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+The Project Gutenberg Etext The Angel and the Author, by Jerome
+#23 in our series by Jerome K. Jerome
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+The Angel and the Author - and others
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+by Jerome K. Jerome
+
+October, 2000 [Etext #2368]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext The Angel and the Author, by Jerome
+*****This file should be named angau10.txt or angau10.zip******
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+This etext was prepared by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+from the 1908 Hurst and Blackett edition.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGEL AND THE AUTHOR--AND OTHERS
+
+by Jerome K. Jerome
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+
+I had a vexing dream one night, not long ago: it was about a
+fortnight after Christmas. I dreamt I flew out of the window in my
+nightshirt. I went up and up. I was glad that I was going up.
+"They have been noticing me," I thought to myself. "If anything, I
+have been a bit too good. A little less virtue and I might have
+lived longer. But one cannot have everything." The world grew
+smaller and smaller. The last I saw of London was the long line of
+electric lamps bordering the Embankment; later nothing remained but a
+faint luminosity buried beneath darkness. It was at this point of my
+journey that I heard behind me the slow, throbbing sound of wings.
+
+I turned my head. It was the Recording Angel. He had a weary look;
+I judged him to be tired.
+
+"Yes," he acknowledged, "it is a trying period for me, your Christmas
+time."
+
+"I am sure it must be," I returned; "the wonder to me is how you get
+through it all. You see at Christmas time," I went on, "all we men
+and women become generous, quite suddenly. It is really a delightful
+sensation."
+
+"You are to be envied," he agreed.
+
+"It is the first Christmas number that starts me off," I told him;
+"those beautiful pictures--the sweet child looking so pretty in her
+furs, giving Bovril with her own dear little hands to the shivering
+street arab; the good old red-faced squire shovelling out plum
+pudding to the crowd of grateful villagers. It makes me yearn to
+borrow a collecting box and go round doing good myself.
+
+"And it is not only me--I should say I," I continued; "I don't want
+you to run away with the idea that I am the only good man in the
+world. That's what I like about Christmas, it makes everybody good.
+The lovely sentiments we go about repeating! the noble deeds we do!
+from a little before Christmas up to, say, the end of January! why
+noting them down must be a comfort to you."
+
+"Yes," he admitted, "noble deeds are always a great joy to me."
+
+"They are to all of us," I said; "I love to think of all the good
+deeds I myself have done. I have often thought of keeping a diary--
+jotting them down each day. It would be so nice for one's children."
+
+He agreed there was an idea in this.
+
+"That book of yours," I said, "I suppose, now, it contains all the
+good actions that we men and women have been doing during the last
+six weeks?" It was a bulky looking volume.
+
+Yes, he answered, they were all recorded in the book.
+
+[The Author tells of his Good Deeds.]
+
+It was more for the sake of talking of his than anything else that I
+kept up with him. I did not really doubt his care and
+conscientiousness, but it is always pleasant to chat about one's
+self. "My five shillings subscription to the Daily Telegraph's
+Sixpenny Fund for the Unemployed--got that down all right?" I asked
+him.
+
+Yes, he replied, it was entered.
+
+"As a matter of fact, now I come to think of it," I added, "it was
+ten shillings altogether. They spelt my name wrong the first time."
+
+Both subscriptions had been entered, he told me.
+
+"Then I have been to four charity dinners," I reminded him; "I forget
+what the particular charity was about. I know I suffered the next
+morning. Champagne never does agree with me. But, then, if you
+don't order it people think you can't afford it. Not that I don't
+like it. It's my liver, if you understand. If I take more--"
+
+He interrupted me with the assurance that my attendance had been
+noted.
+
+"Last week I sent a dozen photographs of myself, signed, to a charity
+bazaar."
+
+He said he remembered my doing so.
+
+"Then let me see," I continued, "I have been to two ordinary balls.
+I don't care much about dancing, but a few of us generally play a
+little bridge; and to one fancy dress affair. I went as Sir Walter
+Raleigh. Some men cannot afford to show their leg. What I say is,
+if a man can, why not? It isn't often that one gets the opportunity
+of really looking one's best."
+
+He told me all three balls had been duly entered: and commented
+upon.
+
+"And, of course, you remember my performance of Talbot Champneys in
+Our Boys the week before last, in aid of the Fund for Poor Curates,"
+I went on. "I don't know whether you saw the notice in the Morning
+Post, but--"
+
+He again interrupted me to remark that what the Morning Post man said
+would be entered, one way or the other, to the critic of the Morning
+Post, and had nothing to do with me. "Of course not," I agreed; "and
+between ourselves, I don't think the charity got very much.
+Expenses, when you come to add refreshments and one thing and
+another, mount up. But I fancy they rather liked my Talbot
+Champneys."
+
+He replied that he had been present at the performance, and had made
+his own report.
+
+I also reminded him of the four balcony seats I had taken for the
+monster show at His Majesty's in aid of the Fund for the Destitute
+British in Johannesburg. Not all the celebrated actors and actresses
+announced on the posters had appeared, but all had sent letters full
+of kindly wishes; and the others--all the celebrities one had never
+heard of--had turned up to a man. Still, on the whole, the show was
+well worth the money. There was nothing to grumble at.
+
+There were other noble deeds of mine. I could not remember them at
+the time in their entirety. I seemed to have done a good many. But
+I did remember the rummage sale to which I sent all my old clothes,
+including a coat that had got mixed up with them by accident, and
+that I believe I could have worn again.
+
+And also the raffle I had joined for a motor-car.
+
+The Angel said I really need not be alarmed, that everything had been
+noted, together with other matters I, may be, had forgotten.
+
+[The Angel appears to have made a slight Mistake.]
+
+I felt a certain curiosity. We had been getting on very well
+together--so it had seemed to me. I asked him if he would mind my
+seeing the book. He said there could be no objection. He opened it
+at the page devoted to myself, and I flew a little higher, and looked
+down over his shoulder. I can hardly believe it, even now--that I
+could have dreamt anything so foolish:
+
+He had got it all down wrong!
+
+Instead of to the credit side of my account he had put the whole bag
+of tricks to my debit. He had mixed them up with my sins--with my
+acts of hypocrisy, vanity, self-indulgence. Under the head of
+Charity he had but one item to my credit for the past six months: my
+giving up my seat inside a tramcar, late one wet night, to a dismal-
+looking old woman, who had not had even the politeness to say "thank
+you," she seemed just half asleep. According to this idiot, all the
+time and money I had spent responding to these charitable appeals had
+been wasted.
+
+I was not angry with him, at first. I was willing to regard what he
+had done as merely a clerical error.
+
+"You have got the items down all right," I said (I spoke quite
+friendly), "but you have made a slight mistake--we all do now and
+again; you have put them down on the wrong side of the book. I only
+hope this sort of thing doesn't occur often."
+
+What irritated me as much as anything was the grave, passionless face
+the Angel turned upon me.
+
+"There is no mistake," he answered.
+
+"No mistake!" I cried. "Why, you blundering--"
+
+He closed the book with a weary sigh.
+
+I felt so mad with him, I went to snatch it out of his hand. He did
+not do anything that I was aware of, but at once I began falling.
+The faint luminosity beneath me grew, and then the lights of London
+seemed shooting up to meet me. I was coming down on the clock tower
+at Westminster. I gave myself a convulsive twist, hoping to escape
+it, and fell into the river.
+
+And then I awoke.
+
+But it stays with me: the weary sadness of the Angel's face. I
+cannot shake remembrance from me. Would I have done better, had I
+taken the money I had spent upon these fooleries, gone down with it
+among the poor myself, asking nothing in return. Is this fraction of
+our superfluity, flung without further thought or care into the
+collection box, likely to satisfy the Impracticable Idealist, who
+actually suggested--one shrugs one's shoulders when one thinks of it-
+-that one should sell all one had and give to the poor?
+
+[The Author is troubled concerning his Investments.]
+
+Or is our charity but a salve to conscience--an insurance, at
+decidedly moderate premium, in case, after all, there should happen
+to be another world? Is Charity lending to the Lord something we can
+so easily do without?
+
+I remember a lady tidying up her house, clearing it of rubbish. She
+called it "Giving to the Fresh Air Fund." Into the heap of lumber
+one of her daughters flung a pair of crutches that for years had been
+knocking about the house. The lady picked them out again.
+
+"We won't give those away," she said, "they might come in useful
+again. One never knows."
+
+Another lady, I remember coming downstairs one evening dressed for a
+fancy ball. I forget the title of the charity, but I remember that
+every lady who sold more than ten tickets received an autograph
+letter of thanks from the Duchess who was the president. The tickets
+were twelve and sixpence each and included light refreshments and a
+very substantial supper. One presumes the odd sixpence reached the
+poor--or at least the noisier portion of them.
+
+"A little decolletee, isn't it, my dear?" suggested a lady friend, as
+the charitable dancer entered the drawing-room.
+
+"Perhaps it is--a little," she admitted, "but we all of us ought to
+do all we can for the Cause. Don't you think so, dear?"
+
+Really, seeing the amount we give in charity, the wonder is there are
+any poor left. It is a comfort that there are. What should we do
+without them? Our fur-clad little girls! our jolly, red-faced
+squires! we should never know how good they were, but for the poor?
+Without the poor how could we be virtuous? We should have to go
+about giving to each other. And friends expect such expensive
+presents, while a shilling here and there among the poor brings to us
+all the sensations of a good Samaritan. Providence has been very
+thoughtful in providing us with poor.
+
+Dear Lady Bountiful! does it not ever occur to you to thank God for
+the poor? The clean, grateful poor, who bob their heads and curtsey
+and assure you that heaven is going to repay you a thousandfold. One
+does hope you will not be disappointed.
+
+An East-End curate once told me, with a twinkle in his eye, of a
+smart lady who called upon him in her carriage, and insisted on his
+going round with her to show her where the poor hid themselves. They
+went down many streets, and the lady distributed her parcels. Then
+they came to one of the worst, a very narrow street. The coachman
+gave it one glance.
+
+"Sorry, my lady," said the coachman, "but the carriage won't go
+down."
+
+The lady sighed.
+
+"I am afraid we shall have to leave it," she said.
+
+So the gallant greys dashed past.
+
+Where the real poor creep I fear there is no room for Lady
+Bountiful's fine coach. The ways are very narrow--wide enough only
+for little Sister Pity, stealing softly.
+
+I put it to my friend, the curate:
+
+"But if all this charity is, as you say, so useless; if it touches
+but the fringe; if it makes the evil worse, what would you do?"
+
+[And questions a Man of Thought]
+
+"I would substitute Justice," he answered; "there would be no need
+for Charity."
+
+
+ "But it is so delightful to give," I answered.
+
+"Yes," he agreed. "It is better to give than to receive. I was
+thinking of the receiver. And my ideal is a long way off. We shall
+have to work towards it slowly."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+
+[Philosophy and the Daemon]
+
+Philosophy, it has been said, is the art of bearing other people's
+troubles. The truest philosopher I ever heard of was a woman. She
+was brought into the London Hospital suffering from a poisoned leg.
+The house surgeon made a hurried examination. He was a man of blunt
+speech.
+
+"It will have to come off," he told her.
+
+"What, not all of it?"
+
+"The whole of it, I am sorry to say," growled the house surgeon.
+
+"Nothing else for it?"
+
+"No other chance for you whatever," explained the house surgeon.
+
+"Ah, well, thank Gawd it's not my 'ead," observed the lady.
+
+The poor have a great advantage over us better-off folk. Providence
+provides them with many opportunities for the practice of philosophy.
+I was present at a "high tea" given last winter by charitable folk to
+a party of char-women. After the tables were cleared we sought to
+amuse them. One young lady, who was proud of herself as a palmist,
+set out to study their "lines." At sight of the first toil-worn hand
+she took hold of her sympathetic face grew sad.
+
+"There is a great trouble coming to you," she informed the ancient
+dame.
+
+The placid-featured dame looked up and smiled:
+
+"What, only one, my dear?"
+
+"Yes, only one," asserted the kind fortune-teller, much pleased,
+"after that all goes smoothly."
+
+"Ah," murmured the old dame, quite cheerfully, "we was all of us a
+short-lived family."
+
+Our skins harden to the blows of Fate. I was lunching one Wednesday
+with a friend in the country. His son and heir, aged twelve, entered
+and took his seat at the table.
+
+"Well," said his father, "and how did we get on at school today?"
+
+"Oh, all right," answered the youngster, settling himself down to his
+dinner with evident appetite.
+
+"Nobody caned?" demanded his father, with--as I noticed--a sly
+twinkle in his eye.
+
+"No," replied young hopeful, after reflection; "no, I don't think
+so," adding as an afterthought, as he tucked into beef and potatoes,
+"'cepting, o' course, me."
+
+[When the Daemon will not work]
+
+It is a simple science, philosophy. The idea is that it never
+matters what happens to you provided you don't mind it. The weak
+point in the argument is that nine times out of ten you can't help
+minding it.
+
+"No misfortune can harm me," says Marcus Aurelius, "without the
+consent of the daemon within me."
+
+The trouble is our daemon cannot always be relied upon. So often he
+does not seem up to his work.
+
+"You've been a naughty boy, and I'm going to whip you," said nurse to
+a four-year-old criminal.
+
+"You tant," retorted the young ruffian, gripping with both hands the
+chair that he was occupying, "I'se sittin' on it."
+
+His daemon was, no doubt, resolved that misfortune, as personified by
+nurse, should not hurt him. The misfortune, alas! proved stronger
+than the daemon, and misfortune, he found did hurt him.
+
+The toothache cannot hurt us so long as the daemon within us (that is
+to say, our will power) holds on to the chair and says it can't.
+But, sooner or later, the daemon lets go, and then we howl. One sees
+the idea: in theory it is excellent. One makes believe. Your bank
+has suddenly stopped payment. You say to yourself.
+
+"This does not really matter."
+
+Your butcher and your baker say it does, and insist on making a row
+in the passage.
+
+You fill yourself up with gooseberry wine. You tell yourself it is
+seasoned champagne. Your liver next morning says it is not.
+
+The daemon within us means well, but forgets it is not the only thing
+there. A man I knew was an enthusiast on vegetarianism. He argued
+that if the poor would adopt a vegetarian diet the problem of
+existence would be simpler for them, and maybe he was right. So one
+day he assembled some twenty poor lads for the purpose of introducing
+to them a vegetarian lunch. He begged them to believe that lentil
+beans were steaks, that cauliflowers were chops. As a third course
+he placed before them a mixture of carrots and savoury herbs, and
+urged them to imagine they were eating saveloys.
+
+"Now, you all like saveloys," he said, addressing them, "and the
+palate is but the creature of the imagination. Say to yourselves, 'I
+am eating saveloys,' and for all practical purposes these things will
+be saveloys."
+
+Some of the lads professed to have done it, but one disappointed-
+looking youth confessed to failure.
+
+"But how can you be sure it was not a saveloy?" the host persisted.
+
+"Because," explained the boy, "I haven't got the stomach-ache."
+
+It appeared that saveloys, although a dish of which he was fond,
+invariably and immediately disagreed with him. If only we were all
+daemon and nothing else philosophy would be easier. Unfortunately,
+there is more of us.
+
+Another argument much approved by philosophy is that nothing matters,
+because a hundred years hence, say, at the outside, we shall be dead.
+What we really want is a philosophy that will enable us to get along
+while we are still alive. I am not worrying about my centenary; I am
+worrying about next quarter-day. I feel that if other people would
+only go away, and leave me--income-tax collectors, critics, men who
+come round about the gas, all those sort of people--I could be a
+philosopher myself. I am willing enough to make believe that nothing
+matters, but they are not. They say it is going to be cut off, and
+talk about judgment summonses. I tell them it won't trouble any of
+us a hundred years hence. They answer they are not talking of a
+hundred years hence, but of this thing that was due last April
+twelvemonth. They won't listen to my daemon. He does not interest
+them. Nor, to be candid, does it comfort myself very much, this
+philosophical reflection that a hundred years later on I'll be sure
+to be dead--that is, with ordinary luck. What bucks me up much more
+is the hope that they will be dead. Besides, in a hundred years
+things may have improved. I may not want to be dead. If I were sure
+of being dead next morning, before their threat of cutting off that
+water or that gas could by any possibility be carried out, before
+that judgment summons they are bragging about could be made
+returnable, I might--I don't say I should--be amused, thinking how I
+was going to dish them. The wife of a very wicked man visited him
+one evening in prison, and found him enjoying a supper of toasted
+cheese.
+
+"How foolish of you, Edward," argued the fond lady, "to be eating
+toasted cheese for supper. You know it always affects your liver.
+All day long to-morrow you will be complaining."
+
+"No, I shan't," interrupted Edward; "not so foolish as you think me.
+They are going to hang me to-morrow--early."
+
+There is a passage in Marcus Aurelius that used to puzzle me until I
+hit upon the solution. A foot-note says the meaning is obscure.
+Myself, I had gathered this before I read the foot-note. What it is
+all about I defy any human being to explain. It might mean anything;
+it might mean nothing. The majority of students incline to the
+latter theory, though a minority maintain there is a meaning, if only
+it could be discovered. My own conviction is that once in his life
+Marcus Aurelius had a real good time. He came home feeling pleased
+with himself without knowing quite why.
+
+"I will write it down," he said to himself, "now, while it is fresh
+in my mind."
+
+It seemed to him the most wonderful thing that anybody had ever said.
+Maybe he shed a tear or two, thinking of all the good he was doing,
+and later on went suddenly to sleep. In the morning he had forgotten
+all about it, and by accident it got mixed up with the rest of the
+book. That is the only explanation that seems to me possible, and it
+comforts me.
+
+We are none of us philosophers all the time.
+
+Philosophy is the science of suffering the inevitable, which most of
+us contrive to accomplish without the aid of philosophy. Marcus
+Aurelius was an Emperor of Rome, and Diogenes was a bachelor living
+rent free. I want the philosophy of the bank clerk married on thirty
+shillings a week, of the farm labourer bringing up a family of eight
+on a precarious wage of twelve shillings. The troubles of Marcus
+Aurelius were chiefly those of other people.
+
+"Taxes will have to go up, I am afraid," no doubt he often sighed.
+"But, after all, what are taxes? A thing in conformity with the
+nature of man--a little thing that Zeus approves of, one feels sure.
+The daemon within me says taxes don't really matter."
+
+Maybe the paterfamilias of the period, who did the paying, worried
+about new sandals for the children, his wife insisting she hadn't a
+frock fit to be seen in at the amphitheatre; that, if there was one
+thing in the world she fancied, it was seeing a Christian eaten by a
+lion, but now she supposed the children would have to go without her,
+found that philosophy came to his aid less readily.
+
+"Bother these barbarians," Marcus Aurelius may have been tempted, in
+an unphilosophical moment, to exclaim; "I do wish they would not burn
+these poor people's houses over their heads, toss the babies about on
+spears, and carry off the older children into slavery. Why don't
+they behave themselves?"
+
+But philosophy in Marcus Aurelius would eventually triumph over
+passing fretfulness.
+
+"But how foolish of me to be angry with them," he would argue with
+himself. "One is not vexed with the fig-tree for yielding figs, with
+the cucumber for being bitter! One must expect barbarians to behave
+barbariously."
+
+Marcus Aurelius would proceed to slaughter the barbarians, and then
+forgive them. We can most of us forgive our brother his
+transgressions, having once got even with him. In a tiny Swiss
+village, behind the angle of the school-house wall, I came across a
+maiden crying bitterly, her head resting on her arm. I asked her
+what had happened. Between her sobs she explained that a school
+companion, a little lad about her own age, having snatched her hat
+from her head, was at that moment playing football with it the other
+side of the wall. I attempted to console her with philosophy. I
+pointed out to her that boys would be boys--that to expect from them
+at that age reverence for feminine headgear was to seek what was not
+conformable with the nature of boy. But she appeared to have no
+philosophy in her. She said he was a horrid boy, and that she hated
+him. It transpired it was a hat she rather fancied herself in. He
+peeped round the corner while we were talking, the hat in his hand.
+He held it out to her, but she took no notice of him. I gathered the
+incident was closed, and went my way, but turned a few steps further
+on, curious to witness the end. Step by step he approached nearer,
+looking a little ashamed of himself; but still she wept, her face
+hidden in her arm.
+
+He was not expecting it: to all seeming she stood there the
+personification of the grief that is not to be comforted, oblivious
+to all surroundings. Incautiously he took another step. In an
+instant she had "landed" him over the head with a long narrow wooden
+box containing, one supposes, pencils and pens. He must have been a
+hard-headed youngster, the sound of the compact echoed through the
+valley. I met her again on my way back.
+
+"Hat much damaged?" I inquired.
+
+"Oh, no," she answered, smiling; "besides, it was only an old hat.
+I've got a better one for Sundays."
+
+I often feel philosophical myself; generally over a good cigar after
+a satisfactory dinner. At such times I open my Marcus Aurelius, my
+pocket Epicurus, my translation of Plato's "Republic." At such times
+I agree with them. Man troubles himself too much about the
+unessential. Let us cultivate serenity. Nothing can happen to us
+that we have not been constituted by Nature to sustain. That foolish
+farm labourer, on his precarious wage of twelve shillings a week:
+let him dwell rather on the mercies he enjoys. Is he not spared all
+anxiety concerning safe investment of capital yielding four per
+cent.? Is not the sunrise and the sunset for him also? Many of us
+never see the sunrise. So many of our so-termed poorer brethen are
+privileged rarely to miss that early morning festival. Let the
+daemon within them rejoice. Why should he fret when the children cry
+for bread? Is it not in the nature of things that the children of
+the poor should cry for bread? The gods in their wisdom have
+arranged it thus. Let the daemon within him reflect upon the
+advantage to the community of cheap labour. Let the farm labourer
+contemplate the universal good.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+
+[Literature and the Middle Classes.]
+
+I am sorry to be compelled to cast a slur upon the Literary
+profession, but observation shows me that it still contains within
+its ranks writers born and bred in, and moving amidst--if, without
+offence, one may put it bluntly--a purely middle-class environment:
+men and women to whom Park Lane will never be anything than the
+shortest route between Notting Hill and the Strand; to whom Debrett's
+Peerage --gilt-edged and bound in red, a tasteful-looking volume--
+ever has been and ever will remain a drawing-room ornament and not a
+social necessity. Now what is to become of these writers--of us, if
+for the moment I may be allowed to speak as representative of this
+rapidly-diminishing yet nevertheless still numerous section of the
+world of Art and Letters? Formerly, provided we were masters of
+style, possessed imagination and insight, understood human nature,
+had sympathy with and knowledge of life, and could express ourselves
+with humour and distinction, our pathway was, comparatively speaking,
+free from obstacle. We drew from the middle-class life around us,
+passed it through our own middle-class individuality, and presented
+it to a public composed of middle-class readers.
+
+But the middle-class public, for purposes of Art, has practically
+disappeared. The social strata from which George Eliot and Dickens
+drew their characters no longer interests the great B. P. Hetty
+Sorrell, Little Em'ly, would be pronounced "provincial;" a Deronda or
+a Wilfer Family ignored as "suburban."
+
+I confess that personally the terms "provincial" and "suburban," as
+epithets of reproach, have always puzzled me. I never met anyone
+more severe on what she termed the "suburban note" in literature than
+a thin lady who lived in a semi-detached villa in a by-street of
+Hammersmith. Is Art merely a question of geography, and if so what
+is the exact limit? Is it the four-mile cab radius from Charing
+Cross? Is the cheesemonger of Tottenham Court Road of necessity a
+man of taste, and the Oxford professor of necessity a Philistine? I
+want to understand this thing. I once hazarded the direct question
+to a critical friend:
+
+"You say a book is suburban," I put it to him, "and there is an end
+to the matter. But what do you mean by suburban?"
+
+"Well," he replied, "I mean it is the sort of book likely to appeal
+to the class that inhabits the suburbs." He lived himself in
+Chancery Lane.
+
+[May a man of intelligence live, say, in Surbiton?]
+
+"But there is Jones, the editor of The Evening Gentleman," I argued;
+"he lives at Surbiton. It is just twelve miles from Waterloo. He
+comes up every morning by the eight-fifteen and returns again by the
+five-ten. Would you say that a book is bound to be bad because it
+appeals to Jones? Then again, take Tomlinson: he lives, as you are
+well aware, at Forest Gate which is Epping way, and entertains you on
+Kakemonos whenever you call upon him. You know what I mean, of
+course. I think 'Kakemono' is right. They are long things; they
+look like coloured hieroglyphics printed on brown paper. He gets
+behind them and holds them up above his head on the end of a stick so
+that you can see the whole of them at once; and he tells you the name
+of the Japanese artist who painted them in the year 1500 B.C., and
+what it is all about. He shows them to you by the hour and forgets
+to give you dinner. There isn't an easy chair in the house. To put
+it vulgarly, what is wrong with Tomlinson from a high art point of
+view?
+
+"There's a man I know who lives in Birmingham: you must have heard
+of him. He is the great collector of Eighteenth Century caricatures,
+the Rowlandson and Gilray school of things. I don't call them
+artistic myself; they make me ill to look at them; but people who
+understand Art rave about them. Why can't a man be artistic who has
+got a cottage in the country?"
+
+"You don't understand me," retorted my critical friend, a little
+irritably, as I thought.
+
+"I admit it," I returned. "It is what I am trying to do."
+
+"Of course artistic people live in the suburbs," he admitted. "But
+they are not of the suburbs."
+
+"Though they may dwell in Wimbledon or Hornsey," I suggested, "they
+sing with the Scotch bard: 'My heart is in the South-West postal
+district. My heart is not here.'"
+
+"You can put it that way if you like," he growled.
+
+"I will, if you have no objection," I agreed. "It makes life easier
+for those of us with limited incomes."
+
+The modern novel takes care, however, to avoid all doubt upon the
+subject. Its personages, one and all, reside within the half-mile
+square lying between Bond Street and the Park--a neighbourhood that
+would appear to be somewhat densely populated. True, a year or two
+ago there appeared a fairly successful novel the heroine of which
+resided in Onslow Gardens. An eminent critic observed of it that:
+"It fell short only by a little way of being a serious contribution
+to English literature." Consultation with the keeper of the cabman's
+shelter at Hyde Park Corner suggested to me that the "little way" the
+critic had in mind measures exactly eleven hundred yards. When the
+nobility and gentry of the modern novel do leave London they do not
+go into the provinces: to do that would be vulgar. They make
+straight for "Barchester Towers," or what the Duke calls "his little
+place up north"--localities, one presumes, suspended somewhere in
+mid-air.
+
+In every social circle exist great souls with yearnings towards
+higher things. Even among the labouring classes one meets with
+naturally refined natures, gentlemanly persons to whom the loom and
+the plough will always appear low, whose natural desire is towards
+the dignities and graces of the servants' hall. So in Grub Street we
+can always reckon upon the superior writer whose temperament will
+prompt him to make respectful study of his betters. A reasonable
+supply of high-class novels might always have been depended upon; the
+trouble is that the public now demands that all stories must be of
+the upper ten thousand. Auld Robin Grey must be Sir Robert Grey,
+South African millionaire; and Jamie, the youngest son of the old
+Earl, otherwise a cultured public can take no interest in the ballad.
+A modern nursery rhymester to succeed would have to write of Little
+Lord Jack and Lady Jill ascending one of the many beautiful eminences
+belonging to the ancestral estates of their parents, bearing between
+them, on a silver rod, an exquisitely painted Sevres vase filled with
+ottar of roses.
+
+I take up my fourpenny-halfpenny magazine. The heroine is a youthful
+Duchess; her husband gambles with thousand-pound notes, with the
+result that they are reduced to living on the first floor of the
+Carlton Hotel. The villain is a Russian Prince. The Baronet of a
+simpler age has been unable, poor fellow, to keep pace with the
+times. What self-respecting heroine would abandon her husband and
+children for sin and a paltry five thousand a year? To the heroine
+of the past--to the clergyman's daughter or the lady artist--he was
+dangerous. The modern heroine misbehaves herself with nothing below
+Cabinet rank.
+
+I turn to something less pretentious, a weekly periodical that my
+wife tells me is the best authority she has come across on blouses.
+I find in it what once upon a time would have been called a farce.
+It is now a "drawing-room comedietta. All rights reserved." The
+dramatis personae consist of the Earl of Danbury, the Marquis of
+Rottenborough (with a past), and an American heiress--a character
+that nowadays takes with lovers of the simple the place formerly
+occupied by "Rose, the miller's daughter."
+
+I sometimes wonder, is it such teaching as that of Carlyle and
+Tennyson that is responsible for this present tendency of literature?
+Carlyle impressed upon us that the only history worth consideration
+was the life of great men and women, and Tennyson that we "needs must
+love the highest." So literature, striving ever upward, ignores
+plain Romola for the Lady Ponsonby de Tompkins; the provincialisms of
+a Charlotte Bronte for what a certain critic, born before his time,
+would have called the "doin's of the hupper succles."
+
+The British Drama has advanced by even greater bounds. It takes
+place now exclusively within castle walls, and--what Messrs. Lumley &
+Co.'s circular would describe as--"desirable town mansions, suitable
+for gentlemen of means." A living dramatist, who should know, tells
+us that drama does not occur in the back parlour. Dramatists have,
+it has been argued, occasionally found it there, but such may have
+been dramatists with eyes capable of seeing through clothes.
+
+I once wrote a play which I read to a distinguished Manager. He said
+it was a most interesting play: they always say that. I waited,
+wondering to what other manager he would recommend me to take it. To
+my surprise he told me he would like it for himself--but with
+alterations.
+
+"The whole thing wants lifting up," was his opinion. "Your hero is a
+barrister: my public take no interest in plain barristers. Make him
+the Solicitor General."
+
+"But he's got to be amusing," I argued. "A Solicitor General is
+never amusing."
+
+My Manager pondered for a moment. "Let him be Solicitor General for
+Ireland," he suggested.
+
+I made a note of it.
+
+"Your heroine," he continued, "is the daughter of a seaside lodging-
+house keeper. My public do not recognize seaside lodgings. Why not
+the daughter of an hotel proprietor? Even that will be risky, but we
+might venture it." An inspiration came to him. "Or better still,
+let the old man be the Managing Director of an hotel Trust: that
+would account for her clothes."
+
+Unfortunately I put the thing aside for a few months, and when I was
+ready again the public taste had still further advanced. The doors
+of the British Drama were closed for the time being on all but
+members of the aristocracy, and I did not see my comic old man as a
+Marquis, which was the lowest title that just then one dared to offer
+to a low comedian.
+
+Now how are we middle-class novelists and dramatists to continue to
+live? I am aware of the obvious retort, but to us it absolutely is
+necessary. We know only parlours: we call them drawing-rooms. At
+the bottom of our middle-class hearts we regard them fondly: the
+folding-doors thrown back, they make rather a fine apartment. The
+only drama that we know takes place in such rooms: the hero sitting
+in the gentleman's easy chair, of green repp: the heroine in the
+lady's ditto, without arms--the chair, I mean. The scornful glances,
+the bitter words of our middle-class world are hurled across these
+three-legged loo-tables, the wedding-cake ornament under its glass
+case playing the part of white ghost.
+
+In these days, when "Imperial cement" is at a premium, who would dare
+suggest that the emotions of a parlour can by any possibility be the
+same as those exhibited in a salon furnished in the style of Louis
+Quatorze; that the tears of Bayswater can possibly be compared for
+saltness with the lachrymal fluid distilled from South Audley Street
+glands; that the laughter of Clapham can be as catching as the
+cultured cackle of Curzon Street? But we, whose best clothes are
+exhibited only in parlours, what are we to do? How can we lay bare
+the souls of Duchesses, explain the heart-throbs of peers of the
+realm? Some of my friends who, being Conservative, attend Primrose
+"tourneys" (or is it "Courts of love"? I speak as an outsider.
+Something mediaeval, I know it is) do, it is true, occasionally
+converse with titled ladies. But the period for conversation is
+always limited owing to the impatience of the man behind; and I doubt
+if the interview is ever of much practical use to them, as conveying
+knowledge of the workings of the aristocratic mind. Those of us who
+are not Primrose Knights miss even this poor glimpse into the world
+above us. We know nothing, simply nothing, concerning the deeper
+feelings of the upper ten. Personally, I once received a letter from
+an Earl, but that was in connection with a dairy company of which his
+lordship was chairman, and spoke only of his lordship's views
+concerning milk and the advantages of the cash system. Of what I
+really wished to know--his lordship's passions, yearnings and general
+attitude to life--the circular said nothing.
+
+Year by year I find myself more and more in a minority. One by one
+my literary friends enter into this charmed aristocratic circle;
+after which one hears no more from them regarding the middle-classes.
+At once they set to work to describe the mental sufferings of Grooms
+of the Bed-chamber, the hidden emotions of Ladies in their own right,
+the religious doubts of Marquises. I want to know how they do it--
+"how the devil they get there." They refuse to tell me.
+
+Meanwhile, I see nothing before me but the workhouse. Year by year
+the public grows more impatient of literature dealing merely with the
+middle-classes. I know nothing about any other class. What am I to
+do?
+
+Commonplace people--friends of mine without conscience, counsel me in
+flippant phrase to "have a shot at it."
+
+"I expect, old fellow, you know just as much about it as these other
+Johnnies do." (I am not defending their conversation either as
+regards style or matter: I am merely quoting.) "And even if you
+don't, what does it matter? The average reader knows less. How is
+he to find you out?"
+
+But, as I explain to them, it is the law of literature never to write
+except about what you really know. I want to mix with the
+aristocracy, study them, understand them; so that I may earn my
+living in the only way a literary man nowadays can earn his living,
+namely, by writing about the upper circles.
+
+I want to know how to get there.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+
+[Man and his Master.]
+
+There is one thing that the Anglo-Saxon does better than the "French,
+or Turk, or Rooshian," to which add the German or the Belgian. When
+the Anglo-Saxon appoints an official, he appoints a servant: when
+the others put a man in uniform, they add to their long list of
+masters. If among your acquaintances you can discover an American,
+or Englishman, unfamiliar with the continental official, it is worth
+your while to accompany him, the first time he goes out to post a
+letter, say. He advances towards the post-office a breezy, self-
+confident gentleman, borne up by pride of race. While mounting the
+steps he talks airily of "just getting this letter off his mind, and
+then picking up Jobson and going on to Durand's for lunch."
+
+He talks as if he had the whole day before him. At the top of the
+steps he attempts to push open the door. It will not move. He looks
+about him, and discovers that is the door of egress, not of ingress.
+It does not seem to him worth while redescending the twenty steps and
+climbing another twenty. So far as he is concerned he is willing to
+pull the door, instead of pushing it. But a stern official bars his
+way, and haughtily indicates the proper entrance. "Oh, bother," he
+says, and down he trots again, and up the other flight.
+
+"I shall not be a minute," he remarks over his shoulder. "You can
+wait for me outside."
+
+But if you know your way about, you follow him in. There are seats
+within, and you have a newspaper in your pocket: the time will pass
+more pleasantly. Inside he looks round, bewildered. The German
+post-office, generally speaking, is about the size of the Bank of
+England. Some twenty different windows confront your troubled
+friend, each one bearing its own particular legend. Starting with
+number one, he sets to work to spell them out. It appears to him
+that the posting of letters is not a thing that the German post-
+office desires to encourage. Would he not like a dog licence
+instead? is what one window suggests to him. "Oh, never mind that
+letter of yours; come and talk about bicycles," pleads another. At
+last he thinks he has found the right hole: the word "Registration"
+he distinctly recognizes. He taps at the glass.
+
+Nobody takes any notice of him. The foreign official is a man whose
+life is saddened by a public always wanting something. You read it
+in his face wherever you go. The man who sells you tickets for the
+theatre! He is eating sandwiches when you knock at his window. He
+turns to his companion:
+
+"Good Lord!" you can see him say, "here's another of 'em. If there
+has been one man worrying me this morning there have been a hundred.
+Always the same story: all of 'em want to come and see the play.
+You listen now; bet you anything he's going to bother me for tickets.
+Really, it gets on my nerves sometimes."
+
+At the railway station it is just the same.
+
+"Another man who wants to go to Antwerp! Don't seem to care for
+rest, these people: flying here, flying there, what's the sense of
+it?" It is this absurd craze on the part of the public for letter-
+writing that is spoiling the temper of the continental post-office
+official. He does his best to discourage it.
+
+"Look at them," he says to his assistant--the thoughtful German
+Government is careful to provide every official with another official
+for company, lest by sheer force of ennui he might be reduced to
+taking interest in his work--"twenty of 'em, all in a row! Some of
+'em been there for the last quarter of an hour.''
+
+"Let 'em wait another quarter of an hour," advises the assistant;
+"perhaps they'll go away."
+
+"My dear fellow," he answers, "do you think I haven't tried that?
+There's simply no getting rid of 'em. And it's always the same cry:
+'Stamps! stamps! stamps!' 'Pon my word, I think they live on stamps,
+some of 'em."
+
+"Well let 'em have their stamps?" suggests the assistant, with a
+burst of inspiration; "perhaps it will get rid of 'em."
+
+[Why the Man in Uniform has, generally, sad Eyes.]
+
+"What's the use?" wearily replies the older man. "There will only
+come a fresh crowd when those are gone."
+
+"Oh, well," argues the other, "that will be a change, anyhow. I'm
+tired of looking at this lot."
+
+I put it to a German post-office clerk once--a man I had been boring
+for months. I said:
+
+"You think I write these letters--these short stories, these three-
+act plays--on purpose to annoy you. Do let me try to get the idea
+out of your head. Personally, I hate work--hate it as much as you
+do. This is a pleasant little town of yours: given a free choice, I
+could spend the whole day mooning round it, never putting pen to
+paper. But what am I to do? I have a wife and children. You know
+what it is yourself: they clamour for food, boots--all sorts of
+things. I have to prepare these little packets for sale and bring
+them to you to send off. You see, you are here. If you were not
+here--if there were no post-office in this town, maybe I'd have to
+train pigeons, or cork the thing up in a bottle, fling it into the
+river, and trust to luck and the Gulf Stream. But, you being here,
+and calling yourself a post-office--well, it's a temptation to a
+fellow."
+
+I think it did good. Anyhow, after that he used to grin when I
+opened the door, instead of greeting me as formerly with a face the
+picture of despair. But to return to our inexperienced friend.
+
+At last the wicket is suddenly opened. A peremptory official demands
+of him "name and address." Not expecting the question, he is a
+little doubtful of his address, and has to correct himself once or
+twice. The official eyes him suspiciously.
+
+"Name of mother?" continues the official.
+
+"Name of what?"
+
+"Mother!" repeats the official. "Had a mother of some sort, I
+suppose."
+
+He is a man who loved his mother sincerely while she lived, but she
+has been dead these twenty years, and, for the life of him he cannot
+recollect her name. He thinks it was Margaret Henrietta, but is not
+at all sure. Besides, what on earth has his mother got to do with
+this registered letter that he wants to send to his partner in New
+York?
+
+"When did it die?" asks the official.
+
+"When did what die? Mother?"
+
+"No, no, the child."
+
+"What child?" The indignation of the official is almost picturesque.
+
+"All I want to do," explains your friend, "is to register a letter."
+
+"A what?"
+
+"This letter, I want--"
+
+The window is slammed in his face. When, ten minutes later he does
+reach the right wicket--the bureau for the registration of letters,
+and not the bureau for the registration of infantile deaths--it is
+pointed out to him that the letter either is sealed or that it is not
+sealed.
+
+I have never been able yet to solve this problem. If your letter is
+sealed, it then appears that it ought not to have been sealed.
+
+If, on the other hand, you have omitted to seal it, that is your
+fault. In any case, the letter cannot go as it is. The continental
+official brings up the public on the principle of the nurse who sent
+the eldest girl to see what Tommy was doing and tell him he mustn't.
+Your friend, having wasted half an hour and mislaid his temper for
+the day, decides to leave this thing over and talk to the hotel
+porter about it. Next to the Burgomeister, the hotel porter is the
+most influential man in the continental town: maybe because he can
+swear in seven different languages. But even he is not omnipotent.
+
+[The Traveller's one Friend.]
+
+Three of us, on the point of starting for a walking tour through the
+Tyrol, once sent on our luggage by post from Constance to Innsbruck.
+Our idea was that, reaching Innsbruck in the height of the season,
+after a week's tramp on two flannel shirts and a change of socks, we
+should be glad to get into fresh clothes before showing ourselves in
+civilized society. Our bags were waiting for us in the post-office:
+we could see them through the grating. But some informality--I have
+never been able to understand what it was--had occurred at Constance.
+The suspicion of the Swiss postal authorities had been aroused, and
+special instructions had been sent that the bags were to be delivered
+up only to their rightful owners.
+
+It sounds sensible enough. Nobody wants his bag delivered up to
+anyone else. But it had not been explained to the authorities at
+Innsbruck how they were to know the proper owners. Three wretched-
+looking creatures crawled into the post-office and said they wanted
+those three bags--"those bags, there in the corner"--which happened
+to be nice, clean, respectable-looking bags, the sort of bags that
+anyone might want. One of them produced a bit of paper, it is true,
+which he said had been given to him as a receipt by the post-office
+people at Constance. But in the lonely passes of the Tyrol one man,
+set upon by three, might easily be robbed of his papers, and his body
+thrown over a precipice. The chief clerk shook his head. He would
+like us to return accompanied by someone who could identify us. The
+hotel porter occurred to us, as a matter of course. Keeping to the
+back streets, we returned to the hotel and fished him out of his box.
+
+"I am Mr. J.," I said: "this is my friend Mr. B. and this is Mr. S."
+
+The porter bowed and said he was delighted.
+
+"I want you to come with us to the post-office," I explained, "and
+identify us."
+
+The hotel porter is always a practical man: his calling robs him of
+all sympathy with the hide-bound formality of his compatriots. He
+put on his cap and accompanied us back to the office. He did his
+best: no one could say he did not. He told them who we were: they
+asked him how he knew. For reply he asked them how they thought he
+knew his mother: he just knew us: it was second nature with him.
+He implied that the question was a silly one, and suggested that, as
+his time was valuable, they should hand us over the three bags and
+have done with their nonsense.
+
+They asked him how long he had known us. He threw up his hands with
+an eloquent gesture: memory refused to travel back such distance.
+It appeared there was never a time when he had not known us. We had
+been boys together.
+
+Did he know anybody else who knew us? The question appeared to him
+almost insulting. Everybody in Innsbruck knew us, honoured us,
+respected us--everybody, that is, except a few post-office officials,
+people quite out of society.
+
+Would he kindly bring along, say; one undoubtedly respectable citizen
+who could vouch for our identity? The request caused him to forget
+us and our troubles. The argument became a personal quarrel between
+the porter and the clerk. If he, the porter, was not a respectable
+citizen of Innsbruck, where was such an one to be found?
+
+[The disadvantage of being an unknown Person.]
+
+Both gentlemen became excited, and the discussion passed beyond my
+understanding. But I gathered dimly from what the clerk said, that
+ill-natured remarks relative to the porter's grandfather and a
+missing cow had never yet been satisfactorily replied to: and, from
+observations made by the porter, that stories were in circulation
+about the clerk's aunt and a sergeant of artillery that should
+suggest to a discreet nephew of the lady the inadvisability of
+talking about other people's grandfathers.
+
+Our sympathies were naturally with the porter: he was our man, but
+he did not seem to be advancing our cause much. We left them
+quarrelling, and persuaded the head waiter that evening to turn out
+the gas at our end of the table d'hote.
+
+The next morning we returned to the post-office by ourselves. The
+clerk proved a reasonable man when treated in a friendly spirit. He
+was a bit of a climber himself. He admitted the possibility of our
+being the rightful owners. His instructions were only not to DELIVER
+UP the bags, and he himself suggested a way out of the difficulty.
+We might come each day and dress in the post-office, behind the
+screen. It was an awkward arrangement, even although the clerk
+allowed us the use of the back door. And occasionally, in spite of
+the utmost care, bits of us would show outside the screen. But for a
+couple of days, until the British Consul returned from Salzburg, the
+post-office had to be our dressing room. The continental official, I
+am inclined to think, errs on the side of prudence.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+
+[If only we had not lost our Tails!]
+
+A friend of mine thinks it a pity that we have lost our tails. He
+argues it would be so helpful if, like the dog, we possessed a tail
+that wagged when we were pleased, that stuck out straight when we
+were feeling mad.
+
+"Now, do come and see us again soon," says our hostess; "don't wait
+to be asked. Drop in whenever you are passing."
+
+We take her at her word. The servant who answers our knocking says
+she "will see." There is a scuffling of feet, a murmur of hushed
+voices, a swift opening and closing of doors. We are shown into the
+drawing-room, the maid, breathless from her search, one supposes,
+having discovered that her mistress IS at home. We stand upon the
+hearthrug, clinging to our hat and stick as to things friendly and
+sympathetic: the suggestion forcing itself upon us is that of a
+visit to the dentist.
+
+Our hostess enters wreathed in smiles. Is she really pleased to see
+us, or is she saying to herself, "Drat the man! Why must he choose
+the very morning I had intended to fix up the clean curtains?"
+
+But she has to pretend to be delighted, and ask us to stay to lunch.
+It would save us hours of anxiety could we look beyond her smiling
+face to her tail peeping out saucily from a placket-hole. Is it
+wagging, or is it standing out rigid at right angles from her skirt?
+
+But I fear by this time we should have taught our tails polite
+behaviour. We should have schooled them to wag enthusiastically the
+while we were growling savagely to ourselves. Man put on insincerity
+to hide his mind when he made himself a garment of fig-leaves to hide
+his body.
+
+One sometimes wonders whether he has gained so very much. A small
+acquaintance of mine is being brought up on strange principles.
+Whether his parents are mad or not is a matter of opinion. Their
+ideas are certainly peculiar. They encourage him rather than
+otherwise to tell the truth on all occasions. I am watching the
+experiment with interest. If you ask him what he thinks of you, he
+tells you. Some people don't ask him a second time. They say:
+
+"What a very rude little boy you are!"
+
+"But you insisted upon it," he explains; "I told you I'd rather not
+say."
+
+It does not comfort them in the least. Yet the result is, he is
+already an influence. People who have braved the ordeal, and emerged
+successfully, go about with swelled head.
+
+[And little Boys would always tell the Truth!]
+
+Politeness would seem to have been invented for the comfort of the
+undeserving. We let fall our rain of compliments upon the unjust and
+the just without distinction. Every hostess has provided us with the
+most charming evening of our life. Every guest has conferred a like
+blessing upon us by accepting our invitation. I remember a dear good
+lady in a small south German town organizing for one winter's day a
+sleighing party to the woods. A sleighing party differs from a
+picnic. The people who want each other cannot go off together and
+lose themselves, leaving the bores to find only each other. You are
+in close company from early morn till late at night. We were to
+drive twenty miles, six in a sledge, dine together in a lonely
+Wirtschaft, dance and sing songs, and afterwards drive home by
+moonlight. Success depends on every member of the company fitting
+into his place and assisting in the general harmony. Our
+chieftainess was fixing the final arrangements the evening before in
+the drawing-room of the pension. One place was still to spare.
+
+"Tompkins!"
+
+Two voices uttered the name simultaneously; three others immediately
+took up the refrain. Tompkins was our man--the cheeriest, merriest
+companion imaginable. Tompkins alone could be trusted to make the
+affair a success. Tompkins, who had only arrived that afternoon, was
+pointed out to our chieftainess. We could hear his good-tempered
+laugh from where we sat, grouped together at the other end of the
+room. Our chieftainess rose, and made for him direct.
+
+Alas! she was a short-sighted lady--we had not thought of that. She
+returned in triumph, followed by a dismal-looking man I had met the
+year before in the Black Forest, and had hoped never to meet again.
+I drew her aside.
+
+"Whatever you do," I said, "don't ask -- " (I forget his name. One
+of these days I'll forget him altogether, and be happier. I will
+call him Johnson.) "He would turn the whole thing into a funeral
+before we were half-way there. I climbed a mountain with him once.
+He makes you forget all your other troubles; that is the only thing
+he is good for."
+
+"But who is Johnson?" she demanded. "Why, that's Johnson," I
+explained--"the thing you've brought over. Why on earth didn't you
+leave it alone? Where's your woman's instinct?"
+
+"Great heavens!" she cried, "I thought it was Tompkins. I've invited
+him, and he's accepted."
+
+She was a stickler for politeness, and would not hear of his being
+told that he had been mistaken for an agreeable man, but that the
+error, most fortunately, had been discovered in time. He started a
+row with the driver of the sledge, and devoted the journey outwards
+to an argument on the fiscal question. He told the proprietor of the
+hotel what he thought of German cooking, and insisted on having the
+windows open. One of our party--a German student--sang,
+"Deutschland, Deutschland uber alles,"--which led to a heated
+discussion on the proper place of sentiment in literature, and a
+general denunciation by Johnson of Teutonic characteristics in
+general. We did not dance. Johnson said that, of course, he spoke
+only for himself, but the sight of middle-aged ladies and gentlemen
+catching hold of each other round the middle and jigging about like
+children was to him rather a saddening spectacle, but to the young
+such gambolling was natural. Let the young ones indulge themselves.
+Only four of our party could claim to be under thirty with any hope
+of success. They were kind enough not to impress the fact upon us.
+Johnson enlivened the journey back by a searching analysis of
+enjoyment: Of what did it really consist?
+
+Yet, on wishing him "Good-night," our chieftainess thanked him for
+his company in precisely the same terms she would have applied to
+Tompkins, who, by unflagging good humour and tact, would have made
+the day worth remembering to us all for all time.
+
+[And everyone obtained his just Deserts!]
+
+We pay dearly for our want of sincerity. We are denied the payment
+of praise: it has ceased to have any value. People shake me warmly
+by the hand and tell me that they like my books. It only bores me.
+Not that I am superior to compliment--nobody is--but because I cannot
+be sure that they mean it. They would say just the same had they
+never read a line I had written. If I visit a house and find a book
+of mine open face downwards on the window-seat, it sends no thrill of
+pride through my suspicious mind. As likely as not, I tell myself,
+the following is the conversation that has taken place between my
+host and hostess the day before my arrival:
+
+"Don't forget that man J-- is coming down tomorrow."
+
+"To-morrow! I wish you would tell me of these things a little
+earlier."
+
+"I did tell you--told you last week. Your memory gets worse every
+day."
+
+"You certainly never told me, or I should have remembered it. Is he
+anybody important?"
+
+"Oh, no; writes books."
+
+"What sort of books?--I mean, is he quite respectable?"
+
+"Of course, or I should not have invited him. These sort of people
+go everywhere nowadays. By the by, have we got any of his books
+about the house?"
+
+"I don't think so. I'll look and see. If you had let me know in
+time I could have ordered one from Mudie's."
+
+"Well, I've got to go to town; I'll make sure of it, and buy one."
+
+"Seems a pity to waste money. Won't you be going anywhere near
+Mudie's?"
+
+"Looks more appreciative to have bought a copy. It will do for a
+birthday present for someone."
+
+On the other hand, the conversation may have been very different. My
+hostess may have said:
+
+"Oh, I AM glad he's coming. I have been longing to meet him for
+years."
+
+She may have bought my book on the day of publication, and be reading
+it through for the second time. She may, by pure accident, have left
+it on her favourite seat beneath the window. The knowledge that
+insincerity is our universal garment has reduced all compliment to
+meaningless formula. A lady one evening at a party drew me aside.
+The chief guest--a famous writer--had just arrived.
+
+"Tell me," she said, "I have so little time for reading, what has he
+done?"
+
+I was on the point of replying when an inveterate wag, who had
+overheard her, interposed between us.
+
+"'The Cloister and the Hearth,'" he told her, "and 'Adam Bede.'"
+
+He happened to know the lady well. She has a good heart, but was
+ever muddle-headed. She thanked that wag with a smile, and I heard
+her later in the evening boring most evidently that literary lion
+with elongated praise of the "Cloister and the Hearth" and "Adam
+Bede." They were among the few books she had ever read, and talking
+about them came easily to her. She told me afterwards that she had
+found that literary lion a charming man, but -
+
+"Well," she laughed, "he has got a good opinion of himself. He told
+me he considered both books among the finest in the English
+language."
+
+It is as well always to make a note of the author's name. Some
+people never do--more particularly playgoers. A well-known dramatic
+author told me he once took a couple of colonial friends to a play of
+his own. It was after a little dinner at Kettner's; they suggested
+the theatre, and he thought he would give them a treat. He did not
+mention to them that he was the author, and they never looked at the
+programme. Their faces as the play proceeded lengthened; it did not
+seem to be their school of comedy. At the end of the first act they
+sprang to their feet.
+
+"Let's chuck this rot," suggested one.
+
+"Let's go to the Empire," suggested the other. The well-known
+dramatist followed them out. He thinks the fault must have been with
+the dinner.
+
+A young friend of mine--a man of good family--contracted a
+mesalliance: that is, he married the daughter of a Canadian farmer,
+a frank, amiable girl, bewitchingly pretty, with more character in
+her little finger than some girls possess in their whole body. I met
+him one day, some three months after his return to London.
+
+[And only people would do Parlour Tricks who do them well!]
+
+"Well," I asked him, "how is it shaping?"
+
+"She is the dearest girl in the world," he answered. "She has only
+got one fault; she believes what people say."
+
+"She will get over that," I suggested.
+
+"I hope she does," he replied; "it's awkward at present."
+
+"I can see it leading her into difficulty," I agreed.
+
+"She is not accomplished," he continued. He seemed to wish to talk
+about it to a sympathetic listener. "She never pretended to be
+accomplished. I did not marry her for her accomplishments. But now
+she is beginning to think she must have been accomplished all the
+time, without knowing it. She plays the piano like a schoolgirl on a
+parents' visiting-day. She told them she did not play--not worth
+listening to--at least, she began by telling them so. They insisted
+that she did, that they had heard about her playing, and were
+thirsting to enjoy it. She is good nature itself. She would stand
+on her head if she thought it would give real joy to anyone. She
+took it they really wanted to hear her, and so let 'em have it. They
+tell her that her touch is something quite out of the common--which
+is the truth, if only she could understand it--why did she never
+think of taking up music as a profession? By this time she is
+wondering herself that she never did. They are not satisfied with
+hearing her once. They ask for more, and they get it. The other
+evening I had to keep quiet on my chair while she thumped through
+four pieces one after the other, including the Beethoven Sonata. We
+knew it was the Beethoven Sonata. She told us before she started it
+was going to be the Beethoven Sonata, otherwise, for all any of us
+could have guessed, it might have been the 'Battle of Prague.' We
+all sat round with wooden faces, staring at our boots. Afterwards
+those of them that couldn't get near enough to her to make a fool of
+her crowded round me. Wanted to know why I had never told them I had
+discovered a musical prodigy. I'll lose my temper one day and pull
+somebody's nose, I feel I shall. She's got a recitation; whether
+intended to be serious or comic I had never been able to make up my
+mind. The way she gives it confers upon it all the disadvantages of
+both. It is chiefly concerned with an angel and a child. But a dog
+comes into it about the middle, and from that point onward it is
+impossible to tell who is talking--sometimes you think it is the
+angel, and then it sounds more like the dog. The child is the
+easiest to follow: it talks all the time through its nose. If I
+have heard that recitation once I have heard it fifty times; and now
+she is busy learning an encore.
+
+[And all the World had Sense!]
+
+"What hurts me most," he went on, "is having to watch her making
+herself ridiculous. Yet what am I to do? If I explain things to her
+she will be miserable and ashamed of herself; added to which her
+frankness--perhaps her greatest charm--will be murdered. The trouble
+runs through everything. She won't take my advice about her frocks.
+She laughs, and repeats to me--well, the lies that other women tell a
+girl who is spoiling herself by dressing absurdly; especially when
+she is a pretty girl and they are anxious she should go on spoiling
+herself. She bought a hat last week, one day when I was not with
+her. It only wants the candles to look like a Christmas tree. They
+insist on her taking it off so they may examine it more closely, with
+the idea of having one built like it for themselves; and she sits by
+delighted, and explains to them the secret of the thing. We get to
+parties half an hour before the opening time; she is afraid of being
+a minute late. They have told her that the party can't begin without
+her--isn't worth calling a party till she's there. We are always the
+last to go. The other people don't matter, but if she goes they will
+feel the whole thing has been a failure. She is dead for want of
+sleep, and they are sick and tired of us; but if I look at my watch
+they talk as if their hearts were breaking, and she thinks me a brute
+for wanting to leave friends so passionately attached to us.
+
+"Why do we all play this silly game; what is the sense of it?" he
+wanted to know.
+
+I could not tell him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+
+[Fire and the Foreigner.]
+
+They are odd folk, these foreigners. There are moments of despair
+when I almost give them up--feel I don't care what becomes of them--
+feel as if I could let them muddle on in their own way--wash my hands
+of them, so to speak, and attend exclusively to my own business: we
+all have our days of feebleness. They will sit outside a cafe on a
+freezing night, with an east wind blowing, and play dominoes. They
+will stand outside a tramcar, rushing through the icy air at fifteen
+miles an hour, and refuse to go inside, even to oblige a lady. Yet
+in railway carriages, in which you could grill a bloater by the
+simple process of laying it underneath the seat, they will insist on
+the window being closed, light cigars to keep their noses warm, and
+sit with the collars of their fur coats buttoned up around their
+necks.
+
+In their houses they keep the double windows hermetically sealed for
+three or four months at a time: and the hot air quivering about the
+stoves scorches your face if you venture nearer to it than a yard.
+Travel can broaden the mind. It can also suggest to the Britisher
+that in some respects his countrymen are nothing near so silly as
+they are supposed to be. There was a time when I used to sit with my
+legs stretched out before the English coal fire and listen with
+respectful attention while people who I thought knew all about it
+explained to me how wicked and how wasteful were our methods.
+
+All the heat from that fire, they told me, was going up the chimney.
+I did not like to answer them that notwithstanding I felt warm and
+cosy. I feared it might be merely British stupidity that kept me
+warm and cosy, not the fire at all. How could it be the fire? The
+heat from the fire was going up the chimney. It was the glow of
+ignorance that was making my toes tingle. Besides, if by sitting
+close in front of the fire and looking hard at it, I did contrive, by
+hypnotic suggestion, maybe, to fancy myself warm, what should I feel
+like at the other end of the room?
+
+It seemed like begging the question to reply that I had no particular
+use for the other end of the room, that generally speaking there was
+room enough about the fire for all the people I really cared for,
+that sitting altogether round the fire seemed quite as sensible as
+sulking by one's self in a corner the other end of the room, that the
+fire made a cheerful and convenient focus for family and friends.
+They pointed out to me how a stove, blocking up the centre of the
+room, with a dingy looking fluepipe wandering round the ceiling,
+would enable us to sit ranged round the walls, like patients in a
+hospital waiting-room, and use up coke and potato-peelings.
+
+Since then I have had practical experience of the scientific stove.
+I want the old-fashioned, unsanitary, wasteful, illogical, open
+fireplace. I want the heat to go up the chimney, instead of stopping
+in the room and giving me a headache, and making everything go round.
+When I come in out of the snow I want to see a fire--something that
+says to me with a cheerful crackle, "Hallo, old man, cold outside,
+isn't it? Come and sit down. Come quite close and warm your hands.
+That's right, put your foot under him and persuade him to move a yard
+or two. That's all he's been doing for the last hour, lying there
+roasting himself, lazy little devil. He'll get softening of the
+spine, that's what will happen to him. Put your toes on the fender.
+The tea will be here in a minute."
+
+[My British Stupidity.]
+
+I want something that I can toast my back against, while standing
+with coat tails tucked up and my hands in my pockets, explaining
+things to people. I don't want a comfortless, staring, white thing,
+in a corner of the room, behind the sofa--a thing that looks and
+smells like a family tomb. It may be hygienic, and it may be hot,
+but it does not seem to do me any good. It has its advantages: it
+contains a cupboard into which you can put things to dry. You can
+also forget them, and leave them there. Then people complain of a
+smell of burning, and hope the house is not on fire, and you ease
+their mind by explaining to them that it is probably only your boots.
+Complicated internal arrangements are worked by a key. If you put on
+too much fuel, and do not work this key properly, the thing explodes.
+And if you do not put on any coal at all and the fire goes out
+suddenly, then likewise it explodes. That is the only way it knows
+of calling attention to itself. On the Continent you know when the
+fire wants seeing to merely by listening:
+
+"Sounded like the dining-room, that last explosion," somebody
+remarks.
+
+"I think not," observes another, "I distinctly felt the shock behind
+me--my bedroom, I expect."
+
+Bits of ceiling begin to fall, and you notice that the mirror over
+the sideboard is slowly coming towards you.
+
+"Why it must be this stove," you say; "curious how difficult it is to
+locate sound."
+
+You snatch up the children and hurry out of the room. After a while,
+when things have settled down, you venture to look in again. Maybe
+it was only a mild explosion. A ten-pound note and a couple of
+plumbers in the house for a week will put things right again. They
+tell me they are economical, these German stoves, but you have got to
+understand them. I think I have learnt the trick of them at last:
+and I don't suppose, all told, it has cost me more than fifty pounds.
+And now I am trying to teach the rest of the family. What I complain
+about the family is that they do not seem anxious to learn.
+
+"You do it," they say, pressing the coal scoop into my hand: "it
+makes us nervous."
+
+It is a pretty, patriarchal idea: I stand between the trusting,
+admiring family and these explosive stoves that are the terror of
+their lives. They gather round me in a group and watch me, the
+capable, all-knowing Head who fears no foreign stove. But there are
+days when I get tired of going round making up fires.
+
+Nor is it sufficient to understand only one particular stove. The
+practical foreigner prides himself upon having various stoves,
+adapted to various work. Hitherto I have been speaking only of the
+stove supposed to be best suited to reception rooms and bedrooms.
+The hall is provided with another sort of stove altogether: an iron
+stove this, that turns up its nose at coke and potato-peelings. If
+you give it anything else but the best coal it explodes. It is like
+living surrounded by peppery old colonels, trying to pass a peaceful
+winter among these passionate stoves. There is a stove in the
+kitchen to be used only for roasting: this one will not look at
+anything else but wood. Give it a bit of coal, meaning to be kind,
+and before you are out of the room it has exploded.
+
+Then there is a trick stove specially popular in Belgium. It has a
+little door at the top and another little door at the bottom, and
+looks like a pepper-caster. Whether it is happy or not depends upon
+those two little doors. There are times when it feels it wants the
+bottom door shut and the top door open, or vice versa, or both open
+at the same time, or both shut--it is a fussy little stove.
+
+Ordinary intelligence does not help you much with this stove. You
+want to be bred in the country. It is a question of instinct: you
+have to have Belgian blood in your veins to get on comfortably with
+it. On the whole, it is a mild little stove, this Belgian pet. It
+does not often explode: it only gets angry, and throws its cover
+into the air, and flings hot coals about the room. It lives,
+generally speaking, inside an iron cupboard with two doors. When you
+want it, you open these doors, and pull it out into the room. It
+works on a swivel. And when you don't want it you try to push it
+back again, and then the whole thing tumbles over, and the girl
+throws her hands up to Heaven and says, "Mon Dieu!" and screams for
+the cook and the femme journee, and they all three say "Mon Dieu!"
+and fall upon it with buckets of water. By the time everything has
+been extinguished you have made up your mind to substitute for it
+just the ordinary explosive stove to which you are accustomed.
+
+[I am considered Cold and Mad.]
+
+In your own house you can, of course, open the windows, and thus
+defeat the foreign stove. The rest of the street thinks you mad, but
+then the Englishman is considered by all foreigners to be always mad.
+It is his privilege to be mad. The street thinks no worse of you
+than it did before, and you can breathe in comfort. But in the
+railway carriage they don't allow you to be mad. In Europe, unless
+you are prepared to draw at sight upon the other passengers, throw
+the conductor out of the window, and take the train in by yourself,
+it is useless arguing the question of fresh air. The rule abroad is
+that if any one man objects to the window being open, the window
+remains closed. He does not quarrel with you: he rings the bell,
+and points out to the conductor that the temperature of the carriage
+has sunk to little more than ninety degrees, Fahrenheit. He thinks a
+window must be open.
+
+The conductor is generally an old soldier: he understands being
+shot, he understands being thrown out of window, but not the laws of
+sanitation. If, as I have explained, you shoot him, or throw him out
+on the permanent way, that convinces him. He leaves you to discuss
+the matter with the second conductor, who, by your action, has now,
+of course, become the first conductor. As there are generally half a
+dozen of these conductors scattered about the train, the process of
+educating them becomes monotonous. You generally end by submitting
+to the law.
+
+Unless you happen to be an American woman. Never did my heart go out
+more gladly to America as a nation than one spring day travelling
+from Berne to Vevey. We had been sitting for an hour in an
+atmosphere that would have rendered a Dante disinclined to notice
+things. Dante, after ten minutes in that atmosphere, would have lost
+all interest in the show. He would not have asked questions. He
+would have whispered to Virgil:
+
+"Get me out of this, old man, there's a good fellow!"
+
+[Sometimes I wish I were an American Woman.]
+
+The carriage was crowded, chiefly with Germans. Every window was
+closed, every ventilator shut. The hot air quivered round our feet
+Seventeen men and four women were smoking, two children were sucking
+peppermints, and an old married couple were eating their lunch,
+consisting chiefly of garlic. At a junction, the door was thrown
+open. The foreigner opens the door a little way, glides in, and
+closes it behind him. This was not a foreigner, but an American
+lady, en voyage, accompanied by five other American ladies. They
+marched in carrying packages. They could not find six seats
+together, so they scattered up and down the carriage. The first
+thing that each woman did, the moment she could get her hands free,
+was to dash for the nearest window and haul it down.
+
+"Astonishes me," said the first woman, "that somebody is not dead in
+this carriage."
+
+Their idea, I think, was that through asphyxiation we had become
+comatose, and, but for their entrance, would have died unconscious.
+
+"It is a current of air that is wanted," said another of the ladies.
+
+So they opened the door at the front of the carriage and four of them
+stood outside on the platform, chatting pleasantly and admiring the
+scenery, while two of them opened the door at the other end, and took
+photographs of the Lake of Geneva. The carriage rose and cursed them
+in six languages. Bells were rung: conductors came flying in. It
+was all of no use. Those American ladies were cheerful but firm.
+They argued with volubility: they argued standing in the open
+doorway. The conductors, familiar, no doubt, with the American lady
+and her ways, shrugged their shoulders and retired. The other
+passengers undid their bags and bundles, and wrapped themselves up in
+shawls and Jaeger nightshirts.
+
+I met the ladies afterwards in Lausanne. They told me they had been
+condemned to a fine of forty francs apiece. They also explained to
+me that they had not the slightest intention of paying it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+
+[Too much Postcard.]
+
+The postcard craze is dying out in Germany--the land of its birth--I
+am told. In Germany they do things thoroughly, or not at all. The
+German when he took to sending postcards abandoned almost every other
+pursuit in life. The German tourist never knew where he had been
+until on reaching home again he asked some friend or relation to
+allow him to look over the postcards he had sent. Then it was he
+began to enjoy his trip.
+
+"What a charming old town!" the German tourist would exclaim. "I
+wish I could have found time while I was there to have gone outside
+the hotel and have had a look round. Still, it is pleasant to think
+one has been there."
+
+"I suppose you did not have much time?" his friend would suggest.
+
+"We did not get there till the evening," the tourist would explain.
+"We were busy till dark buying postcards, and then in the morning
+there was the writing and addressing to be done, and when that was
+over, and we had had our breakfast, it was time to leave again."
+
+He would take up another card showing the panorama from a mountain
+top.
+
+"Sublime! colossal!" he would cry enraptured. "If I had known it was
+anything like that, I'd have stopped another day and had a look at
+it."
+
+It was always worth seeing, the arrival of a party of German tourists
+in a Schwartzwald village. Leaping from the coach they would surge
+round the solitary gendarme.
+
+"Where is the postcard shop?" "Tell us--we have only two hours--
+where do we get postcards?"
+
+The gendarme, scenting Trinkgeld, would head them at the double-
+quick: stout old gentlemen unaccustomed to the double-quick, stouter
+Frauen gathering up their skirts with utter disregard to all
+propriety, slim Fraulein clinging to their beloved would run after
+him. Nervous pedestrians would fly for safety into doorways,
+careless loiterers would be swept into the gutter.
+
+In the narrow doorway of the postcard shop trouble would begin. The
+cries of suffocated women and trampled children, the curses of strong
+men, would rend the air. The German is a peaceful, law-abiding
+citizen, but in the hunt for postcards he was a beast. A woman would
+pounce on a tray of cards, commence selecting, suddenly the tray
+would be snatched from her. She would burst into tears, and hit the
+person nearest to her with her umbrella. The cunning and the strong
+would secure the best cards. The weak and courteous be left with
+pictures of post offices and railway stations. Torn and dishevelled,
+the crowd would rush back to the hotel, sweep crockery from the
+table, and--sucking stumpy pencils--write feverishly. A hurried meal
+would follow. Then the horses would be put to again, the German
+tourists would climb back to their places and be driven away, asking
+of the coachman what the name of the place they had just left might
+happen to be.
+
+[The Postcard as a Family Curse.]
+
+One presumes that even to the patient German the thing grew tiresome.
+In the Fliegende Blatter two young clerks were represented discussing
+the question of summer holidays.
+
+"Where are you going?" asks A of B.
+
+"Nowhere," answers B.
+
+"Can't you afford it?" asks the sympathetic A.
+
+"Only been able to save up enough for the postcards," answers B,
+gloomily; "no money left for the trip."
+
+Men and women carried bulky volumes containing the names and
+addresses of the people to whom they had promised to send cards.
+Everywhere, through winding forest glade, by silver sea, on mountain
+pathway, one met with prematurely aged looking tourists muttering as
+they walked:
+
+"Did I send Aunt Gretchen a postcard from that last village that we
+stopped at, or did I address two to Cousin Lisa?"
+
+Then, again, maybe, the picture postcard led to disappointment.
+Uninteresting towns clamoured, as ill-favoured spinsters in a
+photographic studio, to be made beautiful.
+
+"I want," says the lady, "a photograph my friends will really like.
+Some of these second-rate photographers make one look quite plain. I
+don't want you to flatter me, if you understand, I merely want
+something nice."
+
+The obliging photographer does his best. The nose is carefully toned
+down, the wart becomes a dimple, her own husband doesn't know her.
+The postcard artist has ended by imagining everything as it might
+have been.
+
+"If it were not for the houses," says the postcard artist to himself,
+"this might have been a picturesque old High street of mediaeval
+aspect."
+
+So he draws a picture of the High street as it might have been. The
+lover of quaint architecture travels out of his way to see it, and
+when he finds it and contrasts it with the picture postcard he gets
+mad. I bought a postcard myself once representing the market place
+of a certain French town. It seemed to me, looking at the postcard,
+that I hadn't really seen France--not yet. I travelled nearly a
+hundred miles to see that market place. I was careful to arrive on
+market day and to get there at the right time. I reached the market
+square and looked at it. Then I asked a gendarme where it was.
+
+He said it was there--that I was in it.
+
+I said, "I don't mean this one, I want the other one, the picturesque
+one."
+
+He said it was the only market square they had. I took the postcard
+from my pocket.
+
+"Where are all the girls?" I asked him.
+
+"What girls?" he demanded.
+
+[The Artist's Dream.]
+
+"Why, these girls;" I showed him the postcard, there ought to have
+been about a hundred of them. There was not a plain one among the
+lot. Many of them I should have called beautiful. They were selling
+flowers and fruit, all kinds of fruit--cherries, strawberries, rosy-
+cheeked apples, luscious grapes--all freshly picked and sparkling
+with dew. The gendarme said he had never seen any girls--not in this
+particular square. Referring casually to the blood of saints and
+martyrs, he said he would like to see a few girls in that town worth
+looking at. In the square itself sat six motherly old souls round a
+lamp-post. One of them had a moustache, and was smoking a pipe, but
+in other respects, I have no doubt, was all a woman should be. Two
+of them were selling fish. That is they would have sold fish, no
+doubt, had anyone been there to buy fish. The gaily clad thousands
+of eager purchasers pictured in the postcard were represented by two
+workmen in blue blouses talking at a corner, mostly with their
+fingers; a small boy walking backwards, with the idea apparently of
+not missing anything behind him, and a yellow dog that sat on the
+kerb, and had given up all hope--judging from his expression--of
+anything ever happening again. With the gendarme and myself, these
+four were the only living creatures in the square. The rest of the
+market consisted of eggs and a few emaciated fowls hanging from a
+sort of broom handle.
+
+"And where's the cathedral?" I asked the gendarme. It was a Gothic
+structure in the postcard of evident antiquity. He said there had
+once been a cathedral. It was now a brewery; he pointed it out to
+me. He said he thought some portion of the original south wall had
+been retained. He thought the manager of the brewery might be
+willing to show it to me.
+
+"And the fountain?" I demanded, "and all these doves!"
+
+He said there had been talk of a fountain. He believed the design
+had already been prepared.
+
+I took the next train back. I do not now travel much out of my way
+to see the original of the picture postcard. Maybe others have had
+like experience and the picture postcard as a guide to the Continent
+has lost its value.
+
+The dealer has fallen back upon the eternal feminine. The postcard
+collector is confined to girls. Through the kindness of
+correspondents I possess myself some fifty to a hundred girls, or
+perhaps it would be more correct to say one girl in fifty to a
+hundred different hats. I have her in big hats, I have her in small
+hats, I have her in no hat at all. I have her smiling, and I have
+her looking as if she had lost her last sixpence. I have her
+overdressed, I have her decidedly underdressed, but she is much the
+same girl. Very young men cannot have too many of her, but myself I
+am getting tired of her. I suppose it is the result of growing old.
+
+[Why not the Eternal Male for a change?]
+
+Girls of my acquaintance are also beginning to grumble at her. I
+often think it hard on girls that the artist so neglects the eternal
+male. Why should there not be portraits of young men in different
+hats; young men in big hats, young men in little hats, young men
+smiling archly, young men looking noble. Girls don't want to
+decorate their rooms with pictures of other girls, they want rows of
+young men beaming down upon them.
+
+But possibly I am sinning my mercies. A father hears what young men
+don't. The girl in real life is feeling it keenly: the impossible
+standard set for her by the popular artist.
+
+"Real skirts don't hang like that," she grumbles, "it's not in the
+nature of skirts. You can't have feet that size. It isn't our
+fault, they are not made. Look at those waists! There would be no
+room to put anything?"
+
+"Nature, in fashioning woman, has not yet crept up to the artistic
+ideal. The young man studies the picture on the postcard; on the
+coloured almanack given away at Christmas by the local grocer; on the
+advertisement of Jones' soap, and thinks with discontent of Polly
+Perkins, who in a natural way is as pretty a girl as can be looked
+for in this imperfect world. Thus it is that woman has had to take
+to shorthand and typewriting. Modern woman is being ruined by the
+artist.
+
+[How Women are ruined by Art.]
+
+Mr. Anstey tells a story of a young barber who fell in love with his
+own wax model. All day he dreamed of the impossible. She--the young
+lady of wax-like complexion, with her everlasting expression of
+dignity combined with amiability. No girl of his acquaintance could
+compete with her. If I remember rightly he died a bachelor, still
+dreaming of wax-like perfection. Perhaps it is as well we men are
+not handicapped to the same extent. If every hoarding, if every
+picture shop window, if every illustrated journal teemed with
+illustrations of the ideal young man in perfect fitting trousers that
+never bagged at the knees! Maybe it would result in our cooking our
+own breakfasts and making our own beds to the end of our lives.
+
+The novelist and playwright, as it is, have made things difficult
+enough for us. In books and plays the young man makes love with a
+flow of language, a wealth of imagery, that must have taken him years
+to acquire. What does the novel-reading girl think, I wonder, when
+the real young man proposes to her! He has not called her anything
+in particular. Possibly he has got as far as suggesting she is a
+duck or a daisy, or hinting shyly that she is his bee or his
+honeysuckle: in his excitement he is not quite sure which. In the
+novel she has been reading the hero has likened the heroine to half
+the vegetable kingdom. Elementary astronomy has been exhausted in
+his attempt to describe to her the impression her appearance leaves
+on him. Bond Street has been sacked in his endeavour to get it
+clearly home to her what different parts of her are like--her eyes,
+her teeth, her heart, her hair, her ears. Delicacy alone prevents
+his extending the catalogue. A Fiji Island lover might possibly go
+further. We have not yet had the Fiji Island novel. By the time he
+is through with it she must have a somewhat confused notion of
+herself--a vague conviction that she is a sort of condensed South
+Kensington Museum.
+
+[Difficulty of living up to the Poster.]
+
+Poor Angelina must feel dissatisfied with the Edwin of real life. I
+am not sure that art and fiction have not made life more difficult
+for us than even it was intended to be. The view from the mountain
+top is less extensive than represented by the picture postcard. The
+play, I fear me, does not always come up to the poster. Polly
+Perkins is pretty enough as girls go; but oh for the young lady of
+the grocer's almanack! Poor dear John is very nice and loves us--so
+he tells us, in his stupid, halting way; but how can we respond when
+we remember how the man loved in the play! The "artist has fashioned
+his dream of delight," and the workaday world by comparison seems
+tame to us.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+
+[The Lady and the Problem.]
+
+She is a good woman, the Heroine of the Problem Play, but accidents
+will happen, and other people were to blame.
+
+Perhaps that is really the Problem: who was responsible for the
+heroine's past? Was it her father? She does not say so--not in so
+many words. That is not her way. It is not for her, the silently-
+suffering victim of complicated antecedent incidents, to purchase
+justice for herself by pointing the finger of accusation against him
+who, whatever his faults may be, was once, at all events, her father.
+That one fact in his favour she can never forget. Indeed she would
+not if she could. That one asset, for whatever it may be worth by
+the time the Day of Judgment arrives, he shall retain. It shall not
+be taken from him. "After all he was my father." She admits it,
+with the accent on the "was." That he is so no longer, he has only
+himself to blame. His subsequent behaviour has apparently rendered
+it necessary for her to sever the relationship.
+
+"I love you," she has probably said to him, paraphrasing Othello's
+speech to Cassio; "it is my duty, and--as by this time you must be
+aware--it is my keen if occasionally somewhat involved, sense of duty
+that is the cause of almost all our troubles in this play. You will
+always remain the object of what I cannot help feeling is misplaced
+affection on my part, mingled with contempt. But never more be
+relative of mine."
+
+Certain it is that but for her father she would never have had a
+past. Failing anyone else on whom to lay the blame for whatever the
+lady may have done, we can generally fall back upon the father. He
+becomes our sheet-anchor, so to speak. There are plays in which at
+first sight it would almost appear there was nobody to blame--nobody,
+except the heroine herself. It all seems to happen just because she
+is no better than she ought to be: clearly, the father's fault! for
+ever having had a daughter no better than she ought to be. As the
+Heroine of a certain Problem Play once put it neatly and succinctly
+to the old man himself: "It is you parents that make us children
+what we are." She had him there. He had not a word to answer for
+himself, but went off centre, leaving his hat behind him.
+
+Sometimes, however, the father is merely a "Scientist"--which in
+Stageland is another term for helpless imbecile. In Stageland, if a
+gentleman has not got to have much brain and you do not know what
+else to make of him, you let him be a scientist--and then, of course,
+he is only to blame in a minor degree. If he had not been a
+scientist--thinking more of his silly old stars or beetles than of
+his intricate daughter, he might have done something. The heroine
+does not say precisely what: perhaps have taken her up stairs now
+and again, while she was still young and susceptible of improvement,
+and have spanked some sense into her.
+
+[The Stage Hero who, for once, had Justice done to him.]
+
+I remember witnessing long ago, in a country barn, a highly moral
+play. It was a Problem Play, now I come to think of it. At least,
+that is, it would have been a Problem Play but that the party with
+the past happened in this case to be merely a male thing. Stage life
+presents no problems to the man. The hero of the Problem Play has
+not got to wonder what to do; he has got to wonder only what the
+heroine will do next. The hero--he was not exactly the hero; he
+would have been the hero had he not been hanged in the last act. But
+for that he was rather a nice young man, full of sentiment and not
+ashamed of it. From the scaffold he pleaded for leave to embrace his
+mother just once more before he died. It was a pretty idea. The
+hangman himself was touched. The necessary leave was granted him.
+He descended the steps and flung his arms round the sobbing old lady,
+and--bit off her nose. After that he told her why he had bitten off
+her nose. It appeared that when he was a boy, he had returned home
+one evening with a rabbit in his pocket. Instead of putting him
+across her knee, and working into him the eighth commandment, she had
+said nothing; but that it seemed to be a fairly useful sort of
+rabbit, and had sent him out into the garden to pick onions. If she
+had done her duty by him then, he would not have been now in his
+present most unsatisfactory position, and she would still have had
+her nose. The fathers and mothers in the audience applauded, but the
+children, scenting addition to precedent, looked glum.
+
+Maybe it is something of this kind the heroine is hinting at.
+Perhaps the Problem has nothing to do with the heroine herself, but
+with the heroine's parents: what is the best way of bringing up a
+daughter who shows the slightest sign of developing a tendency
+towards a Past? Can it be done by kindness? And, if not, how much?
+
+Occasionally the parents attempt to solve the Problem, so far as they
+are concerned, by dying young--shortly after the heroine's birth. No
+doubt they argue to themselves this is their only chance of avoiding
+future blame. But they do not get out of it so easily.
+
+"Ah, if I had only had a mother--or even a father!" cries the
+heroine: one feels how mean it was of them to slip away as they did.
+
+The fact remains, however, that they are dead. One despises them for
+dying, but beyond that it is difficult to hold them personally
+responsible for the heroine's subsequent misdeeds. The argument
+takes to itself new shape. Is it Fate that is to blame? The lady
+herself would seem to favour this suggestion. It has always been her
+fate, she explains, to bring suffering and misery upon those she
+loves. At first, according to her own account, she rebelled against
+this cruel Fate--possibly instigated thereto by the people
+unfortunate enough to he loved by her. But of late she has come to
+accept this strange destiny of hers with touching resignation. It
+grieves her, when she thinks of it, that she is unable to imbue those
+she loves with her own patient spirit. They seem to be a fretful
+little band.
+
+Considered as a scapegoat, Fate, as compared with the father, has
+this advantage: it is always about: it cannot slip away and die
+before the real trouble begins: it cannot even plead a scientific
+head; it is there all the time. With care one can blame it for most
+everything. The vexing thing about it is, that it does not mind
+being blamed. One cannot make Fate feel small and mean. It affords
+no relief to our harrowed feelings to cry out indignantly to Fate:
+"look here, what you have done. Look at this sweet and well-
+proportioned lady, compelled to travel first-class, accompanied by an
+amount of luggage that must be a perpetual nightmare to her maid,
+from one fashionable European resort to another; forced to exist on a
+well-secured income of, apparently, five thousand a year, most of
+which has to go in clothes; beloved by only the best people in the
+play; talked about by everybody incessantly to the exclusion of
+everybody else--all the neighbours interested in her and in nobody
+else much; all the women envying her; all the men tumbling over one
+another after her--looks, in spite of all her worries, not a day
+older than twenty-three; and has discovered a dressmaker never yet
+known to have been an hour behind her promise! And all your fault,
+yours, Fate. Will nothing move you to shame?"
+
+[She has a way of mislaying her Husband.]
+
+It brings no satisfaction with it, speaking out one's mind to Fate.
+We want to see him before us, the thing of flesh and blood that has
+brought all this upon her. Was it that early husband--or rather the
+gentleman she thought was her husband. As a matter of fact, he was a
+husband. Only he did not happen to be hers. That naturally confused
+her. "Then who is my husband?" she seems to have said to herself; "I
+had a husband: I remember it distinctly."
+
+"Difficult to know them apart from one another," says the lady with
+the past, "the way they dress them all alike nowadays. I suppose it
+does not really matter. They are much the same as one another when
+you get them home. Doesn't do to be too fussy."
+
+She is a careless woman. She is always mislaying that early husband.
+And she has an unfortunate knack of finding him at the wrong moment.
+Perhaps that is the Problem: What is a lady to do with a husband for
+whom she has no further use? If she gives him away he is sure to
+come back, like the clever dog that is sent in a hamper to the other
+end of the kingdom, and three days afterwards is found gasping on the
+doorstep. If she leaves him in the middle of South Africa, with most
+of the heavy baggage and all the debts, she may reckon it a certainty
+that on her return from her next honeymoon he will be the first to
+greet her.
+
+Her surprise at meeting him again is a little unreasonable. She
+seems to be under the impression that because she has forgotten him,
+he is for all practical purposes dead.
+
+"Why I forgot all about him," she seems to be arguing to herself,
+"seven years ago at least. According to the laws of Nature there
+ought to be nothing left of him but just his bones."
+
+She is indignant at finding he is still alive, and lets him know it--
+tells him he is a beast for turning up at his sister's party, and
+pleads to him for one last favour: that he will go away where
+neither she nor anybody else of any importance will ever see him or
+hear of him again. That's all she asks of him. If he make a point
+of it she will--though her costume is ill adapted to the exercise--go
+down upon her knees to ask it of him.
+
+He brutally retorts that he doesn't know where to "get." The lady
+travels round a good deal and seems to be in most places. She
+accepts week-end invitations to the houses of his nearest relatives.
+She has married his first cousin, and is now getting up a bazaar with
+the help of his present wife. How he is to avoid her he does not
+quite see.
+
+Perhaps, by the by, that is really the Problem: where is the early
+husband to disappear to? Even if every time he saw her coming he
+were to duck under the table, somebody would be sure to notice it and
+make remarks. Ought he to take himself out one dark night, tie a
+brick round his neck, and throw himself into a pond?
+
+[What is a Lady to do with a Husband when she has finished with him?]
+
+But men are so selfish. The idea does not even occur to him; and the
+lady herself is too generous to do more than just hint at it.
+
+Maybe it is Society that is to blame. There comes a luminous moment
+when it is suddenly revealed to the Heroine of the Problem Play that
+it is Society that is at the bottom of this thing. She has felt all
+along there was something the matter. Why has she never thought of
+it before? Here all these years has she been going about blaming her
+poor old father; her mother for dying too soon; the remarkable
+circumstances attending her girlhood; that dear old stupid husband
+she thought was hers; and all the while the really culpable party has
+been existing unsuspected under her very nose. She clears away the
+furniture a bit, and tells Society exactly what she thinks of it--she
+is always good at that, telling people what she thinks of them.
+Other people's failings do not escape her, not for long. If Society
+would only step out for a moment, and look at itself with her eyes,
+something might be done. If Society, now that the thing has been
+pointed out to it, has still any lingering desire to live, let it
+look at her. This, that she is, Society has made her! Let Society
+have a walk round her, and then go home and reflect.
+
+[Could she--herself--have been to blame?]
+
+It lifts a load from us, fixing the blame on Society. There were
+periods in the play when we hardly knew what to think. The
+scientific father, the dead mother, the early husband! it was
+difficult to grasp the fact that they alone were to blame. One felt
+there was something to be said for even them. Ugly thoughts would
+cross our mind that perhaps the Heroine herself was not altogether
+irreproachable--that possibly there would have been less Problem, if,
+thinking a little less about her clothes, yearning a little less to
+do nothing all day long and be perfectly happy, she had pulled
+herself together, told herself that the world was not built
+exclusively for her, and settled down to the existence of an ordinary
+decent woman.
+
+Looking at the thing all round, that is perhaps the best solution of
+the Problem: it is Society that is to blame. We had better keep to
+that.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+
+[Civilization and the Unemployed.]
+
+Where Civilization fails is in not providing men and women with
+sufficient work. In the Stone Age man was, one imagines, kept busy.
+When he was not looking for his dinner, or eating his dinner, or
+sleeping off the effects of his dinner, he was hard at work with a
+club, clearing the neighbourhood of what one doubts not he would have
+described as aliens. The healthy Palaeolithic man would have had a
+contempt for Cobden rivalling that of Mr. Chamberlain himself. He
+did not take the incursion of the foreigner "lying down." One
+pictures him in the mind's eye: unscientific, perhaps, but active to
+a degree difficult to conceive in these degenerate days. Now up a
+tree hurling cocoa-nuts, the next moment on the ground flinging roots
+and rocks. Both having tolerably hard heads, the argument would of
+necessity be long and heated. Phrases that have since come to be
+meaningless had, in those days, a real significance.
+
+When a Palaeolithic politician claimed to have "crushed his critic,"
+he meant that he had succeeded in dropping a tree or a ton of earth
+upon him. When it was said that one bright and intelligent member of
+that early sociology had "annihilated his opponent," that opponent's
+friends and relations took no further interest in him. It meant that
+he was actually annihilated. Bits of him might be found, but the
+most of him would be hopelessly scattered. When the adherents of any
+particular Cave Dweller remarked that their man was wiping the floor
+with his rival, it did not mean that he was talking himself red in
+the face to a bored audience of sixteen friends and a reporter. It
+meant that he was dragging that rival by the legs round the enclosure
+and making the place damp and untidy with him.
+
+[Early instances of "Dumping."]
+
+Maybe the Cave Dweller, finding nuts in his own neighbourhood growing
+scarce, would emigrate himself: for even in that age the politician
+was not always logical. Thus roles became reversed. The defender of
+his country became the alien, dumping himself where he was not
+wanted. The charm of those early political arguments lay in their
+simplicity. A child could have followed every point. There could
+never have been a moment's doubt, even among his own followers, as to
+what a Palaeolithic statesman really meant to convey. At the close
+of the contest the party who considered it had won the moral victory
+would be cleared away, or buried neatly on the spot, according to
+taste: and the discussion, until the arrival of the next generation,
+was voted closed.
+
+All this must have been harassing, but it did serve to pass away the
+time. Civilization has brought into being a section of the community
+with little else to do but to amuse itself. For youth to play is
+natural; the young barbarian plays, the kitten plays, the colt
+gambols, the lamb skips. But man is the only animal that gambols and
+jumps and skips after it has reached maturity. Were we to meet an
+elderly bearded goat, springing about in the air and behaving,
+generally speaking, like a kid, we should say it had gone mad. Yet
+we throng in our thousands to watch elderly ladies and gentlemen
+jumping about after a ball, twisting themselves into strange shapes,
+rushing, racing, falling over one another; and present them with
+silver-backed hair-brushes and gold-handled umbrellas as a reward to
+them for doing so.
+
+Imagine some scientific inhabitant of one of the larger fixed stars
+examining us through a magnifying-glass as we examine ants. Our
+amusements would puzzle him. The ball of all sorts and sizes, from
+the marble to the pushball, would lead to endless scientific
+argument.
+
+"What is it? Why are these men and women always knocking it about,
+seizing it wherever and whenever they find it and worrying it?"
+
+The observer from that fixed star would argue that the Ball must be
+some malignant creature of fiendish power, the great enemy of the
+human race. Watching our cricket-fields, our tennis-courts, our golf
+links, he would conclude that a certain section of mankind had been
+told off to do battle with the "Ball" on behalf of mankind in
+general.
+
+"As a rule," so he would report, "it is a superior class of insect to
+which this special duty has been assigned. They are a friskier,
+gaudier species than their fellows.
+
+[Cricket, as viewed from the fixed Stars.]
+
+"For this one purpose they appear to be kept and fed. They do no
+other work, so far as I have been able to ascertain. Carefully
+selected and trained, their mission is to go about the world looking
+for Balls. Whenever they find a Ball they set to work to kill it.
+But the vitality of these Balls is extraordinary. There is a medium-
+sized, reddish species that, on an average, takes three days to kill.
+When one of these is discovered, specially trained champions are
+summoned from every corner of the country. They arrive in hot haste,
+eager for the battle, which takes place in the presence of the entire
+neighbourhood. The number of champions for some reason or another is
+limited to twenty-two. Each one seizing in turn a large piece of
+wood, rushes at the Ball as it flies along the ground, or through the
+air, and strikes at it with all his force. When, exhausted, he can
+strike no longer, he throws down his weapon and retires into a tent,
+where he is restored to strength by copious draughts of a drug the
+nature of which I have been unable to discover. Meanwhile, another
+has picked up the fallen weapon, and the contest is continued without
+a moment's interruption. The Ball makes frantic efforts to escape
+from its tormentors, but every time it is captured and flung back.
+So far as can be observed, it makes no attempt at retaliation, its
+only object being to get away; though, occasionally--whether by
+design or accident--it succeeds in inflicting injury upon one or
+other of its executioners, or more often upon one of the spectators,
+striking him either on the head or about the region of the waist,
+which, judging by results, would appear, from the Ball's point of
+view, to be the better selection. These small reddish Balls are
+quickened into life evidently by the heat of the sun; in the cold
+season they disappear, and their place is taken by a much larger
+Ball. This Ball the champions kill by striking it with their feet
+and with their heads. But sometimes they will attempt to suffocate
+it by falling on it, some dozen of them at a time.
+
+"Another of these seemingly harmless enemies of the human race is a
+small white Ball of great cunning and resource. It frequents sandy
+districts by the sea coast and open spaces near the large towns. It
+is pursued with extraordinary animosity by a florid-faced insect of
+fierce aspect and rotundity of figure. The weapon he employs is a
+long stick loaded with metal. With one blow he will send the
+creature through the air sometimes to a distance of nearly a quarter
+of a mile; yet so vigorous is the constitution of these Balls that it
+will fall to earth apparently but little damaged. It is followed by
+the rotund man accompanied by a smaller insect carrying spare clubs.
+Though hampered by the prominent whiteness of its skin, the extreme
+smallness of this Ball often enables it to defy re-discovery, and at
+such times the fury of the little round man is terrible to
+contemplate. He dances round the spot where the ball has
+disappeared, making frenzied passes at the surrounding vegetation
+with his club, uttering the while the most savage and bloodcurdling
+growls. Occasionally striking at the small creature in fury, he will
+miss it altogether, and, having struck merely the air, will sit down
+heavily upon the ground, or, striking the solid earth, will shatter
+his own club. Then a curious thing takes place: all the other
+insects standing round place their right hand before their mouth,
+and, turning away their faces, shake their bodies to and fro,
+emitting a strange crackling sound. Whether this is to be regarded
+as a mere expression of their grief that the blow of their comrade
+should have miscarried, or whether one may assume it to be a
+ceremonious appeal to their gods for better luck next time, I have
+not as yet made up my mind. The striker, meanwhile, raises both
+arms, the hands tightly clenched, towards the heavens, and utters
+what is probably a prayer, prepared expressly for the occasion.
+
+[The Heir of all Ages. His Inheritance.]
+
+In similar manner he, the Celestial Observer, proceeds to describe
+our billiard matches, our tennis tournaments, our croquet parties.
+Maybe it never occurs to him that a large section of our race
+surrounded by Eternity, would devote its entire span of life to sheer
+killing of time. A middle-aged friend of mine, a cultured gentleman,
+a M.A. of Cambridge, assured me the other day that, notwithstanding
+all his experiences of life, the thing that still gave him the
+greatest satisfaction was the accomplishment of a successful drive to
+leg. Rather a quaint commentary on our civilization, is it not?
+"The singers have sung, and the builders have builded. The artists
+have fashioned their dreams of delight." The martyrs for thought and
+freedom have died their death; knowledge has sprung from the bones of
+ignorance; civilization for ten thousand years has battled with
+brutality to this result--that a specimen gentleman of the Twentieth
+Century, the heir of all the ages, finds his greatest joy in life the
+striking of a ball with a chunk of wood!
+
+Human energy, human suffering, has been wasted. Such crown of
+happiness for a man might surely have been obtained earlier and at
+less cost. Was it intended? Are we on the right track? The child's
+play is wiser. The battered doll is a princess. Within the sand
+castle dwells an ogre. It is with imagination that he plays. His
+games have some relation to life. It is the man only who is content
+with this everlasting knocking about of a ball. The majority of
+mankind is doomed to labour so constant, so exhausting, that no
+opportunity is given it to cultivate its brain. Civilization has
+arranged that a small privileged minority shall alone enjoy that
+leisure necessary to the development of thought. And what is the
+answer of this leisured class? It is:
+
+"We will do nothing for the world that feeds us, clothes us, keeps us
+in luxury. We will spend our whole existence knocking balls about,
+watching other people knocking balls about, arguing with one another
+as to the best means of knocking balls about."
+
+[Is it "Playing the Game?"]
+
+Is it--to use their own jargon--"playing the game?"
+
+And the queer thing is this over-worked world, that stints itself to
+keep them in idleness, approves of the answer. "The flannelled
+fool," "The muddied oaf," is the pet of the people; their hero, their
+ideal.
+
+But maybe all this is mere jealousy. Myself, I have never been
+clever at knocking balls about.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+
+[Patience and the Waiter.]
+
+The slowest waiter I know is the British railway refreshment-room
+waiter.
+
+His very breathing--regular, harmonious, penetrating, instinct as it
+is with all the better attributes of a well-preserved grandfather's
+clock--conveys suggestion of dignity and peace. He is a huge,
+impressive person. There emanates from him an atmosphere of
+Lotusland. The otherwise unattractive refreshment-room becomes an
+oasis of repose amid the turmoil of a fretful world. All things
+conspire to aid him: the ancient joints, ranged side by side like
+corpses in a morgue, each one decently hidden under its white muslin
+shroud, whispering of death and decay; the dish of dead flies,
+thoughtfully placed in the centre of the table; the framed
+advertisements extolling the virtues of heavy beers and stouts, of
+weird champagnes, emanating from haunted-looking chateaux, situate--
+if one may judge from the illustration--in the midst of desert lands;
+the sleep-inviting buzz of the bluebottles.
+
+The spirit of the place steals over you. On entering, with a quarter
+of an hour to spare, your idea was a cutlet and a glass of claret.
+In the face of the refreshment-room waiter, the notion appears
+frivolous, not to say un-English. You order cold beef and pickles,
+with a pint of bitter in a tankard. To win the British waiter's
+approval, you must always order beer in a tankard. The British
+waiter, in his ideals, is mediaeval. There is a Shakespearean touch
+about a tankard. A soapy potato will, of course, be added.
+Afterwards a ton of cheese and a basin of rabbit's food floating in
+water (the British salad) will be placed before you. You will work
+steadily through the whole, anticipating the somnolence that will
+subsequently fall upon you with a certain amount of satisfaction. It
+will serve to dispel the last lingering regret at the reflection that
+you will miss your appointment, and suffer thereby serious
+inconvenience if not positive loss. These things are of the world--
+the noisy, tiresome world you have left without.
+
+To the English traveller, the foreign waiter in the earlier stages of
+his career is a burden and a trial. When he is complete--when he
+really can talk English I rejoice in him. When I object to him is
+when his English is worse than my French or German, and when he will,
+for his own educational purposes, insist, nevertheless, that the
+conversation shall be entirely in English. I would he came to me
+some other time. I would so much rather make it after dinner or,
+say, the next morning. I hate giving lessons during meal times.
+
+Besides, to a man with feeble digestion, this sort of thing can lead
+to trouble. One waiter I met at an hotel in Dijon knew very little
+English--about as much as a poll parrot. The moment I entered the
+salle-a-manger he started to his feet.
+
+"Ah! You English!" he cried.
+
+"Well, what about us?" I answered. It was during the period of the
+Boer War. I took it he was about to denounce the English nation
+generally. I was looking for something to throw at him.
+
+"You English--you Englishman, yes," he repeated.
+
+And then I understood he had merely intended a question. I owned up
+that I was, and accused him in turn of being a Frenchman. He
+admitted it. Introductions, as it were, thus over, I thought I would
+order dinner. I ordered it in French. I am not bragging of my
+French, I never wanted to learn French. Even as a boy, it was more
+the idea of others than of myself. I learnt as little as possible.
+But I have learnt enough to live in places where they can't, or
+won't, speak anything else. Left to myself, I could have enjoyed a
+very satisfactory dinner. I was tired with a long day's journey, and
+hungry. They cook well at this hotel. I had been looking forward to
+my dinner for hours and hours. I had sat down in my imagination to a
+consomme bisque, sole au gratin, a poulet saute, and an omelette au
+fromage.
+
+[Waiterkind in the making.]
+
+It is wrong to let one's mind dwell upon carnal delights; I see that
+now. At the time I was mad about it. The fool would not even listen
+to me. He had got it into his garlic-sodden brain that all
+Englishmen live on beef, and nothing but beef. He swept aside all my
+suggestions as though they had been the prattlings of a foolish
+child.
+
+"You haf nice biftek. Not at all done. Yes?"
+
+"No, I don't," I answered. "I don't want what the cook of a French
+provincial hotel calls a biftek. I want something to eat. I want--"
+Apparently, he understood neither English nor French.
+
+"Yes, yes," he interrupted cheerfully, "with pottitoes."
+
+"With what?" I asked. I thought for the moment he was suggesting
+potted pigs' feet in the nearest English he could get to it.
+
+"Pottito," he repeated; "boil pottito. Yes? And pell hell."
+
+I felt like telling him to go there; I suppose he meant "pale ale."
+It took me about five minutes to get that beefsteak out of his head.
+By the time I had done it, I did not care what I had for dinner. I
+took pot-du-jour and veal. He added, on his own initiative, a thing
+that looked like a poultice. I did not try the taste of it. He
+explained it was "plum poodeen." I fancy he had made it himself.
+
+This fellow is typical; you meet him everywhere abroad. He
+translates your bill into English for you, calls ten centimes a
+penny, calculates twelve francs to the pound, and presses a handful
+of sous affectionately upon you as change for a napoleon.
+
+The cheating waiter is common to all countries, though in Italy and
+Belgium he flourishes, perhaps, more than elsewhere. But the British
+waiter, when detected, becomes surly--does not take it nicely. The
+foreign waiter is amiable about it--bears no malice. He is grieved,
+maybe, at your language, but that is because he is thinking of you--
+the possible effect of it upon your future. To try and stop you, he
+offers you another four sous. The story is told of a Frenchman who,
+not knowing the legal fare, adopted the plan of doling out pennies to
+a London cabman one at a time, continuing until the man looked
+satisfied. Myself, I doubt the story. From what I know of the
+London cabman, I can see him leaning down still, with out-stretched
+hand, the horse between the shafts long since dead, the cab chockfull
+of coppers, and yet no expression of satiety upon his face.
+
+But the story would appear to have crossed the Channel, and to have
+commended itself to the foreign waiter--especially to the railway
+refreshment-room waiter. He doles out sous to the traveller, one at
+a time, with the air of a man who is giving away the savings of a
+lifetime. If, after five minutes or so, you still appear
+discontented he goes away quite suddenly. You think he has gone to
+open another chest of half-pence, but when a quarter of an hour has
+passed and he does not reappear, you inquire about him amongst the
+other waiters.
+
+A gloom at once falls upon them. You have spoken of the very thing
+that has been troubling them. He used to be a waiter here once--one
+might almost say until quite recently. As to what has become of him-
+-ah! there you have them. If in the course of their chequered career
+they ever come across him, they will mention to him that you are
+waiting for him. Meanwhile a stentorian-voiced official is shouting
+that your train is on the point of leaving. You console yourself
+with the reflection that it might have been more. It always might
+have been more; sometimes it is.
+
+[His Little Mistakes.]
+
+A waiter at the Gare du Nord, in Brussels, on one occasion pressed
+upon me a five-franc piece, a small Turkish coin the value of which
+was unknown to me, and remains so to this day, a distinctly bad two
+francs, and from a quarter of a pound to six ounces of centimes, as
+change for a twenty-franc note, after deducting the price of a cup of
+coffee. He put it down with the air of one subscribing to a charity.
+We looked at one another. I suppose I must have conveyed to him the
+impression of being discontented. He drew a purse from his pocket.
+The action suggested that, for the purpose of satisfying my
+inordinate demands, he would be compelled to draw upon his private
+resources; but it did not move me. Abstracting reluctantly a fifty-
+centime piece, he added it to the heap upon the table.
+
+I suggested his taking a seat, as at this rate it seemed likely we
+should be doing business together for some time. I think he gathered
+I was not a fool. Hitherto he had been judging, I suppose, purely
+from appearances. But he was not in the least offended.
+
+"Ah!" he cried, with a cheery laugh, "Monsieur comprend!" He swept
+the whole nonsense back into his bag and gave me the right change. I
+slipped my arm through his and insisted upon the pleasure of his
+society, until I had examined each and every coin. He went away
+chuckling, and told another waiter all about it. They both of them
+bowed to me as I went out, and wished me a pleasant journey. I left
+them still chuckling. A British waiter would have been sulky all the
+afternoon.
+
+The waiter who insists upon mistaking you for the heir of all the
+Rothschilds used to cost me dear when I was younger. I find the best
+plan is to take him in hand at the beginning and disillusion him;
+sweep aside his talk of '84 Perrier Jouet, followed by a '79 Chateau
+Lafite, and ask him, as man to man, if he can conscientiously
+recommend the Saint Julien at two-and-six. After that he settles
+down to his work and talks sense.
+
+The fatherly waiter is sometimes a comfort. You feel that he knows
+best. Your instinct is to address him as "Uncle." But you remember
+yourself in time. When you are dining a lady, however, and wish to
+appear important, he is apt to be in the way. It seems, somehow, to
+be his dinner. You have a sense almost of being de trop.
+
+The greatest insult you can offer a waiter is to mistake him for your
+waiter. You think he is your waiter--there is the bald head, the
+black side-whiskers, the Roman nose. But your waiter had blue eyes,
+this man soft hazel. You had forgotten to notice the eyes. You bar
+his progress and ask him for the red pepper. The haughty contempt
+with which he regards you is painful to bear. It is as if you had
+insulted a lady. He appears to be saying the same thing:
+
+"I think you have made a mistake. You are possibly confusing me with
+somebody else; I have not the honour of your acquaintance."
+
+[How to insult him.]
+
+I do not wish it to be understood that I am in the habit of insulting
+ladies, but occasionally I have made an innocent mistake, and have
+met with some such response. The wrong waiter conveys to me
+precisely the same feeling of humiliation.
+
+"I will send your waiter to you," he answers. His tone implies that
+there are waiters and waiters; some may not mind what class of person
+they serve: others, though poor, have their self-respect. It is
+clear to you now why your waiter is keeping away from you; the man is
+ashamed of being your waiter. He is watching, probably, for an
+opportunity to approach you when nobody is looking. The other waiter
+finds him for you. He was hiding behind a screen.
+
+"Table forty-two wants you," the other tells him. The tone of voice
+adds:
+
+"If you like to encourage this class of customer that is your
+business; but don't ask me to have anything to do with him."
+
+Even the waiter has his feelings.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+
+[The everlasting Newness of Woman.]
+
+An Oriental visitor was returning from our shores to his native land.
+
+"Well," asked the youthful diplomatist who had been told off to show
+him round, as on the deck of the steamer they shook hands, "what do
+you now think of England?"
+
+"Too much woman," answered the grave Orientalist, and descended to
+his cabin.
+
+The young diplomatist returned to the shore thoughtful, and later in
+the day a few of us discussed the matter in a far-off, dimly-lighted
+corner of the club smoking-room.
+
+Has the pendulum swung too far the other way? Could there be truth
+in our Oriental friend's terse commentary? The eternal feminine!
+The Western world has been handed over to her. The stranger from
+Mars or Jupiter would describe us as a hive of women, the sober-clad
+male being retained apparently on condition of its doing all the hard
+work and making itself generally useful. Formerly it was the man who
+wore the fine clothes who went to the shows. To-day it is the woman
+gorgeously clad for whom the shows are organized. The man dressed in
+a serviceable and unostentatious, not to say depressing, suit of
+black accompanies her for the purpose of carrying her cloak and
+calling her carriage. Among the working classes life, of necessity,
+remains primitive; the law of the cave is still, with slight
+modification, the law of the slum. But in upper and middle-class
+circles the man is now the woman's servant.
+
+I remember being present while a mother of my acquaintance was
+instilling into the mind of her little son the advantages of being
+born a man. A little girl cousin was about to spend a week with him.
+It was impressed upon him that if she showed a liking for any of his
+toys, he was at once to give them up to her.
+
+"But why, mamma?" he demanded, evidently surprised.
+
+"Because, my dear, you are a little man."
+
+Should she break them, he was not to smack her head or kick her--as
+his instinct might prompt him to do. He was just to say:
+
+"Oh, it is of no consequence at all," and to look as if he meant it.
+
+[Doctor says she is not to be bothered.]
+
+She was always to choose the game--to have the biggest apple. There
+was much more of a similar nature. It was all because he was a
+little man and she was a little woman. At the end he looked up,
+puzzled:
+
+"But don't she do anything, 'cos she's a little girl?"
+
+It was explained to him that she didn't. By right of being born a
+little girl she was exempt from all duty.
+
+Woman nowadays is not taking any duty. She objects to housekeeping;
+she calls it domestic slavery, and feels she was intended for higher
+things. What higher things she does not condescend to explain. One
+or two wives of my acquaintance have persuaded their husbands that
+these higher things are all-important. The home has been given up.
+In company with other strivers after higher things, they live now in
+dismal barracks differing but little from a glorified Bloomsbury
+lodging-house. But they call them "Mansions" or "Courts," and seem
+proud of the address. They are not bothered with servants--with
+housekeeping. The idea of the modern woman is that she is not to be
+bothered with anything. I remember the words with which one of these
+ladies announced her departure from her bothering home.
+
+"Oh, well, I'm tired of trouble," she confided to another lady, "so
+I've made up my mind not to have any more of it."
+
+Artemus Ward tells us of a man who had been in prison for twenty
+years. Suddenly a bright idea occurred to him; he opened the window
+and got out. Here have we poor, foolish mortals been imprisoned in
+this troublesome world for Lord knows how many millions of years. We
+have got so used to trouble we thought there was no help for it. We
+have told ourselves that "Man is born to trouble as the sparks fly
+upwards." We imagined the only thing to be done was to bear it
+philosophically. Why did not this bright young creature come along
+before--show us the way out. All we had to do was to give up the
+bothering home and the bothering servants, and go into a "Mansion" or
+a "Court."
+
+It seems that you leave trouble outside--in charge of the hall-
+porter, one supposes. He ties it up for you as the Commissionaire of
+the Army and Navy Stores ties up your dog. If you want it again, you
+ask for it as you come out. Small wonder that the "Court" and
+"Mansion" are growing in popularity every day.
+
+[That "Higher Life."]
+
+They have nothing to do now all day long, these soaring wives of whom
+I am speaking. They would scorn to sew on a shirt-button even. Are
+there not other women--of an inferior breed--specially fashioned by
+Providence for the doing of such slavish tasks? They have no more
+bothers of any kind. They are free to lead the higher life. What I
+am waiting for is a glimpse of the higher life. One of them, it is
+true, has taken up the violin. Another of them is devoting her
+emancipation to poker work. A third is learning skirt-dancing. Are
+these the "higher things" for which women are claiming freedom from
+all duty? And, if so, is there not danger that the closing of our
+homes may lead to the crowding up of the world with too much higher
+things?
+
+May there not, by the time all bothers have been removed from woman's
+path, be too many amateur violinists in the world, too many skirt-
+dancers, too much poker work? If not, what are they? these "higher
+things," for which so many women are demanding twenty-four hours a
+day leisure. I want to know.
+
+One lady of my acquaintance is a Poor Law Guardian and secretary to a
+labour bureau. But then she runs a house with two servants, four
+children, and a husband, and appears to be so used to bothers that
+she would feel herself lost without them. You can do this kind of
+work apparently even when you are bothered with a home. It is the
+skirt-dancing and the poker work that cannot brook rivalry. The
+modern woman has begun to find children a nuisance; they interfere
+with her development. The mere man, who has written his poems,
+painted his pictures, composed his melodies, fashioned his
+philosophies, in the midst of life's troubles and bothers, grows
+nervous thinking what this new woman must be whose mind is so
+tremendous that the whole world must be shut up, so to speak, sent to
+do its business out of her sight and hearing, lest her attention
+should be distracted.
+
+An optimistic friend of mine tells me not to worry myself; tells me
+that it is going to come out all right in the end. Woman just now,
+he contends, is passing through her college period. The school life
+of strict surveillance is for ever done with. She is now the young
+Freshwoman. The bothering lessons are over, the bothering
+schoolmaster she has said good-bye to. She has her latchkey and is
+"on her own." There are still some bothering rules about being in at
+twelve o'clock, and so many attendances each term at chapel. She is
+indignant. This interferes with her idea that life is to be one long
+orgie of self-indulgence, of pleasure. The college period will pass-
+-is passing. Woman will go out into the world, take her place there,
+discover that bothers were not left behind in the old schoolhouse,
+will learn that life has duties, responsibilities, will take up her
+burden side by side with man, will accomplish her destiny.
+
+[Is there anything left for her to learn?]
+
+Meanwhile, however, she is having a good time--some people think too
+good a time. She wants the best of both. She demands the joys of
+independence together with freedom from all work--slavery she calls
+it. The servants are not to be allowed to bother her, the children
+are not to be allowed to bother her, her husband is not to be allowed
+to bother her. She is to be free to lead the higher life. My dear
+lady, we all want to lead the higher life. I don't want to write
+these articles. I want somebody else to bother about my rates and
+taxes, my children's boots, while I sit in an easy-chair and dream
+about the wonderful books I am going to write, if only a stupid
+public would let me. Tommy Smith of Brixton feels that he was
+intended for higher things. He does not want to be wasting his time
+in an office from nine to six adding up figures. His proper place in
+life is that of Prime Minister or Field Marshal: he feels it. Do
+you think the man has no yearning for higher things? Do you think we
+like the office, the shop, the factory? We ought to be writing
+poetry, painting pictures, the whole world admiring us. You seem to
+imagine your man goes off every morning to a sort of City picnic, has
+eight hours' fun--which he calls work--and then comes home to annoy
+you with chatter about dinner.
+
+It is the old fable reversed; man said woman had nothing to do all
+day but to enjoy herself. Making a potato pie! What sort of work
+was that? Making a potato pie was a lark; anybody could make a
+potato pie.
+
+So the woman said, "Try it," and took the man's spade and went out
+into the field, and left him at home to make that pie.
+
+The man discovered that potato pies took a bit more making than he
+had reckoned--found that running the house and looking after the
+children was not quite the merry pastime he had argued. Man was a
+fool.
+
+Now it is the woman who talks without thinking. How did she like
+hoeing the potato patch? Hard work, was it not, my dear lady? Made
+your back ache? It came on to rain and you got wet.
+
+I don't see that it very much matters which of you hoes the potato
+patch, which of you makes the potato pie. Maybe the hoeing of the
+patch demands more muscle--is more suited to the man. Maybe the
+making of the pie may be more in your department. But, as I have
+said, I cannot see that this matter is of importance. The patch has
+to be hoed, the pie to be cooked; the one cannot do the both. Settle
+it between you, and, having settled it, agree to do each your own
+work free from this everlasting nagging.
+
+I know, personally, three ladies who have exchanged the woman's work
+for the man's. One was deserted by her husband, and left with two
+young children. She hired a capable woman to look after the house,
+and joined a ladies' orchestra as pianist at two pounds a week. She
+now earns four, and works twelve hours a day. The husband of the
+second fell ill. She set him to write letters and run errands, which
+was light work that he could do, and started a dressmaker's business.
+The third was left a widow without means. She sent her three
+children to boarding-school, and opened a tea-room. I don't know how
+they talked before, but I know that they do not talk now as though
+earning the income was a sort of round game.
+
+[When they have tried it the other way round.]
+
+On the Continent they have gone deliberately to work, one would
+imagine, to reverse matters. Abroad woman is always where man ought
+to be, and man where most ladies would prefer to meet with women.
+The ladies garde-robe is superintended by a superannuated sergeant of
+artillery. When I want to curl my moustache, say, I have to make
+application to a superb golden-haired creature, who stands by and
+watches me with an interested smile. I would be much happier waited
+on by the superannuated sergeant, and my wife tells me she could very
+well spare him. But it is the law of the land. I remember the first
+time I travelled with my daughter on the Continent. In the morning I
+was awakened by a piercing scream from her room. I struggled into my
+pyjamas, and rushed to her assistance. I could not see her. I could
+see nothing but a muscular-looking man in a blue blouse with a can of
+hot water in one hand and a pair of boots in the other. He appeared
+to be equally bewildered with myself at the sight of the empty bed.
+From a cupboard in the corner came a wail of distress:
+
+"Oh, do send that horrid man away. What's he doing in my room?"
+
+I explained to her afterwards that the chambermaid abroad is always
+an active and willing young man. The foreign girl fills in her time
+bricklaying and grooming down the horses. It is a young and charming
+lady who serves you when you enter the tobacconist's. She doesn't
+understand tobacco, is unsympathetic; with Mr. Frederic Harrison,
+regards smoking as a degrading and unclean habit; cannot see,
+herself, any difference between shag and Mayblossom, seeing that they
+are both the same price; thinks you fussy. The corset shop is run by
+a most presentable young man in a Vandyck beard. The wife runs the
+restaurant; the man does the cooking, and yet the woman has not
+reached freedom from bother.
+
+[A brutal suggestion]
+
+It sounds brutal, but perhaps woman was not intended to live free
+from all bothers. Perhaps even the higher life--the skirt-dancing
+and the poker work--has its bothers. Perhaps woman was intended to
+take her share of the world's work--of the world's bothers.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+
+[Why I hate Heroes]
+
+When I was younger, reading the popular novel used to make me sad. I
+find it vexes others also. I was talking to a bright young girl upon
+the subject not so very long ago.
+
+"I just hate the girl in the novel," she confessed. "She makes me
+feel real bad. If I don't think of her I feel pleased with myself,
+and good; but when I read about her--well, I'm crazy. I would not
+mind her being smart, sometimes. We can all of us say the right
+thing, now and then. This girl says them straight away, all the
+time. She don't have to dig for them even; they come crowding out of
+her. There never happens a time when she stands there feeling like a
+fool and knowing that she looks it. As for her hair: 'pon my word,
+there are days when I believe it is a wig. I'd like to get behind
+her and give it just one pull. It curls of its own accord. She
+don't seem to have any trouble with it. Look at this mop of mine.
+I've been working at it for three-quarters of an hour this morning;
+and now I would not laugh, not if you were to tell me the funniest
+thing, you'd ever heard, for fear it would come down again. As for
+her clothes, they make me tired. She don't possess a frock that does
+not fit her to perfection; she doesn't have to think about them. You
+would imagine she went into the garden and picked them off a tree.
+She just slips it on and comes down, and then--my stars! All the
+other women in the room may just as well go to bed and get a good
+night's rest for all the chance they've got. It isn't that she's
+beautiful. From what they tell you about her, you might fancy her a
+freak. Looks don't appear to matter to her; she gets there anyhow.
+I tell you she just makes me boil."
+
+Allowing for the difference between the masculine and feminine
+outlook, this is precisely how I used to feel when reading of the
+hero. He was not always good; sometimes he hit the villain harder
+than he had intended, and then he was sorry--when it was too late,
+blamed himself severely, and subscribed towards the wreath. Like the
+rest of us, he made mistakes; occasionally married the wrong girl.
+But how well he did everything!--does still for the matter of that, I
+believe. Take it that he condescends to play cricket! He never
+scores less than a hundred--does not know how to score less than a
+hundred, wonders how it could be done, supposing, for example, you
+had an appointment and wanted to catch an early train. I used to
+play cricket myself, but I could always stop at ten or twenty. There
+have been times when I have stopped at even less.
+
+It is the same with everything he puts his hand to. Either he does
+not care for boating at all, or, as a matter of course, he pulls
+stroke in the University Boat-race; and then takes the train on to
+Henley and wins the Diamond Sculls so easily that it hardly seems
+worth while for the other fellow to have started. Were I living in
+Novel-land, and had I entered for the Diamond Sculls, I should put it
+to my opponent before the word was given to us to go.
+
+"One minute!" I should have called out to him. "Are you the hero of
+this novel, or, like myself, only one of the minor characters?
+Because, if you are the hero you go on; don't you wait for me. I
+shall just pull as far as the boathouse and get myself a cup of tea."
+
+[Because it always seems to be his Day.]
+
+There is no sense of happy medium about the hero of the popular
+novel. He cannot get astride a horse without its going off and
+winning a steeplechase against the favourite. The crowd in Novel-
+land appears to have no power of observation. It worries itself
+about the odds, discusses records, reads the nonsense published by
+the sporting papers. Were I to find myself on a racecourse in Novel-
+land I should not trouble about the unessential; I should go up to
+the bookie who looked as if he had the most money, and should say to
+him:
+
+"Don't shout so loud; you are making yourself hoarse. Just listen to
+me. Who's the hero of this novel? Oh, that's he, is it? The heavy-
+looking man on the little brown horse that keeps coughing and is
+suffering apparently from bone spavin? Well, what are the odds
+against his winning by ten lengths? A thousand to one! Very well!
+Have you got a bag?--Good. Here's twenty-seven pounds in gold and
+eighteen shillings in silver. Coat and waistcoat, say another ten
+shillings. Shirt and trousers--it's all right, I've got my pyjamas
+on underneath--say seven and six. Boots--we won't quarrel--make it
+five bob. That's twenty-nine pounds and sixpence, isn't it? In
+addition here's a mortgage on the family estate, which I've had made
+out in blank, an I O U for fourteen pounds which has been owing to me
+now for some time, and this bundle of securities which, strictly
+speaking, belong to my Aunt Jane. You keep that little lot till
+after the race, and we will call it in round figures, five hundred
+pounds."
+
+That single afternoon would thus bring me in five hundred thousand
+pounds--provided the bookie did not blow his brains out.
+
+Backers in Novel-land do not seem to me to know their way about. If
+the hero of the popular novel swims at all, it is not like an
+ordinary human being that he does it. You never meet him in a
+swimming-bath; he never pays ninepence, like the rest of us, for a
+machine. He goes out at uncanny hours, generally accompanied by a
+lady friend, with whom the while swimming he talks poetry and cracks
+jokes. Some of us, when we try to talk in the sea, fill ourselves up
+with salt water. This chap lies on his back and carols, and the wild
+waves, seeing him, go round the other way. At billiards he can give
+the average sharper forty in a hundred. He does not really want to
+play; he does it to teach these bad men a lesson. He has not handled
+a cue for years. He picked up the game when a young man in
+Australia, and it seems to have lingered with him.
+
+He does not have to get up early and worry dumb-bells in his
+nightshirt; he just lies on a sofa in an elegant attitude and muscle
+comes to him. If his horse declines to jump a hedge, he slips down
+off the animal's back and throws the poor thing over; it saves
+argument. If he gets cross and puts his shoulder to the massive
+oaken door, we know there is going to be work next morning for the
+carpenter. Maybe he is a party belonging to the Middle Ages. Then
+when he reluctantly challenges the crack fencer of Europe to a duel,
+our instinct is to call out and warn his opponent.
+
+"You silly fool," one feels one wants to say; "why, it is the hero of
+the novel! You take a friend's advice while you are still alive, and
+get out of it anyway--anyhow. Apologize--hire a horse and cart, do
+something. You're not going to fight a duel, you're going to commit
+suicide."
+
+If the hero is a modern young man, and has not got a father, or has
+only something not worth calling a father, then he comes across a
+library--anybody's library does for him. He passes Sir Walter Scott
+and the "Arabian Nights," and makes a bee-line for Plato; it seems to
+be an instinct with him. By help of a dictionary he worries it out
+in the original Greek. This gives him a passion for Greek.
+
+When he has romped through the Greek classics he plays about among
+the Latins. He spends most of his spare time in that library, and
+forgets to go to tea.
+
+[Because he always "gets there," without any trouble.]
+
+That is the sort of boy he is. How I used to hate him! If he has a
+proper sort of father, then he goes to college. He does no work:
+there is no need for him to work: everything seems to come to him.
+That was another grievance of mine against him. I always had to work
+a good deal, and very little came of it. He fools around doing
+things that other men would be sent down for; but in his case the
+professors love him for it all the more. He is the sort of man who
+can't do wrong. A fortnight before the examination he ties a wet
+towel round his head. That is all we hear about it. It seems to be
+the towel that does it. Maybe, if the towel is not quite up to its
+work, he will help things on by drinking gallons of strong tea. The
+tea and the towel combined are irresistible: the result is always
+the senior wranglership.
+
+I used to believe in that wet towel and that strong tea. Lord! the
+things I used to believe when I was young. They would make an
+Encyclopaedia of Useless Knowledge. I wonder if the author of the
+popular novel has ever tried working with a wet towel round his or
+her head: I have. It is difficult enough to move a yard, balancing
+a dry towel. A heathen Turk may have it in his blood to do so: the
+ordinary Christian has not got the trick of it. To carry about a wet
+towel twisted round one's head needs a trained acrobat. Every few
+minutes the wretched thing works loose. In darkness and in misery,
+you struggle to get your head out of a clammy towel that clings to
+you almost with passion. Brain power is wasted in inventing names
+for that towel--names expressive of your feelings with regard to it.
+Further time is taken up before the glass, fixing the thing afresh.
+
+You return to your books in the wrong temper, the water trickles down
+your nose, runs in rivulets down your back. Until you have finally
+flung the towel out of the window and rubbed yourself dry, work is
+impossible. The strong tea always gave me indigestion, and made me
+sleepy. Until I had got over the effects of the tea, attempts at
+study were useless.
+
+[Because he's so damned clever.]
+
+But the thing that still irritates me most against the hero of the
+popular novel is the ease with which he learns a modern foreign
+language. Were he a German waiter, a Swiss barber, or a Polish
+photographer, I would not envy him; these people do not have to learn
+a language. My idea is that they boil down a dictionary, and take
+two table-spoonsful each night before going to bed. By the time the
+bottle is finished they have the language well into their system.
+But he is not. He is just an ordinary Anglo-Saxon, and I don't
+believe in him. I walk about for years with dictionaries in my
+pocket. Weird-looking ladies and gentlemen gesticulate and rave at
+me for months. I hide myself in lonely places, repeating idioms to
+myself out loud, in the hope that by this means they will come
+readily to me if ever I want them, which I never do. And, after all
+this, I don't seem to know very much. This irritating ass, who has
+never left his native suburb, suddenly makes up his mind to travel on
+the Continent. I find him in the next chapter engaged in complicated
+psychological argument with French or German savants. It appears--
+the author had forgotten to mention it before--that one summer a
+French, or German, or Italian refugee, as the case may happen to be,
+came to live in the hero's street: thus it is that the hero is able
+to talk fluently in the native language of that unhappy refugee.
+
+I remember a melodrama visiting a country town where I was staying.
+The heroine and child were sleeping peacefully in the customary
+attic. For some reason not quite clear to me, the villain had set
+fire to the house. He had been complaining through the three
+preceding acts of the heroine's coldness; maybe it was with some idea
+of warming her. Escape by way of the staircase was impossible. Each
+time the poor girl opened the door a flame came in and nearly burned
+her hair off. It seemed to have been waiting for her.
+
+"Thank God!" said the lady, hastily wrapping the child in a sheet,
+"that I was brought up a wire walker."
+
+Without a moment's hesitation she opened the attic window and took
+the nearest telegraph wire to the opposite side of the street.
+
+In the same way, apparently, the hero of the popular novel, finding
+himself stranded in a foreign land, suddenly recollects that once
+upon a time he met a refugee, and at once begins to talk. I have met
+refugees myself. The only thing they have ever taught me is not to
+leave my brandy flask about.
+
+[And, finally, because I don't believe he's true.]
+
+I don't believe in these heroes and heroines that cannot keep quiet
+in a foreign language they have taught themselves in an old-world
+library. My fixed idea is that they muddle along like the rest of
+us, surprised that so few people understand them, begging everyone
+they meet not to talk so quickly. These brilliant conversations with
+foreign philosophers! These passionate interviews with foreign
+countesses! They fancy they have had them.
+
+I crossed once with an English lady from Boulogne to Folkestone. At
+Folkestone a little French girl--anxious about her train--asked us a
+simple question. My companion replied to it with an ease that
+astonished herself. The little French girl vanished; my companion
+sighed.
+
+"It's so odd," said my companion, "but I seem to know quite a lot of
+French the moment I get back to England."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+
+[How to be Healthy and Unhappy.]
+
+"They do say," remarked Mrs. Wilkins, as she took the cover off the
+dish and gave a finishing polish to my plate with the cleanest corner
+of her apron, "that 'addicks, leastways in May, ain't, strictly
+speaking, the safest of food. But then, if you listen to all they
+say, it seems to me, we'd have to give up victuals altogether."
+
+"The haddock, Mrs. Wilkins," I replied, "is a savoury and nourishing
+dish, the 'poor man's steak' I believe it is commonly called. When I
+was younger, Mrs. Wilkins, they were cheaper. For twopence one could
+secure a small specimen, for fourpence one of generous proportions.
+In the halcyon days of youth, when one's lexicon contained not the
+word failure (it has crept into later editions, Mrs. Wilkins, the
+word it was found was occasionally needful), the haddock was of much
+comfort and support to me, a very present help in time of trouble.
+In those days a kind friend, without intending it, nearly brought
+about my death by slow starvation. I had left my umbrella in an
+omnibus, and the season was rainy. The kind rich friend gave me a
+new umbrella; it was a rich man's umbrella; we made an ill-assorted
+pair. Its handle was of ivory, imposing in appearance, ornamented
+with a golden snake.
+
+[The unsympathetic Umbrella.]
+
+"Following my own judgment I should have pawned that umbrella,
+purchased one more suited to my state in life, and 'blued' the
+difference. But I was fearful of offending my one respectable
+acquaintance, and for weeks struggled on, hampered by this
+plutocratic appendage. The humble haddock was denied to me. Tied to
+this imposing umbrella, how could I haggle with fishmongers for
+haddocks. At first sight of me--or, rather, of my umbrella--they
+flew to icy cellars, brought up for my inspection soles at
+eighteenpence a pound, recommended me prime parts of salmon, which my
+landlady would have fried in a pan reeking with the mixed remains of
+pork chops, rashers of bacon and cheese. It was closed to me, the
+humble coffee shop, where for threepence I could have strengthened my
+soul with half a pint of cocoa and four "doorsteps"--satisfactory
+slices of bread smeared with a yellow grease that before the days of
+County Council inspectors they called butter. You know of them, Mrs.
+Wilkins? At sight of such nowadays I should turn up my jaded nose.
+But those were the days of my youth, Mrs. Wilkins. The scent of a
+thousand hopes was in my nostrils: so they smelt good to me. The
+fourpenny beefsteak pie, satisfying to the verge of repletion; the
+succulent saveloy, were not for the owner of the ivory-handled
+umbrella. On Mondays and Tuesdays, perhaps, I could enjoy life at
+the rate of five hundred a year--clean serviette a penny extra, and
+twopence to the waiter, whose income must have been at least four
+times my own. But from Wednesday to Saturday I had to wander in the
+wilderness of back streets and silent squares dinnerless, where there
+were not even to be found locusts and wild honey.
+
+"It was, as I have said, a rainy season, and an umbrella of some sort
+was a necessity. Fortunately--or I might not be sitting here, Mrs.
+Wilkins, talking to you now--my one respectable acquaintance was
+called away to foreign lands, and that umbrella I promptly put 'up
+the spout.' You understand me?"
+
+Mrs. Wilkins admitted she did, but was of opinion that twenty-five
+per cent., to say nothing of the halfpenny for the ticket every time,
+was a wicked imposition.
+
+"It did not trouble me, Mrs. Wilkins," I replied, "in this particular
+instance. It was my determination never to see that umbrella again.
+The young man behind the counter seemed suspicious, and asked where I
+got it from. I told him that a friend had given it to me."
+
+"'Did he know that he had given it to you?" demanded the young man.
+
+"Upon which I gave him a piece of my mind concerning the character of
+those who think evil of others, and he gave me five and six, and said
+he should know me again; and I purchased an umbrella suited to my
+rank and station, and as fine a haddock as I have ever tasted with
+the balance, which was sevenpence, for I was feeling hungry.
+
+"The haddock is an excellent fish, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "and if, as
+you observe, we listened to all that was said we'd be hungrier at
+forty, with a balance to our credit at the bank, than ever we were at
+twenty, with 'no effects' beyond a sound digestion."
+
+[A Martyr to Health.]
+
+"There was a gent in Middle Temple Lane," said Mrs. Wilkins, "as I
+used to do for. It's my belief as 'e killed 'imself worrying twenty-
+four hours a day over what 'e called 'is 'ygiene. Leastways 'e's
+dead and buried now, which must be a comfort to 'imself, feeling as
+at last 'e's out of danger. All 'is time 'e spent taking care of
+'imself--didn't seem to 'ave a leisure moment in which to live. For
+'alf an hour every morning 'e'd lie on 'is back on the floor, which
+is a draughty place, I always 'old, at the best of times, with
+nothing on but 'is pyjamas, waving 'is arms and legs about, and
+twisting 'imself into shapes unnatural to a Christian. Then 'e found
+out that everything 'e'd been doing on 'is back was just all wrong,
+so 'e turned over and did tricks on 'is stomach--begging your pardon
+for using the word--that you'd 'ave thought more fit and proper to a
+worm than to a man. Then all that was discovered to be a mistake.
+There don't seem nothing certain in these matters. That's the
+awkward part of it, so it seems to me. 'E got 'imself a machine, by
+means of which 'e'd 'ang 'imself up to the wall, and behave for all
+the world like a beetle with a pin stuck through 'im, poor thing. It
+used to give me the shudders to catch sight of 'im through the 'alf-
+open door. For that was part of the game: you 'ad to 'ave a current
+of air through the room, the result of which was that for six months
+out of the year 'e'd be coughing and blowing 'is nose from morning to
+night. It was the new treatment, so 'e'd explain to me. You got
+yourself accustomed to draughts so that they didn't 'urt you, and if
+you died in the process that only proved that you never ought to 'ave
+been born.
+
+"Then there came in this new Japanese business, and 'e'd 'ire a
+little smiling 'eathen to chuck 'im about 'is room for 'alf an hour
+every morning after breakfast. It got on my nerves after a while
+'earing 'im being bumped on the floor every minute, or flung with 'is
+'ead into the fire-place. But 'e always said it was doing 'im good.
+'E'd argue that it freshened up 'is liver. It was 'is liver that 'e
+seemed to live for--didn't appear to 'ave any other interest in life.
+It was the same with 'is food. One year it would be nothing but
+meat, and next door to raw at that. One of them medical papers 'ad
+suddenly discovered that we were intended to be a sort of wild beast.
+The wonder to me is that 'e didn't go out 'unting chickens with a
+club, and bring 'em 'ome and eat 'em on the mat without any further
+fuss. For drink it would be boiling water that burnt my fingers
+merely 'andling the glass. Then some other crank came out with the
+information that every other crank was wrong--which, taken by itself,
+sounds natural enough--that meat was fatal to the 'uman system. Upon
+that 'e becomes all at once a raging, tearing vegetarian, and trouble
+enough I 'ad learning twenty different ways of cooking beans, which
+didn't make, so far as I could ever see, the slightest difference--
+beans they were, and beans they tasted like, whether you called them
+ragout a la maison, or cutlets a la Pompadour. But it seemed to
+please 'im.
+
+[He was never pig-headed.]
+
+"Then vegetarianism turned out to be the mistake of our lives. It
+seemed we made an error giving up monkeys' food. That was our
+natural victuals; nuts with occasional bananas. As I used to tell
+'im, if that was so, then for all we 'ad got out of it we might just
+as well have stopped up a tree--saved rent and shoe leather. But 'e
+was one of that sort that don't seem able to 'elp believing
+everything they read in print. If one of those papers 'ad told 'im
+to live on the shells and throw away the nuts, 'e'd have made a
+conscientious endeavour to do so, contending that 'is failure to
+digest them was merely the result of vicious training--didn't seem to
+'ave any likes or dislikes of 'is own. You might 'ave thought 'e was
+just a bit of public property made to be experimented upon.
+
+"One of the daily papers interviewed an old gent, as said 'e was a
+'undred, and I will say from 'is picture as any'ow 'e looked it. 'E
+said it was all the result of never 'aving swallowed anything 'ot,
+upon which my gentleman for a week lives on cold porridge, if you'll
+believe me; although myself I'd rather 'ave died at fifty and got it
+over. Then another paper dug up from somewhere a sort of animated
+corpse that said was a 'undred and two, and attributed the
+unfortunate fact to 'is always 'aving 'ad 'is food as 'ot as 'e could
+swallow it. A bit of sense did begin to dawn upon 'im then, but too
+late in the day, I take it. 'E'd played about with 'imself too long.
+'E died at thirty-two, looking to all appearance sixty, and you can't
+say as 'ow it was the result of not taking advice."
+
+[Only just in time.]
+
+"On this subject of health we are much too ready to follow advice," I
+agreed. "A cousin of mine, Mrs. Wilkins, had a wife who suffered
+occasionally from headache. No medicine relieved her of them--not
+altogether. And one day by chance she met a friend who said: 'Come
+straight with me to Dr. Blank,' who happened to be a specialist
+famous for having invented a new disease that nobody until the year
+before had ever heard of. She accompanied her friend to Dr. Blank,
+and in less than ten minutes he had persuaded her that she had got
+this new disease, and got it badly; and that her only chance was to
+let him cut her open and have it out. She was a tolerably healthy
+woman, with the exception of these occasional headaches, but from
+what that specialist said it was doubtful whether she would get home
+alive, unless she let him operate on her then and there, and her
+friend, who appeared delighted, urged her not to commit suicide, as
+it were, by missing her turn.
+
+"The result was she consented, and afterwards went home in a four-
+wheeled cab, and put herself to bed. Her husband, when he returned
+in the evening and was told, was furious. He said it was all humbug,
+and by this time she was ready to agree with him. He put on his hat,
+and started to give that specialist a bit of his mind. The
+specialist was out, and he had to bottle up his rage until the
+morning. By then, his wife now really ill for the first time in her
+life, his indignation had reached boiling point. He was at that
+specialist's door at half-past nine o clock. At half-past eleven he
+came back, also in a four-wheeled cab, and day and night nurses for
+both of them were wired for. He also, it appeared, had arrived at
+that specialist's door only just in time.
+
+"There's this appendy--whatever they call it," commented Mrs.
+Wilkins, "why a dozen years ago one poor creature out of ten thousand
+may possibly 'ave 'ad something wrong with 'is innards. To-day you
+ain't 'ardly considered respectable unless you've got it, or 'ave 'ad
+it. I 'ave no patience with their talk. To listen to some of them
+you'd think as Nature 'adn't made a man--not yet: would never
+understand the principle of the thing till some of these young chaps
+'ad shown 'er 'ow to do it."
+
+[How to avoid Everything.]
+
+"They have now discovered, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "the germ of old
+age. They are going to inoculate us for it in early youth, with the
+result that the only chance of ever getting rid of our friends will
+be to give them a motor-car. And maybe it will not do to trust to
+that for long. They will discover that some men's tendency towards
+getting themselves into trouble is due to some sort of a germ. The
+man of the future, Mrs. Wilkins, will be inoculated against all
+chance of gas explosions, storms at sea, bad oysters, and thin ice.
+Science may eventually discover the germ prompting to ill-assorted
+marriages, proneness to invest in the wrong stock, uncontrollable
+desire to recite poetry at evening parties. Religion, politics,
+education--all these things are so much wasted energy. To live happy
+and good for ever and ever, all we have to do is to hunt out these
+various germs and wring their necks for them--or whatever the proper
+treatment may be. Heaven, I gather from medical science, is merely a
+place that is free from germs."
+
+"We talk a lot about it," thought Mrs. Wilkins, "but it does not seem
+to me that we are very much better off than before we took to
+worrying ourselves for twenty-four 'ours a day about 'ow we are going
+to live. Lord! to read the advertisements in the papers you would
+think as 'ow flesh and blood was never intended to 'ave any natural
+ills. 'Do you ever 'ave a pain in your back?' because, if so,
+there's a picture of a kind gent who's willing for one and sixpence
+halfpenny to take it quite away from you--make you look forward to
+scrubbing floors, and standing over the wash-tub six 'ours at a
+stretch like to a beanfeast. 'Do you ever feel as though you don't
+want to get out of bed in the morning?' that's all to be cured by a
+bottle of their stuff--or two at the outside. Four children to keep,
+and a sick 'usband on your 'ands used to get me over it when I was
+younger. I used to fancy it was just because I was tired.
+
+[The one Cure-All.]
+
+"There's some of them seem to think," continued Mrs. Wilkins, "that
+if you don't get all you want out of this world, and ain't so 'appy
+as you've persuaded yourself you ought to be, that it's all because
+you ain't taking the right medicine. Appears to me there's only one
+doctor as can do for you, all the others talk as though they could,
+and 'e only comes to each of us once, and then 'e makes no charge."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+
+[Europe and the bright American Girl.]
+
+"How does she do it?"
+
+That is what the European girl wants to know. The American girl!
+She comes over here, and, as a British matron, reduced to slang by
+force of indignation, once exclaimed to me: "You'd think the whole
+blessed show belonged to her." The European girl is hampered by her
+relatives. She has to account for her father: to explain away, if
+possible, her grandfather. The American girl sweeps them aside:
+
+"Don't you worry about them," she says to the Lord Chamberlain.
+"It's awfully good of you, but don't you fuss yourself. I'm looking
+after my old people. That's my department. What I want you to do is
+just to listen to what I am saying and then hustle around. I can
+fill up your time all right by myself."
+
+Her father may be a soap-boiler, her grandmother may have gone out
+charing.
+
+"That's all right," she says to her Ambassador: "They're not coming.
+You just take my card and tell the King that when he's got a few
+minutes to spare I'll be pleased to see him."
+
+And the extraordinary thing is that, a day or two afterwards, the
+invitation arrives.
+
+A modern writer has said that "I'm Murrican" is the Civis Romanus sum
+of the present-day woman's world. The late King of Saxony, did, I
+believe, on one occasion make a feeble protest at being asked to
+receive the daughter of a retail bootmaker. The young lady,
+nonplussed for the moment, telegraphed to her father in Detroit. The
+answer came back next morning: "Can't call it selling--practically
+giving them away. See Advertisement." The lady was presented as the
+daughter of an eminent philanthropist.
+
+It is due to her to admit that, taking her as a class, the American
+girl is a distinct gain to European Society. Her influence is
+against convention and in favour of simplicity. One of her greatest
+charms, in the eyes of the European man, is that she listens to him.
+I cannot say whether it does her any good. Maybe she does not
+remember it all, but while you are talking she does give you her
+attention. The English woman does not always. She greets you
+pleasantly enough:
+
+"I've so often wanted to meet you," she says, "must you really go?"
+
+It strikes you as sudden: you had no intention of going for hours.
+But the hint is too plain to be ignored. You are preparing to agree
+that you really must when, looking round, you gather that the last
+remark was not addressed to you, but to another gentleman who is
+shaking hands with her:
+
+"Now, perhaps we shall be able to talk for five minutes," she says.
+"I've so often wanted to say that I shall never forgive you. You
+have been simply horrid."
+
+Again you are confused, until you jump to the conclusion that the
+latter portion of the speech is probably intended for quite another
+party with whom, at the moment, her back towards you, she is engaged
+in a whispered conversation. When he is gone she turns again to you.
+But the varied expressions that pass across her face while you are
+discussing with her the disadvantages of Protection, bewilder you.
+When, explaining your own difficulty in arriving at a conclusion, you
+remark that Great Britain is an island, she roguishly shakes her
+head. It is not that she has forgotten her geography, it is that she
+is conducting a conversation by signs with a lady at the other end of
+the room. When you observe that the working classes must be fed, she
+smiles archly while murmuring:
+
+"Oh, do you really think so?"
+
+You are about to say something strong on the subject of dumping.
+Apparently she has disappeared. You find that she is reaching round
+behind you to tap a new arrival with her fan.
+
+[She has the Art of Listening.]
+
+Now, the American girl looks at you, and just listens to you with her
+eyes fixed on you all the time. You gather that, as far as she is
+concerned, the rest of the company are passing shadows. She wants to
+hear what you have to say about Bi-metallism: her trouble is lest
+she may miss a word of it. From a talk with an American girl one
+comes away with the conviction that one is a brilliant
+conversationalist, who can hold a charming woman spell-bound. This
+may not be good for one: but while it lasts, the sensation is
+pleasant.
+
+Even the American girl cannot, on all occasions, sweep from her path
+the cobwebs of old-world etiquette. Two American ladies told me a
+sad tale of things that had happened to them not long ago in Dresden.
+An officer of rank and standing invited them to breakfast with him on
+the ice. Dames and nobles of the plus haut ton would be there. It
+is a social function that occurs every Sunday morning in Dresden
+during the skating season. The great lake in the Grosser Garten is
+covered with all sorts and conditions of people. Prince and commoner
+circle and recircle round one another. But they do not mix. The
+girls were pleased. They secured the services of an elderly lady,
+the widow of an analytical chemist: unfortunately, she could not
+skate. They wrapped her up and put her in a sledge. While they were
+in the garde robe putting on their skates, a German gentleman came up
+and bowed to them.
+
+He was a nice young man of prepossessing appearance and amiable
+manners. They could not call to mind his name, but remembered having
+met him, somewhere, and on more than one occasion. The American girl
+is always sociable: they bowed and smiled, and said it was a fine
+day. He replied with volubility, and helped them down on to the ice.
+He was really most attentive. They saw their friend, the officer of
+noble family, and, with the assistance of the German gentleman,
+skated towards him. He glided past them. They thought that maybe he
+did not know enough to stop, so they turned and skated after him.
+They chased him three times round the pond and then, feeling tired,
+eased up and took counsel together.
+
+"I'm sure he must have seen us," said the younger girl. "What does
+he mean by it?"
+
+"Well, I have not come down here to play forfeits," said the other,
+"added to which I want my breakfast. You wait here a minute, I'll go
+and have it out with him."
+
+He was standing only a dozen yards away. Alone, though not a good
+performer on the ice, she contrived to cover half the distance
+dividing them. The officer, perceiving her, came to her assistance
+and greeted her with effusion.
+
+[The Republican Idea in practice.]
+
+"Oh," said the lady, who was feeling indignant, "I thought maybe you
+had left your glasses at home."
+
+"I am sorry," said the officer, "but it is impossible."
+
+"What's impossible?" demanded the lady.
+
+"That I can be seen speaking to you," declared the officer, "while
+you are in company with that--that person."
+
+"What person?" She thought maybe he was alluding to the lady in the
+sledge. The chaperon was not showy, but, what is better, she was
+good. And, anyhow, it was the best the girls had been able to do.
+So far as they were concerned, they had no use for a chaperon. The
+idea had been a thoughtful concession to European prejudice.
+
+"The person in knickerbockers," explained the officer.
+
+"Oh, THAT," exclaimed the lady, relieved: "he just came up and made
+himself agreeable while we were putting on our skates. We have met
+him somewhere, but I can't exactly fix him for the moment."
+
+"You have met him possibly at Wiesman's, in the Pragerstrasse: he is
+one of the attendants there," said the officer.
+
+The American girl is Republican in her ideas, but she draws the line
+at hairdressers. In theory it is absurd: the hairdresser is a man
+and a brother: but we are none of us logical all the way. It made
+her mad, the thought that she had been seen by all Dresden Society
+skating with a hairdresser.
+
+"Well," she said, "I do call that impudence. Why, they wouldn't do
+that even in Chicago."
+
+And she returned to where the hairdresser was illustrating to her
+friend the Dutch roll, determined to explain to him, as politely as
+possible, that although the free and enlightened Westerner has
+abolished social distinctions, he has not yet abolished them to that
+extent.
+
+Had he been a commonplace German hairdresser he would have understood
+English, and all might have been easy. But to the "classy" German
+hairdresser, English is not so necessary, and the American ladies had
+reached, as regards their German, only the "improving" stage. In her
+excitement she confused the subjunctive and the imperative, and told
+him that he "might" go. He had no wish to go; he assured them--so
+they gathered--that his intention was to devote the morning to their
+service. He must have been a stupid man, but it is a type
+occasionally encountered. Two pretty women had greeted his advances
+with apparent delight. They were Americans, and the American girl
+was notoriously unconventional. He knew himself to be a good-looking
+young fellow. It did not occur to him that in expressing willingness
+to dispense with his attendance they could be in earnest.
+
+There was nothing for it, so it seemed to the girls, but to request
+the assistance of the officer, who continued to skate round and round
+them at a distance of about ten yards. So again the elder young
+lady, seizing her opportunity, made appeal.
+
+[What the Soldier dared not do.]
+
+"I cannot," persisted the officer, who, having been looking forward
+to a morning with two of the prettiest girls in Dresden, was also
+feeling mad. "I dare not be seen speaking to a hairdresser. You
+must get rid of him."
+
+"But we can't," said the girl. "We do not know enough German, and he
+can't, or he won't, understand us. For goodness sake come and help
+us. We'll be spending the whole morning with him if you don't."
+
+The German officer said he was desolate. Steps would be taken--later
+in the week--the result of which would probably be to render that
+young hairdresser prematurely bald. But, meanwhile, beyond skating
+round and round them, for which they did not even feel they wanted to
+thank him, the German officer could do nothing for them. They tried
+being rude to the hairdresser: he mistook it for American chic.
+They tried joining hands and running away from him, but they were not
+good skaters, and he thought they were trying to show him the cake
+walk. They both fell down and hurt themselves, and it is difficult
+to be angry with a man, even a hairdresser, when he is doing his best
+to pick you up and comfort you.
+
+The chaperon was worse than useless. She was very old. She had been
+promised her breakfast, but saw no signs of it. She could not speak
+German; and remembered somewhat late in the day that two young ladies
+had no business to accept breakfast at the hands of German officers:
+and, if they did, at least they might see that they got it. She
+appeared to be willing to talk about decadence of modern manners to
+almost any extent, but the subject of the hairdresser, and how to get
+rid of him, only bored her.
+
+Their first stroke of luck occurred when the hairdresser, showing
+them the "dropped three," fell down and temporarily stunned himself.
+It was not kind of them, but they were desperate. They flew for the
+bank just anyhow, and, scrambling over the grass, gained the
+restaurant. The officer, overtaking them at the door, led them to
+the table that had been reserved for them, then hastened back to hunt
+for the chaperon. The girls thought their trouble was over. Had
+they glanced behind them their joy would have been shorter-lived than
+even was the case. The hairdresser had recovered consciousness in
+time to see them waddling over the grass. He thought they were
+running to fetch him brandy. When the officer returned with the
+chaperon he found the hairdresser sitting opposite to them,
+explaining that he really was not hurt, and suggesting that, as they
+were there, perhaps they would like something to eat and drink.
+
+The girls made one last frantic appeal to the man of buckram and
+pipeclay, but the etiquette of the Saxon Army was inexorable. It
+transpired that he might kill the hairdresser, but nothing else: he
+must not speak to him--not even explain to the poor devil why it was
+that he was being killed.
+
+[Her path of Usefulness.]
+
+It did not seem quite worth it. They had some sandwiches and coffee
+at the hairdresser's expense, and went home in a cab: while the
+chaperon had breakfast with the officer of noble family.
+
+The American girl has succeeded in freeing European social
+intercourse from many of its hide-bound conventions. There is still
+much work for her to do. But I have faith in her.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+
+[Music and the Savage.]
+
+I never visit a music-hall without reflecting concerning the great
+future there must be before the human race.
+
+How young we are, how very young! And think of all we have done!
+Man is still a mere boy. He has only just within the last half-
+century been put into trousers. Two thousand years ago he wore long
+clothes--the Grecian robe, the Roman toga. Then followed the Little
+Lord Fauntleroy period, when he went about dressed in a velvet suit
+with lace collar and cuffs, and had his hair curled for him. The
+late lamented Queen Victoria put him into trousers. What a wonderful
+little man he will be when he is grown up!
+
+A clergyman friend of mine told me of a German Kurhaus to which he
+was sent for his sins and his health. It was a resort, for some
+reason, specially patronized by the more elderly section of the
+higher English middle class. Bishops were there, suffering from
+fatty degeneration of the heart caused by too close application to
+study; ancient spinsters of good family subject to spasms; gouty
+retired generals. Can anybody tell me how many men in the British
+Army go to a general? Somebody once assured me it was five thousand,
+but that is absurd, on the face of it. The British Army, in that
+case, would have to be counted by millions. There are a goodish few
+American colonels still knocking about. The American colonel is
+still to be met with here and there by the curious traveller, but
+compared with the retired British general he is an extinct species.
+In Cheltenham and Brighton and other favoured towns there are streets
+of nothing but retired British generals--squares of retired British
+generals--whole crescents of British generals. Abroad there are
+pensions with a special scale of charges for British generals. In
+Switzerland there has even been talk of reserving railway
+compartments "For British Generals Only." In Germany, when you do
+not say distinctly and emphatically on being introduced that you are
+not a British general, you are assumed, as a matter of course, to be
+a British general. During the Boer War, when I was residing in a
+small garrison town on the Rhine, German military men would draw me
+aside and ask of me my own private personal views as to the conduct
+of the campaign. I would give them my views freely, explain to them
+how I would finish the whole thing in a week.
+
+"But how in the face of the enemy's tactics--" one of them would
+begin.
+
+"Bother the enemy's tactics," I would reply. "Who cares for
+tactics?"
+
+"But surely a British general--" they would persist. "Who's a
+British general?" I would retort, "I am talking to you merely as a
+plain commonsense man, with a head on my shoulders."
+
+They would apologize for their mistake. But this is leading me away
+from that German Kurhaus.
+
+[Recreation for the Higher clergy.]
+
+My clergyman friend found life there dull. The generals and the
+spinsters left to themselves might have played cards, but they
+thought of the poor bishops who would have had to look on envious.
+The bishops and the spinsters might have sung ballads, but the
+British general after dinner does not care for ballads, and had
+mentioned it. The bishops and the generals might have told each
+other stories, but could not before the ladies. My clergyman friend
+stood the awful solemnity of three evenings, then cautiously felt his
+way towards revelry. He started with an intellectual game called
+"Quotations." You write down quotations on a piece of paper, and the
+players have to add the author's name. It roped in four old ladies,
+and the youngest bishop. One or two generals tried a round, but not
+being familiar with quotations voted the game slow.
+
+The next night my friend tried "Consequences." "Saucy Miss A. met
+the gay General B. in"--most unlikely places. "He said." Really it
+was fortunate that General B. remained too engrossed in the day
+before yesterday's Standard to overhear, or Miss A. could never have
+again faced him. "And she replied." The suppressed giggles excited
+the curiosity of the non-players. Most of the bishops and half the
+generals asked to be allowed to join. The giggles grew into roars.
+Those standing out found that they could not read their papers in
+comfort.
+
+From "Consequences" the descent was easy. The tables and chairs were
+pushed against the walls, the bishops and the spinsters and the
+generals would sit in a ring upon the floor playing hunt the slipper.
+Musical chairs made the two hours between bed and dinner the time of
+the day they all looked forward to: the steady trot with every nerve
+alert, the ear listening for the sudden stoppage of the music, the
+eye seeking with artfulness the likeliest chair, the volcanic
+silence, the mad scramble.
+
+The generals felt themselves fighting their battles over again, the
+spinsters blushed and preened themselves, the bishops took interest
+in proving that even the Church could be prompt of decision and swift
+of movement. Before the week was out they were playing Puss-in-the-
+corner; ladies feeling young again were archly beckoning to stout
+deans, to whom were returning all the sensations of a curate. The
+swiftness with which the gouty generals found they could still hobble
+surprised even themselves.
+
+[Why are we so young?]
+
+But it is in the music-hall, as I have said, that I am most impressed
+with the youthfulness of man. How delighted we are when the long man
+in the little boy's hat, having asked his short brother a riddle, and
+before he can find time to answer it, hits him over the stomach with
+an umbrella! How we clap our hands and shout with glee! It isn't
+really his stomach: it is a bolster tied round his waist--we know
+that; but seeing the long man whack at that bolster with an umbrella
+gives us almost as much joy as if the bolster were not there.
+
+I laugh at the knockabout brothers, I confess, so long as they are on
+the stage; but they do not convince me. Reflecting on the
+performance afterwards, my dramatic sense revolts against the "plot."
+I cannot accept the theory of their being brothers. The difference
+in size alone is a strain upon my imagination. It is not probable
+that of two children of the same parents one should measure six foot
+six, and the other five foot four. Even allowing for a freak of
+nature, and accepting the fact that they might be brothers, I do not
+believe they would remain so inseparable. The short brother would
+have succeeded before now in losing the long brother. Those
+continual bangings over the head and stomach would have weakened
+whatever affection the short brother might originally have felt
+towards his long relation. At least, he would insist upon the
+umbrella being left at home.
+
+"I will go for a walk with you," he might say, "I will stand stock
+still with you in Trafalgar Square in the midst of the traffic while
+you ask me silly riddles, but not if you persist in bringing with you
+that absurd umbrella. You are too handy with it. Put it back in the
+rack before we start, or go out by yourself."
+
+Besides, my sense of justice is outraged. Why should the short
+brother be banged and thumped without reason? The Greek dramatist
+would have explained to us that the shorter brother had committed a
+crime against the gods. Aristophanes would have made the longer
+brother the instrument of the Furies. The riddles he asked would
+have had bearing upon the shorter brother's sin. In this way the
+spectator would have enjoyed amusement combined with the satisfactory
+sense that Nemesis is ever present in human affairs. I present the
+idea, for what it may be worth, to the concoctors of knockabout
+turns.
+
+[Where Brotherly (and Sisterly) Love reigns supreme]
+
+The family tie is always strong on the music-hall stage. The
+acrobatic troupe is always a "Family": Pa, Ma, eight brothers and
+sisters, and the baby. A more affectionate family one rarely sees.
+Pa and Ma are a trifle stout, but still active. Baby, dear little
+fellow, is full of humour. Ladies do not care to go on the music-
+hall stage unless they can take their sister with them. I have seen
+a performance given by eleven sisters, all the same size and
+apparently all the same age. She must have been a wonderful woman--
+the mother. They all had golden hair, and all wore precisely similar
+frocks--a charming but decolletee arrangement--in claret-coloured
+velvet over blue silk stockings. So far as I could gather, they all
+had the same young man. No doubt he found it difficult amongst them
+to make up his mind.
+
+"Arrange it among yourselves," he no doubt had said, "it is quite
+immaterial to me. You are so much alike, it is impossible that a
+fellow loving one should not love the lot of you. So long as I marry
+into the family I really don't care."
+
+When a performer appears alone on the music-hall stage it is easy to
+understand why. His or her domestic life has been a failure. I
+listened one evening to six songs in succession. The first two were
+sung by a gentleman. He entered with his clothes hanging upon him in
+shreds. He explained that he had just come from an argument with his
+wife. He showed us the brick with which she had hit him, and the
+bump at the back of his head that had resulted. The funny man's
+marriage is never a success. But really this seems to be his own
+fault. "She was such a lovely girl," he tells us, "with a face--
+well, you'd hardly call it a face, it was more like a gas explosion.
+Then she had those wonderful sort of eyes that you can see two ways
+at once with, one of them looks down the street, while the other one
+is watching round the corner. Can see you coming any way. And her
+mouth!"
+
+It appears that if she stands anywhere near the curb and smiles,
+careless people mistake her for a pillar-box, and drop letters into
+her.
+
+"And such a voice!" We are told it is a perfect imitation of a
+motor-car. When she laughs people spring into doorways to escape
+being run over.
+
+If he will marry that sort of woman, what can he expect? The man is
+asking for it.
+
+The lady who followed him also told us a sad story of misplaced
+trust. She also was comic--so the programme assured us. The
+humorist appears to have no luck. She had lent her lover money to
+buy the ring, and the licence, and to furnish the flat. He did buy
+the ring, and he furnished the flat, but it was for another lady.
+The audience roared. I have heard it so often asked, "What is
+humour?" From observation, I should describe it as other people's
+troubles.
+
+A male performer followed her. He came on dressed in a night-shirt,
+carrying a baby. His wife, it seemed, had gone out for the evening
+with the lodger. That was his joke. It was the most successful song
+of the whole six.
+
+[The one sure Joke.]
+
+A philosopher has put it on record that he always felt sad when he
+reflected on the sorrows of humanity. But when he reflected on its
+amusements he felt sadder still.
+
+Why was it so funny that the baby had the lodger's nose? We laughed
+for a full minute by the clock.
+
+Why do I love to see a flabby-faced man go behind curtains, and,
+emerging in a wig and a false beard, say that he is now Bismarck or
+Mr. Chamberlain? I have felt resentment against the Lightning
+Impersonator ever since the days of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.
+During that summer every Lightning Impersonator ended his show by
+shouting, while the band played the National Anthem, "Queen
+Victoria!" He was not a bit like Queen Victoria. He did not even,
+to my thinking, look a lady; but at once I had to stand up in my
+place and sing "God save the Queen." It was a time of enthusiastic
+loyalty; if you did not spring up quickly some patriotic old fool
+from the back would reach across and hit you over the head with the
+first thing he could lay his hands upon.
+
+Other music-hall performers caught at the idea. By ending up with
+"God save the Queen" any performer, however poor, could retire in a
+whirlwind of applause. Niggers, having bored us with tiresome songs
+about coons and honeys and Swanee Rivers, would, as a last resource,
+strike up "God save the Queen" on the banjo. The whole house would
+have to rise and cheer. Elderly Sisters Trippet, having failed to
+arouse our enthusiasm by allowing us a brief glimpse of an ankle,
+would put aside all frivolity, and tell us of a hero lover named
+George, who had fought somebody somewhere for his Queen and country.
+"He fell!"--bang from the big drum and blue limelight. In a
+recumbent position he appears to have immediately started singing
+"God save the Queen."
+
+[How Anarchists are made.]
+
+Sleepy members of the audience would be hastily awakened by their
+friends. We would stagger to our feet. The Sisters Trippet, with
+eyes fixed on the chandelier, would lead us: to the best of our
+ability we would sing "God save the Queen."
+
+There have been evenings when I have sung "God save the Queen" six
+times. Another season of it, and I should have become a Republican.
+
+The singer of patriotic songs is generally a stout and puffy man.
+The perspiration pours from his face as the result of the violent
+gesticulations with which he tells us how he stormed the fort. He
+must have reached it very hot.
+
+"There were ten to one agin us, boys." We feel that this was a
+miscalculation on the enemy's part. Ten to one "agin" such wildly
+gesticulating Britishers was inviting defeat.
+
+It seems to have been a terrible battle notwithstanding. He shows us
+with a real sword how it was done. Nothing could have lived within a
+dozen yards of that sword. The conductor of the orchestra looks
+nervous. Our fear is lest he will end by cutting off his own head.
+His recollections are carrying him away. Then follows "Victory!"
+
+The gas men and the programme sellers cheer wildly. We conclude with
+the inevitable "God save the King."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+
+[The Ghost and the Blind Children.]
+
+Ghosts are in the air. It is difficult at this moment to avoid
+talking of ghosts. The first question you are asked on being
+introduced this season is:
+
+"Do you believe in ghosts?"
+
+I would be so glad to believe in ghosts. This world is much too
+small for me. Up to a century or two ago the intellectual young man
+found it sufficient for his purposes. It still contained the
+unknown--the possible--within its boundaries. New continents were
+still to be discovered: we dreamt of giants, Liliputians, desert-
+fenced Utopias. We set our sail, and Wonderland lay ever just beyond
+our horizon. To-day the world is small, the light railway runs
+through the desert, the coasting steamer calls at the Islands of the
+Blessed, the last mystery has been unveiled, the fairies are dead,
+the talking birds are silent. Our baffled curiosity turns for relief
+outwards. We call upon the dead to rescue us from our monotony. The
+first authentic ghost will be welcomed as the saviour of humanity.
+
+But he must be a living ghost--a ghost we can respect, a ghost we can
+listen to. The poor spiritless addle-headed ghost that has hitherto
+haunted our blue chambers is of no use to us. I remember a
+thoughtful man once remarking during argument that if he believed in
+ghosts--the silly, childish spooks about which we had been telling
+anecdotes--death would possess for him an added fear: the idea that
+his next dwelling-place would be among such a pack of dismal idiots
+would sadden his departing hours. What was he to talk to them about?
+Apparently their only interest lay in recalling their earthly
+troubles. The ghost of the lady unhappily married who had been
+poisoned, or had her throat cut, who every night for the last five
+hundred years had visited the chamber where it happened for no other
+purpose than to scream about it! what a tiresome person she would be
+to meet! All her conversation during the long days would be around
+her earthly wrongs. The other ghosts, in all probability, would have
+heard about that husband of hers, what he said, and what he did, till
+they were sick of the subject. A newcomer would be seized upon with
+avidity.
+
+A lady of repute writes to a magazine that she once occupied for a
+season a wainscotted room in an old manor house. On several
+occasions she awoke in the night: each time to witness the same
+ghostly performance. Four gentlemen sat round a table playing cards.
+Suddenly one of them sprang to his feet and plunged a dagger into the
+back of his partner. The lady does not say so: one presumes it was
+his partner. I have, myself, when playing bridge, seen an expression
+on my partner's face that said quite plainly:
+
+"I would like to murder you."
+
+I have not the memory for bridge. I forget who it was that, last
+trick but seven, played the two of clubs. I thought it was he, my
+partner. I thought it meant that I was to take an early opportunity
+of forcing trumps. I don't know why I thought so, I try to explain
+why I thought so. It sounds a silly argument even to myself; I feel
+I have not got it quite right. Added to which it was not my partner
+who played the two of clubs, it was Dummy. If I had only remembered
+this, and had concluded from it--as I ought to have done--that my
+partner had the ace of diamonds--as otherwise why did he pass my
+knave?--we might have saved the odd trick. I have not the head for
+bridge. It is only an ordinary head--mine. I have no business to
+play bridge.
+
+[Why not, occasionally, a cheerful Ghost.]
+
+But to return to our ghosts. These four gentlemen must now and
+again, during their earthly existence, have sat down to a merry game
+of cards. There must have been evenings when nobody was stabbed.
+Why choose an unpleasant occasion to harp exclusively upon it? Why
+do ghosts never give a cheerful show? The lady who was poisoned!
+there must have been other evenings in her life. Why does she not
+show us "The first meeting": when he gave her the violets and said
+they were like her eyes? He wasn't always poisoning her. There must
+have been a period before he ever thought of poisoning her. Cannot
+these ghosts do something occasionally in what is termed "the lighter
+vein"? If they haunt a forest glade, it is to perform a duel to the
+death, or an assassination. Why cannot they, for a change, give us
+an old-time picnic, or "The hawking party," which, in Elizabethan
+costume, should make a pretty picture? Ghostland would appear to be
+obsessed by the spirit of the Scandinavian drama: murders, suicides,
+ruined fortunes, and broken hearts are the only material made use of.
+Why is not a dead humorist allowed now and then to write the sketch?
+There must be plenty of dead comic lovers; why are they never allowed
+to give a performance?
+
+[Where are the dead Humorists?]
+
+A cheerful person contemplates death with alarm. What is he to do in
+this land of ghosts? there is no place for him. Imagine the
+commonplace liver of a humdrum existence being received into
+ghostland. He enters nervous, shy, feeling again the new boy at
+school. The old ghosts gather round him.
+
+"How do you come here--murdered?"
+
+"No, at least, I don't think so."
+
+"Suicide?
+
+"No--can't remember the name of it now. Began with a chill on the
+liver, I think."
+
+The ghosts are disappointed. But a happy suggestion is made.
+Perhaps he was the murderer; that would be even better. Let him
+think carefully; can he recollect ever having committed a murder? He
+racks his brains in vain, not a single murder comes to his
+recollection. He never forged a will. Doesn't even know where
+anything is hid. Of what use will he be in ghostland? One pictures
+him passing the centuries among a moody crowd of uninteresting
+mediocrities, brooding perpetually over their wasted lives. Only the
+ghosts of ladies and gentlemen mixed up in crime have any "show" in
+ghostland.
+
+[The Spirit does not shine as a Conversationalist.]
+
+I feel an equal dissatisfaction with the spirits who are supposed to
+return to us and communicate with us through the medium of three-
+legged tables. I do not deny the possibility that spirits exist. I
+am even willing to allow them their three-legged tables. It must be
+confessed it is a clumsy method. One cannot help regretting that
+during all the ages they have not evolved a more dignified system.
+One feels that the three-legged table must hamper them. One can
+imagine an impatient spirit getting tired of spelling out a lengthy
+story on a three-legged table. But, as I have said, I am willing to
+assume that, for some spiritual reason unfathomable to my mere human
+intelligence, that three-legged table is essential. I am willing
+also to accept the human medium. She is generally an unprepossessing
+lady running somewhat to bulk. If a gentleman, he so often has dirty
+finger-nails, and smells of stale beer. I think myself it would be
+so much simpler if the spirit would talk to me direct; we could get
+on quicker. But there is that about the medium, I am told, which
+appeals to a spirit. Well, it is his affair, not mine, and I waive
+the argument. My real stumbling-block is the spirit himself--the
+sort of conversation that, when he does talk, he indulges in. I
+cannot help feeling that his conversation is not worth the
+paraphernalia. I can talk better than that myself.
+
+The late Professor Huxley, who took some trouble over this matter,
+attended some half-dozen seances, and then determined to attend no
+more.
+
+"I have," he said, "for my sins to submit occasionally to the society
+of live bores. I refuse to go out of my way to spend an evening in
+the dark with dead bores."
+
+The spiritualists themselves admit that their table-rapping spooks
+are precious dull dogs; it would be difficult, in face of the
+communications recorded, for them to deny it. They explain to us
+that they have not yet achieved communication with the higher
+spiritual Intelligences. The more intelligent spirits--for some
+reason that the spiritualists themselves are unable to explain--do
+not want to talk to them, appear to have something else to do. At
+present--so I am told, and can believe--it is only the spirits of
+lower intelligence that care to turn up on these evenings. The
+spiritualists argue that, by continuing, the higher-class spirits
+will later on be induced to "come in." I fail to follow the
+argument. It seems to me that we are frightening them away. Anyhow,
+myself I shall wait awhile.
+
+When the spirit comes along that can talk sense, that can tell me
+something I don't know, I shall be glad to meet him. The class of
+spirit that we are getting just at present does not appeal to me.
+The thought of him--the reflection that I shall die and spend the
+rest of eternity in his company--does not comfort me.
+
+[She is now a Believer.]
+
+A lady of my acquaintance tells me it is marvellous how much these
+spirits seem to know. On her very first visit, the spirit, through
+the voice of the medium--an elderly gentleman residing obscurely in
+Clerkenwell--informed her without a moment's hesitation that she
+possessed a relative with the Christian name of George. (I am not
+making this up--it is real.) This gave her at first the idea that
+spiritualism was a fraud. She had no relative named George--at
+least, so she thought. But a morning or two later her husband
+received a letter from Australia. "By Jove!" he exclaimed, as he
+glanced at the last page, "I had forgotten all about the poor old
+beggar."
+
+"Whom is it from?" she asked.
+
+"Oh, nobody you know--haven't seen him myself for twenty years--a
+third or fourth cousin of mine--George--"
+
+She never heard the surname, she was too excited. The spirit had
+been right from the beginning; she HAD a relative named George. Her
+faith in spiritualism is now as a rock.
+
+There are thousands of folk who believe in Old Moore's Almanac. My
+difficulty would be not to believe in the old gentleman. I see that
+for the month of January last he foretold us that the Government
+would meet with determined and persistent opposition. He warned us
+that there would be much sickness about, and that rheumatism would
+discover its old victims. How does he know these things? Is it that
+the stars really do communicate with him, or does he "feel it in his
+bones," as the saying is up North?
+
+During February, he mentioned, the weather would be unsettled. He
+concluded:
+
+"The word Taxation will have a terrible significance for both
+Government and people this month."
+
+Really, it is quite uncanny. In March:
+
+"Theatres will do badly during the month."
+
+There seems to be no keeping anything from Old Moore. In April "much
+dissatisfaction will be expressed among Post Office employees." That
+sounds probable, on the face of it. In any event, I will answer for
+our local postman.
+
+In May "a wealthy magnate is going to die." In June there is going
+to be a fire. In July "Old Moore has reason to fear there will be
+trouble."
+
+I do hope he may be wrong, and yet somehow I feel a conviction that
+he won't be. Anyhow, one is glad it has been put off till July.
+
+In August "one in high authority will be in danger of demise." In
+September "zeal" on the part of persons mentioned "will outstrip
+discretion." In October Old Moore is afraid again. He cannot avoid
+a haunting suspicion that "Certain people will be victimized by
+extensive fraudulent proceedings."
+
+In November "the public Press will have its columns full of important
+news." The weather will be "adverse," and "a death will occur in
+high circles." This makes the second in one year. I am glad I do
+not belong to the higher circles.
+
+[How does he do it?]
+
+In December Old Moore again foresees trouble, just when I was hoping
+it was all over. "Frauds will come to light, and death will find its
+victims."
+
+And all this information is given to us for a penny.
+
+The palmist examines our hand. "You will go a journey," he tells us.
+It is marvellous! How could he have known that only the night before
+we had been discussing the advisability of taking the children to
+Margate for the holidays?
+
+"There is trouble in store for you," he tells us, regretfully, "but
+you will get over it." We feel that the future has no secret hidden
+from him.
+
+We have "presentiments" that people we love, who are climbing
+mountains, who are fond of ballooning, are in danger.
+
+The sister of a friend of mine who went out to the South African War
+as a volunteer had three presentiments of his death. He came home
+safe and sound, but admitted that on three distinct occasions he had
+been in imminent danger. It seemed to the dear lady a proof of
+everything she had ever read.
+
+Another friend of mine was waked in the middle of the night by his
+wife, who insisted that he should dress himself and walk three miles
+across a moor because she had had a dream that something terrible was
+happening to a bosom friend of hers. The bosom friend and her
+husband were rather indignant at being waked at two o'clock in the
+morning, but their indignation was mild compared with that of the
+dreamer on learning that nothing was the matter. From that day
+forward a coldness sprang up between the two families.
+
+I would give much to believe in ghosts. The interest of life would
+be multiplied by its own square power could we communicate with the
+myriad dead watching us from their mountain summits. Mr. Zangwill,
+in a poem that should live, draws for us a pathetic picture of blind
+children playing in a garden, laughing, romping. All their lives
+they have lived in darkness; they are content. But, the wonder of
+it, could their eyes by some miracle be opened!
+
+[Blind Children playing in a World of Darkness.]
+
+May not we be but blind children, suggests the poet, living in a
+world of darkness--laughing, weeping, loving, dying--knowing nothing
+of the wonder round us?
+
+The ghosts about us, with their god-like faces, it might be good to
+look at them.
+
+But these poor, pale-faced spooks, these dull-witted, table-thumping
+spirits: it would be sad to think that of such was the kingdom of
+the Dead.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+
+[Parents and their Teachers.]
+
+My heart has been much torn of late, reading of the wrongs of
+Children. It has lately been discovered that Children are being
+hampered and harassed in their career by certain brutal and ignorant
+persons called, for want of a better name, parents. The parent is a
+selfish wretch who, out of pure devilment, and without consulting the
+Child itself upon the subject, lures innocent Children into the
+world, apparently for the purpose merely of annoying them. The
+parent does not understand the Child when he has got it; he does not
+understand anything, not much. The only person who understands the
+Child is the young gentleman fresh from College and the elderly
+maiden lady, who, between them, produce most of the literature that
+explains to us the Child.
+
+The parent does not even know how to dress the Child. The parent
+will persist in dressing the Child in a long and trailing garment
+that prevents the Child from kicking. The young gentleman fresh from
+College grows almost poetical in his contempt. It appears that the
+one thing essential for the health of a young child is that it should
+have perfect freedom to kick. Later on the parent dresses the Child
+in short clothes, and leaves bits of its leg bare. The elderly
+maiden Understander of Children, quoting medical opinion, denounces
+us as criminals for leaving any portion of that precious leg
+uncovered. It appears that the partially uncovered leg of childhood
+is responsible for most of the disease that flesh is heir to.
+
+Then we put it into boots. We "crush its delicately fashioned feet
+into hideous leather instruments of torture." That is the sort of
+phrase that is hurled at us! The picture conjured up is that of some
+fiend in human shape, calling itself a father, seizing some helpless
+cherub by the hair, and, while drowning its pathetic wails for mercy
+beneath roars of demon laughter, proceeding to bind about its tender
+bones some ancient curiosity dug from the dungeons of the
+Inquisition.
+
+If the young gentleman fresh from College or the maiden lady
+Understander could be, if only for a month or two, a father! If only
+he or she could guess how gladly the father of limited income would
+reply,
+
+"My dear, you are wrong in saying that the children must have boots.
+That is an exploded theory. The children must not have boots. I
+refuse to be a party to crushing their delicately fashioned feet into
+hideous leather instruments of torture. The young gentleman fresh
+from College and the elderly maiden Understander have decided that
+the children must not have boots. Do not let me hear again that out-
+of-date word--boots."
+
+If there were only one young gentleman fresh from College, one maiden
+lady Understander teaching us our duty, life would be simpler. But
+there are so many young gentlemen from College, so many maiden lady
+Understanders, on the job--if I may be permitted a vulgarism; and as
+yet they are not all agreed. It is distracting for the parent
+anxious to do right. We put the little dears into sandals, and then
+at once other young gentlemen from College, other maiden lady
+Understanders, point to us as would-be murderers. Long clothes are
+fatal, short clothes are deadly, boots are instruments of torture, to
+allow children to go about with bare feet shows that we regard them
+as Incumbrances, and, with low cunning, are seeking to be rid of
+them.
+
+[Their first attempt.]
+
+I knew a pair of parents. I am convinced, in spite of all that can
+be said to the contrary, they were fond of their Child; it was their
+first. They were anxious to do the right thing. They read with
+avidity all books and articles written on the subject of Children.
+They read that a Child should always sleep lying on its back, and
+took it in turns to sit awake o' nights to make sure that the Child
+was always right side up.
+
+But another magazine told them that Children allowed to sleep lying
+on their backs grew up to be idiots. They were sad they had not read
+of this before, and started the Child on its right side. The Child,
+on the contrary, appeared to have a predilection for the left, the
+result being that neither the parents nor the baby itself for the
+next three weeks got any sleep worth speaking of.
+
+Later on, by good fortune, they came across a treatise that said a
+Child should always be allowed to choose its own position while
+sleeping, and their friends persuaded them to stop at that--told them
+they would never strike a better article if they searched the whole
+British Museum Library. It troubled them to find that Child
+sometimes sleeping curled up with its toe in its mouth, and sometimes
+flat on its stomach with its head underneath the pillow. But its
+health and temper were decidedly improved.
+
+[The Parent can do no right.]
+
+There is nothing the parent can do right. You would think that now
+and then he might, if only by mere accident, blunder into sense.
+But, no, there seems to be a law against it. He brings home woolly
+rabbits and indiarubber elephants, and expects the Child to be
+contented "forsooth" with suchlike aids to its education. As a
+matter of fact, the Child is content: it bangs its own head with the
+woolly rabbit and does itself no harm; it tries to swallow the
+indiarubber elephant; it does not succeed, but continues to hope.
+With that woolly rabbit and that indiarubber elephant it would be as
+happy as the day is long if only the young gentleman from Cambridge
+would leave it alone, and not put new ideas into its head. But the
+gentleman from Cambridge and the maiden lady Understander are
+convinced that the future of the race depends upon leaving the Child
+untrammelled to select its own amusements. A friend of mine, during
+his wife's absence once on a visit to her mother, tried the
+experiment.
+
+The Child selected a frying-pan. How it got the frying-pan remains
+to this day a mystery. The cook said "frying-pans don't walk
+upstairs." The nurse said she should be sorry to call anyone a liar,
+but that there was commonsense in everything. The scullery-maid said
+that if everybody did their own work other people would not be driven
+beyond the limits of human endurance; and the housekeeper said that
+she was sick and tired of life. My friend said it did not matter.
+The Child clung to the frying-pan with passion. The book my friend
+was reading said that was how the human mind was formed: the Child's
+instinct prompted it to seize upon objects tending to develop its
+brain faculty. What the parent had got to do was to stand aside and
+watch events.
+
+The Child proceeded to black everything about the nursery with the
+bottom of the frying-pan. It then set to work to lick the frying-pan
+clean. The nurse, a woman of narrow ideas, had a presentiment that
+later on it would be ill. My friend explained to her the error the
+world had hitherto committed: it had imagined that the parent knew a
+thing or two that the Child didn't. In future the Children were to
+do their bringing up themselves. In the house of the future the
+parents would be allotted the attics where they would be out of the
+way. They might occasionally be allowed down to dinner, say, on
+Sundays.
+
+The Child, having exhausted all the nourishment the frying-pan
+contained, sought to develop its brain faculty by thumping itself
+over the head with the flat of the thing. With the selfishness of
+the average parent--thinking chiefly of what the Coroner might say,
+and indifferent to the future of humanity, my friend insisted upon
+changing the game.
+
+[His foolish talk.]
+
+The parent does not even know how to talk to his own Child. The
+Child is yearning to acquire a correct and dignified mode of
+expression. The parent says: "Did ums. Did naughty table hurt
+ickle tootsie pootsies? Baby say: ''Oo naughty table. Me no love
+'oo.'"
+
+The Child despairs of ever learning English. What should we think
+ourselves were we to join a French class, and were the Instructor to
+commence talking to us French of this description? What the Child,
+according to the gentleman from Cambridge, says to itself is,
+
+"Oh for one hour's intelligent conversation with a human being who
+can talk the language."
+
+Will not the young gentleman from Cambridge descend to detail? Will
+he not give us a specimen dialogue?
+
+A celebrated lady writer, who has made herself the mouthpiece of
+feminine indignation against male stupidity, took up the cudgels a
+little while ago on behalf of Mrs. Caudle. She admitted Mrs. Caudle
+appeared to be a somewhat foolish lady. "BUT WHAT HAD CAUDLE EVER
+DONE TO IMPROVE MRS. CAUDLE'S MIND?" Had he ever sought, with
+intelligent illuminating conversation, to direct her thoughts towards
+other topics than lent umbrellas and red-headed minxes?
+
+It is my complaint against so many of our teachers. They scold us
+for what we do, but so rarely tell us what we ought to do. Tell me
+how to talk to my baby, and I am willing to try. It is not as if I
+took a personal pride in the phrase: "Did ums." I did not even
+invent it. I found it, so to speak, when I got here, and my
+experience is that it soothes the Child. When he is howling, and I
+say "Did ums" with sympathetic intonation, he stops crying. Possibly
+enough it is astonishment at the ineptitude of the remark that
+silences him. Maybe it is that minor troubles are lost sight of face
+to face with the reflection that this is the sort of father with
+which fate has provided him. But may not even this be useful to him?
+He has got to meet with stupid people in the world. Let him begin by
+contemplating me. It will make things easier for him later on. I
+put forward the idea in the hope of comforting the young gentleman
+from Cambridge.
+
+We injure the health of the Child by enforcing on it silence. We
+have a stupid formula that children should be seen and not heard. We
+deny it exercise to its lungs. We discourage its natural and
+laudable curiosity by telling it not to worry us--not to ask so many
+questions.
+
+Won't somebody lend the young gentleman from Cambridge a small and
+healthy child just for a week or so, and let the bargain be that he
+lives with it all the time? The young gentleman from Cambridge
+thinks, when we call up the stairs to say that if we hear another
+sound from the nursery during the next two hours we will come up and
+do things to that Child the mere thought of which should appal it,
+that is silencing the Child. It does not occur to him that two
+minutes later that Child is yelling again at the top of its voice,
+having forgotten all we ever said.
+
+[The Child of Fiction.]
+
+I know the sort of Child the weeper over Children's wrongs has in his
+mind. It has deep, soulful, yearning eyes. It moves about the house
+softly, shedding an atmosphere of patient resignation. It says:
+"Yes, dear papa." "No, dear mamma." It has but one ambition--to be
+good and useful. It has beautiful thoughts about the stars. You
+don't know whether it is in the house or isn't: you find it with its
+little face pressed close against the window-pane watching the golden
+sunset. Nobody understands it. It blesses the old people and dies.
+One of these days the young gentleman from Cambridge will, one hopes,
+have a Baby of his own--a real Child: and serve him darn-well right.
+
+At present he is labouring under a wrong conception of the article.
+He says we over-educate it. We clog its wonderful brain with a mass
+of uninteresting facts and foolish formulas that we call knowledge.
+He does not know that all this time the Child is alive and kicking.
+He is under the delusion that the Child is taking all this lying
+down. We tell the Child it has got to be quiet, or else we will
+wring its neck. The gentleman from Cambridge pictures the Child as
+from that moment a silent spirit moving voiceless towards the grave.
+
+We catch the Child in the morning, and clean it up, and put a little
+satchel on its back, and pack it off to school; and the maiden lady
+Understander pictures that Child wasting the all too brief period of
+youth crowding itself up with knowledge.
+
+My dear Madam, you take it from me that your tears are being wasted.
+You wipe your eyes and cheer up. The dear Child is not going to be
+overworked: HE is seeing to that.
+
+As a matter of the fact, the Child of the present day is having, if
+anything, too good a time. I shall be considered a brute for saying
+this, but I am thinking of its future, and my opinion is that we are
+giving it swelled head. The argument just now in the air is that the
+parent exists merely for the Children. The parent doesn't count. It
+is as if a gardener were to say,
+
+"Bother the flowers, let them rot. The sooner they are out of the
+way the better. The seed is the only thing that interests me."
+
+You can't produce respectable seed but from carefully cultivated
+flowers. The philosopher, clamouring for improved Children, will
+later grasp the fact that the parent is of importance. Then he will
+change his tactics, and address the Children, and we shall have our
+time. He will impress on them how necessary it is for their own
+sakes that they should be careful of us. We shall have books written
+about misunderstood fathers who were worried into early graves.
+
+[The misunderstood Father.]
+
+Fresh Air Funds will be started for sending parents away to the
+seaside on visits to kind bachelors living in detached houses, miles
+away from Children. Books will be specially written for us picturing
+a world where school fees are never demanded and babies never howl o'
+nights. Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Parents will
+arise. Little girls who get their hair entangled and mislay all
+their clothes just before they are starting for the party--little
+boys who kick holes in their best shoes will be spanked at the public
+expense.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+
+[Marriage and the Joke of it.]
+
+Marriages are made in heaven--"but solely," it has been added by a
+cynical writer, "for export." There is nothing more remarkable in
+human sociology than our attitude towards the institution of
+marriage. So it came home to me the other evening as I sat on a cane
+chair in the ill-lighted schoolroom of a small country town. The
+occasion was a Penny Reading. We had listened to the usual overture
+from Zampa, played by the lady professor and the eldest daughter of
+the brewer; to "Phil Blood's Leap," recited by the curate; to the
+violin solo by the pretty widow about whom gossip is whispered--one
+hopes it is not true. Then a pale-faced gentleman, with a drooping
+black moustache, walked on to the platform. It was the local tenor.
+He sang to us a song of love. Misunderstandings had arisen; bitter
+words, regretted as soon as uttered, had pierced the all too
+sensitive spirit. Parting had followed. The broken-hearted one had
+died believing his affection unrequited. But the angels had since
+told him; he knew she loved him now--the accent on the now.
+
+I glanced around me. We were the usual crowd of mixed humanity--
+tinkers, tailors, soldiers, sailors, with our cousins, and our
+sisters, and our wives. So many of our eyes were wet with tears.
+Miss Butcher could hardly repress her sobs. Young Mr. Tinker, his
+face hidden behind his programme, pretended to be blowing his nose.
+Mrs. Apothecary's large bosom heaved with heartfelt sighs. The
+retired Colonel sniffed audibly. Sadness rested on our souls. It
+might have been so different but for those foolish, hasty words!
+There need have been no funeral. Instead, the church might have been
+decked with bridal flowers. How sweet she would have looked beneath
+her orange wreath! How proudly, gladly, he might have responded "I
+will," take her for his wedded wife, to have and to hold from this
+day forward, for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness
+and in health, to love and to cherish, till death did them part. And
+thereto he might have plighted his troth.
+
+In the silence which reigned after the applause had subsided the
+beautiful words of the Marriage Service seemed to be stealing through
+the room: that they might ever remain in perfect love and peace
+together. Thy wife shall be as the fruitful vine. Thy children like
+the olive branches round about thy table. Lo! thus shall a man be
+blessed. So shall men love their wives as their own bodies, and be
+not bitter against them, giving honour unto them as unto the weaker
+vessel. Let the wife see that she reverence her husband, wearing the
+ornament of a meek and quiet spirit.
+
+[Love and the Satyr.]
+
+All the stories sung by the sweet singers of all time were echoing in
+our ears--stories of true love that would not run smoothly until the
+last chapter; of gallant lovers strong and brave against fate; of
+tender sweethearts, waiting, trusting, till love's golden crown was
+won; so they married and lived happy ever after.
+
+Then stepped briskly on the platform a stout, bald-headed man. We
+greeted him with enthusiasm--it was the local low comedian. The
+piano tinkled saucily. The self-confident man winked and opened wide
+his mouth. It was a funny song; how we roared with laughter! The
+last line of each verse was the same:
+
+"And that's what it's like when you're married."
+
+"Before it was 'duckie,' and 'darling,' and 'dear.' Now it's 'Take
+your cold feet away, Brute! can't you hear?'
+
+"Once they walked hand in hand: 'Me loves ickle 'oo.' Now he
+strides on ahead" (imitation with aid of umbrella much appreciated;
+the bald-headed man, in his enthusiasm and owing to the smallness of
+the platform, sweeping the lady accompanist off her stool), "bawling:
+'Come along, do.'"
+
+The bald-headed man interspersed side-splitting patter. The husband
+comes home late; the wife is waiting for him at the top of the stairs
+with a broom. He kisses the servant-girl. She retaliates by
+discovering a cousin in the Guards.
+
+The comic man retired to an enthusiastic demand for an encore. I
+looked around me at the laughing faces. Miss Butcher had been
+compelled to stuff her handkerchief into her mouth. Mr. Tinker was
+wiping his eyes; he was not ashamed this time, they were tears of
+merriment. Mrs. Apothecary's motherly bosom was shaking like a
+jelly. The Colonel was grinning from ear to ear.
+
+Later on, as I noticed in the programme, the schoolmistress, an
+unmarried lady, was down to sing "Darby and Joan." She has a
+sympathetic voice. Her "Darby and Joan" is always popular. The
+comic man would also again appear in the second part, and would
+oblige with (by request) "His Mother-in-Law."
+
+So the quaint comedy continues: To-night we will enjoy Romeo and
+Juliet, for to-morrow we have seats booked for The Pink Domino.
+
+[What the Gipsy did not mention.]
+
+"Won't the pretty lady let the poor old gipsy tell her fortune?"
+Blushes, giggles, protestations. Gallant gentleman friend insists.
+A dark man is in love with pretty lady. Gipsy sees a marriage not so
+very far ahead. Pretty lady says "What nonsense!" but looks serious.
+Pretty lady's pretty friends must, of course, be teasing. Gallant
+gentleman friend, by curious coincidence, happens to be dark. Gipsy
+grins and passes on.
+
+Is that all the gipsy knows of pretty lady's future? The rheumy,
+cunning eyes! They were bonny and black many years ago, when the
+parchment skin was smooth and fair. They have seen so many a passing
+show--do they see in pretty lady's hand nothing further?
+
+What would the wicked old eyes foresee did it pay them to speak: --
+Pretty lady crying tears into a pillow. Pretty lady growing ugly,
+spite and anger spoiling pretty features. Dark young man no longer
+loving. Dark young man hurling bitter words at pretty lady--hurling,
+maybe, things more heavy. Dark young man and pretty lady listening
+approvingly to comic singer, having both discovered: "That's what
+it's like when you're married."
+
+My friend H. G. Wells wrote a book, "The Island of Dr. Moreau." I
+read it in MS. one winter evening in a lonely country house upon the
+hills, wind screaming to wind in the dark without. The story has
+haunted me ever since. I hear the wind's shrill laughter. The
+doctor had taken the beasts of the forest, apes, tigers, strange
+creatures from the deep, had fashioned them with hideous cruelty into
+the shapes of men, had given them souls, had taught to them the law.
+In all things else were they human, but their original instincts
+their creator's skill had failed to eliminate. All their lives were
+one long torture. The Law said, "We are men and women; this we shall
+do, this we shall not do." But the ape and tiger still cried aloud
+within them.
+
+Civilization lays her laws upon us; they are the laws of gods--of the
+men that one day, perhaps, shall come. But the primeval creature of
+the cave still cries within us.
+
+[A few rules for Married Happiness.]
+
+The wonder is that not being gods--being mere men and women--marriage
+works out as well as it does. We take two creatures with the
+instincts of the ape still stirring within them; two creatures
+fashioned on the law of selfishness; two self-centred creatures of
+opposite appetites, of desires opposed to one another, of differing
+moods and fancies; two creatures not yet taught the lesson of self-
+control, of self-renunciation, and bind them together for life in an
+union so close that one cannot snore o'nights without disturbing the
+other's rest; that one cannot, without risk to happiness, have a
+single taste unshared by the other; that neither, without danger of
+upsetting the whole applecart, so to speak, can have an opinion with
+which the other does not heartedly agree.
+
+Could two angels exist together on such terms without ever
+quarrelling? I doubt it. To make marriage the ideal we love to
+picture it in romance, the elimination of human nature is the first
+essential. Supreme unselfishness, perfect patience, changeless
+amiability, we should have to start with, and continue with, until
+the end.
+
+[The real Darby and Joan.]
+
+I do not believe in the "Darby and Joan" of the song. They belong to
+song-land. To accept them I need a piano, a sympathetic contralto
+voice, a firelight effect, and that sentimental mood in myself, the
+foundation of which is a good dinner well digested. But there are
+Darbys and Joans of real flesh and blood to be met with--God bless
+them, and send more for our example--wholesome living men and women,
+brave, struggling, souls with common-sense. Ah, yes! they have
+quarrelled; had their dark house of bitterness, of hate, when he
+wished to heaven he had never met her, and told her so. How could he
+have guessed those sweet lips could utter such cruel words; those
+tender eyes, he loved to kiss, flash with scorn and anger?
+
+And she, had she known what lay behind; those days when he knelt
+before her, swore that his only dream was to save her from all pain.
+Passion lies dead; it is a flame that burns out quickly. The most
+beautiful face in the world grows indifferent to us when we have sat
+opposite it every morning at breakfast, every evening at supper, for
+a brief year or two. Passion is the seed. Love grows from it, a
+tender sapling, beautiful to look upon, but wondrous frail, easily
+broken, easily trampled on during those first years of wedded life.
+Only by much nursing, by long caring-for, watered with tears, shall
+it grow into a sturdy tree, defiant of the winds, 'neath which Darby
+and Joan shall sit sheltered in old age.
+
+They had commonsense, brave hearts. Darby had expected too much.
+Darby had not made allowance for human nature which he ought to have
+done, seeing how much he had of it himself. Joan knows he did not
+mean it. Joan has a nasty temper; she admits it. Joan will try,
+Darby will try. They kiss again with tears. It is a workaday world;
+Darby and Joan will take it as it is, will do their best. A little
+kindness, a little clasping of the hands before night comes.
+
+[Many ways of Love]
+
+Youth deems it heresy, but I sometimes wonder if our English speaking
+way is quite the best. I discussed the subject once with an old
+French lady. The English reader forms his idea of French life from
+the French novel; it leads to mistaken notions. There are French
+Darbys, French Joans, many thousands of them.
+
+"Believe me," said my old French friend, "your English way is wrong;
+our way is not perfect, but it is the better, I am sure. You leave
+it entirely to the young people. What do they know of life, of
+themselves, even. He falls in love with a pretty face. She--he
+danced so well! he was so agreeable that day of the picnic! If
+marriage were only for a month or so; could be ended without harm
+when the passion was burnt out. Ah, yes! then perhaps you would be
+right. I loved at eighteen, madly--nearly broke my heart. I meet
+him occasionally now. My dear"--her hair was silvery white, and I
+was only thirty-five; she always called me "my dear"; it is pleasant
+at thirty-five to be talked to as a child. "He was a perfect brute,
+handsome he had been, yes, but all that was changed. He was as
+stupid as an ox. I never see his poor frightened-looking wife
+without shuddering thinking of what I have escaped. They told me all
+that, but I looked only at his face, and did not believe them. They
+forced me into marriage with the kindest man that ever lived. I did
+not love him then, but I loved him for thirty years; was it not
+better?"
+
+"But, my dear friend," I answered; "that poor, frightened-looking
+wife of your first love! Her marriage also was, I take it, the
+result of parental choosing. The love marriage, I admit, as often as
+not turns out sadly. The children choose ill. Parents also choose
+ill. I fear there is no sure receipt for the happy marriage."
+
+"You are arguing from bad examples," answered my silver-haired
+friend; "it is the system that I am defending. A young girl is no
+judge of character. She is easily deceived, is wishful to be
+deceived. As I have said, she does not even know herself. She
+imagines the mood of the moment will remain with her. Only those who
+have watched over her with loving insight from her infancy know her
+real temperament.
+
+"The young man is blinded by his passion. Nature knows nothing of
+marriage, of companionship. She has only one aim. That
+accomplished, she is indifferent to the future of those she has
+joined together. I would have parents think only of their children's
+happiness, giving to worldly considerations their true value, but
+nothing beyond, choosing for their children with loving care, with
+sense of their great responsibility."
+
+[Which is it?]
+
+"I fear our young people would not be contented with our choosing," I
+suggested.
+
+"Are they so contented with their own, the honeymoon over?" she
+responded with a smile.
+
+We agreed it was a difficult problem viewed from any point.
+
+But I still think it would be better were we to heap less ridicule
+upon the institution. Matrimony cannot be "holy" and ridiculous at
+the same time. We have been familiar with it long enough to make up
+our minds in which light to regard it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+
+[Man and his Tailor.]
+
+What's wrong with the "Made-up Tie"? I gather from the fashionable
+novelist that no man can wear a made-up tie and be a gentleman. He
+may be a worthy man, clever, well-to-do, eligible from every other
+point of view; but She, the refined heroine, can never get over the
+fact that he wears a made-up tie. It causes a shudder down her high-
+bred spine whenever she thinks of it. There is nothing else to be
+said against him. There is nothing worse about him than this--he
+wears a made-up tie. It is all sufficient. No true woman could ever
+care for him, no really classy society ever open its doors to him.
+
+I am worried about this thing because, to confess the horrid truth, I
+wear a made-up tie myself. On foggy afternoons I steal out of the
+house disguised. They ask me where I am going in a hat that comes
+down over my ears, and why I am wearing blue spectacles and a false
+beard, but I will not tell them. I creep along the wall till I find
+a common hosier's shop, and then, in an assumed voice, I tell the man
+what it is I want. They come to fourpence halfpenny each; by taking
+the half-dozen I get them for a trifle less. They are put on in a
+moment, and, to my vulgar eye, look neat and tasteful.
+
+Of course, I know I am not a gentleman. I have given up hopes of
+ever being one. Years ago, when life presented possibilities, I
+thought that with pains and intelligence I might become one. I never
+succeeded. It all depends on being able to tie a bow. Round the
+bed-post, or the neck of the water-jug, I could tie the wretched
+thing to perfection. If only the bed-post or the water-jug could
+have taken my place and gone to the party instead of me, life would
+have been simpler. The bed-post and the water-jug, in its neat white
+bow, looked like a gentleman--the fashionable novelist's idea of a
+gentleman. Upon myself the result was otherwise, suggesting always a
+feeble attempt at suicide by strangulation. I could never understand
+how it was done. There were moments when it flashed across me that
+the secret lay in being able to turn one's self inside out, coming up
+with one's arms and legs the other way round. Standing on one's head
+might have surmounted the difficulty; but the higher gymnastics
+Nature has denied to me. "The Boneless Wonder" or the "Man Serpent"
+could, I felt, be a gentleman so easily. To one to whom has been
+given only the common ordinary joints gentlemanliness is apparently
+an impossible ideal.
+
+It is not only the tie. I never read the fashionable novel without
+misgiving. Some hopeless bounder is being described:
+
+"If you want to know what he is like," says the Peer of the Realm,
+throwing himself back in his deep easy-chair, and puffing lazily at
+his cigar of delicate aroma, "he is the sort of man that wears three
+studs in his shirt."
+
+[The difficulty of being a Gentleman.]
+
+Merciful heavens! I myself wear three studs in my shirt. I also am
+a hopeless bounder, and I never knew it. It comes upon me like a
+thunderbolt. I thought three studs were fashionable. The idiot at
+the shop told me three studs were all the rage, and I ordered two
+dozen. I can't afford to throw them away. Till these two dozen
+shirts are worn out, I shall have to remain a hopeless bounder.
+
+Why have we not a Minister of the Fine Arts? Why does not a paternal
+Government fix notices at the street corners, telling the would-be
+gentleman how many studs he ought to wear, what style of necktie now
+distinguishes the noble-minded man from the base-hearted? They are
+prompt enough with their police regulations, their vaccination
+orders--the higher things of life they neglect.
+
+I select at random another masterpiece of English literature.
+
+"My dear," says Lady Montresor, with her light aristocratic laugh,
+"you surely cannot seriously think of marrying a man who wears socks
+with yellow spots?"
+
+Lady Emmelina sighs.
+
+"He is very nice," she murmurs, "but I suppose you are right. I
+suppose that sort of man does get on your nerves after a time."
+
+"My dear child," says Lady Montresor, "he is impossible."
+
+In a cold sweat I rush upstairs into my bedroom.
+
+I thought so: I am always wrong. All my best socks have yellow
+spots. I rather fancied them. They were expensive, too, now I come
+to think of it.
+
+What am I to do? If I sacrifice them and get red spots, then red
+spots, for all I know, may be wrong. I have no instinct. The
+fashionable novelist never helps one. He tells us what is wrong, but
+he does not tell us what is right. It is creative criticism that I
+feel the need of. Why does not the Lady Montresor go on? Tell me
+what sort of socks the ideal lover ought to wear. There are so many
+varieties of socks. What is a would-be-gentleman to do? Would it be
+of any use writing to the fashionable novelist:-
+
+[How we might, all of us, be Gentlemen.]
+
+"Dear Mr. Fashionable Novelist (or should it be Miss?),--Before going
+to my tailor, I venture to write to you on a subject of some
+importance. I am fairly well educated, of good family and address,
+and, so my friends tell me, of passable appearance. I yearn to
+become a gentleman. If it is not troubling you too much, would you
+mind telling me how to set about the business? What socks and ties
+ought I to wear? Do I wear a flower in my button-hole, or is that a
+sign of a coarse mind? How many buttons on a morning coat show a
+beautiful nature? Does a stand-up collar with a tennis shirt prove
+that you are of noble descent, or, on the contrary, stamp you as a
+parvenu? If answering these questions imposes too great a tax on
+your time, perhaps you would not mind telling me how you yourself
+know these things. Who is your authority, and when is he at home? I
+should apologize for writing to you but that I feel you will
+sympathize with my appeal. It seems a pity there should be so many
+vulgar, ill-bred people in the world when a little knowledge on these
+trivial points would enable us all to become gentlemen. Thanking you
+in anticipation, I remain . . . "
+
+Would he or she tell us? Or would the fashionable novelist reply as
+I once overheard a harassed mother retort upon one of her inquiring
+children. Most of the afternoon she had been rushing out into the
+garden, where games were in progress, to tell the children what they
+must not do: --"Tommy, you know you must not do that. Haven't you
+got any sense at all?" "Johnny, you wicked boy, how dare you do
+that; how many more times do you want me to tell you?" "Jane, if you
+do that again you will go straight to bed, my girl!" and so on.
+
+At length the door was opened from without, and a little face peeped
+in: "Mother!"
+
+"Now, what is it? can't I ever get a moment's peace?"
+
+"Mother, please would you mind telling us something we might do?"
+
+The lady almost fell back on the floor in her astonishment. The idea
+had never occurred to her.
+
+"What may you do! Don't ask me. I am tired enough of telling you
+what not to do."
+
+[Things a Gentleman should never do.]
+
+I remember when a young man, wishful to conform to the rules of good
+society, I bought a book of etiquette for gentlemen. Its fault was
+just this. It told me through many pages what not to do. Beyond
+that it seemed to have no idea. I made a list of things it said a
+gentleman should NEVER do: it was a lengthy list.
+
+Determined to do the job completely while I was about it, I bought
+other books of etiquette and added on their list of "Nevers." What
+one book left out another supplied. There did not seem much left for
+a gentleman to do.
+
+I concluded by the time I had come to the end of my books, that to be
+a true gentleman my safest course would be to stop in bed for the
+rest of my life. By this means only could I hope to avoid every
+possible faux pas, every solecism. I should have lived and died a
+gentleman. I could have had it engraved upon my tombstone:
+
+"He never in his life committed a single act unbecoming to a
+gentleman."
+
+To be a gentleman is not so easy, perhaps, as a fashionable novelist
+imagines. One is forced to the conclusion that it is not a question
+entirely for the outfitter. My attention was attracted once by a
+notice in the window of a West-End emporium, "Gentlemen supplied."
+
+It is to such like Universal Providers that the fashionable novelist
+goes for his gentleman. The gentleman is supplied to him complete in
+every detail. If the reader be not satisfied, that is the reader's
+fault. He is one of those tiresome, discontented customers who does
+not know a good article when he has got it.
+
+I was told the other day of the writer of a musical farce (or is it
+comedy?) who was most desirous that his leading character should be a
+perfect gentleman. During the dress rehearsal, the actor
+representing the part had to open his cigarette case and request
+another perfect gentleman to help himself. The actor drew forth his
+case. It caught the critical eye of the author.
+
+"Good heavens!" he cried, "what do you call that?"
+
+"A cigarette case," answered the actor.
+
+"But, my dear boy," exclaimed the author, "surely it is silver?"
+
+"I know," admitted the actor, "it does perhaps suggest that I am
+living beyond my means, but the truth is I picked it up cheap."
+
+The author turned to the manager.
+
+"This won't do," he explained, "a real gentleman always carries a
+gold cigarette case. He must be a gentleman, or there's no point in
+the plot."
+
+"Don't let us endanger any point the plot may happen to possess, for
+goodness sake," agreed the manager, "let him by all means have a gold
+cigarette case."
+
+[How one may know the perfect Gentleman.]
+
+So, regardless of expense, a gold cigarette case was obtained and put
+down to expenses. And yet on the first night of that musical play,
+when that leading personage smashed a tray over a waiter's head, and,
+after a row with the police, came home drunk to his wife, even that
+gold cigarette case failed to convince one that the man was a
+gentleman beyond all doubt.
+
+The old writers appear to have been singularly unaware of the
+importance attaching to these socks, and ties, and cigarette-cases.
+They told us merely what the man felt and thought. What reliance can
+we place upon them? How could they possibly have known what sort of
+man he was underneath his clothes? Tweed or broadcloth is not
+transparent. Even could they have got rid of his clothes there would
+have remained his flesh and bones. It was pure guess-work. They did
+not observe.
+
+The modern writer goes to work scientifically. He tells us that the
+creature wore a made-up tie. From that we know he was not a
+gentleman; it follows as the night the day. The fashionable novelist
+notices the young man's socks. It reveals to us whether the marriage
+would have been successful or a failure. It is necessary to convince
+us that the hero is a perfect gentleman: the author gives him a gold
+cigarette case.
+
+A well-known dramatist has left it on record that comedy cannot exist
+nowadays, for the simple reason that gentlemen have given up taking
+snuff and wearing swords. How can one have comedy in company with
+frock-coats--without its "Las" and its "Odds Bobs."
+
+The sword may have been helpful. I have been told that at levees
+City men, unaccustomed to the thing, have, with its help, provided
+comedy for the rest of the company.
+
+But I take it this is not the comedy our dramatist had in mind.
+
+[Why not an Exhibition of Gentlemen?]
+
+It seems a pity that comedy should disappear from among us. If it
+depend entirely on swords and snuff-boxes, would it not be worth the
+while of the Society of Authors to keep a few gentlemen specially
+trained? Maybe some sympathetic theatrical manager would lend us
+costumes of the eighteenth century. We might provide them with
+swords and snuff-boxes. They might meet, say, once a week, in a
+Queen Anne drawing-room, especially prepared by Gillow, and go
+through their tricks. Authors seeking high-class comedy might be
+admitted to a gallery.
+
+Perhaps this explains why old-fashioned readers complain that we do
+not give them human nature. How can we? Ladies and gentlemen
+nowadays don't wear the proper clothes. Evidently it all depends
+upon the clothes.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+
+[Woman and her behaviour.]
+
+Should women smoke?
+
+The question, in four-inch letters, exhibited on a placard outside a
+small newsvendor's shop, caught recently my eye. The wanderer
+through London streets is familiar with such-like appeals to his
+decision: "Should short men marry tall wives?" "Ought we to cut our
+hair?" "Should second cousins kiss?" Life's problems appear to be
+endless.
+
+Personally, I am not worrying myself whether women should smoke or
+not. It seems to me a question for the individual woman to decide
+for herself. I like women who smoke; I can see no objection to their
+smoking. Smoking soothes the nerves. Women's nerves occasionally
+want soothing. The tiresome idiot who argues that smoking is
+unwomanly denounces the drinking of tea as unmanly. He is a wooden-
+headed person who derives all his ideas from cheap fiction. The
+manly man of cheap fiction smokes a pipe and drinks whisky. That is
+how we know he is a man. The womanly woman--well, I always feel I
+could make a better woman myself out of an old clothes shop and a
+hair-dresser's block.
+
+But, as I have said, the question does not impress me as one
+demanding my particular attention. I also like the woman who does
+not smoke. I have met in my time some very charming women who do not
+smoke. It may be a sign of degeneracy, but I am prepared to abdicate
+my position of woman's god, leaving her free to lead her own life.
+
+[Woman's God.]
+
+Candidly, the responsibility of feeling myself answerable for all a
+woman does or does not do would weigh upon me. There are men who are
+willing to take this burden upon themselves, and a large number of
+women are still anxious that they should continue to bear it. I
+spoke quite seriously to a young lady not long ago on the subject of
+tight lacing; undoubtedly she was injuring her health. She admitted
+it herself.
+
+"I know all you can say," she wailed; "I daresay a lot of it is true.
+Those awful pictures where one sees--well, all the things one does
+not want to think about. If they are correct, it must be bad,
+squeezing it all up together."
+
+"Then why continue to do so?" I argued.
+
+"Oh, it's easy enough to talk," she explained; "a few old fogies like
+you"--I had been speaking very plainly to her, and she was cross with
+me--"may pretend you don't like small waists, but the average man
+does."
+
+Poor girl! She was quite prepared to injure herself for life, to
+damage her children's future, to be uncomfortable for fifteen hours a
+day, all to oblige the average man.
+
+It is a compliment to our sex. What man would suffer injury and
+torture to please the average woman? This frenzied desire of woman
+to conform to our ideals is touching. A few daring spirits of late
+years have exhibited a tendency to seek for other gods--for ideals of
+their own. We call them the unsexed women. The womanly women lift
+up their hands in horror of such blasphemy.
+
+When I was a boy no womanly woman rode a bicycle--tricycles were
+permitted. On three wheels you could still be womanly, but on two
+you were "a creature"! The womanly woman, seeing her approach, would
+draw down the parlour blind with a jerk, lest the children looking
+out might catch a glimpse of her, and their young souls be smirched
+for all eternity.
+
+No womanly woman rode inside a hansom or outside a 'bus. I remember
+the day my own dear mother climbed outside a 'bus for the first time
+in her life. She was excited, and cried a little; but nobody--heaven
+be praised!--saw us--that is, nobody of importance. And afterwards
+she confessed the air was pleasant.
+
+"Be not the first by whom the new is tried, Nor yet the last to lay
+the old aside," is a safe rule for those who would always retain the
+good opinion of that all-powerful, but somewhat unintelligent,
+incubus, "the average person," but the pioneer, the guide, is
+necessary. That is, if the world is to move forward.
+
+The freedom-loving girl of to-day, who can enjoy a walk by herself
+without losing her reputation, who can ride down the street on her
+"bike" without being hooted at, who can play a mixed double at tennis
+without being compelled by public opinion to marry her partner, who
+can, in short, lead a human creature's life, and not that of a lap-
+dog led about at the end of a string, might pause to think what she
+owes to the "unsexed creatures" who fought her battle for her fifty
+years ago.
+
+[Those unsexed Creatures]
+
+Can the working woman of to-day, who may earn her own living, if she
+will, without loss of the elementary rights of womanhood, think of
+the bachelor girl of a short generation ago without admiration of her
+pluck? There were ladies in those day too "unwomanly" to remain
+helpless burdens on overworked fathers and mothers, too "unsexed" to
+marry the first man that came along for the sake of their bread and
+butter. They fought their way into journalism, into the office, into
+the shop. The reformer is not always the pleasantest man to invite
+to a tea-party. Maybe these women who went forward with the flag
+were not the most charming of their sex. The "Dora Copperfield" type
+will for some time remain the young man's ideal, the model the young
+girl puts before herself. Myself, I think Dora Copperfield charming,
+but a world of Dora Copperfields!
+
+The working woman is a new development in sociology. She has many
+lessons to learn, but one has hopes of her. It is said that she is
+unfitting herself to be a wife and mother. If the ideal helpmeet for
+a man be an animated Dresden china shepherdess--something that looks
+pretty on the table, something to be shown round to one's friends,
+something that can be locked up safely in a cupboard, that asks no
+questions, and, therefore, need be told no lies--then a woman who has
+learnt something of the world, who has formed ideas of her own, will
+not be the ideal wife.
+
+[References given--and required.]
+
+Maybe the average man will not be her ideal husband. Each Michaelmas
+at a little town in the Thames Valley with which I am acquainted
+there is held a hiring fair. A farmer one year laid his hand on a
+lively-looking lad, and asked him if he wanted a job. It was what
+the boy was looking for.
+
+"Got a character?" asked the farmer. The boy replied that he had for
+the last two years been working for Mr. Muggs, the ironmonger--felt
+sure that Mr. Muggs would give him a good character.
+
+"Well, go and ask Mr. Muggs to come across and speak to me, I will
+wait here," directed the would-be employer. Five minutes went by--
+ten minutes. No Mr. Muggs appeared. Later in the afternoon the
+farmer met the boy again.
+
+"Mr. Muggs never came near me with that character of yours," said the
+farmer.
+
+"No, sir," answered the boy, "I didn't ask him to."
+
+"Why not?" inquired the farmer.
+
+"Well, I told him who it was that wanted it"--the boy hesitated.
+
+"Well?" demanded the farmer, impatiently.
+
+"Well, then, he told me yours," explained the boy.
+
+Maybe the working woman, looking for a husband, and not merely a
+livelihood, may end by formulating standards of her own. She may end
+by demanding the manly man and moving about the world, knowing
+something of life, may arrive at the conclusion that something more
+is needed than the smoking of pipes and the drinking of whiskies and
+sodas. We must be prepared for this. The sheltered woman who learnt
+her life from fairy stories is a dream of the past. Woman has
+escaped from her "shelter"--she is on the loose. For the future we
+men have got to accept the emancipated woman as an accomplished fact.
+
+[The ideal World.]
+
+Many of us are worried about her. What is going to become of the
+home? I admit there is a more ideal existence where the working
+woman would find no place; it is in a world that exists only on the
+comic opera stage. There every picturesque village contains an equal
+number of ladies and gentlemen nearly all the same height and weight,
+to all appearance of the same age. Each Jack has his Jill, and does
+not want anybody else's. There are no complications: one presumes
+they draw lots and fall in love the moment they unscrew the paper.
+They dance for awhile on grass which is never damp, and then into the
+conveniently situated ivy-covered church they troop in pairs and are
+wedded off hand by a white-haired clergyman, who is a married man
+himself.
+
+Ah, if the world were but a comic opera stage, there would be no need
+for working women! As a matter of fact, so far as one can judge from
+the front of the house, there are no working men either.
+
+But outside the opera house in the muddy street Jack goes home to his
+third floor back, or his chambers in the Albany, according to his
+caste, and wonders when the time will come when he will be able to
+support a wife. And Jill climbs on a penny 'bus, or steps into the
+family brougham, and dreams with regret of a lost garden, where there
+was just one man and just one woman, and clothes grew on a fig tree.
+
+With the progress of civilization--utterly opposed as it is to all
+Nature's intentions--the number of working women will increase. With
+some friends the other day I was discussing motor-cars, and one
+gentleman with sorrow in his voice--he is the type of Conservative
+who would have regretted the passing away of the glacial period--
+opined that motor-cars had come to stay.
+
+"You mean," said another, "they have come to go." The working woman,
+however much we may regret it, has come to go, and she is going it.
+We shall have to accept her and see what can be done with her. One
+thing is certain, we shall not solve the problem of the twentieth
+century by regretting the simple sociology of the Stone Age.
+
+[A Lover's View.]
+
+Speaking as a lover, I welcome the openings that are being given to
+women to earn their own livelihood. I can conceive of no more
+degrading profession for a woman--no profession more calculated to
+unfit her for being that wife and mother we talk so much about than
+the profession that up to a few years ago was the only one open to
+her--the profession of husband-hunting.
+
+As a man, I object to being regarded as woman's last refuge, her one
+and only alternative to the workhouse. I cannot myself see why the
+woman who has faced the difficulties of existence, learnt the lesson
+of life, should not make as good a wife and mother as the ignorant
+girl taken direct, one might almost say, from the nursery, and,
+without the slightest preparation, put in a position of
+responsibility that to a thinking person must be almost appalling.
+
+It has been said that the difference between men and women is this:
+That the man goes about the world making it ready for the children,
+that the woman stops at home making the children ready for the world.
+Will not she do it much better for knowing something of the world,
+for knowing something of the temptations, the difficulties, her own
+children will have to face, for having learnt by her own experience
+to sympathize with the struggles, the sordid heart-breaking cares
+that man has daily to contend with?
+
+Civilization is ever undergoing transformation, but human nature
+remains. The bachelor girl, in her bed-sitting room, in her studio,
+in her flat, will still see in the shadows the vision of the home,
+will still hear in the silence the sound of children's voices, will
+still dream of the lover's kiss that is to open up new life to her.
+She is not quite so unsexed as you may think, my dear womanly madame.
+A male friend of mine was telling me of a catastrophe that once
+occurred at a station in the East Indies.
+
+[No time to think of Husbands.]
+
+A fire broke out at night, and everybody was in terror lest it should
+reach the magazine. The women and children were being hurried to the
+ships, and two ladies were hastening past my friend. One of them
+paused, and, clasping her hands, demanded of him if he knew what had
+become of her husband. Her companion was indignant.
+
+"For goodness' sake, don't dawdle, Maria," she cried; "this is no
+time to think of husbands."
+
+There is no reason to fear that the working woman will ever cease to
+think of husbands. Maybe, as I have said, she will demand a better
+article than the mere husband-hunter has been able to stand out for.
+Maybe she herself will have something more to give; maybe she will
+bring to him broader sympathies, higher ideals. The woman who has
+herself been down among the people, who has faced life in the open,
+will know that the home is but one cell of the vast hive.
+
+We shall, perhaps, hear less of the woman who "has her own home and
+children to think of--really takes no interest in these matters"--
+these matters of right and wrong, these matters that spell the
+happiness or misery of millions.
+
+[The Wife of the Future.]
+
+Maybe the bridegroom of the future will not say, "I have married a
+wife, and therefore I cannot come," but "I have married a wife; we
+will both come."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext The Angel and the Author, by Jerome
+
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