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diff --git a/23726.txt b/23726.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ec9f584 --- /dev/null +++ b/23726.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2346 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 146, +March 11, 1914, by Various, Edited by Owen Seaman + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 146, March 11, 1914 + + +Author: Various + +Editor: Owen Seaman + +Release Date: December 3, 2007 [eBook #23726] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI, +VOL. 146, MARCH 11, 1914*** + + +E-text prepared by Matt Whittaker, Malcolm Farmer, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 23726-h.htm or 23726-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/3/7/2/23726/23726-h/23726-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/3/7/2/23726/23726-h.zip) + + + + + +PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI + +VOL. 146 + +MARCH 11, 1914 + + + + + + + +CHARIVARIA. + +A contemporary describes one of the deported Nine as the Brain of the +party. This is a distinction which just eluded Mr. BAIN. + + * * * + +The Admiralty has decided that, in the place of the grand manoeuvres this +year, there shall be a surprise mobilisation. Last year's manoeuvres were, +we believe, something of a fiasco, but to ensure the success of the +surprise mobilisation five months' previous notice is given. + + * * * + +"Every man," says the Bishop of LONDON, "must be his own Columbus and find +the continent of truth." This is the first time that we had heard America +called the continent of truth, and one wonders where the present fashion of +flattery is going to end. + + * * * + +We read that a Russian writer named LUNATCHARSKY has been expelled from +Germany. Is it possible that he is a relative of Mr. MAX BEERBOHM'S friend +Kolniyatchi? + + * * * + +At the Grand Military Meeting at Sandown Park, two young millionaires +figured as amateur jockeys. We understand now the meaning of the expression +"putting money on a horse." + + * * * + +"Futurist frocks," we are told, were a feature of the Chelsea Arts Club +ball. Just as in these days "Fancy Dress" often seems to mean that the +dress is left to the fancy, Futurist frocks, we presume, are frocks that +may appear in the future. + + * * * + +An American journalist has been pointing out how London lags behind other +great cities in the matter of shop-window dressing. There would seem to be +no limit to our decadence. Even our shop-windows are inadequately clothed. + + * * * + +A meeting has been held at Kingston to consider the possibility of +providing "some counter attraction" for the young people who frequent the +streets on Sunday evenings. Seeing that most of them are at the counter +during the week--you catch the idea? + + * * * + +"Monkey nuts are dangerous," said Dr. ROUND at an inquest last week. +Judging by the mild-looking specimens one sees walking about in the streets +appearances are certainly deceptive. + + * * * + +A contemporary, by the way, propounds the question: Why does the "nut" +always wear his headgear on the back of his head? This custom is certainly +queer, for, if he really cared about his personal appearance, he would wear +the hat over his face. + + * * * + +We regret to learn that an attempt to teach a modern Office Boy manners has +failed. A friend of ours met his Office Boy in the street, and the lad +merely nodded to him. To shame him the Master raised his hat with mock +solemnity, at which the lad said, "That's all right, but you needn't do +it." + + * * * + +The fashion, which originated on the Continent, of having the face and neck +painted with miniature works of art is reported to be spreading to London. +And the practical Americans are said to be considering a further +development in the form of advertisements on the face by means of neat +inscriptions, such as "Complexion by Rouge et Cie," "Teeth by Max Gumberg," +and "Dimples excavated by the American Face Mining Co." + + * * * + +"England," says General CARRANZA, "is the world's bully." The General must +please have patience with us, for there are signs that we are improving. In +the same issue of the evening paper which reported this dictum of his the +following announcement appeared under the heading "LATEST NEWS":--"There +were no bullion operations reported at the Bank of England to-day." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Curate_ (_forte_). "... TO HAVE-AND-TO-HOLD." + +_Bridegroom_ (_deaf_). "EH?" + +_Curate_ (_fortissimo_). "TO--HAVE--AND--TO--HOLD." + +_Bridegroom._ "TO 'AVE AND TO 'OLD." + +_Curate._ "FROM--THIS--DAY--FORWARD." + +_Bridegroom._ "TILL THIS DAY FORTNIGHT!"] + + * * * * * + +BYLES FOR THE BILL. + + [In a letter addressed to _The Times_, headed "PASS THE BILL AND TAKE + THE CONSEQUENCES," Sir WILLIAM BYLES makes the statement:--"I for one + will take the risk without hesitation."] + + Darkling I sing. Ere Tuesday's hour for tea + Shall set this doggerel in the glare of day, + He who adjured us still to "wait and see," + He will have tweaked the mystic veil away, + And you will know--whatever it may be. + + You, but not I; for I have yet to wait. + Far South, beneath (I hope) a stainless sky + The pregnant news shall find me, rather late, + Powerless to watch the ball with steadfast eye + Through sheer distraction as to Ulster's fate. + + Fain would I have upon my well-pricked ear + Such tidings fall as prove that party pride + Yields with a mutual grace. And yet I fear + These desperadoes on the Liberal side-- + BILL BYLES (for one), the Bradford Buccaneer. + + "Pass"--so he boldly writes--"the Bill and take + (His conscience will not let him run to "damn") + "The Consequences." That is why I shake + Even as when the shorn and shivering lamb + Observes the wolf advancing in his wake. + + I see him bear, this dreadful man of gore, + A brace of battleaxes at the slope; + I see him fling his gauntlet on the floor, + And (shouting, "BYLES for REDMOND and the POPE!") + Let loose the Nonconformist Dogs of War. + + Ah! take and hide me in some hollow lair, + Red hills of Var! and ye umbrella-pines, + Cover me like a gamp! I cannot bear + This Apparition with its armed lines + Humming the strain, "_Sir BYLES s'en va-t-en guerre_." + + _March 7._ + + O. S. + + * * * * * + +THE END OF IT ALL. + +It was the opening of the new Parliament of 1919 A.D. + +They had got IT. + +If you can't guess what they had got you must be obtuse. + +The great procession of Women M.P.'s formed in Trafalgar Square. Behind +them were the ruins of the National Gallery (the work of the immortal Miss +Podgers, B.Sc.); before them were the fragments of the Nelson Column (Miss +Tunk's world-famous feat). + +The free fight concerning the leadership of the procession was settled by +the intervention of mounted police. They decided that all the would-be +leaders should march abreast with two armed policemen between each pair of +them to prevent casualties by the way. So the head of the procession +started off sixty abreast down Whitehall. + +It was a magnificent spectacle. All the M.P.'s wore green-and-white wigs +because it was the fashion, and in addition green-and-white whiskers to +assert their equality with men. Each processionist carried a model of her +greatest work. There was Mrs. Spankham with a superb model of Westminster +Abbey--its petrolling had been the greatest stroke in convincing the voters +of the pure motives of the feminists. Miss Sylvia Spankham bore aloft the +City Temple, Miss Christabel Spankham the Albert Hall, whilst Mrs. Lawrence +Pothook waved triumphantly a lovely representation of King's Cross Station. +Magnificent too was Mrs. Drummit riding astride a fire-engine as an emblem +of peace and goodwill. + +The crowd viewed the procession with awed silence, only breaking into +cheers when Miss Blithers, blushing modestly, held up a cardboard +representation of the Albert Memorial she had nitro-glycerined. Miss Bliggs +marched triumphantly in a bishop's mitre bearing a pastoral staff, in +recognition of her great feat in forcibly feeding a wicked bishop who had +written a letter to the Press against forcible, feeding. Misunderstood by +the crowd was Mrs. Trudge, who wheeled a perambulator containing two +babies. The onlookers thought that Mrs. Trudge was about to take her +innocent offspring to the House of Commons, and those out of hat-pin range +murmured, "Shime," "Give the kids a chawnce." They did not know that Mrs. +Trudge was no base slave of man, that she had no children of her own, and +that the wax babies she wheeled in the perambulator merely indicated that +she was the heroine who had doped a nursemaid with drugged chocolate and +abducted a Cabinet Minister's twins. + +Unhappily Miss Bolland also passed unidentified, though she held a +cardboard tube aloft. Not even a taxi-driver cheered as the intrepid lady +passed who had blown up the electrical-generation station of the Tubes and +made London walk for a month. There too was Mrs. Tibbs, brave in her +misfortunes. She had missed her election by one vote just because, when she +came to the booth to vote for herself, lifelong habit had been too strong +for her and she had phosphorused the ballot box. + +An unfortunate breeze from the river played havoc with the processionists' +whiskers, and one or two of the weaker spirits in the ranks argued that +some of the Government offices in Whitehall ought to have been left +standing for protection--at any rate till the procession was over. + +On they went, each of the twenty leaders in front explaining how SHE had +led the movement to triumph. On the top of the fire-engine Mrs. Drummit +danced a futurist dance, symbolic of the subjection of man. At last they +reached the portals of the House. The leaders broke into a run to secure +front places on the Government benches. + +"Stop," cried a police superintendent, rushing from the building. + +"The days of man's tyranny are over!" shouted twenty voices together. + +"Maybe," said the police superintendent, "but some of 'em are catching up +to you. They've dynamited the Houses of Parliament, and if you go inside +you'll pop like roasted chestnuts." + +And as they watched the flame the leaders realised the sad fact that they +had not left a building standing in London roomy enough for a Parliament. + + * * * * * + +Commercial Candour. + + "---- Tooth Brushes are so constructed that the bristles get right + into the smallest crevices of the teeth. Moreover the bristles + positively won't come out."--_Advt. in "London Opinion."_ + +That has sometimes been our bitter experience. + + * * * * * + +The Choir Inaudible. + + "The chorus gave ample evidence of having made great strides since + their last appearance in public, all the items for which they were + responsible being well sustained and rendered in first-class style. + Special mention should be made, however, of their rendering of 'A + Spring Song,' which was given in quite a professional manner, the + chorus dispensing with both music and words, and the audience evinced + their appreciation of this really fine effort by long continued + applause, to which the chorus responded by repeating it." + + _Avalon Independent._ + +There would probably be no words to the applause and very little music; so +the chorus could easily repeat it. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GIFT FOR GIFT. + +GENERAL BOTHA. "WELL, I SUPPOSE ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER; WE MUST +GIVE HIM A WARM RECEPTION."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE BRUTE AGAIN. + +_Weary Hostess._ "YES, I'VE BEEN HAVING SUCH TROUBLE WITH BABY. EVERY NIGHT +I HAVE TO GET UP ABOUT TWENTY TIMES, GETTING HIS THINGS----" + +_Visitor._ "WHY DON'T YOU MAKE YOUR HUSBAND DO SOMETHING?" + +_Hostess._ "OH, I DAREN'T WAKE MY HUSBAND; IF I DO HE ALWAYS DRINKS BABY'S +MILK."] + + * * * * * + +STUDIES IN DISCIPLESHIP. + +_THE TIMES'_ THIRD LEADER. + +The statement made in these columns by a well-informed correspondent that +the incomparable NIJINSKY is so delicate that by his doctor's decree he is +obliged to abstain from all forms of exercise save that involved in his +beloved art, gives us, in the vivid phrase of our neighbours, "furiously to +think." At the first blush incredulity prevails, but recourse to the annals +of history, ancient and modern alike, furnishes us with abundant +confirmation of this strange anomaly. HANNIBAL was a martyr to indigestion, +while his great rival, SCIPIO AFRICANUS, suffered from sea-sickness even +when crossing the Tiber. Wherever we look we are confronted with the +spectacle of genius fraying its way to the appointed goal in spite of +physical drawbacks which would have paralysed meritorious mediocrity. WOLFE +was a _poitrinaire_, and NELSON would never have passed the medical +examination to which the naval cadets of to-day are subjected. But the case +of NIJINSKY is more tragic because abstinence from skating and riding, of +which he was passionately fond, entails greater anguish on so sensitively +organised a temperament than it would on a mere man of action, and the +suffering of a great artist may lead to international complications which +it is terrible to complicate. Russian dancing is as necessary to the +well-being of our social system as standard bread, yet when we think of the +sacrifices which its hierophants undergo in order to minister to our +pleasure the sturdiest Hedonist cannot escape misgivings. Still, we may +find consolation in the thought that sacrifice is necessary to perfection. +Such sacrifices take various forms. In the case of NIJINSKY we see a man of +immense brain power specialising in a most exhausting form of physical +culture to remedy his extreme delicacy. At the opposite extreme we find +cases of men so extraordinarily powerful that they are obliged to abandon +all exercise and lead a purely sedentary life in order to counteract their +abnormal muscularity. Thus Lord HALDANE, who in his earlier days thought +nothing of walking to Cambridge one day and back to London on the next, has +now become more than reconciled to the immobility imposed on the occupant +of the Woolsack. + +It needs no little exercise of the imagination to form a mental picture of +Lord HALDANE as a member of the Russian ballet, or, to put it in a more +concrete form, making the famous flying exit in _Le Spectre da la Rose_. +Could fancy be translated into fact, the drawing power of such a spectacle +would be prodigious. On the other hand, and in view of the notorious +adaptability of the Slavonic temperament, we can well imagine NIJINSKY +proving an admirable Lord Chancellor. Exchanges of this sort would add to +the comity of nations besides enhancing the amenities of public life, and +it is perhaps not too much to hope that provision for carrying this out may +be in the Government's scheme for the Reform of the House of Lords. + + * * * * * + + "New Zealand mutton was yearly increasing in public + flavour."--_Times._ + +It mustn't get too powerful. + + * * * * * + +From an advertisement of a land sale in _Ceylon Morning Leader_:-- + + "An undivided 1/3 + 1/36 + 1/2 of 3/80 + 1/24 + 1/2 of 1/18 parts of + the land called Vitarmalage Gamwasama at Yatawala in extent 500 + amunams paddy sowing." + +A chance for a newly-created peer who wants a family seat from which to +take his title and quarterings. + + * * * * * + +The meeting of ANTONY and CLEOPATRA as described in HUTCHINSON'S _History +of the Nations_:-- + + "When they met first he was twenty-nine and she was sixteen; now he + was forty-two and she was twenty-seven." + +Anyhow she would say so. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Kind Old Gentleman._ "WHAT A DELIGHTFUL LITTLE PET! I HAVE +ALWAYS A SOFT PLACE FOR ANIMALS."] + + * * * * * + +A LOST LEADER. + +"Enid," I said, "we must offer something to somebody." + +"You don't mean Squawks?" she pleaded piteously. + +"I wish I did," I sighed. Squawks is a Pomorachshund--at least I think so; +though Enid inclines towards the Chowkingese theory. Anyhow, he himself has +always realised that someone had blundered, and has worked steadily to make +a dog of himself. + +"Well, if it's not Squawks, I don't care," remarked Enid. + +"I wish you'd take some interest." + +"What in?" + +"In what I say." + +"What _did_ you say?" + +"We must," I repeated, "offer something to somebody." + +"That's not very enthusey. Unless"--and her whole face brightened--"you +mean what you call your reading-chair. It threw me on to the floor and +knelt on me only yesterday; and I know Aunt Anne----" + +"Enid," I said sternly, "that's not the point." + +"I was afraid not." + +"The thing is, one must be in the swim. Everybody is offering things right +and left now. Look at SUTHERLAND, DERBY--even LLOYD GEORGE." + +"I didn't know they were friends of yours." + +"Not exactly; but----" + +"Then why so familiar?" + +"My dear," I explained, "that _is_ the point. Once get your name in the +papers at the end of a two-column letter and you are the friend of all the +world--it gives one an _entree_ to the castle of the Duke and the cottage +of the crofter." + +"Even before you've written it?" + +"I have written it!" + +"Oh, how splendid! Where?" + +"In here," I said, tapping the best bit of my head. + +"Oh, _that_!" And then, pensively: "Next time Mary Jane has a brainstorm, +I'll tell her to call you 'Charley.' Poor girl!" + +"I don't think you quite appreciate," I remarked. + +"I don't. What exactly do we stand to gain?" + +"There's the rub. Not lucre. Perish the thought! But one begins to be a +power, an influence. People whisper in the Tube, 'Who's that?' '_That!_ +Don't you know? Why Him--He! The man who is making the Government a +laughing-stock. The man who holds the Empire in the palm of his hand. The +man who----'" + +"Thanks," said Enid. "We had better buy a gramophone. I thought you were +getting fidgety at home." + +"Dearest," I explained, "it is not that. It is because I feel in me a +spirit that will not be denied. Give me the opportunity and I will make +this land, this England----" + +"Hush, Squawks. Was'ms frightened then, poor darling!" + +"That dog----" + +"Hush!" said Enid to me. "How are you going to begin?" + +"It is quite simple. Somebody writes something to the papers." + +"Yes; so far it sounds easy." + +"Now that something is hideously disparaging to my class and calling. I +promptly answer him." + +"That is, if you can be funnier at his expense than he at yours." + +"I shan't be funny at all." + +"No?" said Enid thoughtfully. + +"Mine will be a scathing indictment, and of course I shall bring in the +political situation. He writes back, evading the point at issue. I crush +him with figures and statistics, and make him a practical offer--a few +deer-forests, a paltry township, or my unearned increment, as the case may +be." + +"The mowing-machine is out of order," Enid remarked. + +"I quote passages in his letter as the basis of negotiation. He pretends to +accept. I point out how, when and why he has been guilty of paltry +quibbling, and show that the Party he supports fosters such methods and +manners." + +"Is that all?" + +"No. And that is just where I shall differ from everybody else. I shall go +on where they have stopped. Having made one individual ridiculous, I shall +broaden the basis of operation. With consummate skill I shall gradually +draw the public officials down into the arena." + +"Don't forget the gas-man; he was very rude last month." + +"Not that kind," I explained. "Cabinet Ministers, Secretaries of State, the +whole machinery of government shall writhe under the barbed shafts of my +mockery. Ridicule is the power of the age. Ridicule in my hands shall be as +bayonets to NAPOLEON, as poison to a BORGIA." I gasped. + +"Help!" said Enid, taking up _The Daily Most_. "Here's the very +thing," she went on. "Somebody called 'A. Lethos'----" + +"Pah! A pseudonym." + +"Well, anyhow, he says that all political writers are worthless sycophants. +You might begin on that." + +"I will," I cried. "But craven anonymity is not my part. My name shall +stand forth boldly. Fate's linger points the way. How do you spell +'sycophant'? The type has gone a bit dizzy over it." + +And I plunged into the fray. + +"Sir," I began; and there followed 2,000 words of closely-woven argument, +down to "I remain, Sir, your obedient Servant." + +I read it through carefully, looked up "sycophant" in the dictionary, and +wrote it all out again. + +Then I showed it to Enid. + +"Why have you spelt 'sycophant' like that?" she asked. + +"I----" + +"No, 'y.'" + +"It _is_ a 'y.'" + +"Oh!" (Pause.) "What about the offer? Mr. Lethos says that ninetenths of +what is written nowadays is only worth the ink and paper." + +"The offer," I reminded her, "will come later." + +"Oh! I just thought---- You might get rid of those articles on 'Happiness +in the Home' at cost price. They're running up to quite a lot in stamps." + +I posted the letter to the Editor. + +Next morning I seized the paper nervously. There was my name at the end of +a column and a half. I had begun. + +I sat down to wait for the next step. It came with the mid-day post in a +letter from Saxby, who is--or was--my friend. + +"Good old Tibbles," it ran; "I knew some juggins would rise, whatever I +wrote. But fancy landing you!--Yours ever, BEEFERS." + +Now how _can_ a man save his country on a thing like that? + + * * * * * + +SMILES AND LAUGHTER. + + On days of gloom and sadness, + When nothing brings relief, + When men are moved to madness + And women groan with grief; + Though growing daily dafter, + I might, as once I did, + Have cheered myself with laughter, + But laughter is forbid. + + If I should treat of CARSON, + His guns and rataplan, + It's something worse than arson + To smile at such a man; + Since chaff would make his pulse stir-- + And this he cannot brook-- + The more he talks of Ulster + The solemner we look. + + Then, should I meet a CECIL, + (Lord ROBERT or Lord HUGH), + His manifest distress'll + Be very sad to view + Unless I'm in a proper, + A gloomy frame of mind, + And put a heavy stopper + On mirth of any kind. + + Next POUTSEA brings his quota + For giving me delight, + Who wants to punish BOTHA + By living in his sight; + Or, foiled of such a strife-time, + Decides to have a blow + And spend a briny lifetime + In sailing to and fro. + + And SEDDON, who gave greetings + To those deported nine, + Invited them to meetings + And asked them out to dine, + And begged of them and prayed them + To be no longer banned, + But hardly could persuade them + To leave the ship and land. + + These two, the gloom beguiling, + Might make me greatly dare, + Might set my face a-smiling + And win my soul from care; + The feted and the feeders + Might well provoke some chaff; + But no--they're Labour Leaders, + And so we mustn't laugh. + + And, last, there's LAW, our BONAR, + Who in a burst of tact + Is minded to dishonour + The loathed Insurance Act; + With opposites agreeing, + He faces North by South, + And keeps the Act in being + And kills it with his mouth. + + He too might smooth a wrinkle, + Although he's stern and grim, + And make my eyes to twinkle + By seeing fun in him; + Cursed be that cheerful vision, + And cursed all sense of fun: + It is a foul misprision + To smile at anyone. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: REVERIE. + +"NO, DARLING, NOT IN THE STUDY. YOUR FATHER WENT ROUND IN BOGEY TO-DAY AND +WANTS TO HAVE A NICE LONG THINK ABOUT IT."] + + * * * * * + +HAVE YOU ANYTHING TO SELL? + +(_With acknowledgments to "The Daily Mail."_) + +Have you anything you think of burning as useless, but would naturally +prefer to sell? Why not try one of our small advertisements? Every day we +receive thousands of letters testifying to their power. Here is one, picked +up at random:-- + +"Please discontinue my advertisement of a half-pair of bellows and a +stuffed canary, as the first insertion has had such remarkable results. On +looking out of my bedroom window this morning I observed a queue of some +hundreds of people extending from my doorstep down to the trams in the main +road. They included ladies on campstools, messenger boys, a sad-looking +young man in an ulster who was reading SWINBURNE'S poems, and others. Only +with difficulty could the milkman fight his way through to place the can on +the doorstep, and the contents were quickly required to restore a lady who +had turned faint for want of a camp-stool. While I was shaving, a motor +mail-van dashed up and left seven sacks of postal replies to the +advertisement. One by one, eighty-three people were admitted to view the +goods, and a satisfactory bargain was made with the last of these. I then +telephoned for the police to come and remove the disappointed thousands, +who were disposed to be riotous. My garden gate is off its hinges, the +garden itself has the lawn inextricably mixed with the flower-beds, my +marble step is cracked in three places, and my stair-carpet is caked with +mud. I do not know any other paper in this country in which a two-shilling +advertisement could produce such encouraging results." + + * * * * * + +ORANGES AND LEMONS. + +I.--THE INVITATION. + + "DEAR MYRA," wrote Simpson at the beginning of the year,--"I have an + important suggestion to make to you both, and I am coming round + to-morrow night after dinner about nine o'clock. As time is so short I + have asked Dahlia and Archie to meet me there, and if by any chance + you have gone out we shall wait till you come back. + + Yours ever, + SAMUEL. + + P.S.--I have asked Thomas too." + +"Well?" said Myra eagerly, as I gave her back the letter. + +In deep thought I buttered a piece of toast. + +"We could stop Thomas," I said. "We might ring up the Admiralty and ask +them to give him something to do this evening. I don't know about Archie. +Is he----" + +"Oh, what do you think it is? Aren't you excited?" She sighed and added, +"Of course I know what Samuel _is_." + +"Yes. Probably he wants us all to go to the Wonder Zoo together ... or he's +discovered a new way of putting, or---- I say, I didn't know Archie and +Dahlia were in town." + +"They aren't. But I expect Samuel telegraphed to them to meet him under the +clock at Charing Cross, disguised, when they would hear of something to +their advantage. Oh, I wonder what it is. It _must_ be something real this +time." + +Since the day when Simpson woke me up at six o'clock in the morning to show +me his stance-for-a-full-wooden-club shot I have distrusted his +enthusiasms; but Myra loves him as a mother; and I--I couldn't do without +him; and when a man like that invites a whole crowd of people to come to +your flat just about the time when you are wondering what has happened to +the sardines on toast, and why doesn't she bring them in--well, it isn't +polite to put the chain on the door and explain through the letter-box that +you have gone away for a week. + +"We'd better have dinner a bit earlier to be on the safe side," I said, as +Myra gave me a parting brush down in the hall. "If any further developments +occur in the course of the day ring me up at the office. By the way, +Simpson doesn't seem to have invited Peter. I wonder why not. He's nearly +two, and he ought to be in it. Myra, I'm sure I'm tidy now." + +"Pipe, tobacco, matches, keys, money?" + +"Everything," I said. "Bless you. Good-bye." + +"Good-bye," said Myra lingeringly. "What do you think he meant by 'as time +is so short'?" + +"I don't know. At least," I added, looking at my watch, "I do know. I shall +be horribly late. Good-bye." + +I fled down the stairs into the street, waved to Myra at the window ... and +then came cautiously up again for my pipe. Life is very difficult on the +mornings when you are in a hurry. + +At dinner that night Myra could hardly eat for excitement. + +"You'll be sorry afterwards," I warned her, "when it turns out to be +nothing more than that he has had his hair cut." + +"But even if it is I don't see why I shouldn't be excited at seeing my only +brother again--not to mention sister-in-law." + +"You only want to see them so that you can talk about Peter." + +"Oh, Fatty, darling"--(I am really quite thin)--"oh, Fatty," cried +Myra--("lean and slender" would perhaps describe it better)--cried Myra, +clasping her hands together--(in fact the very last person you could call +stout)--"I haven't seen the darling for ages! But I shall see Samuel," she +added hopefully, "and he's almost as young." ("Svelte"--that's the word for +me.) + +"Then let's move," I said. "They'll be here directly." + +Archie and Dahlia came first. We besieged them with questions as soon as +they appeared. + +"Haven't an idea," said Archie. "I wanted to bring a revolver in case it +was anything really desperate, but Dahlia wouldn't let me." + +"It would have been useful too," I said, "if it turned out to be something +merely futile." + +"You're not going to hurt my Samuel, however futile it is," said Myra. +"Dahlia, how's Peter, and will you have some coffee?" + +"Peter's lovely. You've had coffee, haven't you, Archie?" + +"Better have some more," I suggested, "in case Simpson is merely soporific. +We anticipate a slumbering audience, and Samuel explaining a new kind of +googlie he's invented." + +Entered Thomas lazily. + +"Hallo," he said in his slow voice, "What's it all about?" + +"It's a raid on the Begum's palace," explained Archie rapidly. "Dahlia +decoys the Chief Mucilage; you, Thomas, drive the submarine; Myra has +charge of the clockwork mouse, and we others hang about and sing. To say +more at this stage would be to bring about a European conflict." + +"Coffee, Thomas?" said Myra. + +"I bet he's having us on," said Thomas gloomily, as he stirred his coffee. + +There was a hurricane in the hall. Chairs were swept over; coats and hats +fell to the ground; a high voice offered continuous apologies--and Simpson +came in. + +"Hallo, Myra!" he said eagerly. "Hallo, old chap! Hallo, Dahlia! Hallo, +Archie! Hallo, Thomas, old boy!" He fixed his spectacles firmly on his nose +and beamed round the room. + +"You haven't said 'Hallo!' to the cook," Archie pointed out. + +"We're all here--thanking you very much for inviting us," I said. "Have a +cigar--if you've brought any with you." + +Fortunately he had brought several with him. + +"Now then, I'll give any of you three guesses what it's all about." + +"No, you don't. We're all waiting, and you can begin your apology right +away." + +Simpson took a deep breath and began. + +"I've been lent a villa," he said. + +There was a moment's silence ... and then Archie got up. + +"Good-bye," he said to Myra, holding out his hand. "Thanks for a very jolly +evening. Come along, Dahlia." + +"But I say, old chap," protested Simpson. + +"I'm sorry, Simpson, but the fact that you're moving from the Temple to +Cricklewood, or wherever it is, and that somebody else is paying the thirty +pounds a year, is jolly interesting, but it wasn't good enough to drag us +up from the country to tell us about it. You could have written. However, +thank you for the cigar." + +"My dear fellow, it isn't Cricklewood. It's the Riviera!" + +Archie sat down again. + +"Samuel!" cried Myra. "How she must love you!" + +"I should never lend Simpson a villa of mine," I said. "He'd only lose it." + +"They're some very old friends who live there, and they're going away for a +month, and the servants are staying on, and they suggested that if I was +going abroad again this year----" + +"How did the servants know you'd been abroad last year?" asked Archie. + +"Don't interrupt, dear," said Dahlia. "I see what he means. How very jolly +for you, Samuel." + +"For all of us, Dahlia!" "You aren't suggesting we shall all crowd in?" +growled Thomas. + +"Of course, my dear old chap! I told them, and they're delighted. We can +share housekeeping expenses, and it will be as cheap as anything." + +"But to go into a stranger's house," said Dahlia anxiously. + +"It's _my_ house, Dahlia, for the time. I invite you!" He threw out his +hands in a large gesture of welcome and knocked his coffee-cup on to the +carpet; begged Myra's pardon several times; and then sat down again and +wiped his spectacles vigorously. + +Archie looked doubtfully at Thomas. + +"Duty, Thomas, duty," he said, thumping his chest. "You can't desert the +Navy at this moment of crisis." + +"Might," said Thomas, puffing at his pipe. + +Archie looked at me. I looked hopefully at Myra. + +"Oh-h-h!" said Myra, entranced. + +Archie looked at Dahlia. Dahlia frowned. + +"It isn't till February," said Simpson eagerly. + +"It's very kind of you, Samuel," said Dahlia, "but I don't think----" + +Archie nodded to Simpson. + +"You leave this to me," he said confidentially. "We're going." + +A. A. M. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "PORTER, WHAT ON EARTH ARE WE WAITING HERE FOR?" + +"YOU'RE WAITIN' TO GO ON, SIR."] + + * * * * * + +THE CHAMELEONS. + +(_From "The Gladiator," Nov. 1914._) + +ASSOCIATION. + +WHITEBROOK ROVERS _V._ BROMVILLE. + +The meeting of these teams on Saturday last produced a struggle of titanic +dimensions worthy of the best traditions of the famous combinations +engaged. On the one hand we saw the machine-like precision, the subtle +finesse so characteristic of the Whitebrook men, while at the same time we +revelled in the dash and speed, the consummate daring displayed by their +doughty opponents. We have witnessed many games, but for keenness and +enthusiasm this one must rank.... In a game where every man acquitted +himself well it is difficult to particularise; but Brown, Jones, Green and +McSleery for the Rovers, and Gray, Smith, Black and McSkinner for the +Broms, may be mentioned as being shining lights in their respective +positions. + +(_From "The Gladiator," Nov. 1915._) + +ASSOCIATION. + +WHITEBROOK ROVERS _V._ BROMVILLE. + +Before a huge crowd exceeding 60,000 these historic combinations met on +Saturday, and provided a rich treat for those who had the privilege to be +there. The officials of both clubs have been busy team-building, and the +sides differed in many instances from those antagonizing on the same ground +a year ago. That the changes have been judicious and beneficial Saturday's +game abundantly proved. The men played with great earnestness, evincing +much local patriotism, and in their contrasted styles--the polished +artistry, the scientific precision of the Rovers, and the dash and forceful +intrepidity of the Broms--were at their very best. We have seen many games, +but this must rank.... While every man did himself justice, it may not be +invidious to mention, for the Rovers, Gray, Smith, Black and McSkinner, and +for the Broms, Brown, Jones, Green and McSleery, as being bright particular +stars in their respective departments. + + * * * * * + +From a literary weekly:-- + + "It is a terribly accurate saying about the loud laugh and the vacant + mind--Pope never got down surer to the bare bones of the truth." + +Nor did GOLDSMITH when he pointed out the danger of "a little learning." + + * * * * * + +From two consecutive items of "News in a Nutshell" in the _North-Eastern +Daily Gazette_:-- + + "Lieut. ----, of an infantry regiment at Lemburg, Austria, fell fast + asleep on February 14, and all efforts to wake him have proved futile + ever since. + + A sleeper weighing 8 cwt. was found on the Great Western Railway near + Banbury just before the arrival of a train from the north." + +However, it was not the lieutenant. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THINGS THAT ONE MIGHT HAVE PUT DIFFERENTLY. + +"HOW DE DO, LADY SMYTHE? I'VE JUST DRIVEN THE MOTOR OVER TO FETCH MY WIFE +AWAY." + +"HOW NICE OF YOU, ADMIRAL; BUT I DO WISH YOU'D COME SOONER."] + + * * * * * + +FORGIVENESS. + +(_A Dream after losing a Dog._) + + Methought I saw the man that stole our Tim + In a night vision; and "Behold!" he cried, + "This was a task too easy for my whim, + A job of little worth and little pride, + An Irish terrier." Then his pal replied, + "I know a place where you may pinch with ease + One of these here carnation Pekinese. + + "You see them nasty spikes on that there wall? + Climb it, and you shall find a little yard; + An unlatched casement leads you to a hall, + Thence to the crib where, odorous with nard, + Slumbers the petted plaything; 'twere not hard + Out of his cushioned ease (and gorged belike + With sweetmeats) to appropriate the tyke." + + So, filled with high ambition and the hope + Of gaining huge emolument, this man + Hung to the toothed battlements a rope, + Climbed and leapt down to execute his plan-- + But even as he leapt a noise began + As when the Arctic icebergs break and grind; + This was because his pants were caught behind. + + Awhile they tore, then stayed. And helpless there + Betwixt the silvery moonlight and the ground + He hung convulsive, grasping at the air, + For two full hours it may be, whilst a hound + Of the Great Danish breed, that made no sound + Save a deep snarl, below him watching stood + (This portion of my dream was very good). + + And much he vowed because of his great pain + That he was the most dashed of all dashed fools + And never would he steal a dog again, + No (strite!) he would not. He recalled the rules + That teachers taught him in the Sunday Schools + And thought on serious happenings and the grave; + And with dawn's earliest flush his trousers gave. + + * * * * * + + And having waited for a time I went + To see him in the hospital. And hours + Of earnest converse with the man I spent, + Told him of Nemesis and what dark powers + Punish our mortal crimes, and brought him flowers, + Dog-roses and dog-violets, and read + The Eighth Commandment out beside his bed. + +EVOE. + + * * * * * + +_The Daily Telegraph_ on the next Drury Lane melodrama:-- + + "We are able to say on the very best authority that the idea at the + root of the story is of a quite unusual nature; indeed, if secrecy + were not for the moment imposed, one might even go a step further and + declare it to be of startling originality." + +As it is, one doesn't; for if once the secret got about that the play was +to be original there would be riots in Fleet Street. + + * * * * * + + "Song, 'March of the Men of Garlick' (Tune, Welsh melody)." + + _Ripon Observer._ + +A pardonable mistake. The national emblem is of course the leek. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE WOOING. + +MISS ULSTER. "AN' WHAT'S THE GOOD OF HIM SENDIN' ME FLOWERS WHEN I'VE +TOLD HIM 'NO' ALREADY?" + +MR. PUNCH. "WELL NOW, COME, MY DEAR--WON'T YOU JUST TAKE A GOOD LOOK +AT THEM BEFORE YOU START TURNING UP YOUR PRETTY NOSE?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "A HOLLOW DEMONSTRATION." + +(_With acknowledgments to GILLRAY'S caricature of NAPOLEON as Gulliver +among the Brobdingnagians._) + + [Mr. D. M. MASON'S motion for the reduction of the Supplementary Navy + Estimates was defeated by 237 votes to 34.]] + + * * * * * + +ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT. + +(EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF TOBY, M.P.) + +_House of Commons, Monday, March 2._--In speech of flawless lucidity +displaying perfect command of columnar figures upon which strength of +British Navy is based, the WINSOME WINSTON moved Supplementary Estimates +amounting to two and a-half millions. These raise total expenditure of year +on the Navy to forty-eight millions. "A serious event," he admitted amid +sympathetic cheers from below Gangway to his right. Necessity arises from +increased expenditure on oil reserves; from demand for a quarter of a +million for the new aircraft programme, an item unknown to OLD MORALITY or +CHILDERS when successively at the Admiralty; from increment of wages and +acceleration of ship-building. + +He might have mentioned that of grand total close upon two millions is +legacy left by former Ministry on account of liabilities incurred before +1905. Whilst present Government, austerely-minded, pay their way as they +go, meeting increased expenditure out of revenue, PRINCE ARTHUR, with +characteristically light heart, built ships and strengthened +fortifications, raising the money by loan, which he gaily left to posterity +to pay off. Posterity has this pleasant task in hand now, and will continue +to be engaged upon it for next twenty years. + +WINSTON judiciously refrained from pressing the point. Had enough on his +hands with discontented supporters below Gangway, who resent +ever-increasing burden of Naval expenditure. RAMSAY MACDONALD lodged +protest on behalf of Labour Members; stopped short of moving reduction of +vote. This done by DAVID MASON of Coventry. + +"A hollow demonstration," was GILBERT PARKER'S terse description of the +revolt. On a division Estimates were carried by a majority of 203. Only 34 +voted for reduction. + +Prolongation of debate plainly boring. By exception, one listener sat it +out with unwearied attention. Nothing precisely cherubic in face or figure +of Lord FISHER OF KILVERSTONE, better known on sea and land by the +affectionate diminutive JACKY FISHER. Nevertheless, as he sat perched in +Peers' Gallery immediately over the clock, a place ever associated with the +genial presence of EDWARD PRINCE OF WALES, there flashed across the mind a +familiar couplet sung by DIBDIN:-- + + "There's a sweet little cherub that sits up aloft + To keep watch for the life of poor Jack." + +[Illustration: JACK'S JACK. + +(Lord FISHER).] + +Whilst jealous for maintenance of Naval power, no Admiral or Sea Lord did +more to improve conditions of life on the lower deck than did JACKY FISHER. +Retired from active service, his multiform commissions under hatches, +to-night his body has gone aloft to a seat in Peers' Gallery. There he +heard expounded biggest Navy vote submitted since days of the "Great +Harry." Exceptionally swollen by provision for reserves of oil fuel, a new +departure, for which he in his capacity as Chairman of a Royal Commission +has, as WINSTON testified, been chiefly responsible. + +_Business done._--Naval Estimates discussed. + +_Tuesday._--Another scene testifying to electricity of atmosphere. As +usual, explosion from unexpected quarter. House in committee on Naval +Estimates. Lord ROBERT CECIL, ever alert in interests of working-man with a +vote, moved reduction in order to call attention to housing accommodation +provided for men employed at Rosyth. Chairman ruled debate out of order on +Supplementary Estimates. Lord BOB nevertheless managed to sum up purport of +intended speech by denouncing state of things as "a scandal and disgrace to +the Government." At this stage Opposition Whips, counting heads, discovered +that, if not at the moment in actual minority, Government would, if +division were rushed, find themselves in parlous state. The word--it was +"Mum"--went round Opposition benches. + +Unfortunately for success of plot Ministerial Whips also alive to +situation. + +"After your ruling, Sir," said Lord BOB with ominous politeness, "I cannot +develop my argument, but I propose to persist in my motion, and will divide +the Committee." + +Not if LEIF JONES knew it. For him, as for all good Ministerialists, +subject suddenly developed interest, urgently demanded consideration. This +he proposed to bestow upon it. A Bengal tiger about to lunch off a +toothsome native, discovering the anticipated meal withdrawn from his +reach, could not be more sublimely wrathful than were gentlemen on +Opposition benches. And LEIF JONES, too! The mildest-mannered man that ever +turned on a water-tap. + +After a moment of petrified pause, natural to Bengal tiger on discovering +reality of his discomfiture, there burst forth roar of "'Vide! 'Vide! +'Vide!" From appearance of LEIF JONES'S lips, he was continuing his +remarks. Not a syllable rose above the storm. After it had raged for some +moments CHAIRMAN pointed out that, whilst divigation in direction of Rosyth +was out of order, it was competent to any Member to discuss the vote as a +whole. + +This too much for A. S. WILSON, who has been surprisingly reticent since +Session opened. + +"Is it right for the CHAIRMAN," he asked, "to protect the Government from +what may be an inconvenient position?" + +"A grossly disorderly observation," the CHAIRMAN retorted. + +A. S. withdrew the remark, the more willingly since designed effect gained. + +COUSIN HUGH, for some time moving uneasily in corner seat below Gangway, +bounded to his feet. Member near him simultaneously rose. With sweep of +left arm, after manner of RICHARD III. directing the cutting off of the +head of BUCKINGHAM, he waved the appalled Member down. Was getting on +nicely with what he had to say when, like GRAND CROSS on historical +occasion, he "heard a smile." + +It came from WINSTON. + +"I notice," said COUSIN HUGH glaring on the Treasury bench, "that the FIRST +LORD OF THE ADMIRALTY, who is very ignorant on many matters, is amused at +this observation." + +WINSTON explained that what he had laughed at was "the lordly gesture with +which the noble Lord swept away another honourable gentleman." + +LEIF JONES, proposing to continue his remarks, presented himself again. +Greeted with fresh yell of execration. Battled for some moments with the +storm. Too much for him. Reached forth hand; seized imperceptible tankard +of invisible stout; gratefully wetted his parched lips withal. Refreshed, +he tried again; no articulate word dominated the din. + +After further ten minutes of uproar, through which from time to time A. S. +WILSON tried to get in more or less relevant remark and was instantly +extinguished by the CHAIRMAN, who masterfully managed difficult situation, +WINSTON interposed. A bird of the air had brought news from Whips' Room +that all was well. Accordingly the FIRST LORD graciously conceded division +clamoured for. + +Its result profound surprise. So far from Government lacking support, the +amendment was negatived by more than two to one. Majority rushed up to 140. + +Evidently been a mistake somewhere. + +_Business done._--Supplementary votes agreed to. + +_Thursday._--Dramatic turn in position of Home Rule Bill. PREMIER hitherto +steadfast in deferring Second Reading till close of financial year. As +result of confabulation between two Front Benches arranged that +Supplementary Estimates shall be hurried up so as to make opening for +immediate debate on Second Reading. + +Accordingly ST. AUGUSTINE BIRRELL to-day brought in Bill for First Reading. +No need of persuasion of silver tongue to carry this stage. Proceeding +purely formal. Fight opens on Monday, when PREMIER, moving Second Reading, +will explain his "suggestions" of amendment. + +_Business done._--Home Rule brought in, being third time of asking. Welsh +Church Disestablishment Bill and Plural Voting Bill also read amid +vociferous cheering by Ministerialists. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "I understand you have only one Welsh saint. Well, there'll +soon be another; it will be Saint Lloyd George. I would canonise him right +away."--_The Rev. Dr. CLIFFORD at Westbourne Park Chapel._] + + * * * * * + + "His brilliant flashes of wit and humour evoked hearty applause, and + sometimes even laughter."--_Teesdale Mercury._ + +Almost the last thing you would have expected. + + * * * * * + + "One of the strongest traits in Mrs. Barclay's character is a love of + all creatures, great and small--thrushes, wagtails and robins come to + her when she calls, and she keeps a little box of worms to feed + them."--_Woman at Home._ + +Sometimes the worms must wish she wasn't quite so loving. + + * * * * * + +THE DOWNWARD TREND. + + Come, Nora, Nance and Nellie, + Let us study BOTTICELLI + When we feel the gnawing craving to be smart; + If we want to be _de rigueur_ + We must educate the figure + To show the downward trend of "plastic art." + The outline should be slack, + Slippy-sloppy, front and back, + Till bodice, skirt and tunic--every stitch-- + Seems to call for the support + Of the handy-man's resort-- + That naval gesture termed the "double hitch." + The shoulders must be drooping. + The knees a trifle stooping, + And the widest waist, remember, takes the prize; + When motoring or shopping + The _coatee_ must be flopping + Through a belt that's sagging downward to the thighs. + But the evening toilette scheme + Shows the opposite extreme, + And, when for dance or dinner you're equipped, + A clinging "mermaid's tail" + The nether limbs must veil, + While the corsage is the only part that's slipped. + + * * * * * + + "At the close of the match, Mr. Burnett, Kenmay, announced the result + and called for cheers for the winners. Mr. J. Fulton, President + English Province R.C.C.C., responded."--_Field._ + +We are sorry that Mr. FULTON was the only one. After his opening +"Hip--hip--hip" even the most timid or indifferent should have joined in. + + * * * * * + + "Tickets purchased before the date will admit holders at 2 p.m. to + view the machine used when 'looping the loop,' and the passenger + carrying machine." + + _Advt. in "The Varsity."_ + +At the risk of embarrassing this anonymous Samson we shall go early and +view him. + + * * * * * + + "Councillor Johnson said the Bye Laws wore not in a satisfactory + state, and suggested that Councillor Bayman be added to the number." + + _Mossel Bay Advertiser._ + +Henceforward the penalty for breaking Councillor BAYMAN is forty shillings. + + * * * * * + +Report received by a South African mine-manager:-- + + "The mule being experimented with by feeding on bad mealies is still + being carried out, but up to date the animal seems to keep in normal + condition." + +They must carry him out again. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: LANGUAGE A LA MODE. + +"WHAT DO YOU THINK? ISN'T IT _RATHER_ NICE?" + +"MY DEAR, HOW _UTTERLY SUCCULENT_!"] + + * * * * * + +AT THE PLAY. + +"THE TWO VIRTUES." + +The news, which ran like wildfire through the town on Wednesday morning, +that Sir GEORGE ALEXANDER had signed the Covenant, must have stirred many +hearts; but those of us who saw him on the next night as the hero of Mr. +ALFRED SUTRO'S comedy are hoping that, at any rate, there will be no +fighting on Wednesday and Saturday afternoons, and that sentry duty in the +evenings may be performed by less valuable signatories. For in _Jeffery +Panton_ he has really found a part to suit him, and a part which should +keep him busy for some months. Comedy is certainly his medium. + +It is not, alas, Miss MARTHA HEDMAN'S, nor is English her language. Her +pretty foreign accent and tearful manner became her as a French girl in +_The Attack_, but it won't do for every part she plays. It didn't do in the +least for _Mrs. Guildford_. The difficulty of understanding what she said +was made greater by a surprising catarrh amongst the first-night audience, +so that her scenes had a way of going like this:-- + +_Jeffery Panton_ (_clearly_). But I must just talk to you a moment. + +_Stall on left._ Honk--honk! Honk! H'r'r'm! + +_Dress circle._ HONK! HONK!! + +_Mrs. Guildford._ No, no, I must get on with my work. + +_Stall just behind._ WHAT DID SHE SAY? + +_Her neighbour._ Something about her work. + +_Her other neighbour._ Honk--honk! H'r'm! Honk--honk! + +_Gallery boy._ HONK--HONK--HONK! + +_Several voices._ Sh'sh! + +_Mrs. Guildford._ No ... I ... you ... + +_Second gallery boy._ Stop that coughing there! + +_Injured voice._ _I_ can't 'elp coughing! + +_Several voices._ Sh'sh! + +But I'm afraid the coughing was not always the fault of the microbes but +sometimes of Mr. SUTRO, who seemed to be exploiting a wonderful talent for +starting his Acts dully. The opening scene of the Second Act, between _Mrs. +Guildford_ and _Alice Exern_, was particularly tiresome. It went on a long +time, and seemed when audible to be only a recapitulation of Act I. We +simply had to cough. + +I have said nothing of the story, for the reason that a summary of it would +hardly do it justice. It is slight, and yet just strong enough to carry two +or three pleasant creations and much happy dialogue. The important thing is +that Sir GEORGE is on the stage most of the time, has many delightful +things to say, and says them delightfully. There are also Miss HENRIETTA +WATSON, Miss ATHENE SEYLER, and Mr. HERBERT WARING, all excellent. + +It remains to be said that the Two Virtues are Chastity and Charity; that +_Mrs. Guildford_ lacked (I think--but they were coughing a good deal just +then) the first virtue, and the other ladies the second; and that the +reclining chair in Act I. was kindly lent by--but the name of the generous +fellow will be revealed to you in your programme when you go. + +M. + + * * * * * + + "'Paphnutius' was given its first public performance in London + recently. Miss Ellen Terry appeared in it as an abbcess." + + _Hong Kong Telegraph._ + +Our impersonation of a nasty sore throat "off" is still the talk of China. + + * * * * * + +ONE WAY WITH THEM. + +Leeson is the best of living creatures (as so many of us are), but he has +one detestable foible--he always wants to read something aloud. Now, +reading aloud is a very special gift. Few men have it, and even of those +few there are some who do not force it upon their friends; the rest have it +not, and Leeson is of the rest. + +In fact, it is really painful to listen to him, because he not only reads, +but acts. If it is a woman speaking, he pipes a falsetto such as no woman +outside a reciter's brain ever possessed. If it is a rustic, he affects a +dialect from no known district. In emotional passages one does not dare to +look at him at all, but we all cower with our heads in our hands, as though +we were convicted but penitent criminals. So much for dramatic or dialogue +pieces. When it comes to lyric poetry--his favourite form of +literature--Leeson sings, or rather cantillates, swaying his body to the +rhythm of the lines. If any of the poets could hear him they would become +'bus-conductors at once; it is as bad as that. + +Otherwise Leeson is excellent company and one likes dining with him. But +there's always hanging over one the dread that he may have alighted on +something new and wonderful, and at any moment.... + +Directly I entered the house last week I was conscious that this had +happened--Leeson had made another discovery. I had not been in the +drawing-room for more than a minute, and had barely shaken hands with Mrs. +Leeson, when he pulled from his pocket a thin book. I knew the worst at +once: it had about it all the stigmata of new poetry. It was of the right +deadly hue, the right deadly size, the right deadly roughness about the +edges. + +"I've got something here, my boy," he said. "The real stuff. Let me----" + +Just at this moment the door opened and some guests entered. + +"Never mind," he remarked to me, as he approached to welcome them; "later. +It's wonderful--wonderful!" + +Other guests arriving occupied him, and then a servant came in to say that +he was wanted on the telephone. + +He returned with the message that Captain Cathcart was sorry to say he +could not possibly be there until a quarter-past eight. But please don't +wait. + +It was now five minutes past eight. + +"What I suggest," said Leeson, "is that we do wait, and that we fill up the +time by reading one or two poems by a new man that I've just discovered? +They're simply wonderful!" + +He drew out the book and we all composed ourselves to the ordeal; Mrs. +Gaston, who is the insincerest creature on earth and has no thoughts beyond +Auction Bridge, even going so far as to say, ecstatically, "A new poet! How +heavenly!" + +But Mrs. Leeson stopped it. "Oh, no," she said, "don't let us wait. Very +likely Captain Cathcart will be later still." And with a sigh of relief +that was almost audible we marched down to dinner. + +I thought that Leeson cut the time over our cigars rather short, and we had +no sooner returned to the drawing-room than he began again. "I won't keep +you more than a few moments," he said, "but I very much want your opinion +of a new poet I have discovered. I have his work here," and out came the +deadly book, "and I want to read one or two brief things." + +"Oh, George, dear," said Mrs. Leeson, "do you mind postponing that for a +little? Miss Langton is very kindly going to sing for us, and she has to +leave early." + +Leeson accepted the situation with as much philosophy as he could muster. + +As a rule I am bored by amateur, or indeed any, singing after dinner, but I +looked at Miss Langton with an expression which a Society paper reporter +might easily have misconstrued. + +Long before she had finished we were all calling out, "Thank you! Thank +you! Encore! Encore!" + +Leeson alone was faint in his praises and his face fell to a lower depth +when she began again. + +No sooner had she finished and gone than he was planning another effort, +but during the opportunity afforded by her departure we had, with great +address, divided ourselves into such animated groups that Mrs. Leeson, like +a tactful hostess, laid her hand on his arm and caused him again to +postpone it. + +He wandered forlornly from chair to chair, seeking an opening, and at last +ventured to clear his throat and again ask if we would like to hear his new +poet. "I assure you he's wonderful!" + +But at this moment old Lady Thistlewood uttered a little cry and at once +bells were rung for sal-volatile. Her ladyship, it seems, is subject to +attacks of faintness. + +When next Leeson made his proposal the Buntons rose and, expressing every +variety of sorrow and regret, stated that they had no idea it was so late +and they must really tear themselves away; Mrs. Bunton tactfully taking +down the title of this dear new poet's book and its publisher. + +This being the signal for the others to leave, I soon found myself alone. + +"Now!" said Leeson with a triumphant expression. "Thank goodness they're +out of the way and we're quiet and snug. Now you shall hear my poet." He +felt for the book. "I tell you----" He stopped in dismay. + +"I could have sworn it was in my pocket," he said, and began to hunt about +the room. + +"Where on earth can it be?" he said. + +I helped him to look for it, but in vain. + +"Perhaps Mrs. Bunton took it?" I suggested. + +"I'm sure she didn't," he replied. + +"Perhaps Mrs. Leeson has it?" I said. + +But she had not. The last time she had seen it it was on the table after +Mrs. Bunton copied the title. + +Leeson was so utterly dejected that I felt almost sorry for him. + +"Well," he said at last, "that's the strangest thing I ever heard of. What +a disappointment! I did want you to hear it." + +But it was precisely because I didn't that in my own pocket was the +volume's present hiding-place. When the front door had closed behind me +half-an-hour later, I slipped it into the letter-box. + + * * * * * + +THE FOX. + + The birds see him first, jay and blackbird and thrush; + They shriek at his coming and curse him, each one; + With the clay of the vale on his pads and his brush, + It's the Fallowfield fox and he's pretty near done; + It's a couple of hours since a whip tally-ho'd him; + Now the rookery's stooping to mob and to goad him; + There's an earth on the hill, but he's cooked past believing, + And his tongue's hanging out and his wet ribs are heaving. + Here he comes up the field at a woebegone trot; + He's stiff as a poker, he's done all he knows; + Now the ploughmen'll view him as likely as not; + There--they run to the paling and yell as he goes: + Here's an end, if we live to be two minutes older; + See, he turns a glazed eye o'er a mud-spattered shoulder; + There's a hound through the hedgerow.... + Game's up, and he's beaten, + And he faces about with a snarl to be eaten. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MR. PUNCH'S GALLERY OF BRAVE DEEDS. No. 1. + +THE HERO WHO TOOK OUT A PARTY OF LADIES FERRETING.] + + * * * * * + +THE RING. + +KEEKS _v._ COCKLES. + +I.--OLD STYLE. + +_By Tony Shovell._ + +The much-boomed fight between Nobby Keeks and Bill Cockles ended in +something of a _fiasco_, the last named being knocked out with a terrific +uppercut in the first round. + +The men stripped well, and appeared in excellent fettle. The fight +commenced precisely at 11.22, only fifty-two minutes after the advertised +time. + +_1st Round._--Both men opened warily, sparring for an opening. Presently +Cockles stepped in and drove his left hard to the nose, drawing blood. +Keeks drew back, and Cockles, following up his advantage, got in a +nicely-judged left hook on the eye, which began to swell ominously. Though +his supporters were obviously chagrined, Keeks kept his head admirably, and +cleverly ducked under a right swing and clinched. At the breakaway Cockles +got his left home on the ribs, but in doing so left himself open, and Keeks +shook him up badly with a jab to the jaw. Cockles' hands dropped +momentarily, and Keeks, whipping in a smashing right uppercut, had his man +down and out. + +A poor struggle, lost solely through carelessness. + + +II.--NEW STYLE. + +_By Philip Keppermann._ + +At twenty-two and a-half minutes past eleven last night a man stood looking +wistfully over a sea of faces looming whitely through a thin blue haze of +tobacco smoke. At his feet lay stretched the limp body of his antagonist. +The disappearance of one eye; under a large red swelling, combined with a +patulous and rubescent nose, detracted to some extent from the dignity of +his appearance. An ugly patch of crimson over his left ribs held the +attention fantastically, morbidly. It was blood, human blood, his own +blood. The thought fascinated me.... + +Somewhere a voice was counting slowly, steadily, +unhesitatingly--_one_--_two_--_three_.... The voice had in it the +inexorable quality of Fate; it brought tears to the eyes like the wail of +the Chorus in some Greek drama. + +I looked at the man by my side. His regard was fixed intently on the +prostrate figure in the ring. His fingers played uneasily with his +watch-chain. He wore evening dress, and I noticed that his tie was a little +crooked. + +Away outside we caught the distant hoot of a motorcar. A dog barked. Then a +woman in the audience sneezed; it seemed unwarrantable, impertinent, almost +a desecration.... + +The voice that was counting ceased. The limp figure did not move. The one +wistful eye of the victor closed for a moment in relief. There was a sudden +incursion of hurrying figures into the ring.... + +The great fight was over. Nobby Keeks had beaten Bill Cockles. + + +_By Theresa Chingles._ + +I was one of forty-four women who witnessed the great battle last night. +There were, it was said, over three thousand men. + +On my left sat a young girl in a rose-pink evening dress, with a +dove-colour opera cloak covering her bare shoulders. Her eyes followed +intently the struggling figures on the stage, and I observed that she wore +an engagement ring with three diamonds. + +A few seats away, surrounded by a swarm of men in evening dress, sat a +grey-haired woman, watching the fight with interest through a gold-rimmed +lorgnette. Her eyes twinkled as heavy blows were delivered, and when one of +the men began to bleed copiously from the nose, she uttered an exclamation +of delight. She wore black. + +So far as I could observe, no woman present showed any sign of repulsion. +It seemed to me significant of the times. I whispered to my neighbour, "_O +tempora! O mores!_" but she replied coldly, "Not at all!" I checked my +impulse to add "_Autres temps, autres moeurs!_" + +Of the actual fight I am not competent to speak. I was most interested in +the referee, whose strong mobile face reminded me occasionally of Lord +BYRON, at other times of Mr. WINSTON CHURCHILL. + + +_By the Rev. Robert Shackleberry._ + +I had never seen a boxing contest before I was invited by the enterprising +editor of _The Daily Gong_ to witness the encounter last night between +"Nobby" Keeks and William Cockles. + +I found an excellent seat reserved for me. It was nearing midnight when the +two men mounted the platform. Cockles came first, wearing a scarlet +dressing-gown with yellow collar and cuffs. He seemed to me a bluff, +hearty, good-tempered-looking man, though perhaps unduly prominent in the +lower jaw. Keeks, who followed, wore a bright green dressing-gown with a +pink sash, and shook hands with six or seven members of the audience. He +was taller and heavier than his opponent, and his features, to my mind, +more intelligent but less amiable. + +There was a long delay, during which I was given to understand that the +men's hands were being bandaged for some reason. At length the swarm of +seconds and advisers disappeared to the sound of a gong, and the combatants +stood up and advanced upon one another. I was embarrassed to observe that +they were nearly nude, but my embarrassment did not seem to be shared by +any of the ladies present, so perhaps I have no right to complain. + +The actual boxing did not last nearly so long as the preliminaries. This +was perhaps just as well, since Keeks, afterwards announced the victor, +unfortunately sustained considerable damage to his right eye and was also +losing blood from his nose--nasty injuries which, in my opinion, should +have led to the competition being stopped while he received medical +attention. No doubt the injuries were undesigned. + +Cockles soon afterwards fell down, and refused to rise while some +individual slowly counted ten. This, I was told, indicated that he was +desirous of withdrawing from the contest before his antagonist sustained +any further damage. In my judgment this generosity merited the award of +victory; but no doubt the authorities know their business. + +I was glad to have an opportunity of gaining a new experience, but on the +whole I must say I prefer a quiet rubber of whist. + + * * * * * + +THE OPPORTUNIST. + +The personal distinctions, experiences, successes, opinions, anecdotes and +statistics of Dr. Peterson, F.R.C.S., M.R.C.P., are too many for me to +mention here, but are never too many for him to mention anywhere. That was +the difficulty with which the Governors of the St. Barnabas Throat and Ear +Hospital were confronted from the beginning to the end of their business of +administration. As member of their honorary staff he performed his fair +share of successful operations, but when it came to speech-making he had no +consideration either for his own throat or for anybody else's ears. + +"It's my belief," said the Chairman, at the special meeting of the Board +called to arrange the programme for the opening of the new wing, "that the +whole of this project originated in Peterson's desire to make himself +heard." + +"I certainly remember his introducing the matter to the Board," said +Thompson, "with a brief sketch of his own career." + +"And if the foundation stone could only speak," said Vernon-White, "it +probably wouldn't be able to recall the name of the man who laid it, but +would repeat from memory the whole of Peterson's private history." + +"Proposed, seconded and carried unanimously," reported the Secretary, "that +at the opening of the new wing no speech be made by Dr. Peterson." + +"So much for our resolution," said Bainbridge. "Nevertheless the company +will have barely got seated before it hears Peterson wondering whether he +may occupy a moment of their valuable time with a little experience which +happened to him the other day." + +"Even he will give way to Sir Thingummy," said Thompson, referring to the +great man who had been invited to make the great speech. + +Bainbridge was always a pessimist. "Whether," he said, "the context be the +opening of the new wing or the duty of gratitude to the man that opened it, +the one subject the meeting will hear all about will be the son of Peter." + +"Proposed, seconded and carried unanimously," reported the Secretary, "that +the vote of thanks to Sir Frederick Gorton be moved by the Chairman." + +"I see myself," said the Chairman, "resuming my seat after a few moments of +inaudible confusion, and I hear a ringing voice crying forth: 'In rising on +behalf of the Medical and Surgical Staff to propose a vote of thanks to our +dear Chairman, I may perhaps be permitted to remind you that I joined that +staff in 1887, and that since I----?'" + +"Who's the senior member of the staff?" asked the Chairman. + +"Peterson," said Bainbridge. + +"Who's the oldest in mere age?" + +"Peterson." + +The Chairman thought hard. "The event is fixed for April 29th," said he. +"Whose week on duty is that?" + +The Secretary looked up the books. His face fell. "Peterson's," he said. + +"Proposed, seconded and carried unanimously," said the Chairman hurriedly, +without troubling to take the vote, "that Dr. Wilkes be appointed tomorrow +the vote of thanks to the Chairman, and that the Secretary be instructed to +explain the matter, with due tact and circumspection, to Dr. Peterson." + +"Dear Peterson," wrote the Secretary,--"At the ceremony of the opening of +the new wing, my Board is particularly anxious that everything should go +with a swing, and that there shall be no possibility of any hitch. I am +instructed to ask you if you will be so good as to hold yourself in +readiness to make the big technical speech of the day in the unhappy event +of Sir Frederick Gorton failing to turn up. One is never safe with these +London men, and it is for that reason that the Board hopes you will not +mind putting yourself to trouble which may prove wasted. Some of the less +eloquent members of the Staff can be got to make the short formal +speeches." + +Sir Frederick turned up all right, as the Secretary had taken care that he +should, and declared the wing open, and thanked the Board for asking him. +Thereupon the Board, by its Chairman, thanked him, and he rose again and +very briefly thanked the Board for thanking him. Then Dr. Wilkes got up and +thanked the Chairman even more briefly still, and the Chairman got up again +and thanked Dr. Wilkes for thanking him. In fact, only one man didn't get +his share of formal gratitude, for no one thanked Dr. Peterson for rising +(if he might) to express a few words of thanks to Dr. Wilkes. + +Anticipating this possibility, Dr. Peterson devoted the larger part of his +speech to thanking himself. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Grannie._ "AND WIT'S THE MATTER WI' ME RIGHT LEG, DOCTOR?" + +_Doctor._ "OH, JUST OLD AGE, MRS. MACDOUGALL." + +_Grannie._ "HOOTS, MAN; YE'RE HAVERIN'. THE LEFT LEG'S HALE AND SOOND, AND +THEY'RE _BAITH_ THE SAME AGE."] + + * * * * * + +OUR BOOKING-OFFICE. + +(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks._) + +To read _An Englishman Looks at the World_ (CASSELL), a collection of +"unrestrained remarks on contemporary matters"--aeroplanes, CHESTERTON and +BELLOC, libraries, labour unrest, the Great State, and the like--by Mr. H. +G. WELLS, is to be delighted or infuriated according to your natural habit +of mind. If established in tolerable comfort in a world which you judge, +for all its blemishes, to be on the whole rather well run, you will resent +exceedingly this pert young man (for Mr. WELLS is still astonishingly +young) with his preposterous eagerness, his insane passion for questioning +and tinkering and most unfairly putting you and your kind in the wrong. You +will no doubt find excellent grounds for doubting his ability to +reconstruct; for suspecting what you will feel to be his pretentious +breadth of view, his assumed omniscience. But if, on the other hand, +thinking life in your sombre moments a nightmare of imbecility and in your +more expansive moments a high adventure of immeasurable possibilities, you +are straitened between cold despairs and immense hopes, you will readily +forgive this irreverent, self-confident critic-journalist any crude things +he may have said in his haste for sake of his flashes of perception, his +happily descriptive phrases, his inspiring anticipations, his uncalculating +candour, and above all his generous preoccupation with things that matter +enormously. "What we prosperous people who have nearly all the good things +of life and most of the opportunities have to do now is to justify +ourselves." That is a sentiment and a challenge repeated or implied +throughout the book. This Englishman looking at his world looks with quick +eyes. He is himself so intensely interested that he can only fail to +interest such as find his whole attitude an outrage upon their finally +adopted convictions and conventions. + + * * * * * + +Have you noticed the way in which certain stories bear the mark of a +particular place or period? If ever there was a novel that vociferated +"Cambridge" in every line, _The Making of a Bigot_ (HODDER AND STOUGHTON) +is that one. Well indeed may its paper wrapper display a drawing of King's +Chapel, though as a matter of fact only the action of the first chapter +passes in the University town. Miss ROSE MACAULAY has based her story upon +a quaintly attractive theme. Her hero, _Eddy Oliver_, is a type new to +fiction. _Eddy_ saw good in everything to such an extent that he allowed +himself to be persuaded into active sympathy with the aims of practically +everyone who was aiming at anything, however mutually irreconcilable the +aims might be. "He went along with all points of view so long as they were +positive; as soon as condemnation or rejection came in, he broke off." +Consequently, as you may imagine, his career was pleasantly involved. It +embraced the Church, various forms of Socialism, and at one time and +another some devotion to the ideals of Nationalism, Disarmament, Imperial +Service and the Primrose League. But please don't imagine that all this is +told in a spirit of comedy. Miss MACAULAY is, if anything, almost too dry +and serious; this, and her disproportionate affection for the word +"rather," a little impaired my own enjoyment of the book. It contains some +happily sketched types of modernity--all of them Cambridge to the +back-bone; and _Eddy's_ final discovery (which makes the bigot), that one +can't achieve anything in life without some wholesale hatreds, is genuine +enough--more so than the system of card-cutting by which he settles his +convictions. Miss MACAULAY has already, I am told, won a thousand pounds +with a previous book; this one proves her the possessor of a gift of +originality that is both rare and refreshing. + + * * * * * + +I could imagine a novel with which I could sympathise deeply, based upon +the theme of England's regeneration by means of the right type of Tory +squire, but it would be a novel with a more credible hero and conceived in +a less petty spirit of party bias than Mr. H. N. DICKINSON has given us in +_The Business of a Gentleman_ (HEINEMANN). For, in the first place, _Sir +Robert Wilton_, who figured of course in _Keddy_ and _Sir Guy and Lady +Rannard_--he has, in fact, by this time married _Marion_, late _Sir Guy's_ +widow--is far too jumpy and nervy a person to fit my ideal of a paternal +landlord, and what is, after all, more important, I feel convinced that his +tenants and stable-lads would have thought the same. Secondly, I refuse to +believe that a spinster, however soured, however much devoted to the cause +of Labour and misguided crusades for social purity, would have behaved as +_Miss Baker_ does in this book; and deliberately attempted to father a +false scandal on _Sir Robert_ merely because she hated his type. And if the +author replies that he knows of such an instance I maintain that it was +just one of those things which the art of selection should have prompted +him to leave out. I have, of course, no fault to find with Mr. DICKINSON'S +style, which as usual is curiously simple yet at the same time attractive, +nor with his powers of character-sketching. His schoolboy of seventeen, +_Eddie Durwold_, is in this book particularly good. It is the things that +these people do that bothers me. And if I might venture to rename _The +Business of a Gentleman_ the title I should choose is "The Escapade of an +Egoist." + + * * * * * + +Mr. SIDNEY LOW has paid some visits to Egypt and the Sudan, has kept his +eyes very wide open and has written _Egypt in Transition_ (SMITH, ELDER) in +consequence. The Earl of CROMER, who has also been there or thereabouts, +introduces the book to the notice of the public with an appreciative +preface. Am I then in a position to pass judgment? Yes, I am; for I can +claim to be literally more informed on the subject than most people, having +above my share of friends and relations who have been there. I have the +clearest possible picture of the country--a stretch of sand, some pyramids +in the background, and, in the centre foreground, smiling +enigmatically--not the Sphinx, but my friend or relation. I at once gave +Mr. LOW five marks out of ten upon discovering that none of his +illustrations reproduced himself on either on or off a camel. On less +personal grounds, I have no scruple in giving him the remaining five for +the vastly interesting facts, political, international, social and racial, +with which he entertained me. It requires no small skill in a dispenser of +such facts to make them entertaining. Twice only was I minded to quarrel +with him; once when he expressed a general contempt, based upon one +egregious example, for the foreign exports of Oxford and Cambridge, and +again when he got on to the subject of tourists, who include my nearest and +dearest, and abused them from the standpoint of a "visitor." In the first +case he was absurd, in the second, common-place; but he made ample +compensation for both by his memorable chapter of "Conclusions," in which +he gave me clearly to understand why East, being East, will never be joined +to West, always West, but yet how the twain have got within measurable +distance of one another. + + * * * * * + +There must have been moments when NAPOLEON found St. Helena a little quiet +for a man of his temperament; when the monotony of his life there pressed +somewhat hardly upon him. On these occasions I like to think of him saying +philosophically to himself, as he remembered what Mr. RUDOLF PICKTHALL +calls "the last phase but two," "Well, after all, this isn't Elba. I've got +that much to be thankful for." In _The Comic Kingdom_ (LANE) Mr. PICKTHALL +shows how everybody on the island struggles to make a bit out of their +visitors. Little children rallied round with posies of wild flowers, +demanding large sums in payment. Bogus monks waved crosses at him, and, if +he pretended not to notice them, rolled in the dust under his carriage +wheels. There was never a moment when somebody was not calling with a bust +of the Emperor or Empress, price three hundred francs. And itinerant bands +played under his windows into the small hours of the morning. I can imagine +him saying, in the words of ORESTES, "Dis is a dam country." ORESTES was +the guide who conducted Mr. PICKTHALL through the island. It revolted him, +but he did it. "I tink we better leave to-morrow," was a sort of refrain +with ORESTES. He had a poor opinion of Elba, which I for one do not share. +After reading _The Comic Kingdom_ I feel that one of my coming holidays +must be spent climbing its hills and supplying its thirsty inhabitants with +wine. The scenery is apparently worth while, and the natives appear a +friendly lot. I like their enthusiasm for literature. They turned out in +their hundreds and insisted on Mr. PICKTHALL'S standing treat, just because +they mistook him for a great historian. When I tell them I write for +_Punch_ they will be all over me. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A WORLD'S WORKER. + +LADY OF TITLE TAKING LESSONS IN BUILDING-CONSTRUCTION PRIOR TO PERFORMING +THE CEREMONY OF LAYING A FOUNDATION-STONE.] + + * * * * * + +From a notice of "The New Standard Dictionary" in _The London Teacher_:-- + + "The Dictionary is arranged in alphabetical order, thus being a great + time saver, and one can find what is required with the greatest ease." + +Otherwise it is so awkward, when you want to know how to spell "parallel" +in a hurry, to have to go through one volume after another until you come +to it. + + + + * * * * * + + + +Transcriber's note: + + Changed "there" to "three" in the second to last paragraph + of "At the play" on page 195. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI, VOL. +146, MARCH 11, 1914*** + + +******* This file should be named 23726.txt or 23726.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/3/7/2/23726 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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