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diff --git a/22576-8.txt b/22576-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..453bd47 --- /dev/null +++ b/22576-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2277 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 146, +February 18, 1914, 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. 146, February 18, 1914 + +Author: Various + +Editor: Owen Seaman + +Release Date: September 11, 2007 [EBook #22576] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH *** + + + + +Produced by Malcolm Farmer, David King, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI. + +VOL. 146. + +February 18, 1914 + + + + +CHARIVARIA. + +"I come," said Mr. LLOYD GEORGE last week, "from a farming stock right +down from the Flood. The first thing a farmer wants is to be secure." It +was of course during the Flood that the insecurity of land tenure was +most noticeable. + + *** + +Lord CARRICK, who a few months ago was appearing in a sketch at the +Coliseum, seconded the Address in the House of Lords. We are glad to +note the growth of ties between Parliament and the Stage, and we are not +without hope that before long a further link will be added in the person +of SIR GEORGE ALEXANDER. + + *** + +A new form of flying boat is being built in America, in which it is +hoped that somebody may fly from Newfoundland to Ireland in fifteen +hours. In the event of Home Rule, we trust, for the sake of the intrepid +aviator, that a still fleeter flying boat will be designed for the +return journey. + + *** + +A resident of Waltham Abbey has just received a letter with a Waltham +Cross post-mark on the back of the envelope dated February, 31, 1914. We +understand that the recipient proposes to return the letter to the Post +Office marked "Date unknown." + + *** + +With reference to the Old Time Supper which is to be a feature of the +Chelsea Arts Club Ball we are requested to state that it must not be +taken that all the food offered for consumption on that occasion will +bear the stamp of antiquity. + + *** + +An enterprising publisher has, it is rumoured, persuaded no less a +personage than Mr. LLOYD GEORGE to write some books for him, and we are +promised at an early date, "Essays on Lamb (shorn)," "The Fortunes of +Montrose," and other works of creative fancy. + + *** + +"I was shaved yesterday by a highly intelligent young Pole," says a +writer in _The Express_. The Barber's Pole is of course a very old +institution. + + *** + +"Old Masters--VELASQUEZ and so on--what are they?" said Mr. Justice EVE +last week during a case dealing with pictures. "I should turn them into +cash if they were mine." Seeing how often the old fellows painted EVE'S +portrait, this _dictum_ of his Lordship strikes one as ungracious. + + *** + +Messrs. BRYANT AND MAY have issued a brochure describing how little +houses may be made out of matches. A companion volume, entitled "How to +light them," by a Suffragette, may be expected shortly. + + *** + +It is sometimes asked, Why do so few individuals when sentenced to death +for murder take advantage of their right to appeal? The answer is, +Because the Court of Criminal Appeal has the power of increasing a +sentence. + + *** + + "Samuel, in the spirit of a notorious member of his race, one + Pontius Pilate, disavows all responsibility in the matter of the + shooting of Englishmen in the Transvaal." + + _New Witness._ + +_Mr. Punch_ (to Mr. SAMUEL) _Ave! Civis Romane!_ + + *** + +[Illustration: _Butler_ (_to new servant from the country_). "When +you've quite finished cleaning next door's steps perhaps you would +kindly begin on our own."] + + *** + + "BRIC-A-BRAC.--'My Somali Book' is a work by Captain Mosse, who + spent a considerable time in the country, which Sampson Low is + about to publish."--_Daily Chronicle._ + +Modesty is all very well in its place, but to publish an area of over +400,000 square miles and then call the feat "Bric-à-Brac"--well! + + *** + + "The full penalty of £20 and costs was imposed at Croydon + Borough Police-court upon Ernest Montefiore de Wilton, of St. + James's-street, W., for exceeding the ten-mile limit at Southend + on Jan. 25. + + Burroughes & Watts' Billiard Tables for Speed."--_Daily + Telegraph._ + +Mr. DE WILTON, reading the advertisement: "No, thanks. A really slow +table for me." + + *** + +THE STRIKE OF SCHOOL-TEACHERS. + +Sir,--Is the nation properly alive to the seriousness of the educational +_impasse_ in Herefordshire? Personally I view with alarm the state of +things of which that is a symptom. + +What will it mean if this sort of thing spreads, as I fear it may? We +shall have the children of our working-classes growing up ill-educated +and with imperfect manners. Their spelling will become phonetic. They +will cease to speak grammatically. They will lose their pleasing accent. +Their lack of instruction in arithmetic may even lead them into errors +savouring of criminality. Worse, they will fall back in their +appreciation of music, art and poetry. They will be reading trashy and +sensational literature rather than the classical works to which our +elementary education directs their tastes. + +To my mind, the condition of things is grave in the extreme, and for the +sake of the children I beg the nation to wake up and put an end to +conditions which make these strikes possible. + +Yours obediently, + +EDUCATIONAL REFORMER. + + +Sir,--The most promising event of last week was the delightful strike of +school-teachers in that beautiful county of Hereford. Happy children, +thus to be freed from the shackles of our so-called education. They will +now go to the only school worth learning in--the school of Mother +Nature; and if only the strike will continue long enough we shall see in +years to come poets and painters and musicians making a glad procession +from their Herefordshire homes to carry light and joy into our dark +places. + +Yours ecstatically, + +VAVASOUR PRINGLE. + + *** + + "The Bishop of Zanzibar (Dr. Weston) arrived at Charing-cross + from Paris yesterday afternoon.... He went to the House of + Charity, 1, Greek-street."--_The Times._ + +And a very good address for him. + + *** + + "Shea, Blackburn Rovers' clever insight-right, scored all three + goals for the Football League against the Southern League at New + Cross."--_Westminster Gazette._ + +Selection Committee's insight also right, evidently. + + * * * * * + +GUESS WHO IT IS. + +From a Competition in _People of Position_ (with which are incorporated +_West End Whispers and Mayfair Mysteries_). Prizes will be awarded to +the three readers who are first, second, and third in guessing the +identities of the greatest number of Society Personages indicated in the +Guess Who It Is series of articles. + +First Prize, a copy of this year's _Debrett_. Second Prize, a copy of +last year's _Debrett_. Third Prize, a bound volume of _People of +Position_ (with which are incorporated _West-End Whispers and Mayfair +Mysteries_.) + + * * * * * + +She is a woman who matters very much indeed. By birth and by marriage +she belongs to two extremely ancient families, which were settled in +Britain when it was entirely covered with forests and inhabited largely +by wild beasts. But it is not any advantage of birth or of wealth that +has made her the great social figure she is. It is her extraordinary +charm and her arresting personality. She is not strictly beautiful, but +her smile is peculiarly her own--a rare distinction in these days when +there is so much that is artificial. + +She has the reputation of being one of the three best dressed women in +Europe, and never wears anything, not even her boots, more than once. +Her wit is positively brilliant, and in this connection it may be +asserted once for all that it was she who first gave vogue to the +greeting, "Doodledo," an abbreviated form of "How d'you do," though +others have been given the credit for that sparkling pleasantry. In the +art of "setting down" she is unapproachable, combining gentle courtesy +with fine satire and mordant epigram, as on the occasion when a certain +pushing and impossible outside person claimed her acquaintance in public +with a loud "How are you?" With her own look and smile she turned and +gave him his _coup de grâce_--"Not any the better for seeing you!"--at +which an exalted foreign Personage, who was chatting with her laughed so +much that he fell into an apoplexy. + +She and her husband are sometimes at their beautiful place in +Middleshire, and sometimes at their mansion in Belvenor Square. When +they are not in England they are generally abroad. She is devoted to +horse-riding, motoring, yachting, and ski-ing, but has not, like some of +her set, forgotten how to walk. On the contrary, when in town she may +occasionally be seen taking this old-fashioned form of exercise in the +Park, placing one foot alternately before the other in her charmingly +characteristic manner. + +She has once or twice, in a delightfully mischievous spirit, amused +herself by flouting those very social ordinances of which she is an +acknowledged high priestess. When wars, strikes, and Governments are +forgotten, it will still be remembered how, some years ago when she was +a few months younger than she is now, she appeared in her box at the +opera on a MELBA (_and therefore a tiara_) night wearing a necklace of +spar beads and a large ribbon bow on her head. An electric shock ran +through the house; opera and singers were unheeded; and the beautiful +Countess of ---- tore the family diamonds from her head and neck, and, +with a shriek of despair, flung them into the orchestra. + +The subject of our article could have shone in any or all of the arts, +had she cared to give her time and talents to them. Let it be said, too, +that, though surrounded from her infancy with "all this world and all +the glory of it," she has a serious side to her character, countenances +the Church, and by no means discourages religion. + +It is widely known that she keeps a diary. Ah! if only that diary, in +its dainty, morocco, gold-clasped volumes, could be abstracted from the +wonderful mother-o'-pearl escritoire, carried out of the exquisite +Renaissance boudoir, down the noble staircase and out of the massive +hall-door, and, after the spelling, grammar and composition had been +slightly overhauled, if it could but be published and given to the eager +world, what an intellectual feast it would provide! And to the fair, +gifted, high-born diarist what a fortune it would bring, and what a +number of simply _absorbing_ libel cases! + +_GUESS WHO IT IS._ + + * * * * * + +_The Daily Mail_ must be more careful with its posters. Here are two +recent examples:-- + +£2 A WEEK FOR LIFE. + +DRAMATIC END TO SACK CRIME TRIAL. + +£2 A WEEK FOR LIFE. + +COOLEST FRAUD ON RECORD. + + * * * * * + + "Lady Dorothy Wood, sister of the Earl of Onslow and wife of the + Hon. E. F. Wood, M.P., son and heir of Viscount Halifax, was the + recipient of birthday congratulations yesterday, when the Earl + of Erroll, of Slain's Castle, Aberdeenshire, completed his 62nd + year."--_Observer._ + +The Earl of ERROLL'S turn for congratulations will come when Lady +DOROTHY has a birthday. + + * * * * * + +MR. PUNCH'S PANTOMIME ANALYSIS. + +Now that the Pantomime season is drawing to a close and the intelligent +student of this branch of Drama is tempted to pass it in review, it may +be useful to him to have a list of possible Pantomimes drawn up in a +tabulated form according to genus and species, that their finer +distinctions, so easily overlooked, may be the better apprehended. _Mr. +Punch_ has no hesitation in placing his nice erudition at the disposal +of his readers. + +Pantomimes may be divided into those of a distinctly Oriental origin and +_milieu_ and those which are either associated with Occidental +localities or with none in particular. For convenience we may divide +them broadly and loosely into Oriental and Non-Oriental Pantomimes. Very +well, then. + +I.--Oriental. + +A. With a ship (_Sinbad the Sailor_). + +B. Without a ship. + (a) With a cave. + (1) Password to cave, "Open Sesame" (_The Forty Thieves_). + (2) Password to cave, "Abracadabra" (_Aladdin_). + + (b) Without a cave (_Bluebeard_). + +II.--Non-Oriental. + +A. With a ship. + (a) With a cat (_Dick Whittington_). + (b) Without a cat (_Robinson Crusoe_). + +B. Without a ship. + (a) With a giant. + (1) With a cat (_Puss-in-Boots_). + (2) Without a cat. + (i.) With a bean-stalk (_Jack and the Beanstalk_). + (ii.) Without a beanstalk (_Jack the Giant-Killer_). + + (b) Without a giant: + (1) With animals: sheep (_Bo-Peep_); + wolf (_Little Red Riding-Hood_); + goose (_Mother Goose_); + uncertain (_Beauty and the Beast_); + two children (_The Babes in the Wood_). + + (2) Without animals. + (i.) With footgear: shoes (_Goody Two-Shoes_); + slippers (_Cinderella_). + (ii.) No particular footgear. + (a) With a "Jack" (_Jack and + Jill, Little Jack Horner, The House that Jack Built_). + (b) Without a "Jack" (The Sleeping Beauty). + + * * * * * + +Notice on a suite of furniture:-- + + "Monthly payments 12/6. They will last a lifetime." + +Help! + + * * * * * + +ONE OF US--NOW. + +[Illustration: The Old Postmaster-General (_to the New +Postmaster-General_). "THAT YOU, HOBHOUSE? I'VE BEEN TRYING TO GET +THROUGH TO YOU ON THIS INFERNAL TELEPHONE FOR THE LAST HALF-HOUR. I WANT +TO CONGRATULATE YOU ON BEING APPOINTED TO A DEPARTMENT WHICH I LEFT IN A +STATE OF PERFECT EFFICIENCY.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Fair Yankee_ (_who, on her first visit to England, has +been told how extremely obliging the London policeman is_). "Say, would +you vurry kindly do up my shoe-string?"] + + * * * * * + +"CINES" OF THE TIMES. + +(_A far-away Project of educational Films._) + + O advent of the age of gold, + O happy day for proud papas + When Hellas shall her tale unfold + On secondary "cinemas"! + + When "all the glory that was Greece + And all the grandeur that was Rome" + Shall hire on a perpetual lease + The academic "Picturedrome." + + O OVID on the screen for kids! + O Helicon attained by 'bus! + O filmographic Aeneids! + O vitoscoped HERODOTUS! + + Our boys shall note the sacred Nine + Ascending their immortal peak, + Also Apollo (he was fine + In the old films as _Alf the Freak_). + + They shall behold TEIRESIAS + Telling the doom of Thebes, and con + With eyes but not with lips the crass + Way in which OEDIPUS went on. + + They shall observe quite painlessly + The heroes toiling as they sit + Rowing upon the sun-kissed sea + With black smuts racing over it. + + Some stout electroscopic "star," + Some Gallic beauty bistre-eyed, + Shall show them in the years afar + How Helen laughed, how Priam died, + + And how the good ÆNEAS came + Through faked adventures on the screen + To Latium, and what forks of flame + Devoured a dummy Punic queen. + + What snares the Queen of Love employed, + What Juno: mixed with local ads, + These shall be thoroughly enjoyed + By all appreciative lads. + + And some day, if the gods are kind + To hearts so filled with classic feats + In many a marble palace "cined" + And puffed so oft in halfpenny sheets, + + Shall come revulsion, faintly stirred + By Phoebus' and the Muses' laugh, + Against the foul sins of a word + Like spectodrome or vitagraph. + + Youth shall draw learning from the spring + Pierian, and be taught to know + The clustered verbal shames that cling + About the moving picture show, + + Till at the last shall dawn a bright, + A long-to-be-remembered day, + When porticos of fanes of light + Shall print Kinema with a K. + +EVOE. + + * * * * * + + "H.M.S. Cumberland. + + Geneva, Tuesday. + + The Municipality to-day gave a luncheon in honour of the + officers and cadets of the training ship Cumberland.--Reuter." + + _Naval and Military Record._ + +Another record for WINSTON. He alone could succeed in getting _H.M.S. +Cumberland_ to Geneva. + + * * * * * + + "Widcombe Manor, Bath, in which Fielding is said to have written + 'Tom Jones,' is to come under the hammer shortly. It is one of + the smaller houses erected by Indigo Jones." + + _Manchester Evening News._ + +It was, of course, the influence of his ancestor Indigo which so tinged +certain episodes in _Tom's_ career. + + * * * * * + +THE BAZAAR CUSHION. + +"Ha! Someone has been sitting on it," cried Father William, snatching a +flattened object off the piano-stool in high irritation. "It's +abominable, you know," turning to me. "There are any number of cushions. +The house is stuffed with cushions. Why people should always pounce upon +this one and manhandle it in this way"--He put it on the table and began +punching and squeezing and puffing and smoothing it till it had expanded +to its full extent. Then he flicked the dust off it with his +handkerchief. "I'll put it back in its box under the sofa," he said. "I +can't understand how it ever got out." + +He dropped into an armchair and instantly recovered his equanimity. + +"And why should they spare that one?" I asked. + +"That," said the old man solemnly, "is my bazaar cushion." + +"I thought it looked as if it had escaped from a bazaar," said I. + +"It came back only last night," he went on. "Are you a judge of +cushions? How do you like it? Pretty nice piece of work, eh?" + +"Yes," said I cautiously. "Looks to me pretty well put together and all +that; but it's rather--well, hideous, isn't it?" + +"Yes, yes," said Father William. "I suppose it's the colour you object +to. I confess it's a bit of an eyesore. But of course it has to be like +that. It's a case of protective colouring, you know." + +I didn't quite follow his line of thought and there was a short pause. +"You would hardly think to look at it," the old man went on at last, +"that that cushion has stood between me and all the trials and +persecutions incidental to bazaars for nearly half a century. Perhaps +the plague is not quite so bad as it was in the old days when I was in +my first City parish, but I must say they were particularly active last +summer. They have taken to holding them outside now, with Chinese +lanterns, so that there is no close season at all. I had the wit at the +very outset to see that the thing must be grappled with. They used to +badger me in two separate ways. I was always expected to send some sort +of contribution--and then I had to go and buy things. That was the worst +of it. I used to dive about, harassed and pursued, searching in vain for +the price of my freedom, always confronted by smoking-caps and +impossible needlework. It was a fearful ordeal." + +"I know," said I, with sympathy. "I know all about it." + +"But I found a way out, thanks to my cushion. I bought it at a Sale of +Work for Waifs and Strays nearly forty-seven years ago, and I think you +will agree with me that it is a fairly good cushion yet. Of course it +has been re-covered more than once. It was getting altogether too well +known in Streatham at one time. It used to be blue with horrid little +silver spangles." + +"And how does it work?" + +"It is beautifully simple. I am told that a bazaar is contemplated and +asked if I will assist. Very well, I send my cushion. That is quite good +enough; no one would expect me to do more. Then I go, on the appointed +day, buy the cushion, and walk out with an enormous parcel for all the +world to see that I have done my duty. Then it goes back in its box. The +only bazaars that I am unable to assist are those which occur (as they +sometimes do) when my cushion happens to be out." + +"And is it never sold?" + +"Well, _look_ at it!" said Father William. "Of course it had to be of +such a nature that there was no danger of its going off too quick. I +used always to go early on the first day to make sure. But since the +last time it was re-covered I have had more confidence in its staying +powers. I find there is no particular hurry." + +"Do you put a price on it?" I asked. + +"Oh, no. I don't like to do that. That might put me in an awkward +position if it came out. But I find it fairly exciting on each occasion +to discover what I shall have to pay for it. It is generally more +expensive now than it used to be in the old days. I suppose it is the +rise in the cost of living. But I am seldom satisfied, either way. If it +is too cheap I naturally feel rather slighted, seeing that it was I who +sent it; and if it is too dear of course I am annoyed because I have to +buy it. And it fluctuates extraordinarily. I have more than once bought +it in at half-a-crown and come home burning with indignation, and, if +you will believe me, there was a blackguard at that big Sale of Work for +the Territorials in the autumn who had the effrontery to charge me a +guinea and a half. I was furious with him." + +"I wish you would lend it to me, Father William," said I, after a pause. +"We are getting up a Jumble Sale in Little Sudbury." + +"No," said Father William firmly, "no. Little Sudbury is barred. The +last time it was there on sale there was a very painful scene. I had +arrived rather late, I remember, and I found my cushion actually being +sold by auction along with a pair of worsted slippers and a woolly door +mat--in one lot. I thought it showed very poor taste. Besides, it is +already booked to appear six times in the next fortnight." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Dear Old Lady._ "You have a picture in the window marked +ten-and-six, by a Mr. Holbein. Could you tell me if that is an original +painting or merely a print?"] + + * * * * * + +HAROLD NAPPING. + + "How stupid are the degenerate Tories who call this man [Mr. + LLOYD GEORGE] a demagogue."--_Mr. BEGBIE on Mr. LLOYD GEORGE in + "The Daily Chronicle," Feb. 5._ + + "He [Mr. Lloyd George] was, if you like, a demagogue."--_Mr. + BEGBIE on Mr. BALFOUR in "The Daily Chronicle," Feb. 7._ + + * * * * * + +The Duke of SUTHERLAND, we see, values the diamond-studded gold watch +and chain, of which he has just been relieved by two desperate +Neapolitans, at £60. But the real question is, would the CHANCELLOR OF +THE EXCHEQUER accept that valuation? + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "Oh, Jockywock darling, you _must_ try and remember it's +a tricycle, not a bicycle."] + + * * * * * + +WHEN BOSS EATS BOSS. + +According to the New York Correspondent of _The Daily Chronicle_, the +publication of a letter from Mr. CROKER, formerly the great Tammany +Chief, attacking his successor, Mr. MURPHY, has greatly strengthened the +campaign for purifying the Administration. + +The recent meeting of the Statistical Society was rendered remarkable by +a letter from Mr. LLOYD GEORGE who, in regretting his inability to be +present, impressed upon the Society the need of upholding a vigorous and +fastidious accuracy in the use of facts and figures. "To gain a +momentary triumph over an antagonist in a public controversy by a +misquotation, even though only a fraction is involved, is, in my +opinion, an act which permanently disqualifies the offender from holding +any place of responsibility." These golden words, so the President +observed, ought to be engraved in indelible letters in every school in +the kingdom. + +The dignified and telling rebuke recently addressed by Mr. BERNARD SHAW +to Mr. G. K. CHESTERTON, for undue indulgence in paradoxical gymnastics, +has given great satisfaction to the members of the Society for the +Promotion of Simplified Thought. As the President of the Society, Dr. +Pickering Phibbs, puts it, to have Mr. SHAW on the side of the angels is +enough to make the Powers of Darkness throw up the sponge. + +Mr. KEIR HARDIE'S remarkable speech at Wolverhampton, when he declared +that it was the duty of Labour to uphold the British Constitution, has +profoundly impressed Mr. LARKIN and Mr. LANSBURY, who are of opinion +that the stability of the British Empire is now assured for at least one +hundred years. + +The publication of a letter from Mr. ROOSEVELT, censuring President +WILSON for the prolixity and verbosity of his Presidential messages, +will, it is believed, lend a powerful impetus to the campaign on behalf +of brevity in public utterances. + + * * * * * + + "YOUNG LADY APPRENTICE WANTED--must be tall to learn all higher + branches of the trade."--_Advt. in_ (_our favourite news-paper_) + "_The Hairdressers Weekly Journal_." + +You want to be tall to reach up to the higher branches. + + * * * * * +From an Aberdeen firm's advertisement:-- + + Success comes in Cans, not in Can'ts. + + Once-a-year Clearance. + + To-day and Following Days. + + Wonder Values! + + Stimulants to Encourage Purchasers. + +In the cans, we suppose. + + * * * * * + +A GOLF JUDGMENT. + +(_To the Editor of "Punch."_) + +Dear Sir,--As I am not at all satisfied with the recent decision of The +Rules of Golf Committee on the position created by a cow carrying off a +ball in her hoof, I appeal to you to arbitrate in the following dispute +between myself and my friend A (for I am too courteous to expose his +actual name). + +During some very wild weather we made an arrangement, before starting +out, that, in the event of another storm coming on, the game should be +decided by the score existing at the moment of our consequent +retirement. + +A was in receipt of six bisques. I holed out the first in five. A, who +was in well-deserved trouble all the way, holed out in ten. I remarked, +"One up!" to which A made no response. As we moved off to the second tee +there was a loud clap of thunder and the heavens burst over our heads. A +at once shouted above the tumult, "I take my six bisques and claim the +hole and the match." He then headed swiftly for the pavilion. + +I cannot believe that he was justified in his claim. What do _you_ +think? + +Yours faithfully, FAIR PLAY. + +_Editor's Decision._--The original arrangement was bad in Golf Law. The +match is therefore off, and each party must pay his own costs. + + * * * * * + +TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE. + +"Do you believe in magic?" Jack asked. + +I hedged. + +"Well, whether you do or not," he said, "I've got a rather rum story for +you." + +"Go ahead," I replied. + +"Very well," he said. "It was on last Tuesday morning that I looked in +at the watchmaker's to see if my watch was mended yet. + +"It was hanging up in the glass case above the bench where he worked, +with my name on a little tab attached to the ring. + +"'No,' the man said, 'it's not done--in fact, I'm still observing it.' + +"'But it seems to be recording the time all right,' I said. + +"'Yes,' he replied--'seems, but it isn't. That's mere chance. Do you +know, it's so fast that it's gained exactly twenty-four hours since you +brought it in. That's not to-day's time it's registering, but +to-morrow's. Leave it here another week, and I'll have got to the bottom +of the mystery.' + +"At first I was disposed to do so; and then I had an idea. + +"'No,' I said, 'I'll take it.' + +"'But it's useless to you,' he replied. + +"'I'll take it," I said. 'Just for fun.' + +"He gave it me reluctantly and returned to his labours. + +"I walked away from the shop very thoughtfully. Here was a curious state +of things. I and the rest of the world were living on Monday, February +9th, while my watch was busily recording, a little too hurriedly, the +progress of time on Tuesday, February 10th. To see into the future has +ever been man's dearest wish, and here was I in possession of a little +piece of machinery which actually was of the future and yet could tell +none of its secrets. + +"But couldn't it? Couldn't I wrest one at least from it?--that was what +worried me. + +"As I pondered, a newspaper boy passed me bearing the placard +'Selections for Lingfield,' and in a flash I bought one. My watch knew +who had won! How could I extract that information from it?" + +Jack paused. + +"Good heavens," I interpolated, "what an extraordinary situation!" + +"You may well say so," he said. "You see, if only I could share its +knowledge, I should be rich for life; for it was now only a quarter to +eleven, and the first race was not till one-fifty, and there was plenty +of time to bet. + +"But---- + +"I continued on my way deep in thought," Jack went on, "when whom should +I meet but Lisburne? Lisburne is the most ingenious man I know. + +"'Come and advise me,' I said, and led him to a quiet corner. + +"'It's jolly interesting,' he remarked, when I had finished, 'but of +course it's black arts, you know, and we've lost the key nowadays. Still +we must try.' + +"We discussed the thing every way, in vain. + +"Then suddenly he said, 'Look here, this watch represents to-morrow. +That means it is through the watch that we must work. Here, let's get +to-day's _Mail_ and read it through the watch-glass and see if there's +any difference?' + +"We got it and did so. + +"Lisburne removed the glass, found the racing news and read them through +it. 'Good heavens!' he said, and turned white. 'Here, read this with +your naked eye,' he said, pushing the paper before me. + +"I read 'Saturday's racing results: 1.30, Midas 1, Blair Hampton 2, +Chessington 3,' and so on. 'Prices, Midas 6-4,' etc. + +"'Those are Saturday's results,' he said, shaking with excitement. 'But +now read them through the watch-glass.' + +"I did so, and they immediately changed to Monday's results. I was +reading to-morrow's paper! + +"'Look at the prices,' he cried. + +"'The prices! I hastily ran through them. They were splendid. "Captain +Farrell 10-1, Woodpark 10-1, Flitting Light 4-1." And these horses, +remember,' he said, 'are going to run this afternoon!' + +"'What's the next thing to be done?' I gasped. + +"'The bookies,' he replied. + +"'I suppose they're fair game,' I said. + +"'Of course,' he replied. 'The very fairest. But that's nothing to do +with you, anyhow. You're in possession of magic and must employ it. They +are the natural medium. How much can you muster?' + +"'I'd risk anything I could scrape up,' I said. 'Say £750. And you?' + +"'Oh, I'm broke,' he replied. 'How many bookies do you know?' + +"'Three,' I said. + +"'Well,' he replied, 'I know three more, and we can find men who know +others, and who will bet for us. Because we must plant this out warily, +you know, or they'll be suspicious.' + +"'Will you take it in hand,' I asked, 'leaving me £150 for my own +commissioners?' + +"'Of course,' he said, 'if you'll give me ten per cent.;' and having +copied out all the longer-priced winners through the watch-glass he +hurried off, promising to meet me at lunch. + +"How to get through the intervening time was now the question. First I +went to the telegraph office, and then to the barber's to have my hair +cut. Forcibly to be kept in a chair was what I needed. The hair-cut took +only half-an-hour; so I was shaved; then I was shampooed; then I was +massaged; then I was manicured. I should have been pedicured, but the +clock mercifully said lunch-time. + +"Lisburne was there in a state of fever. He had distributed the £600 +among fourteen different commission agents. + +"'Now we can have lunch,' he said, 'with easy minds.' + +"Easy! + +"'But suppose the whole thing is a fizzle,' I said. 'We've been far too +impetuous. Impulse was always my ruin.' + +"'Oh no,' he said. + +"'But if it's a fizzle,' I said, 'what about my £750?' + +"'It won't be,' he replied. 'It's magic. Let's order something to eat.' + +"He ate; that is the advantage of being on ten per cent. commission. I +couldn't." + +Jack paused. + +"Go on," I said. "Did the horses win?" + +"Every one," he replied. + +"At those prices?" + +"Yes." + +"Then you're frightfully rich?" + +"No," he said. + +"Why ever not? Surely the bookies haven't refused to pay?" + +"Oh no." + +"Then why aren't you rich?" + +"Because I did the usual silly thing--I woke up." + + * * * * * + + "The Cafe Chantant. + + To the Editor of 'The Evening Post.' + + Sir,--In writing on the 4th February I omitted from the lists of + names of two of our kind helpers at the Café Chantant, Messrs. + Le Cheminant and the Victoria Dairy. Will you kindly allow me to + do so now. Yours faithfully, M. P. PIPON." + + _"The Evening Post," Jersey._ + +Apparently the Editor wouldn't! + + * * * * * + + "Yesterday a metal-gilt chandelier, 5ft. high, with branches for + twenty-five lights, and numerous cut-glass pendants, fell at the + one bid of half a guinea. The purchaser, who was sitting under + it, seemed to be the most surprised person in the room." + + _Daily Telegraph._ + +If it fell on his head, we fear he must have been pained as well as +surprised. + + * * * * * + + "N.B.--Welsh rarebit is most nourishing, and, with a plate of + soap, makes an excellent dinner." _Bombay Gazette._ + +The soap, however nourishing, should be disguised; otherwise your guests +will misunderstand you. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Stewardess._ "We are just nearing the harbour, Madam. +Would you like some hot water?" + +_Passenger_ (_faintly_). "It doesn't matter, thank you; I'm only going +to relations."] + + * * * * * + +LETTERS AND LIFE. + +Preparations are already on foot for the great banquet to be given in +honour of the famous Russian novelist, Dr. Ladislas Plovskin, who is to +visit England in July. A representative committee has been formed, which +includes, amongst others, Sir GILBERT PARKER, Mr. CHARLES GARVICE, Mr. +SILAS HOCKING, Mr. C. K. SHORTER, Lord DUNSANY, Mr. JAMES DOUGLAS and +Mr. EDMUND GOSSE, who will take the chair at the banquet. There is a +peculiar appropriateness in this, for it was Mr. GOSSE who, some ten +years ago, first called attention to Plovskin in one of his masterly +studies. Since then, Plovskin has gained the Nobel Prize and become the +object of a special cult which has centres from Tomsk to Seattle, and +from Popocatapetl to Oshkosh. + +The address which will be presented to the great Muscovite fictionist +has been written by Mr. JAMES DOUGLAS, and is a masterpiece of sensitive +and discriminating eulogy. Thus in one passage Mr. DOUGLAS says, "while +preserving your own individuality with miraculous independence, you have +summed up in your work all the inchoate influences to be found in HOMER, +DANTE, SHAKSPEARE, VOLTAIRE and VERLAINE, and carried them to a pitch of +divine effulgence only to be equalled in the godlike work of our +marvellous MASEFIELD." + +Dr. Plovskin is no stranger to England, for he was an intimate friend of +the late EDWARD LEAR, who alludes to him under the name of Ploffskin in +one of his touching lyrics, and, as we have seen, he owes almost +everything to the generous appreciation of Mr. GOSSE, to whom he has +dedicated his last novel, which bears the fascinating title of _The Bad +Egg_. Portions of this, it is to be hoped, will be recited at the +banquet by the author's brother-in-law, Mr. Ossip Bobolinsky, Managing +Director of the Anglo-Manchurian Steam Tar Company. + + * * * * * + +In smart intellectual circles Tagore Teas are now all the rage. At these +elegant and up-to-date entertainments China tea is absolutely +proscribed, the refreshments, solid and liquid, being exclusively of +Indian origin. After tea the guests cantillate passages from the prose +and poetry of the Great Indian Master to the accompaniment of gongs (the +Sanskrit _tum-tum_) and one-stringed Afghan jamboons, for the space of +two or three hours, when their engagements permit. Sometimes the reading +is varied by mystical dances of a slow and solemn character, but all +laughter, levity and exuberance are sedulously discountenanced, the aim +of all present being to attain an attitude of serene and complacent +ecstasy which enables them to invest utterances of the most perfect +ineptitude with a portentous and pontifical significance. + + * * * * * + + "The advent to the episcopal bench of Dr. Russell Wakefield--the + only Anglican Bishop on record to wear a moustache with a + clean-shaven chin--does not appear to have aroused so much + comment as the appointment of Dr. Ryle to the See of Liverpool + in 1884. It was then said that the new prelate was the first + Anglican Bishop to wear a beard for over 200 years."--_The Daily + Chronicle._ + +Dr. RUSSELL WAKEFIELD, of course, has not worn his moustache for a +quarter of that time. + + * * * * * + +From a Hong Kong tradesman's circular:-- + + "EGGS! FRESH EGGS! AND TASTEFUL EGGS! FOR SALE. + + These eggs are exceedingly pure and fresh, and can be proved by + looking at or breaking them. The yelk when boiled--smell sweet, + the white--glistened, relished, and favourable to health as + well. + + TRY our taseeful eggs as their quality bears. + + COME! COME! COME! AND TRY TO HAVE SOME." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _First Winter Sport_ (_looking at a magnificent view of +the Alps_). "Not bad, that." + +_Second Winter Sport._ "Yes, it's all right; but you needn't rave about +it like a bally poet."] + + * * * * * + +THE HEN. + + To-day it is not mine to sing + A lay of love, a song of Spring; + I tackle no uplifting thing + Of arms and men; + My muse is otherwise beguiled + To gentler themes and measures mild; + I sing of nature's artless child, + The common hen. + + Little she has of lyric stuff; + Her bows, I grant, are merely bluff, + Her sternmost pile of windy fluff + Would leave one cool; + Yet never since the world was planned + Was aught more lofty and more grand + Regarded as a mother--and + Such an old fool. + + In laying eggs is all her joy; + Its rapture never seems to cloy; + She knows no worthier employ + In life than this, + So to collect a fertile batch + Still young, still fresh enough to hatch, + And thus, by sterling effort, snatch + A mother's bliss. + + But, though the futile one will lay + (When she's in form) an egg per day, + She always gives the fact away + With loud acclaim + That all the novel truth may know; + Whereby the unsleeping human foe + Derives a tip on where to go + To get the same. + + It does not make her senses reel, + This mystery, or dim her zeal, + Till by degrees she seems to feel + Her broken lot; + She roams aloof, she grows depressed; + And then, her broody sorrow guessed, + Men lure her to a well-filled nest + And bid her squat. + + And now behold her, warm and wide, + Her rounded form well satisfied, + Though even in her highest pride + She has no luck; + The offspring that she tends so well + Are probably of alien shell; + Indeed, for all that she can tell, + They may be duck. + + Yes, one may grant that on the whole + She would not thrill the poet soul; + For, tho' she plays a decent _rôle_ + Beyond all doubt, + Where mental qualities are lacked + We find but little to attract; + She does not make, in point of fact, + The heart go out. + + But see her when some danger lies + O'er her young brood, and, with wild eyes, + Straight at the sudden foe she flies, + Her full soul spurred + To battle with the gnashing beak-- + A roaring tiger is more meek; + And somehow one is bound to speak + Well of the bird. + +DUM-DUM. + + * * * * * + +From the "Found" column in _The Standard_:-- + + "Fox Skin Fur, on Hog's Back." + +The last place where you would look for it. + + * * * * * + + "Natal first innings--Barnes, 5 wickets for 44 runs; Rolf, 4 for + 59; Woolley, 6 for 6; Douglas, 8 for 8; Hearne, none for 15; + Bird, 1 for 9.--P.A. Foreign Special Telegram." + + _Glasgow Herald._ + +And yet Natal won. + + * * * * * + +THE MISSING WORD. + +[Illustration: The "Premier" Parrot (_emerging from profound thought_). +"EX----EX----EX----EX----" + +John Bull. "LOOK HERE, HERBERT, IF YOU'RE _GOING_ TO SAY 'EXCLUSION,' +FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE _SAY_ IT AND GET IT OVER!" [_Parrot relapses into +profound thought_.]] + + * * * * * + +ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT. + +(Extracted from the Diary of Toby, M.P.) + +_House of Commons, Tuesday, February_ 10.--Odd to find proceedings in +House to-day reminiscent of incident in a famous trial. Occasion +recognised as supremely momentous. Marks, within defined limit of time, +crisis of bitter controversy. Before Session closes fate of Ireland and +of the Ministry will be settled. PREMIER'S speech awaited with gravest +anxiety. Lobby thronged with animated groups. Before four o'clock--when +SPEAKER returned to Chair elate with consciousness of singular foresight +in having "for greater accuracy" possessed himself of copy of KING'S +Speech, presently read to expectant Members, most of whom heard it +delivered from the Throne two hours earlier--stream of humanity flooded +House, filling every seat and crowding Bar. + +It was at preliminary gathering that case of _Bardell_ v. _Pickwick_ was +recalled. House awaiting arrival of Black Rod with summons to repair to +gilded Chamber. Message delivered, SPEAKER, escorted by SERJEANT-AT-ARMS +carrying Mace, marches off. From Treasury Bench and from Front Bench +opposite, Leader of House and Leader of Opposition simultaneously rise +and fall in. Other Ministers and ex-Ministers with mob of Members +complete procession. + +When PREMIER and BONNER LAW met they heartily shook hands. CAPTAIN CRAIG +and MOORE (of Armagh) looked at each other in pained surprise. + +[Illustration: _Mr. Pickwick_ (Captain Craig) regards with abhorrence +the exchange of salutations between _Serjeant Buzfuz_ (Mr. Asquith) and +his own counsel, _Serjeant Snubbin_ (Mr. Bonar Law).] + +Here was the touch of nature that makes the whole world kin. When seated +in court awaiting opening of trial, _Mr. Pickwick_ observed a learned +serjeant-at-law make friendly salutation to his own counsel. + +"Who's that red-faced man who said it was a fine morning, and nodded to +our counsel?" he whispered to his solicitor. + +"Mr. Serjeant Buzfuz," was the reply. "He's opposed to us; he leads on +the other side." + +_Mr. Pickwick_, it is recorded, regarded with great abhorrence the +cold-blooded villainy of a man who, as counsel for the opposite party, +presumed to tell _Mr. Serjeant Snubbin_, who was counsel for him, that +it was a fine morning. + +Thus MOORE (of Armagh) and the COURAGEOUS CRAIG. Here were the +contending forces set in battle array, and the first thing they behold +is their Captain shaking hands with the commander of the enemy! An +ominous beginning, they agreed, well calculated to depress the spirits +of men who mean business. + +It proved emblematical of what followed. Expected that stupendous +occasion would be marked by dramatic scenes, possibly by outbreak of +disorder. Nothing of that kind happened. Scene was indeed impressive by +reason of Chamber being crowded from floor to topmost bench of +Strangers' Gallery. Also, whilst PREMIER in unusually low-spoken, +comparatively halting voice, delivered critical passages of his speech, +there was movement marking intense interest. Multitude on floor of House +bent forward to catch the murmured syllables. Members crowding the side +galleries stood up in same anxious quest. + +[Illustration: _Mr. John Burns_ (_holding list of the four new +appointments to Government Departments, including his own to the Board +of Trade_). "Excellent choices!--with perhaps the exception of Samuel, +Hobhouse and Masterman."] + +Otherwise the accustomed signs and tokens of Parliamentary crisis were +conspicuously lacking. WALTER LONG, whose return to fighting-line after +bout of illness was warmly welcomed on both sides, pitched the opening +note a little low. Not fierce enough to gratify Ulster, he +correspondingly failed to irritate the Home Rulers. + +As for PREMIER, his part, adroitly played, was to appear to be saying a +good deal without committing himself to definite pledges. Above all, not +to inflame controversy. He brought with him unusually copious notes, but +did not, as is his wont on such occasions, read from them the text of +especially weighty passages. Spoke slowly, occasionally in a murmur, +uttering his sentences as if deliberately weighing each word. Following +WALTER LONG, he was received with prolonged cheers, testifying to +personal popularity. When he sat down cheering was more polite than +effusive. + +Irish Nationalists barely contributed even to this circumspect note of +approval. Throughout nearly an hour's speech they sat in ominous +silence, listening to passages in which they seemed to recognise +disposition on part of PREMIER towards mood of _Benedick_, who, when he +said he would die a bachelor, never thought he would live to be married. + +Had not PREMIER within the last twelve months frequently declared he +would never consent to exclusion of Ulster from Home Rule Bill? And +wasn't he now showing signs of disposition to surrender? + +_Business done._--Parliament reassembles. WALTER LONG, on behalf of +Opposition, moves amendment to Address, calling upon Government to +appeal to country before proceeding further with Home Rule Bill. + +_Wednesday._--Interest of sitting centred in speeches of CARSON and JOHN +REDMOND. Former met with rousing reception from Opposition. Some +Ministerialists would have liked to join in the demonstration, not +because they share CARSON'S views or admire his policy, but because they +instinctively feel admiration for a man of commanding position who has +sacrificed personal and professional interests to what he regards as the +well-being of his country. Esteem increased by merit of his speech. Only +once did he lapse into tone and manner of personal attack familiar to +House when Ulster Members and Nationalists, hating each other for love +of their country, join in debate. Turning round to top bench below +Gangway, where JOHN REDMOND sat attentive, he said: "If you want Ulster, +come and take her, or come and win her. But you have never wanted her +affections; you have wanted her taxes." + +This stung to the quick. REDMOND, leaping to his feet when CARSON +resumed his seat, hotly denounced accusation as unworthy of his +countryman. + +House already began to show signs of satiety. Long intervals when +benches were empty. COUSIN HUGH, speaking at favourable hour of six +o'clock, failed to attract an audience to whom he might present his +cheering forecast of an interval of six weeks spent in listening to +speeches of Members below the Gangway, "poked up by the CHANCELLOR OF +THE EXCHEQUER to attack the FIRST LORD OF THE ADMIRALTY." Benches +crowded whilst CARSON and REDMOND spoke. Filled up again when CHANCELLOR +OF EXCHEQUER in brief speech wound up debate on behalf of Government, +and BONNER LAW, as usual unencumbered by notes, replied. + +_Business done._--Demand for immediate dissolution negatived by 333 +votes against 255. Opposition elate at reduced majority. + +"I fancy," said PREMIER, smiling serenely upon the WINSOME WINSTON, +"they would gladly suffer from our complaint." + +_House of Lords, Thursday._--Noble Lords, having disposed of Address, +already find themselves in condition of frozen-out gardeners who have no +work to do. Session but a few days old has already afforded fresh sign +of disposition to belittle hereditary Chamber. + +[Illustration: "Noble Lords already find themselves in condition of +frozen-out gardeners who have no work to do." + +(Lord Curzon and Lord Lansdowne.)] + +It happened thus. On opening night Lord LONDONDERRY, making his way +along Peers' Gallery in Commons, came upon extraordinary sight. A +stranger on front seat overlooking sacred quarter allotted to Peers, +finding himself incommoded by hat and overcoat, neatly folded up the +latter, dropped it on the Peers' bench beneath and carefully placed his +hat upon it. Hadn't LLOYD GEORGE demonstrated that the land belonged to +the people? Here was undeveloped space. As a free man he claimed it for +his own uses. + +LONDONDERRY, halting, angrily regarded the incumbrance. Turned about +with evident intention of calling attendant's notice to unparalleled +liberty. At that moment his eye fell on the countenance of the stranger. +Could it be? Yes; it was the school proprietor whose patriotic offer of +aid to Ulster in approaching civil war he had a few days earlier +reported to an admiring nation. Letter offered to provide for two sons +of any Ulster volunteer who fell in battle with the myrmidons of an +iniquitous Ministry. As sometimes happens, pearl of the letter was +hidden in the postscript. Writer explained that he could not very well +go to the war himself but would send his partner. + +Recognition placed new aspect on little affair.>LONDONDERRY perceived it +was simple ignorance of customs of the place that led to apparent +indiscretion. So with genial nod passed on to seat over the clock. + +Few minutes later outraged attendant, catching sight of the bundle, +peremptorily ordered its removal. + +_Business done._--By 243 votes against 55 Lords carried MIDDLETON'S +amendment to Address demanding immediate dissolution. WILLOUGHBY DE +BROKE communicated to the MEMBER FOR SARK his conviction that this +hide-bound Government will take no notice of the mandate. + +"Reminds me," said the Bold Baron, brushing away a manly tear, "of a +hymn I learned in the nursery:-- + + 'Tis not enough to say + You're sorry and repent + If you go on in the same way + As you did always went.'" + + * * * * * + +ANOTHER HAPPY ACCIDENT. + +(_From "The Daily Sale."_) + +_The Daily Sale_ has peculiar pleasure in announcing that another of its +insured readers has been gravely injured by an accident to the taxi-cab, +omnibus, train or tram, in (or on) which he was travelling at the time +of the disaster. The name of this reader (whose portrait is given) is +Mr. Vivian Brackendope, the well-known amateur actor of Burton-on-Beer. +Mr. Vivian Brackendope is indeed a lucky man. He is the ninth of our +readers to be badly smashed up during the past six weeks. Now, who will +be the tenth? Fill up the coupon on page 2 and _you_ will be eligible. + + * * * * * + +AN ADMIRABLE CRICHTON. + + "In the list of successes in the Cambridge Local Examinations we + notice the name of P. T. Harris, of Wellingborough Grammar + School, who gained credit for himself and his school by passing + in every subject and gaining four distinctions, the distinctions + being gained in arithmetic, French, algebra, and Little Bowden + Pig Club." + +_Market Harborough Advertiser._ + + * * * * * + + "COUNTRY LIFE: an Illustrated Journal for all interested in + Country Life and Country Pursuits, complete from its beginning + in 1897 to June 1906, _profusely illustrated with views of + ancient and modern seats, Country scenes, sporting incidents, + and portraits of winning horses, prize beasts, and fashionable + beauties."_ + + _Bookseller's List._ + +An ungallant sequence. + + * * * * * + +THE WISH IS FATHER TO THE THOUGHT. + + "Then, after a last earnest statement of the Ulster position by + Mr. Gordon, the Chancellor of the Exchequer rose to wind up the + Government."--_Daily Telegraph._ + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Ardent Young Lady Visitor_ (_who is being shown over +author's sanctum_). "How perfectly _sweet_ it must be to have a room +where one can work without being disturbed."] + + * * * * * + +A TYPICAL AMERICAN. + +[Illustration: _David Quixano_ (Mr. Walker Whiteside) to _Herr +Pappelmeister_ (Mr. Clifton Alderson). "I cannot take a fee for playing +in your orchestra. I am too Quixanotic to do a thing like that."] + + * * * * * + +AT THE PLAY. + +"The Melting Pot." + +It is impossible not to respect the earnestness of Mr. ZANGWILL when he +treats of the persecution of his co-religionists in Russia, or their +social exclusion in America. But when he appeals to an English audience +he is addressing the converted. It is a good many years since the pogram +was a popular form of amusement in this country, and at present the Jew +is the flattered idol of English Society. It may seem surprising that +his play should have had so great a success in the States, where they +are not supposed to have a passion for hearing home truths. But then its +main theme is the glorification of America as the Melting Pot or +crucible into which are flung the wrongs and hatreds and slaveries of +the old world, to re-appear in the shape of justice and love and +freedom. This is the theme upon which _David Quixano_, a Kishineff Jew +who has lost all his family in a massacre, goes from time to time into +an orgy of lyrical raptures. And indeed the swiftness with which the +naturalised immigrant, of just any nationality, assimilates himself to +local conditions, instantly changing his heart with his change of sky, +and learning to wave his stars and stripes with the best of the +native-born, must seem miraculous to the ordinary patriot. And here we +touch the weak spot in Mr. ZANGWILL'S pæan of the Melting Pot. For those +who migrate to America for the sake of its democratic freedom are the +few; and those who go there for the sake of its dollars are the many; +and into the Melting Pot--or, to use an image more apposite to +indigenous tastes, its Sausage Machine--are thrown not only the wrongs +and hatreds of unhappy races but also the dear traditions of birth and +blood and family ties and pride of country, to emerge in a uniform +pattern without a past. + +For his plot, Mr. ZANGWILL relies upon a very stagy coincidence. +_Quixano_ falls in love with a young Russian girl who conducts a +Settlement Home in New York, and conquers her prejudice against his +race, only to find that she is the daughter of the very officer who +permitted the massacre at Kishineff in which _Quixano's_ family had +perished, and himself been wounded. In turn he naturally has his own +prejudices to conquer, and does so. But not till he has scared us with +the fear that he is going to be false to his theory of purification by +process of the Melting Pot. + +Mr. WALKER WHITESIDE, who plays the part, was excellent in his quiet +moods, and when he was obliged to rant was no worse than other ranters. +The superb solidity of Mr. SASS as the Russian officer served as an +admirable foil to the mercurial methods of _Quixano_. Miss PHYLLIS RELPH +as the heroine mitigated the effect of her obvious sincerity by a bad +trick of showing her nice teeth. Mr. PERCEVAL CLARK, as a young American +millionaire, was pleasantly British. Humorous relief of a cosmopolitan +order was provided by the Irish brogue of Miss O'CONNOR; the broken +English of Miss GILLIAN SCAIFE; the Anglo-German of Mr. CLIFTON ALDERSON +who played very well as _Herr Pappelmeister_ (Kapellmeister to a New +York orchestra); and what I took to be the Yiddish of Miss INEZ BENSUSAN +as the aunt of the hero, a pathetic figure of an old lady with firm +views about the keeping of the Jewish Sabbath, and a pedantic habit of +celebrating with a false nose and other marks of hilarity the +anniversary of the escape of the Chosen People from a Persian pogram +twenty-five centuries ago. + +It might seem from this long catalogue of humorists that frivolity was +the prevailing note of the play. But I can give assurances that this was +not so. The prevailing note was a high seriousness, culminating in the +last Act, when tedium supervened. I attribute my final depression in +part to the scene--a bird's-eye view of New York from the roof-garden of +the Settlement House. It was impossible to share _Quixano's_ spasm of +exaltation in the matter of the Melting Pot as he gazed on this very +indifferent example of scenic art. + + * * * * * + +"A Midsummer Night's Dream." + +I am not sure that Mr. GRANVILLE BARKER'S faithful followers are being +quite kindly entreated by him. He happens to have a keen sense of humour +and for some little while he has been trying, with a very grave face, to +see how much they will swallow. This time, everybody else except the +initiated can see the bulge in his cheek where his tongue comes. + +The alleged faults of the old school, which the new was to correct, were +(1) an over-elaboration of detail in the setting; (2) a realism which +challenged reality. ("Challenge," I understand, is the catch-word they +use.) Both these qualities were supposed to distract attention from the +drama itself. The answer, almost too obvious to be worth stating, is +that the grotesque and the eccentric are vastly more distracting than +the elaborate; and that, if you only sound the loud symbol loud enough +the audience has no ear left at all for the actual words. As for the +"challenging" of reality the new school would argue that, as the stage +is a thing of convention to start with--artificial light, no natural +atmosphere or perspective, no fourth wall, and so on--all the rest +should be convention too. The answer, again almost too obvious, is that, +since the audience has to bear the strain of unavoidable convention, you +should not wantonly add to their worry. And, anyhow, the human figures +on your stage (I leave out fairies and superhumans for the moment) are +bound to challenge reality by the fact that they are alive. If Mr. +BARKER wants to be consistent (and he would probably repudiate so +Philistine a suggestion) his figures should be marionettes worked by +strings; and for words--if you _must_ have words--he might himself read +the text from a corner of the top landing of his proscenium. + +[Illustration: _Hermia_ (Miss Laura Cowie). "I upon this bank will rest +my head."] + +And the strange thing is that no one in the world has a nicer sense of +the beauty of SHAKSPEARE'S verse than Mr. BARKER. Indeed he protests in +his preface: "They (the fairies) must be not too startling.... _They +mustn't warp your imagination--stepping too boldly between SHAKSPEARE'S +spirit and yours._" (The italics are my own comment.) He is of course +free, within limits, to choose his own convention about fairies, because +we have never seen them, though some of us say we have. Mr. CHESTERTON +naturally says they can be of any size; Mr. BARKER says they can be of +any age from little _Peaseblossom_ and his young friends to hoary +antiques with moustaches like ram's horns and beards trickling down to +their knees. And as many as like it, and are not afraid of being +poisoned, may have gilt faces that make them look like Hindoo idols with +the miraculous gift of perspiration. But he should please remember that +the play is not his own. It is, in point of fact, SHAKSPEARE'S, and I am +certain he was not properly consulted about the Orientalisation of the +fairies out of his Warwickshire woodlands. You will be told that he +_has_ been properly consulted; that he himself makes _Titania_ say that +_Oberon_ has "come from the furthest steppe of India," and that she too +had breathed "the spiced Indian air." But on the same authority Mr. +BARKER might just as well have fixed on Asia Minor or Greece as their +provenance. She charges _Oberon_ with knowing _Hippolyta_ too well, and +he accuses her of making _Theseus_ break faith with a number of ladies. +Clearly they were a travelling company and would never have confined +themselves to the costumes of any particular clime. + +Anyhow, when at His Majesty's you saw _Oberon_ in sylvan dress moving +lightly through a wood that looked like a wood (and so left your mind +free to listen to him), you could believe in all the lovely things he +had to say; but when you saw Mr. BARKER'S _Oberon_ standing stark, like +a painted graven image, with yellow cheeks and red eyebrows, up against +a symbolic painted cloth, and telling you that he knows a bank where the +wild thyme blows, you know quite well that he knows nothing of the kind; +and you don't believe a word of it. + +But, to leave SHAKSPEARE decently out of the question, I liked the gold +dresses of the fairies enormously, so long as _Puck_--a sort of adult +Struwel-Puck that got badly on my nerves--was not there, destroying +every colour scheme with his shrieking scarlet suit, which went with +nothing except a few vermilion eyebrows. I liked too the grace of their +simple chain-dances on the green mound (English dances, you will note, +and English tunes--not Indian). But in the last scene, where they +interlace among the staring columns, their movements lacked space. +Indeed that was the trouble all through; that, and the pitiless light +that poured point-blank upon the stage from the 12.6 muzzles protruding +from the bulwarks of the dress-circle. There was no distance, no +suggestion of the spirit-world, no sense of mystery (except in regard to +Mr. BARKER'S intentions). + +The best scene was the haunt of _Titania_, with its background of +Liberty curtains very cleverly disposed. As drapery they were excellent, +but as symbols of a forest I found them a little arbitrary. I do not +mind a forest being indicated, if you are short of foliage, by a couple +of trees (in tubs, if you like) or even a single tree; but somehow--and +the fault is probably mine--the spectacle of hanging drapery does not +immediately suggest to me the idea of birds' nests. I am afraid I should +be just as stupid if Mr. BARKER gave me the same convention the other +way round, and showed an interior with foliage to indicate +window-curtains. + +The play itself, with its rather foolish figures from the Court and the +easy buffoonery of its peasants, does not offer great chances of acting; +and Miss LAURA COWIE was the only one in the cast who added to her +reputation. Her _Hermia_ was a delightful performance full of charm and +piquancy and real intelligence. Miss LILLAH MCCARTHY sacrificed +something of her personality to the exigences of a flaxen chevelure. Mr. +HOLLOWAY'S _Theseus_ was wanting in kingliness, and his hunting scene +was perhaps the worst thing in the play. He was not greatly helped by +his _Hippolyta_, for Miss EVELYN HOPE never began to look like a leader +of Amazons. Miss CHRISTINE SILVER'S _Titania_ had a certain domestic +sweetness, but even a queen of fairies might be a little more queenly. +Mr. DENNIS NEILSON-TERRY as _Oberon_ was a curiously effeminate figure +for those who recalled the manly bearing of his mother in the same part. +Of the two bemused Athenian lovers, Mr. SWINLEY, as _Lysander_, bore +himself as bravely as could be expected. + +Mr. NIGEL PLAYFAIR had, of course, no difficulty with the part of +_Bottom_, and Mr. ARTHUR WHITBY'S _Quince_ and Mr. QUARTERMAINE'S +_Flute_ were both excellent. It is to the credit of the whole troupe of +rustic players that nobody tried to force the fun. + +Apart from a slight tendency to hurry, a trick that, except in swift +dialogue or passionate speech, gives the effect of something learnt by +heart and not spontaneous, the delivery of the lines--and some of +SHAKSPEARE'S most exquisite are here--was done soundly. + +Finally, no one who wants to keep level with the table-talk of the day +should miss this interesting and intriguing production, especially if he +hasn't been to _Parsifal_. + +O. S. + + * * * * * + +HOW TO GET YOUR PHOTOGRAPH INTO THE ILLUSTRATED DAILY PAPERS. + +[Illustration: Be the only lady fireman In Yorkshire.] + +[Illustration: Or be the only wooden-legged roller-skater in Holland +Park.] + +[Illustration: Or be the double of some celebrity.] + +[Illustration: Or become unexpectedly heir to a large fortune left by an +uncle who emigrated to America at the age of six with half-a-crown, and +lived to become the Hairpin King. It is usual in this case to be +photographed just after you have realised that the fortune is in +dollars, not pounds. Sometimes the lawyer who discovered you, and +assisted you to establish your claim, is included in this photograph.] + +[Illustration: Or make a musical instrument out of something else.] + +[Illustration: Or you might be a foster-mother.] + +[Illustration: Or you might, owing to lack of funds, sweep the chimney +of the Sunday-school yourself.] + +[Illustration: But, after all, the pleasantest way is to back the winner +of a double and get £40,000 to 5/-.] + + * * * * * + +OVER MONT BLANC BY AEROPLANE. + + _"'Thou, too, hoar Mount! with they sky-pointing peaks, + Oft from whose feet the avalanche, unheard, + Shoots downward.'"_--_Daily Chronicle._ + +Conquered, alas! and by one of they dratted flying machines. + + * * * * * + + "Eastbourne.--Furnished double-fronted villa, from April, for + six or twelve months; facing south; near the downs, fifteen + months from pier, five from 'buses."--_The Lady._ + +Too near for us. + + * * * * * + +TO SEPTIMIUS ON TROUT. + +(_A February Ode._) + + To-day the young year in her sleep was stirring + In woods and hearts of men; + To-night 'tis sharper and the cold's recurring-- + Septimius, what then? + + Draw in and talk of politics and speeches + To the old tiresome tune? + Not we who saw pale sunshine on the beeches + Only this afternoon; + + Who saw the snowdrops frail in woodland hollows, + Who heard the building rooks + Herald a time of flowers and skimming swallows, + Green fields and brawling brooks! + + Nay, pledge anew, Septimius, such gages + Of May-time's radiant rout + Till, as becometh fishermen and sages, + Our talk shall trend to trout-- + + To little trout, to little streams that scurry + Where the hill curlews cry, + O'er which the neophyte may splash and flurry, + Yet heap his basket high; + + To careful trout, for pundits skilled and wary, + That use upon the chalk, + Plump and recondite, dubious and chary-- + On such shall turn our talk. + + Then since we're of the Faithful, vowed to follow + Old Thames's placid flow, + We'll breathe of his leviathans that wallow, + In bated tones and low; + + And I mayhap shall say a word in token + Of one prodigious friend + Who lurks--excuse a statement more outspoken-- + 'Twixt Marlow and Bourne End; + + While you, Septimius, set memory roaming + To That which smashed amain + Your trace of proof, and hint how some soft gloaming + He yet shall come again. + + So shall we sit this firelit hour, contriving + Blue halcyon days that hold + The lisp of streams in crisping reed-beds striving, + And meadows spun with gold. + + * * * * * + + "Insurance business is ransacted." + + _Quarterly Post Office Guide, p. 154._ + +The influence of Mr. LLOYD GEORGE again. + + * * * * * + +INTELLECTUAL DAMAGE TO ANIMALS. + +We gather from _The Daily Sketch_ that a reverend gentleman at Herne Bay +has just founded the S. P. M. C. A., or "Society for the Prevention of +Mental Cruelty to Animals," and holds, as part of his propaganda, that +the Zoo should be disbanded and abolished, and, in fact, that no wild +animals or birds should be kept anywhere in captivity at all. + +The S. P. M. C. A. fills a long-felt want. Everyone with any sense of +politeness or tact must recognise that it is grossly improper to wound +the feelings of the lower orders of creation by the opprobrious use of +such epithets as ass, donkey, cat, mule, pig, goose, monkey, and so on. +Picture the mental torture and degradation undergone by the +self-respecting rodent who overhears the contemptuous exclamation, +"Rats!" Realise, if you can, the stigma attached to the hard-working +order of garden annelids when, possibly in their very presence, one +human being addresses another as a "worm"! + +Then, again, take the deplorable breaches of etiquette on the part of +visitors at the Zoo. We ourselves have heard the most uncomplimentary +allusions made to the appearance of the baboons and the hippopotamus, in +the hearing of those unfortunate creatures, and quite regardless of +their _amour propre_. The callous Cockney takes care to insult his +helpless victims only when they are behind bars and cannot retaliate +effectively. One shudders to think of the mental humiliation that is +daily experienced by the warthog and the mandrill. And even the nobler +animals--the lions and bears--are not allowed to escape without +prejudicial comment, especially at feeding-time. Not the slightest +deference is paid to the private opinions and sentiments of these +carnivores by the vulgar crowd of sight-seers. The parrots alone can +ease their harassed souls and have the last word with the passer-by. + +Meanwhile, we have to apologise to our cat for having recently upbraided +him rather too freely for his nocturnal habits and general lack of +discipline, not having considered the shock of such language to his +sensitive mind. + +ZIG-ZAG. + + * * * * * + + "Young lady requires secretarial work of any kind, good writer + and correspondent, accustomed to literary work, or would write + up Parish fashions."--_Daily Mail._ + +Smocks are no longer being worn. Sun-bonnets may be expected in a few +months. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Lady_ (_in small Irish hotel_). "Waiter, take away that +bottle and put some clean water in it." + +_Waiter._ "Faith, Mum, the wather's all right; 'tis the bottle that's +dirty."] + + * * * * * + +OUR BOOKING-OFFICE. + +(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks._) + +"Anyhow, I can remember this Court and can tell a tale it plays a part +in, only not very quick." Thus Mr. WILLIAM DE MORGAN, introductory, on +the fourth page of his latest novel, When _Ghost meets Ghost_ +(HEINEMANN). Before it ends there have been as near nine hundred pages +of it as makes no difference; and the things that the author remembers +in the course of the tale, and the not-very-quickness with which he +tells it, must be seen to be believed. The main outline of this more +than leisurely plot is concerned with the coming together of two aged +twin sisters, each of whom has been living for years in ignorance of the +other's existence, so that they meet at last almost as ghosts. Hence the +title. But you will not need to be told that there is ever so much more +in the nine hundred pages than this. There are the children _Dave and +Dolly_, for example; likewise _Uncle Mo'_, and any quantity of humble +London types; not to mention the group that includes _Lady Gwen_, and +_Adrian Torrens_, and a score of others, all drawn with that verbal +Pre-Raphaelitism in which the author takes such obvious delight. For +myself I must honestly confess that I have found it a little +overwhelming; but that, after all, is a question of individual taste. I +suppose there is one comparison that is inevitable. I had meant to say +never a word about CHARLES DICKENS in this notice, but, like the head of +another CHARLES, it would come; and when the chief house in the story +began to rumble and finally collapsed in a cloud of dust--well, could +anyone help being reminded of how the same incident was handled by the +master of such terrors? In brief, this latest De Morgan left me with a +profound and increased respect for the author; some little envy for the +reader whose time and taste enable him to enjoy it as it should be +enjoyed; and, for proof-readers and reviewers, a very pure sympathy. + + * * * * * + +The _Duchess of Wrexe_ (SECKER) is, I think, the longest as it is +certainly the most substantial novel that Mr. HUGH WALPOLE has yet given +us. It is the work of one who has already made himself a force in modern +fiction, and after this book will have more than ever to be reckoned +with. Whether the reckoning will be to all tastes is another matter; I +incline to think not. Four hundred closely printed pages, in which +hardly anything happens to the bodies of the characters, but a great +deal to their spirits--this perhaps is toughish meat for the ordinary +devourer of fiction. But for the others this study of the passing of an +epoch, the time of the Old Society, as symbolised by the figure of the +_Duchess_, will be a delight. You might suppose from this (if you were +unfamiliar with your author) that we had here a social comedy. Nothing +in fact could be further from Mr. WALPOLE'S design. For him, as for his +characters, there is almost too haunting a sense of the tragedy of +trivial things. No one in the book is happy. The _Duchess_ herself, +stern, aloof, terrible, broken but never bent by the oncoming of the New +Order; the various members of the family whom she terrified; _Rachel_, +the granddaughter, between whom and the old woman there exists the bond +of one of those hatreds in which Mr. WALPOLE so exults; the secretary, +_Lizzie Rand_--all of them are tremendously and miserably alive. I think +the matter is that they have too much sensibility, of the modern kind. +They see too many meanings. A primrose by a river's brim, or more +probably in a flower-seller's basket, is not for them a simple primrose, +but a portent of soul-shaking significance. To make up for this the +author has gifted them with his own exquisite sense of colour and words, +and especially a feeling for the beauty of London that at times almost +reconciles them to life. But I could wish them merrier. + + * * * * * + +Mr. HAROLD SPENDER'S new novel, _One Man Returns_ (MILLS AND BOON), +opens with a very powerful and dramatic situation. Nothing in its way +could be better than the description of the lonely _Trevena_ family, of +their vigil during the terrible storm, of the shipwreck and the sudden +arrival of the two strangers, father and son, who are its only +survivors. The father dies immediately without revealing his identity, +and the son, slowly nursed back to health by the devoted care of _Enid +Trevena_, resumes his life without any consciousness of the past, having +forgotten even his own name. As a matter of fact he is _Cyril Oswald_, +the lawful inheritor of Oswald Hall and great estates, which, of course, +pass into the possession of the nearest villain. This is _Major Harley_, +a gentleman of a lurid past and an infamous present, mitigated only by +the fact that he has a beautiful and amiable daughter, _Dorothy_, who, +having been educated at Roedean School, conceives herself to be +qualified to run after beagles. In the natural course of things she +sprains her ankle and is beloved by _Rupert Sandford_, the chief beagler +of the novel. She then quarrels with her disgraceful parent, is adopted +by _Mrs. Sandford_ (mother to _Rupert_), and becomes the affianced bride +of _Rupert_, though for a time she had been inclined to look with favour +on _Cyril_. This young gentleman eventually recovers his estates by +course of law and returns to Cornwall and _Enid_ just in time to cut out +that young lady from under the guns of _Merrifield_, a South African +millionaire who had complicated the situation by providing _Cyril_ with +money for his law-suit. What happened to _Major Harley_ is not stated, +but I presume he must have drunk off the phial of poison which such +desperate adventurers always carry concealed about their persons. + + * * * * * + +"The matrimonial career of suburban lovers," says Miss JESSIE POPE in a +prologue to _The Tracy Tubbses_ (MILLS AND BOON), "is seldom variegated +by so many curious happenings as fell to the lot of Mr. and Mrs. _Tracy +Tubbs_;" and to this statement I can give my unqualified assent. No +sooner were the _T. T.'s_ married than they were beset by such wonderful +and various misfortunes that I should like to try and "place" them. The +Lion, I think, won in a canter, _Aunt Julia_ was a bad second, and The +Chafing-dish was third, while among the "also ran" were several +Policemen, The Balloon, _Cross-eyed Cranstone_ and The Motor-Bicycle. +But whether the _T. T.'s_ were nearly devoured by wild beasts or merely +annoyed by aunts and chafing-dishes, they continued to embrace each +other with magnificent heartiness whenever they had a moment to spare. +In short, Miss POPE'S high spirits never flag; and, even if you fail to +be amused by all the incidents in the _T. T.'s_ career, you will be glad +to make the acquaintance--under a new aspect, for Miss POPE'S talent as +a maker of light verse is established--of a writer so unaffectedly +cheerful and exhilarating. + + * * * * * + +"I cannot marry you or any man; _I am not free_," said _Polly Adair_ to +_Hemingway_, and the italics were her own. For my part, having been +rather pointedly informed earlier in the story that the lady was +understood in Zanzibar to be a widow, I began at this stage to suspect +that there was something lacking in the lateness of _Mr. Adair_. This +was a great pity, because _Polly_ and _Hemingway_ were obviously meant +for each other, as she and he and I and Mr. RICHARD HARDING DAVIS were +unanimously agreed. But there the fatal obstacle was, whatever it might +be. "I am not free," she repeated, and again the italics were her very +own. After much to-do, it came out that what she meant was that she had +a brother who oughtn't to be free; ought, if justice were done, to be +picking oakum or whatever else they pick in their leisure hours way back +in U.S.A. And this was the whole and the sole fatal obstacle! +_Hemingway_ took it as it came; Mr. DAVIS seemed quite pleased about it; +but I felt that I had been wantonly deceived. Baffle me by all means, +said I, but do not lie to me. Maybe I was not in a good temper at the +time, for the three preceding stories were not calculated to stir the +gentlest reader's sympathies. Possibly I am not in a good temper now, +for the three later stories (though "_The God of Coincidence_" only just +missed fire) were not distracting enough to deaden my sense of injury. A +pity, for _The Lost Road_ (DUCKWORTH) has such a good cover and the name +of such a good author on the back of it. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: As dress parades have become quite a feature of modern +life, surely the restaurant offers a rich field of advertisement for the +enterprising outfitter through the medium of waiters.] + + * * * * * + +EDITORIAL CANDOUR. + +Notice in _Nash's Magazine_ at the beginning of a new serial:-- + + "The theme of this story is a strange one handled with the + consummate skill one expects from so clever a writer as + Gouverneur Morris.... This story will stimulate your interest. + It is quite different from anything Mr. Morris has previously + written." + + * * * * * + + "Cambridge. + + The appointment of Mr. W. W. Buckland, of Caius, to be Regius + Professor of Civil War is in accordance with general + expectation, though there were those who thought that the + Government might go outside the circle of University + teachers."--_The Record._ + +Mr. DEVLIN was surely indicated. + + * * * * * + + "CANARY WANTED.--Young, intelligent bird wanted for training. + For right bird, right price paid. Apply, with bird, Tuesday + morning next, at 11 o'clock. M. D., Stage Door, Palladium, + London, W.C." + + _The Referee._ + +Dangerous, asking for the bird like that. + + * * * * * + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. +146, February 18, 1914, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH *** + +***** This file should be named 22576-8.txt or 22576-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/2/5/7/22576/ + +Produced by Malcolm Farmer, David King, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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