAYSWATER-BROADMEAD Road. "Q" will arrange.
+
+19. Practice Raids will be carried out upon a model of the objective
+which will be erected at the depot.
+
+20. Parties detailed for Glass-cutting, Safe-opening, etc., etc., will
+draw the necessary tools from the Main Dump at K 25 A on the 12th
+inst. "Q" will arrange.
+
+21. Dress: Fighting Order with Rubber Soles.
+
+22. A non-committal hot meal (without onions) will be served to all
+before starting. "Q" will arrange.
+
+23. Results of the Raid will be collected and dumped at Advanced
+Brigade dump at G 36 A. "Q" will arrange for necessary transport.
+Distribution of proceeds will be made in accordance with G.R.O. 15.
+"_G_" _Staff will arrange_.
+
+24. Please acknowledge. _Issued at 5.15 P.M._
+
+ Copies to
+ Diary I.
+ Diary II., etc., etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Detroit aldermen yesterday adopted a resolution asking for the
+ freedom of Ireland from British rule.
+
+ It is addressed to the president and was introduced by Alderman
+ Walsh.
+
+ Other Irish patriots eager for the freedom of Erin who did sign
+ the resolution were Jacob Guthard, William H.C. Hinkle, Joseph H.
+ Bahorski, Joseph A. Miotke, Anthony Nowe, Herman Zink, Charles
+ Braun, Charles A. Kocher, Oscar A. Dodt, John C. Bleil, Ralph G.
+ Mitter, Alexander Dill, John A. Kronk, Herman Schultz, Albert G.
+ Kunz, Frederick W. Wendell and Oscar Riopelle."
+
+ _Detroit Free Press_.
+
+Your true Irish patriot doesn't mind what country he comes from.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: HOIST WITH HIS OWN PETARD.
+
+MR. RAMSAY MACDONALD (_Champion of Independent Labour_). "OF COURSE
+I'M ALL FOR PEACEFUL PICKETING--ON PRINCIPLE. BUT IT MUST BE APPLIED
+TO THE PROPER PARTIES."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=BLANCHE'S LETTERS.=
+
+WAR FEVER.
+
+_Park Lane_.
+
+[Illustration: THE LAST STRAW.]
+
+Dearest DAPHNE,--Juno ffarrington's wedding to the Oldcastles' boy,
+Portcullis, the other day, quite the best done of Allotment Weddings
+that are having a little vogue just now. Juno's white satin gown was
+embroidered with mustard and cress and spring onions in their natural
+colours, her veil was kept in place by a coronal of lettuce leaves,
+and, instead of a Prayer-Book or a posy, she carried a little
+ivory-and-silver spade. The effect was _absolutely!_ The 'maids had on
+Olga's latest in Allotment Wedding frocks, carried out in potato-brown
+charmeuse and cabbage-green chiffon; also they'd garden-hats, tied
+under the chin with ribbon-grass and with a big cluster of radishes at
+the left side, and each of them carried a bunch of small salad and a
+darling little crystal-and-silver watering-pot (Portcullis's gifts).
+The Duke of Southlands gave his daughter away, and Juno _insisted_ on
+his wearing a smock-frock and carrying a trowel, and just as the dear
+Bishop said, "Who giveth this woman?" the poor old darling dropped his
+trowel with a crash and rather spoilt things.
+
+The wedding-cake was a great big war loaf stuck with flags. Juno cut
+it in old-fashioned style with Portcullis's sword. While we were doing
+ourselves well with war-bread and margarine, boiled eggs and plenty of
+champagne, the Controller of Wedding Breakfasts blew in (it's a new
+post, and he's two hundred and fifty able-bodied young assistants).
+He was curious to see what we were having, and cautioned us against
+throwing any rice after our bride and 'groom. "But how absurd, you
+ricky person!" chipped in Popsy, Lady Ramsgate, who, of course, is
+Juno's great-aunt. "_We_ never throw rice at our wedding-people!
+_That_'s only done by the outlying tribes of barbarians." It was a
+pity she attracted his notice, for he was down on her directly for
+having on a toque almost entirely made of young turnips and carrots.
+He said it was "an infraction of rule 150, cap. 4,500 of the Safety of
+the Empire Act, forbidding the use of the people's food for personal
+adornment."
+
+The Allotment expression, which is the correct one now, is a look of
+interest and expectation, because what one's planted is coming up.
+_Some_ people rather spoil their Allotment expression by a _puzzled_
+look. _Et pourquoi_? dear, they've _quite_ forgotten what they
+planted, and, though they _pretend_ they know _exactly_ what it is
+that's coming up, they really haven't the slightest!
+
+My last photo is considered to show the Allotment expression in utter
+perfection. (It's been in _People of Position, Mayfair Murmurs_, and
+several other weeklies.) I'm standing in my potato-patch (my Allotment
+toilette is finished off by a pair of _enthralling_ little hob-nailed
+boots!) and I'm holding a rake and a hoe and a digging-fork in one
+hand and a garden-hose in the other; there's a wheel-barrow beside me,
+and I'm looking at the potato-plants with the _true_ Allotment smile,
+my dearest. I sent a copy of this picky to Norty, and under it I wrote
+those famous last words of some celebrated Frenchman (I forget whether
+it was MOLIERE or MIRABEAU or NAPOLEON): "_Je vais chercher un grand
+peut-etre!_"
+
+Wee-Wee is frightfully worried about Bo-Bo being so overworked. He
+used to be at the head of the Department for Telling People What to
+Do, and he and his five hundred assistants were worked half dead;
+and _now_ he's at the head of a still newer department, the one for
+Telling People What They're _Not_ to Do, and, though he's eight
+hundred clerks to help him, Wee-Wee says the strain is too great for
+words. He goes to Whitehall at ten every day and comes back at three!
+And then he has the Long-Ago treatment that's being used so much now
+for war-frayed nerves. The idea is to get people as far away from the
+present as poss. So when Bo-Bo comes in from Whitehall he lies down on
+a fearful old worm-eaten oak settle in a dim room hung with moth-eaten
+tapestry, and Wee-Wee reads CHAUCER to him, and sings ghastly little
+folk-songs, accompanying herself on a thing called a _crwth_--(it's a
+tremendously primitive sort of harp, but I can't believe that even a
+_crwth_ meant to make such a horrible noise as Wee-Wee makes on it!).
+Myself, I don't consider Bo-Bo a bit the better for the Long-Ago
+treatment, and there's certainly a wild look in his eyes that wasn't
+there before!
+
+_M'amie_, would you like to hear the simply _odious_ storyette of
+Somebody's Cousin? Well, so you shall. Somebody is by way of being an
+intimate foe of mine, and Somebody's Cousin has long been a thorn in
+the flesh and a shaking of the head to his people. Before the War
+he belonged to the League for Taking Everything Lying Down, the
+Fellowship for Preventing People from Standing up against Foreign
+Aggression, and the Brotherhood for Giving up All Our Advantages to
+Aliens. He was of military age, and when war came, after giving vent
+to some completely detestable sentiments, he crossed to the U.S. and
+naturalised himself there, constantly attacking the country that was
+unlucky enough to produce him.
+
+[Illustration: _Recruit_. "EXCUSE ME, SIR, I FEEL GREATLY EXHAUSTED BY
+THIS EXERCISE."
+
+_Instructor_. "DO YOU, DEARIE? WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO PLAY AT?
+KISS-IN-THE-RING?"]
+
+When the U.S. came in, he shed his citizenship in a hurry, fled to
+South America, and naturalised himself in a republic that had sworn
+by all its gods to keep out of the War _a tout prix_. This republic,
+however, changed its mind later and followed its big northern brother
+into the War, _et voila_! Somebody's Cousin was at a loose end again.
+He afterwards naturalised himself in half-a-dozen small far-away
+nations that all finally came in, and _then, cherie_, he drifted down
+to the islands of the South Pacific (the favourite ocean of _his_
+sort!) and had himself made an Ollyoola. (The Ollyoolas are a tribe
+that has _never in all its past history_ been known to go to war). He
+was made an Ollyoola with all the native rites, dancing and shrieking
+and so on, and he wore the correct Ollyoola dress (a few shells and
+his hair trained on sticks to stand straight up).
+
+And _now_ comes the point of this storyette: Only a few weeks after
+Somebody's Cousin had become a full-blooded Ollyoola (I think
+that's the proper phrase), the Ollyoolas suddenly fell out with the
+Patti-Tattis (on the next island) and went to war, for _absolutely the
+first time_, with a _ferocity_, my Daphne, that seems to have been
+saving up through all their centuries of peacefulness!
+
+Nothing's been heard since of Somebody's Cousin!
+
+ Ever thine,
+ BLANCHE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "AIRMEN'S ORDEAL IN THE NORTH SEA.
+
+ FIVE DAYS ON A PIECE OF CHOCOLATE."
+
+ _Continental Daily Mail_.
+
+Rather a precarious perch.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "'GIB.' SHELLS FALL IN MOROCCO.
+
+ MADRID.--Near Algeciras 20 shells fell from the batteries of
+ Gibraltar. There were no victims, and no damage was caused.
+ The authorities at Gibraltar have given satisfactory
+ explanations."--_Evening Paper_.
+
+Still, we should like to know the nature of the explosive that blew
+Algeciras across the Straits.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KINSMEN AND NAMESAKES.
+
+An official circular, commenting on the presentation at the Scala, in
+film form, of _The Crisis_, by Mr. WINSTON CHURCHILL, the American
+novelist, adds the interesting statement, "the author is of course a
+distant cousin of the Right Hon. Winston Churchill, M.P."; This sounds
+a little ungracious. Why "of course _distant_?" But perhaps the gifted
+novelist shares the opinion held by Lord BERESFORD of the politician
+who did not write _The Crisis_, but is always trying to make one.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the account of a military wedding in _The West London Press_:--
+
+ "The bridegroom was wearing a simple draped gown of lavender-blue
+ crepe georgette, with a mushroom-shaped hat in the same shade,
+ wreathed with small coloured flowers and draped with a blue lace
+ veil."
+
+Some mufti!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "When the Lord Provost ruled that the mater was not urgent, the
+ Labourists created something of a scene."--_Glasgow Citizen_.
+
+Quite justifiably, in view of the imminence of "Baby Week."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=THE DISSUADERS.=
+
+For many years--ever since the first piece of chalk was applied to
+the first wall and advertising began its bombastic career--the
+advertiser's tendency has been to commend his wares, if not to excess,
+at any rate with no want of generosity. Everyone must have noticed it.
+But war changes many things besides Cabinets, and if the paper
+famine is to continue there will shortly be a totally novel kind of
+advertising to be seen, where dissuasion holds the highest place. For
+unless something happens those journals which have already done
+much to reduce circulation will have to do more and actually decry
+themselves. Such counsels as those which follow may before long meet
+the eyes, and, it is possible, influence the minds, of the great
+B.P.:--
+
+ * * *
+
+ THE PROPRIETORS OF
+
+ _THE TIMES_
+
+ Urge you to spend your money
+ elsewhere.
+
+ _THE TIMES_
+
+ may have the best foreign correspondence,
+ the latest news, the greatest
+ variety of letters (in types of all sizes),
+ the funniest dramatic criticisms, the
+ sternest leading articles, and the only
+ newspaper proprietor now acting as a
+ plenipotentiary in America;
+
+ BUT
+
+ you are implored not to buy it.
+
+ Remember its virtues for future use,
+ when skies are brighter, but disregard
+ them to-day.
+
+ * * *
+
+ We appeal to the great-hearted Public
+ to make a real effort and refrain from
+ buying
+
+ _THE OBSERVER._
+
+ Sunday may be only half a Sunday
+ without it;
+
+ But indulge in a little self-sacrifice.
+
+ Not only eat less bread
+ But
+ Read less GARVIN.
+
+ * * *
+
+ DOWN SPECTATORS!
+
+ Give
+
+ _THE SPECTATOR_
+
+ A WIDE BERTH.
+
+ There are reasons why it must be published
+ regularly
+
+ But there are no reasons why you
+ should buy it.
+
+ There is no better, saner, or soberer
+ Critic of Life; but what of it?
+
+ We print all the latest Canine and
+ Feline news; but never mind.
+
+ If you won't, as seems probable, down
+ your glass, down your _Spectator_.
+
+ * * *
+
+ HELP TO WIN THE WAR
+
+ BY NOT BUYING
+
+ _THE DAILY CHRONICLE_.
+
+ * * *
+
+ Whatever Sixpenny weekly you buy
+ don't let it be
+
+ _THE NATION_.
+
+ Owing to its persecution by the present
+ incapable Government _The Nation_ is
+ achieving an embarrassing popularity.
+
+ Please forget it.
+
+ Let your only
+
+ NATION
+
+ Be your determi-
+
+ Nation
+
+ NOT TO BUY IT.
+
+ * * *
+
+ THE PROPRIETORS OF
+
+ _THE STAR_
+
+ urge you not to buy it any more until
+ the War is over and paper is cheap again.
+
+ Buy _The Evening News_ instead.
+
+ * * *
+
+ DON'T BUY
+
+ _THE SPHERE_.
+
+ IT IS ONLY SEVENPENCE A WEEK,
+
+ BUT DON'T BUY IT.
+
+ It is full of Pictures of the War, but
+ you can do without them. It has
+ punctual literary judgments of astounding
+ finality by "C.K.S.," but they
+ can wait.
+
+ Do anything in reason, but don't buy
+
+ _The Sphere_.
+
+The depreciation, you observe, is not always quite whole-heartedly
+done. But it must be remembered that the habit of self-praise cannot
+be broken down in a minute, and this is only a beginning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PAN PIPES.
+
+ In the green spaces of the listening trees
+ Pan sits at ease,
+ Watching with lazy eyes
+ Little blue butterflies
+ That flicker sidelong in the fitful breeze;
+ While on his pipe he plays
+ Quaint trills, and roundelays
+ With dropping cadences;
+ And shy red squirrels rub against his knees.
+
+ And, thro' the city's tumult and the beat
+ Of hurrying feet,
+ Those whom the god loves hear
+ Pan's pipe, insistent, clear;
+ Echoes of elfin laughter, high and sweet;
+ Catch in the sparrows' cries
+ Those tinkling melodies
+ That sing where brooklets meet,
+ And the wood's glamour colours the grey street.
+
+
+=A LOCAL FOOD-CONTROLLER.=
+
+"No partner for you this evening, Sir," said the Inspector. "Mr.
+Tibbits has just telephoned through that he has rheumatism badly
+again."
+
+I know Tibbits' rheumatism. I also know he plays off his heat in the
+club billiard handicap to-night. I can imagine him writhing round
+the table. Still I remember the first rule of the force--under no
+circumstances give another policeman away.
+
+"You'll have to take Dartmouth Street by yourself, Sir," continues the
+Inspector.
+
+"What's it like?"
+
+"Bit of a street market. All right--just tact and keep them moving."
+
+I reach Dartmouth Street. It is a thronged smelly thoroughfare. I pass
+along modestly, hoping that every one will ignore me.
+
+But a gentleman who is selling fish detects me and calls "'Ere, Boss,
+move this ole geezer on."
+
+"What's the trouble?" I inquire.
+
+The old geezer turns rapidly on me. "'Ere 'e's gone and sold me two
+'errings for tuppence 'alfpenny which was that salt my 'usband went
+near mad, what with the pubs bein' shut all afternoon, an' now 'e's
+popped the fender jus' to get rid of 'is thirst."
+
+"I told you to soak 'em in three waters," says the fishmonger.
+
+"'Ow much beer is my 'usband to soak 'imself in--tell me that?"
+
+It is time for tact. I whisper in the lady's ear, "Come along--don't
+argue with a man like that. He's beneath you."
+
+She comes away. I am triumphant. But she turns round and cries, "This
+gentleman as _is_ a gentleman says I ain't to lower meself by talkin'
+to a 'ound like you."
+
+I move on. I doubt if the fishmonger will be pleased by the lady's
+representation of my few words, and I make a mental note to keep away
+from his stall. All at once another lady, who for some obscure reason
+is carrying a bucket, grips me by the arm.
+
+"I'm goin' to 'ave the law on my side, I am," she declares
+emphatically, "an' then I'll smash 'is bloomin' fice in."
+
+I am swayed towards a fruit-stall.
+
+"Look at them," says the irate lady, holding out three potatoes.
+"Rotten--at thrippence a pound. My 'usband 'e'd 'ave set abaht me if
+I'd give 'im them for 'is dinner."
+
+The fruiterer takes a lofty moral standard. "I sold yer them fer seed
+pertaters, I did. If yer 'usband eats them 'e's worse than a Un."
+
+"Seed pertaters, was they? Where was I to grow 'em? In a mug on the
+mantelpiece?"
+
+"'Ow was I ter know yer 'adn't a 'lotment?"
+
+"You'll need no 'lotment. It's a cemet'ry you'll want when my 'usband
+knows you've called 'im a Un."
+
+"Now, now," I interpose tactfully. "Perhaps you can exchange them,
+then you'll have the lady for a regular customer."
+
+"I don't want the blighter fer a reglar customer," says the fruiterer.
+
+Three potatoes whirl past me at the fruiterer. The lady with the
+bucket departs rapidly.
+
+"Lemme get at 'er," cries the irate fruiterer.
+
+"You wouldn't hit a woman," I protest.
+
+"Wouldn't I?" says the infuriated fruiterer.
+
+I interpose--verbally. "You'll get everything stolen," I say, "from
+your stall if you leave it."
+
+"I'll leave you in charge."
+
+"I'm needed down my beat," I reply, and stalk on instantly, leaving a
+sadly disillusioned man behind me.
+
+I reach a queue outside a grocer's shop.
+
+"There now," says a stout lady, "give 'er in charge."
+
+The queue all speak at once.
+
+"She's a 'oarder, she is. Got 'arf-a-pound o' sugar already in 'er
+basket and only 'erself and 'er 'usband at 'ome, while I got five
+kids."
+
+A lady down the queue caps this with seven kids, and in the distance a
+lady in a fur cap claims ten, and is at once engaged by her neighbours
+in a bitter controversy as to whether three in France should count in
+sugar buying.
+
+All the time the hoarder stands with nose in the air, the picture of
+lofty indifference.
+
+Tact--tact--I remember the Inspector's advice.
+
+"Excuse me, Madam," I say, "but in these times we all have to make
+sacrifices. You already have sugar. Some of your friends have none.
+Under the circumstances--"
+
+Slowly the lady turns a withering eye on me. "I'll move nowhere no'ow
+for nobody."
+
+A lady in the background suggests that the female should be boiled in
+a sugar-sack. A more humane person expresses the hope that she will be
+bombed that night.
+
+"But, Madam, consider your friends," I proceed.
+
+"Don't you call that lot my friends! I'm 'ere fer a pound of marge,
+and get it I will if all the bloomin' speshuls come 'oo 're doin'
+reglar coppers outer jobs."
+
+Public opinion in the queue takes a sudden turn. One lady remarks that
+these speshuls are that interfering. Another alleges that she has no
+doubt I have sacks of sugar at home.
+
+I remember the Inspector's counsel about moving on, and move myself
+on.
+
+There is one man in England who proclaims himself absolutely unfitted
+to fill the Food-Controller's position.
+
+I am that modest person.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Stage Manager._"THE ELEPHANT'S PUTTING UP A VERY
+SPIRITED PERFORMANCE TO-NIGHT."
+
+_Carpenter_. "YESSIR. YOU SEE, THE NEW HIND-LEGS IS A DISCHARGED
+SOLDIER, AND THE FRONT LEGS is AN OUT-AND-OUT PACIFIST."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Broody.
+
+ "WHIST DRIVE.--A sitting of eggs was given by Mrs. ---- for the
+ lady or gentleman sitting the greatest number of times
+ consecutively."--_Worcester Daily Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In Captain ----'s boat all the men survived, although full of
+ water."--_New Zealand Paper._
+
+In the interests of temperance we protest against "although."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "RUSSIAN TROOPS MUTINY.
+
+ Petrograd, Saturday.
+
+ The Minister of War has given orders to disband the regiments, and
+ to bring the officers and men responsible before a court-marital."
+ _East Anglian Daily Times._
+
+That's right. Let their wives talk to them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "I'LL LEARN YER TO CALL ME 'LITTLE WILLIE.' MY FARVER
+DON'T ARF KNOW 'OW TO KILL GERMANS. AN' _I'LL SHOW YER WHERE HE GITS
+IT FROM!_"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=OPEN WARFARE.= Men said, "At last! at last the open battle!
+ Now shall we fight unfettered o'er the plain,
+ No more in catacombs be cooped like cattle,
+ Nor travel always in a devious drain!"
+ They were in ecstasies. But I was damping;
+ I like a trench, I have no lives to spare;
+ And in those catacombs, however cramping,
+ You did at least know vaguely where you were.
+
+ Ah, happy days in deep well-ordered alleys,
+ Where, after dining, probably with wine,
+ One felt indifferent to hostile sallies,
+ And with a pipe meandered round the line;
+ You trudged along a trench until it ended;
+ It led at least to some familiar spot;
+ It might not be the place that you'd intended,
+ But then you might as well be there as not.
+
+ But what a wilderness we now inhabit
+ Since this confounded "open" strife prevails!
+ It may be good; I do not wish to crab it,
+ But you should hear the language it entails,
+ Should see this waste of wide uncharted craters
+ Where it is vain to seek the companies,
+ Seeing the shell-holes are as like as taters
+ And no one knows where anybody is.
+
+ Oft in the darkness, palpitant and blowing,
+ Have I set out and lost the hang of things,
+ And ever thought, "Where _can_ the guide be going?"
+ But trusted long and rambled on in rings,
+ For ever climbing up some miry summit,
+ And halting there to curse the contrite guide,
+ For ever then descending like a plummet
+ Into a chasm on the other side.
+
+ Oft have I sat and wept, or sought to study
+ With hopeless gaze the uninstructive stars,
+ Hopeless because the very skies were muddy;
+ I only saw a red malicious Mars;
+ Or pulled my little compass out and pondered,
+ And set it sadly on my shrapnel hat,
+ Which, I suppose, was why the needle wandered,
+ Only, of course, I never thought of that.
+
+ And then perhaps some 5.9's start dropping,
+ As if there weren't sufficient holes about;
+ I flounder on, hysterical and sopping,
+ And come by chance to where I started out,
+ And say once more, while I have no objection
+ To other people going to Berlin,
+ Give _me_ a trench, a nice revetted section,
+ And let me stay there till the Bosch gives in!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=A Judge Speaks Out.=
+
+ "Regarding the assertions that the appellant introduced politics
+ into his sermons, it would be a bad day for this country when in
+ a political controversy when a clergyman could conceive cases in
+ which some high ideal was involved in a political controversy
+ when a clergyman could honestly and reasonably preach about
+ it."--_Yorkshire Post._
+
+We have always felt that something like this needed saying.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: COMFORT IN EXILE.
+
+IMPERIAL BROTHER-IN-LAW. "AFTER ALL, MY DEAR TINO, YOU ARE SOMETHING
+BETTER THAN A KING; YOU ARE A FIELD-MARSHAL IN MY ARMY! YOU SHALL
+PRESENTLY HAVE A COMMAND ON THE WESTERN FRONT."
+
+TINO _(without enthusiasm)_. "THANK YOU VERY MUCH."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.=
+
+_Monday, June 11th_.--I am told that it was WILLIE REDMOND'S ambition
+to be the Father of the House; indeed, that by some arithmetical
+process peculiar to himself be claimed, although only elected in 1883,
+to be already entitled to that venerable honour.
+
+In reality he was the Eternal Boy, from the far-off time when it was
+his nightly delight with youthful exuberance to cheek Mr. Speaker
+BRAND until the moment of his glorious death in Flanders, whither he
+had gone at an age when most of his compeers were content to play the
+critic in a snug corner of the smoking-room.
+
+Personal affection combined with admiration for his gallantry to
+inspire the speeches in which the PRIME MINISTER, Mr. ASQUITH and Sir
+EDWARD CARSON enshrined the most remarkable tribute ever paid to a
+private Member.
+
+Sir GEORGE GREENWOOD'S affection for the animal creation is commonly
+supposed to be such that he would not countenance the slaughter of the
+meanest thing that crawls--not even those miserable creatures who hold
+that SHAKSPEARE'S plays were written by SHAKSPEARE. It was therefore
+with pained regret that I heard him attempting to support his
+objection to the activities of sparrow-clubs by the argument that,
+if the birds were destroyed, large numbers of grubs and caterpillars
+would be left alive. After this I shall not be surprised to hear that
+he has been summoned by the R.S.P.C.A. for brutality to a slug.
+
+What I most admire in the CHIEF SECRETARY FOR IRELAND is his wonderful
+self-restraint. When Mr. GINNELL stridently inquired whether to
+institute legal process against the police in Ireland was not like
+bringing an action against Satan in hell, the ordinary man would
+have been tempted to reply: "The hon. Member probably has sources of
+information not accessible to me." Mr. DUKE contented himself
+with mildly suggesting that the hon. Member should "apply his own
+intelligence to that matter." Perhaps, however, he meant much the same
+thing.
+
+[Illustration: _IN RE_ AN ACTION AGAINST SATAN.
+
+(MR. H.E. DUKE, K.C.)]
+
+Half the sitting was taken up with discussing whether Messrs. JOWETT
+and RAMSAY MACDONALD should be given passports to Russia. Mr. BONAR
+LAW clinched the matter by saying that the Russian Government wanted
+them. Well, _de gustibus_, etc.
+
+_Tuesday, June 12th_.--Perhaps the most wonderful revelation of the
+War has been the adaptability of the British working-man. Mr. CATHCART
+WASON called attention to the case of a professional gardener who,
+having been recruited for home service, had first been turned into a
+bricklayer's assistant, then into an assistant-dresser, and finally
+into a munition-maker. For some time the Ministry of Munitions
+seems to have been loth to part with the services of this Admirable
+Crichton, but having learned from the Board of Agriculture that there
+was a shortage of food it has now consented to restore him to his
+original vocation.
+
+It will be a thousand pities if Captain BATHURST should persist in
+leaving the department of the FOOD-CONTROLLER. If he could only keep
+down food-prices as effectively as he does irrelevant questioners he
+would be worth his weight in "Bradburys." His latest victim is Mr.
+PENNEFATHER, who has developed a keen curiosity on the subject of
+potatoes. Did not the Government think that the high price would cause
+premature "lifting"? Were they aware that potatoes could be used for
+making rubber substitutes and cement; and would they assure the House
+that there would be an abundance of them for the next twelve months'?
+Captain BATHURST declined to figure in the _role_ of prophet, and, for
+the rest, remarked that the hon. Member appeared to have an insatiable
+appetite for _crambe repetita_. Mr. PENNEFATHER is understood to be
+still searching the Encyclopaedia to discover the properties of this
+vegetable, with the view of putting a few posers on the subject to
+Captain BATHURST (or his successor) next week.
+
+[Illustration: CAPTAIN BATHURST REFUSES TO BE A POTATO PROPHET.]
+
+As the friends of Proportional Representation are wont to refer to
+their little pet by the affectionate diminutive of "P.R.," they
+can hardly be surprised that its appearance should lead to combats
+recalling in intensity the palmy days of the Prize Ring. It was
+designed that the Front Bench should be content to perform the
+function of judicious bottle-holder, and leave the issue to be fought
+out by the rest of the House. But Sir F.E. SMITH, like the Irishman
+who inquired, "Is this a private fight, or may anyone join in?" could
+not refrain from trailing his coat, and quickly found a doughty
+opponent in Mr. HAYES FISHER. The House so much enjoyed the unusual
+freedom of the fight that it would probably be going on still but for
+that spoil-sport, the HOME SECRETARY, who begged Members to come to a
+decision. By 149 votes to 141 "P.R." was "down and out."
+
+Mr. EUGENE WASON entered an anticipatory protest against the
+possibility that Scotland might be deprived of some of her seventy-two
+Members. "I myself," he said, "represent two whole counties,
+Clackmannan and Kinross, and I have a bit of Stirling and Perth and
+West Fife, and I am told I am to be swept out of existence." Gazing at
+his ample proportions the House felt that the Boundary Commissioners
+will have their work cut out for them.
+
+[Illustration: HEAVY WORK FOR THE BOUNDARY COMISSIONERS.
+
+MR. EUGENE WASON TO BE SWEPT AWAY.]
+
+_Wednesday, June 13th_.--Considering that barely three hours before
+the House met the "Fort of London" had been drenched with the "ghastly
+dew of aerial navies" Members showed themselves most uncommon calm.
+They exhibited, however, a little extra interest when any prominent
+personage entered the House, showing that he at least had escaped the
+bombs, and were too busy comparing notes regarding their personal
+experiences to ask many Supplementary Questions.
+
+Even Mr. BONAR LAW'S announcement that KING CONSTANTINE had abdicated
+the throne of Greece passed almost without remark; except that Mr.
+SWIFT MACNEILL anxiously inquired whether TINO, having received the
+Order of the Boot, would be allowed to retain that of the Bath.
+
+The mystery of Lord NORTHCLIFFE'S visit to the United States has been
+cleared up. Certain journals, believed to enjoy his confidence, had
+described him as "Mr. Balfour's successor." Certain other journals,
+whose confidence he does not enjoy, had declined to believe this.
+The fact, as stated by Mr. BONAR LAW, is that "it is hoped that Lord
+NORTHCLIFFE will be able to carry on the work begun by Mr. BALFOUR
+as head of the British Mission in America." He is expected "to
+co-ordinate and supervise the work of all the Departmental Missions."
+It was interesting to learn that his Lordship "will have the right of
+communicating direct with the PRIME MINISTER"--a thing which of course
+he has never done before.
+
+_Thursday, June 14th_.--Mr. KEATING, having made the remarkable
+discovery that the War has injured the prosperity of Irish seaside
+resorts, demanded the restoration of excursion trains and season
+tickets. Mr. GEORGE ROBERTS stoutly supported the Irish Railway
+Executive Committee in its refusal to encourage pleasure-traffic.
+His decision received the involuntary support of Mr. MACVEAGH, who
+attempted to back up his colleague by the singular argument that the
+existing trains in Ireland ran half-empty.
+
+The Lords spent the best part of a sunny afternoon in discussing
+whether or not the South-Eastern Eailway should be allowed to bolster
+up the Charing Cross railway bridge. In vain Lord CURZON, flying in
+the face of his Ministerial colleague, the PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF
+TRADE, urged the claims of Art; in vain he assured the House that when
+WORDSWORTH wrote of the view from Westminster, "Earth has not anything
+to show more fair," he was not thinking of that maroon-coloured
+monstrosity. The majority of their lordships, understanding that the
+proposal had something to do with "strengthening the piers," declined
+to reject it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Officer_. "AND WHAT DID YOU SAY TO PRIVATE SMITH?"
+_Witness_ (_who had discovered prisoner milking cow belonging to
+French farmer_). "I TOLD HIM TO STOP IMMEDIATELY AND PUT THE MILK
+BACK."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have received a copy of _The Glasgow Weekly Herald_, dated "May 56,
+1917." Trust a Scot to make a good thing go as far as possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Great jubilation prevailed amongst the people at finding the
+ children alive, and congratulations were extended to their parents
+ that their little ones were not lost in the cavities and chasms of
+ Knocknatubber Mountain, though straying thereon for upwards of 25
+ years."--_Nenagh Guardian_.
+
+The young "Rips"!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _National Service Volunteer_ (_late crack billiard
+player_). "MARKER, HAND ME THE REST."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+="IN PRIZE."=
+
+ A ship was built in Glasgow, and oh, she looked a daisy
+ (Just the way that some ships do!)
+ An' the only thing against 'er was she allus steered so crazy
+ (An' it's true, my Johnny Bowline, true!)
+
+ They sent 'er out in ballast to Oregon for lumber,
+ An' before she dropped 'er pilot she all but lost 'er number.
+
+ They sold 'er into Norway because she steered so funny,
+ An' she nearly went to glory before they drawed the money.
+
+ They sold 'er out o' Norway--they sold 'er into Chile,
+ An' Chile got a bargain because she steered so silly.
+
+ They chartered 'er to Germans with a bunch o' greasers forrard;
+ Old shellbacks wouldn't touch 'er because she steered so 'orrid.
+
+ She set a course for Bremen with contraband inside 'er,
+ An' she might 'ave got there some time if a cruiser 'adn't spied 'er.
+
+ She nearly drowned the boarders because she cut such capers,
+ But they found she was a German through inspectin' of 'er papers.
+
+ So they put a crew aboard 'er, which was both right an' lawful,
+ An' the prize crew 'ad a picnic, because she steered so awful.
+
+ But they brought 'er into Kirkwall, an' then they said, "Lord lumme,
+ If I ever see an 'ooker as steered so kind o' rummy!"
+
+ But she'll fetch 'er price at auction, for oh, she looks a daisy
+ (Just the way that some ships do!)
+ An' the chap as tops the biddin' won't know she steers so crazy
+ (But it's true, my Johnny Bowline, true!)
+
+C.F.S.
+
+
+=TO MR. BALFOUR ON HIS RETURN.=
+
+ Our hearts go out with all our ships that plough the deadly sea,
+ But the ship that brought us safely back the only ARTHUR B.
+ Was freighted with good wishes in a very high degree.
+
+ There are heaps of politicians who can hustle and can shriek,
+ And some, though very strong in lung, in brains are very weak,
+ But A.J.B.'s equipment is admittedly unique.
+
+ His manners are delightful, and the workings of his mind
+ Have never shown the slightest trace of self-esteem behind;
+ Nor has he had at any time a private axe to grind.
+
+ For forty years and upwards he has graced the public scene
+ Without becoming sterilized or stiffened by routine;
+ He still retains his freshness and his brain is just as keen.
+
+ His credit was not shipwrecked on the fatal Irish reef;
+ He has always been a loyal and a sympathetic chief;
+ And he has also written _The Foundations of Belief_.
+
+ As leader of the Mission to our cousins and Allies,
+ We learn with satisfaction, but without the least surprise,
+ That he proved the very cynosure of Transatlantic eyes.
+
+ For the special brand of statesman _plus_ aristocratic sage,
+ Like the model king-philosopher described in PLATO'S page,
+ Is uncommonly attractive in a democratic age.
+
+ "BALFOUR Must Go!" was once the cry of those who deemed him slack,
+ But now there's not a single scribe of that unruly pack
+ Who is not glad in every sense that BALFOUR has come back.
+
+ And as for his "successor"--the Napoleonic peer
+ Whose functions are restricted to a purely business sphere--
+ We must try to bear his absence in a spirit of good cheer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=THE INFANTICIDE.=
+
+From an economic point of view it was inexcusable. I can only hope
+that the affair will never reach the ear of the new FOOD-CONTROLLER.
+The chief culprit was undoubtedly Joan minor--I only became an
+accomplice after the fact--and I can scarcely believe that even a
+Food-Controller could be very angry with Joan minor. For one thing she
+really is so very minor. And then there's her manner; in face of it
+severity, as I have found, is out of the question. Even Joan major,
+who has been known to rout our charlady in single combat, finds it
+irresistible. Indeed when I taxed her with having a hand in the crime
+she secured an acquittal on the plea of duress.
+
+Ever since Joan minor arrived at years of understanding the weeks
+preceding the great day have been fraught with a mystery in which I
+have no share. Earnest conversations which break off guiltily the
+moment I enter the room; strained whisperings and now and again little
+uncontrollable giggles of ecstatic anticipation from Joan minor--these
+are the signs that I have learned to look for, and, being well versed
+in my part, to ignore with a sublime unconsciousness which should make
+my fortune in a melodrama of stage asides. And then, on the morning of
+my birthday, the solemn ceremonial of revelation, I would come in to
+breakfast, to find a parcel lying by my plate. At first I would not
+see it. In a tense and unnatural silence Joan minor would follow me
+with her eyes while I opened the window a few inches, closed it again,
+stroked the cat and generally behaved as though sitting down at table
+was the last thing I intended. Then, when I did take my place, "The
+post is early to-day," I would say, pushing the parcel carelessly on
+one side as I took up the paper, while Joan minor hid her face in Joan
+major's blouse lest her feelings should betray her into premature
+speech. And at last I would open it, and my amazement and delight
+would know no bounds. There was very little acting needed for that. It
+is no small thing to be spirited back to the age when birthdays really
+matter.
+
+And so this year it was with a feeling of having been cheated that I
+left the house for the office, where, in company with other old fogies
+and girl clerks, I do my unambitious bit towards downing the Hun. The
+premonitory symptoms had seemed to me unusually acute, but the morning
+had brought no parcel. My years weighed on my shoulders again, and I
+am afraid I was more than a little tart with my typist.
+
+I was kept late for dinner, and when I entered the room I found Joan
+minor sitting in her place, her eyes bright with expectation. Beside
+my place was a covered muffin dish. There was no dallying with the
+pleasure this time, for I had suddenly become young again, and could
+not have waited had I tried. I lifted the cover, and there, about the
+size of a well-nourished pea, lay the first-fruit of Joan minor's
+peculiar and personal allotment, prepared, planted and dug by Joan
+minor's own hands, a veritable and unmistakable potato.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Official of Lady War-workers' Bureau_. "WHAT SORT OF
+WORK DO YOU FEEL FITTED FOR?"
+
+_Applicant_. "I DON'T QUITE KNOW, BUT I WANT TO WEAR THESE CLOTHES."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our Official Pessimists.
+
+From an Admiralty notice:--
+
+ "It is to be particularly noted that entries are only being made
+ for 12 years' service, and not for duration of war."--_Evening
+ Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Summoned at Barry for having driven a horse whilst drunk, Antonio
+ Millonas was stated to have narrowly missed a policeman and two
+ children."--_Western Mail_.
+
+We are all in favour of prohibition for horses.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=IN A GOOD CAUSE.=
+
+The Newport Market Army Training School, Greencoat Place, Westminster,
+which has for over fifty years been training homeless and destitute
+boys to become soldiers of the KING, and has sent over two thousand
+into the Army, is in great need of funds. Mr. Punch cordially supports
+the appeal of the President of the School, H.R.H. the Duke of
+CONNAUGHT, who "sincerely hopes the public will generously support
+an Institution that has for so many years quietly and unobtrusively
+furnished a Christian home and education to poor and outcast lads, and
+has supplied the Army with so many good and gallant soldiers."
+
+Donations and inquiries should be addressed to the Secretary, the Rev.
+H.A. WILSON, 20, Great Peter Street, Westminster, S.W.1.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Credit to the Commonwealth.
+
+ "COCKATOO, Australian, splendid talker, does not
+ swear."--_Newcastle Evening Chronicle_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+=THE HAT AND THE VISIT.=
+
+"Francesca," I said, "does my hat really look all right?"
+
+When I put this momentous question we were in a train, being bound on
+a visit to Frederick at his preparatory school. A sudden doubt had
+just assailed me as to my presentability. Should I, as a father, be
+looked upon as a credit or a disgrace to my son? Francesca took some
+time before she answered my question. Then she spoke.
+
+"Your hat," she said, "is well enough."
+
+"I see what it is," I said; "you think I ought to have worn a top-hat.
+There are still occasions when a top-hat may, nay, must be worn; and
+this, you think, is one of them. There are solemnities and venerations
+that only a top-hat can inspire in the naturally irreverent mind of
+youth. A father in any other hat is a ridiculously youthful object and
+has no business to inflict himself on his son. Very well. I would not
+for worlds spoil Frederick's half-holiday by shaming him in the eyes
+of his schoolfellows."
+
+"What do you propose to do about it, then? You can't alter your hat
+now."
+
+"No," I said, "I can't; but I can get out of the train at the next
+station and go home and leave you in your comparative spickness and
+your relative spanness to spend your afternoon with the boy. Or, stay,
+there must be a shop in Belfield where top-hats can be bought. It is a
+cathedral city and possesses dignitaries of the Church who still wear
+top-hats, and----"
+
+"But those are special top-hats. You couldn't go to Frederick in a
+bishop's hat, now could you?"
+
+"No-o-o," I said doubtfully, "perhaps I couldn't. But suppose I wore
+the gaiters too--wouldn't that make it all right?"
+
+"I should like," she said, "to see Frederick's face on perceiving the
+new bishop."
+
+"Francesca," I said, "you talk as if no boys ever had bishops for
+their fathers. Let me assure you, on the contrary, that there are many
+bishops who have large families of both sexes. I once stayed with a
+bishop, and I never heard anybody attempt to make a mockery of his
+gaiters."
+
+"But they were his own. He couldn't be a bishop without them."
+
+"That fact doesn't render them immune from laughter. My present hat,
+for instance, is my own, and yet you have been laughing at it ever
+since I called your attention to it."
+
+"Not at all; I have been admiring it. I said it was well enough, and
+so it is. What more can you want?"
+
+"I only hope," I said, "that Frederick will think so too. It would be
+too painful to dash the cup of half-holiday joy from a boy's lips by
+wearing an inappropriate hat."
+
+"You're too nervous altogether about the impression you're going to
+make on Frederick. Take example by me. I've got a hat on."
+
+"You have," I said fervently. "It has grazed my face more than once."
+
+"It is feeding," she said, "on your damask cheek. But I'm quite calm
+in spite of it."
+
+"But then," I said, "you never knew Rowell."
+
+"No. Who was he?"
+
+"Rowell," I said, "was a schoolfellow of mine, and he had a father."
+
+"Marvellous! And a mother too, I suppose."
+
+"Yes," I said, "but she doesn't come into the story. Rowell's father
+had a passion, it appears, for riding, and one dreadful afternoon,
+when we were playing cricket, he rode into the cricket-field. _He was
+wearing trousers, and his trousers had rucked up to his knees._ It was
+a terrific sight, and, though we all pretended not to see and were
+very sorry for young Rowell, he felt the blow most keenly. I hope my
+hat won't be like Rowell's father's trousers."
+
+"It isn't a bit like them yet," said Francesca.
+
+R.C.L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Officer_. "BUT SURELY, THOMPSON, IF THESE MUD-BILLETS
+ARE ALL ALIKE YOU OUGHT TO REMEMBER WHERE YOU PUT MY HORSE----"]
+
+[Illustration: _Batman_. "HERE HE IS, SIR."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Fireman wanted; consuming under 50 tons; wages 30s."
+
+Under the present system of rationing, this demand for moderation does
+not seem excessive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Inspecting Officer_. "IT'S NO USE YOUR TELLING ME YOU
+HAVEN'T GOT ANY POTATOES ABOUT THE PLACE. IF YOU HOLD THE END OF THIS
+TAPE I'LL VERY SOON TELL YOU HOW MANY YOU HAVE HERE."
+
+_Farmer_. "YE'LL BE A MAIN CLEVER LITTLE FELLOW, THEN. THEY WAS
+TURMUTS WHEN I PUT 'EM IN LAST BACK END."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.=
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks_.)
+
+It is my deliberate verdict that Mr. E.F. BENSON is (as my old nurse
+used to express it) "in league with Somebody he oughtn't." I hope,
+however, that he will understand this for the extorted compliment that
+it is, and not magic me into something unpleasant, or (more probably)
+write another book to prove to my own dissatisfaction that I am
+everything I least wish to be. That indeed is the gravamen of my
+charge: the diabolic ingenuity with which he makes not so much our
+pleasant vices as our little almost-virtues into whips to scourge us
+with. All this has been wrung from me by the perusal of _Mr. Teddy_
+(FISHER UNWIN). Even now I can't make up my mind whether I like it or
+not. The first half, which might be called a satire on the folly of
+being forty and not realising it, depressed me profoundly. I need not
+perhaps enlarge upon the reason. Later, Mr. BENSON made a very clever
+return upon the theme; and, with a touch of real beauty, brought
+solace to poor _Mr. Teddy_ and consolation to the middle-aged reader.
+I need give you only a slight indication of the plot, which is
+simplicity itself. Into the self-contained little community of a
+provincial society, where to have once been young is to retain a
+courtesy title to perpetual youth, there arrives suddenly the genuine
+article, a boy and girl still in the springtime of life, by contrast
+with whom the preserved immaturity of _Mr. Teddy_ and his partner,
+_Miss Daisy_, is shown for an artificial substitute. Baldly stated,
+the thesis sounds cynical and a little cruel; actually, however,
+you will here find Mr. BENSON in a kindlier mood than he sometimes
+consents to indulge. He displays, indeed, more than a little fondness
+for his disillusioned hero; the fine spirit with which _Mr. Teddy_
+faces at last the inevitable is a sure proof of the author's sympathy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You will hardly have traversed the passages of our underground railway
+system without being hurriedly aware in passing of a picture in reds
+and browns, representing a faun-like figure piping to an audience of
+three rather self-conscious rabbits. This pleasing group does not
+portray an actual scene from _Autumn_ (LANE), but is rather to be
+taken as symbolic of the atmosphere of Miss MURIEL HINE'S latest book.
+The faun, I imagine, stands for _Rollo_, the middle-aged lover of the
+country, into whose happy life other, more human, loves break with
+such devastation. What the rabbits mean is a more difficult problem. I
+jest; but as a matter of fact I should be the first to admit that Miss
+HINE has written a story that, despite a certain crudity of colouring,
+is both unconventional and alive. The attitude of the characters
+towards their parents, for example, is at least original. _Deirdre_,
+the heroine, frankly despised her mother, to whom she owed a marriage
+with the man whom she hated. The gift of a country cottage enabled
+her to escape from him to rabbits (figurative) and the simpler life.
+There, however, she fell in with _Rollo_, who loved her at sight,
+and whose daughter, _Hyacinth_, adored her father, but quite blandly
+deceived him about her own amorous adventures. A pretty tangle, you
+observe, and I am not sure that I can wholly acquit the author of
+some cowardice in her manner of cutting it. But undoubtedly _Autumn_
+remains a story to read, and remember.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Since Mr. H. PERRY ROBINSON'S name must be familiar to most of us
+by now as that of one of the very select company of journalists who
+monopolise seats at the Front, one naturally turns with interest from
+his daily despatches to a sustained narrative. His account of last
+year's battle of the Somme, which he names _The Turning Point_
+(HEINEMANN), is as lively and vigorous a recital as can well be
+imagined of events hardly the less thrilling because already
+well-known. Although he disclaims expert knowledge of strategies, he
+is at least uncommonly well qualified to appraise the things he saw.
+"Before July, 1916, our Army," he says, "was like a small hoy hoping
+to grow up and be big enough to lick a bully some day. Told to attack
+him before he felt sure of his own strength, the small boy would not
+have been sorry to wait a bit longer, but the pressure against Verdun
+and against the Russians had to be relieved, and so with steadily
+increasing skill and confidence the attack was made, and day after day
+fresh units proved themselves more than a match for the enemy." The
+result was a series of victories--Mametz, Contalmaison, Pozieres,
+Guillemont, Thiepval, Beaumont-Hamel--and the writer is able to
+associate with each immortal name the regiments there engaged, all
+heroes, for "there were no stragglers." Indeed, if there is a weakness
+in the book it is that the insistent recording of the individual
+heroism of different battalions tends to become monotonous. But what
+a fault! It is a monotony of British valour crowned by a monotony of
+British triumph.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A point that will hardly avoid your notice in the plot of _In the
+Night_ (LONGMANS), by Mr. R. GORELL BARNES (now Lord GORELL), is the
+exiguous part played in its elucidation by the Great Investigator, who
+(as usual) happens to be on the spot and able to place his services
+at the disposal of the local authorities. It is, I suppose due to the
+Sherlockian tradition these unhappy persons, the local detectives,
+must always be supplemented by a superior and high-handed expert. I
+think, from his preface, that the author does not quite share my own
+taste in such matters, since he promises that his Investigator shall
+keep no secrets and observe nothing withheld from the eye of the
+reader. So faithful is the author to this undertaking that he
+practically keeps his expert hanging about with the unenlightened
+crowd, while another character, in light-hearted amateur enthusiasm,
+does all the work. But of course, in a tale of this kind, the only
+thing that really matters is the one question of spotting the
+criminal, or who killed Cock Robin. Naturally I am not going to spoil
+your fun over this by any officious whisperings. As you probably know,
+the one safe rule in such matters is to concentrate upon Caesar's wife;
+and even in repeating this antique maxim I may have betrayed too
+much. Forget it, and you may find what happened _In the Night_
+a sufficiently intriguing problem to provide a pleasant bedtime
+entertainment that will leave your subsequent repose unimpaired.
+
+In deciding to add to what one may call the fiction of Metropolitan
+Adventures, whereof _The New Arabian Nights_ may be regarded as both
+the model and the prototype, the author of _The London Nights
+of Belsize_ (LANE) has undertaken a task which is both easy and
+difficult--easy because a sophisticated style and a lively imagination
+are the only essential qualifications, and difficult because it
+involves competition with a perfect galaxy of distinguished authors.
+There is always room for more of it, however, and, if Mr. VERNON
+RENDALL disappoints us, it is not merely because the standard has
+been set unusually high. His style is smooth and assured, and, though
+somewhat lacking in humour, his touch is light and pleasing. He begins
+well and interests us in his principal character so that we look
+forward with zest to the adventures of a personality which is
+everything that this sort of fiction requires. Here unfortunately the
+matter ends. _Belsize_, who promises so much, has no adventures worth
+the name. It is true that he rescues the _Prince of Mingrelia_, runs
+to earth a gang of highly-educated and aesthetic criminals, and does
+other things that we properly expect such men to do. But there is no
+excitement about his methods. Not to put too fine a point on it, the
+author of _Belsize_ lacks the true imagination that makes the unreal
+seem real--a very different thing from the imagination which merely
+clothes realities in a garment of mystery. Notwithstanding this
+defect, _The London Nights of Belsize_ should wile away an hour or so
+very pleasantly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Delighted Patriot (after three days' absence)_. "NOT
+MUCH TO FEAR FROM U-BOATS IF WE CAN GROW FOOD AT THIS RATE!"
+
+_Voice from, above_. "PLEASE WOULD YOU THROW OVER OUR LITTLE BOY'S
+ZEPPELIN?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If _A Regimental Surgeon in War and Prison_ (MURRAY) does not create
+so profound an impression as it would have done two years ago, the
+reason must be that our capacity for disgust at Hunnish cruelty is
+exhausted by the demands already made upon it. Captain DOLBEY was in
+the Mons retreat and assisted at what he calls "the Miracle of the
+Marne," and in writing of these events he shows a real knowledge of
+both friend and foe. Taken prisoner under circumstances entirely
+creditable to himself, he saw the inside of German prison-camps, and
+suffered the indignities and horrors for which these places have so
+justly become infamous. His experiences are described with an almost
+judicial calmness. In one case of childish revenge I trust that the
+sufferers were sustained by a sense of humour. When the picture of a
+"Prussian family having its morning hate" appeared, the prisoners were
+punished by having their deck-chairs confiscated. Mr. Punch, while
+deeply regretting this vicarious expiation of his offence, cannot help
+deriving some solace from the thought that he succeeded in penetrating
+the hide of these Teuton pachyderms. When, for a change, Captain
+DOLBEY received a kindness from German hands he acknowledges it
+frankly. He also makes one or two suggestions which I sincerely hope
+will be considered by those who are in a position to deal with them.
+Altogether an illuminating book.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol.
+152, June 20, 1917, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON ***
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