summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--3140-0.txt5841
-rw-r--r--3140-0.zipbin0 -> 127147 bytes
-rw-r--r--3140-h.zipbin0 -> 141030 bytes
-rw-r--r--3140-h/3140-h.htm6320
-rw-r--r--3140-h/images/tpb.jpgbin0 -> 8586 bytes
-rw-r--r--3140-h/images/tps.jpgbin0 -> 1750 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/idlid10.txt6046
-rw-r--r--old/idlid10.zipbin0 -> 125048 bytes
11 files changed, 18223 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/3140-0.txt b/3140-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ade8714
--- /dev/null
+++ b/3140-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,5841 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Idle Ideas in 1905, by Jerome K. Jerome
+
+
+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: Idle Ideas in 1905
+
+
+Author: Jerome K. Jerome
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2013 [eBook #3140]
+[This file was first posted on December 30, 2000]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IDLE IDEAS IN 1905***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1905 Hurst and Blackett edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ IDLE IDEAS
+ in 1905
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BY
+
+ JEROME K. JEROME
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+
+ “Three Men in a Boat,”
+ “Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow,”
+ etc.
+
+ [Picture: Decorative graphic]
+
+ LONDON
+ HURST AND BLACKETT, LIMITED
+ 182, HIGH HOLBORN, W.C.
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+ I. ARE WE AS INTERESTING AS WE THINK WE ARE? 1
+ II. SHOULD WOMEN BE BEAUTIFUL? 16
+ III. WHEN IS THE BEST TIME TO BE MERRY? 29
+ IV. DO WE LIE A-BED TOO LATE? 46
+ V. SHOULD MARRIED MEN PLAY GOLF? 60
+ VI. ARE EARLY MARRIAGES A MISTAKE? 74
+ VII. DO WRITERS WRITE TOO MUCH? 89
+ VIII. SHOULD SOLDIERS BE POLITE? 105
+ IX. OUGHT STORIES TO BE TRUE? 122
+ X. CREATURES THAT ONE DAY SHALL BE MEN 141
+ XI. HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH LITTLE 158
+ XII. SHOULD WE SAY WHAT WE THINK, OR THINK WHAT WE 173
+ SAY?
+ XIII. IS THE AMERICAN HUSBAND MADE ENTIRELY OF STAINED 186
+ GLASS
+ XIV. DOES THE YOUNG MAN KNOW EVERYTHING WORTH KNOWING? 199
+ XV. HOW MANY CHARMS HATH MUSIC, WOULD YOU SAY? 213
+ XVI. THE WHITE MAN’S BURDEN! NEED IT BE SO HEAVY? 225
+ XVII. WHY DIDN’T HE MARRY THE GIRL? 238
+ XVIII. WHAT MRS. WILKINS THOUGHT ABOUT IT 251
+ XIX. SHALL WE BE RUINED BY CHINESE CHEAP LABOUR? 264
+ XX. HOW TO SOLVE THE SERVANT PROBLEM 278
+ XXI. WHY WE HATE THE FOREIGNER 292
+
+
+
+
+ARE WE AS INTERESTING AS WE THINK WE ARE?
+
+
+“CHARMED. Very hot weather we’ve been having of late—I mean cold. Let
+me see, I did not quite catch your name just now. Thank you so much.
+Yes, it is a bit close.” And a silence falls, neither of us being able
+to think what next to say.
+
+What has happened is this: My host has met me in the doorway, and shaken
+me heartily by the hand.
+
+“So glad you were able to come,” he has said. “Some friends of mine
+here, very anxious to meet you.” He has bustled me across the room.
+“Delightful people. You’ll like them—have read all your books.”
+
+He has brought me up to a stately lady, and has presented me. We have
+exchanged the customary commonplaces, and she, I feel, is waiting for me
+to say something clever, original and tactful. And I don’t know whether
+she is Presbyterian or Mormon; a Protectionist or a Free Trader; whether
+she is engaged to be married or has lately been divorced!
+
+A friend of mine adopts the sensible plan of always providing you with a
+short history of the person to whom he is about to lead you.
+
+“I want to introduce you to a Mrs. Jones,” he whispers. “Clever woman.
+Wrote a book two years ago. Forget the name of it. Something about
+twins. Keep away from sausages. Father ran a pork shop in the Borough.
+Husband on the Stock Exchange. Keep off coke. Unpleasantness about a
+company. You’ll get on best by sticking to the book. Lot in it about
+platonic friendship. Don’t seem to be looking too closely at her. Has a
+slight squint she tries to hide.”
+
+By this time we have reached the lady, and he introduces me as a friend
+of his who is simply dying to know her.
+
+“Wants to talk about your book,” he explains. “Disagrees with you
+entirely on the subject of platonic friendship. Sure you’ll be able to
+convince him.”
+
+It saves us both a deal of trouble. I start at once on platonic
+friendship, and ask her questions about twins, avoiding sausages and
+coke. She thinks me an unusually interesting man, and I am less bored
+than otherwise I might be.
+
+I have sometimes thought it would be a serviceable device if, in Society,
+we all of us wore a neat card—pinned, say, upon our back—setting forth
+such information as was necessary; our name legibly written, and how to
+be pronounced; our age (not necessarily in good faith, but for purposes
+of conversation. Once I seriously hurt a German lady by demanding of her
+information about the Franco-German war. She looked to me as if she
+could not object to being taken for forty. It turned out she was
+thirty-seven. Had I not been an Englishman I might have had to fight a
+duel); our religious and political beliefs; together with a list of the
+subjects we were most at home upon; and a few facts concerning our
+career—sufficient to save the stranger from, what is vulgarly termed
+“putting his foot in it.” Before making jokes about “Dumping,” or
+discussing the question of Chinese Cheap Labour, one would glance behind
+and note whether one’s companion was ticketed “Whole-hogger,” or
+“Pro-Boer.” Guests desirous of agreeable partners—an “agreeable person,”
+according to the late Lord Beaconsfield’s definition, being “a person who
+agrees with you”—could make their own selection.
+
+“Excuse me. Would you mind turning round a minute? Ah, ‘Wagnerian
+Crank!’ I am afraid we should not get on together. I prefer the Italian
+school.”
+
+Or, “How delightful. I see you don’t believe in vaccination. May I take
+you into supper?”
+
+Those, on the other hand, fond of argument would choose a suitable
+opponent. A master of ceremonies might be provided who would stand in
+the centre of the room and call for partners: “Lady with strong views in
+favour of female franchise wishes to meet gentleman holding the opinions
+of St. Paul. With view to argument.”
+
+An American lady, a year or two ago, wrote me a letter that did me real
+good: she appreciated my work with so much understanding, criticised it
+with such sympathetic interest. She added that, when in England the
+summer before, she had been on the point of accepting an invitation to
+meet me; but at the last moment she had changed her mind; she felt so
+sure—she put it pleasantly, but this is what it came to—that in my own
+proper person I should fall short of her expectations. For my own sake I
+felt sorry she had cried off; it would have been worth something to have
+met so sensible a woman. An author introduced to people who have read—or
+who say that they have read—his books, feels always like a man taken for
+the first time to be shown to his future wife’s relations. They are very
+pleasant. They try to put him at his ease. But he knows instinctively
+they are disappointed with him. I remember, when a very young man,
+attending a party at which a famous American humorist was the chief
+guest. I was standing close behind a lady who was talking to her
+husband.
+
+“He doesn’t look a bit funny,” said the lady.
+
+“Great Scott!” answered her husband. “How did you expect him to look?
+Did you think he would have a red nose and a patch over one eye?”
+
+“Oh, well, he might look funnier than that, anyhow,” retorted the lady,
+highly dissatisfied. “It isn’t worth coming for.”
+
+We all know the story of the hostess who, leaning across the table during
+the dessert, requested of the funny man that he would kindly say
+something amusing soon, because the dear children were waiting to go to
+bed. Children, I suppose, have no use for funny people who don’t choose
+to be funny. I once invited a friend down to my house for a Saturday to
+Monday. He is an entertaining man, and before he came I dilated on his
+powers of humour—somewhat foolishly perhaps—in the presence of a certain
+youthful person who resides with me, and who listens when she oughtn’t
+to, and never when she ought. He happened not to be in a humorous mood
+that evening. My young relation, after dinner, climbed upon my knee.
+For quite five minutes she sat silent. Then she whispered:
+
+“Has he said anything funny?”
+
+“Hush. No, not yet; don’t be silly.”
+
+Five minutes later: “Was that funny?”
+
+“No, of course not.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Because—can’t you hear? We are talking about Old Age Pensions.”
+
+“What’s that?”
+
+“Oh, it’s—oh, never mind now. It isn’t a subject on which one can be
+funny.”
+
+“Then what’s he want to talk about it for?”
+
+She waited for another quarter of an hour. Then, evidently bored, and
+much to my relief, suggested herself that she might as well go to bed.
+She ran to me the next morning in the garden with an air of triumph.
+
+“He said something so funny last night,” she told me.
+
+“Oh, what was it?” I inquired. It seemed to me I must have missed it.
+
+“Well, I can’t exactly ’member it,” she explained, “not just at the
+moment. But it was so funny. I dreamed it, you know.”
+
+For folks not Lions, but closely related to Lions, introductions must be
+trying ordeals. You tell them that for years you have been yearning to
+meet them. You assure them, in a voice trembling with emotion, that this
+is indeed a privilege. You go on to add that when a boy—
+
+At this point they have to interrupt you to explain that they are not the
+Mr. So-and-So, but only his cousin or his grandfather; and all you can
+think of to say is: “Oh, I’m so sorry.”
+
+I had a nephew who was once the amateur long-distance bicycle champion.
+I have him still, but he is stouter and has come down to a motor car. In
+sporting circles I was always introduced as “Shorland’s Uncle.”
+Close-cropped young men would gaze at me with rapture; and then inquire:
+“And do you do anything yourself, Mr. Jerome?”
+
+But my case was not so bad as that of a friend of mine, a doctor. He
+married a leading actress, and was known ever afterwards as “Miss B—’s
+husband.”
+
+At public dinners, where one takes one’s seat for the evening next to
+someone that one possibly has never met before, and is never likely to
+meet again, conversation is difficult and dangerous. I remember talking
+to a lady at a Vagabond Club dinner. She asked me during the
+_entree_—with a light laugh, as I afterwards recalled—what I thought,
+candidly, of the last book of a certain celebrated authoress. I told
+her, and a coldness sprang up between us. She happened to be the certain
+celebrated authoress; she had changed her place at the last moment so as
+to avoid sitting next to another lady novelist, whom she hated.
+
+One has to shift oneself, sometimes, on these occasions. A newspaper man
+came up to me last Ninth of November at the Mansion House.
+
+“Would you mind changing seats with me?” he asked. “It’s a bit awkward.
+They’ve put me next to my first wife.”
+
+I had a troubled evening myself once long ago. I accompanied a young
+widow lady to a musical At Home, given by a lady who had more
+acquaintances than she knew. We met the butler at the top of the stairs.
+My friend spoke first:
+
+“Say Mrs. Dash and—”
+
+The butler did not wait for more—he was a youngish man—but shouted out:
+
+“Mr. and Mrs. Dash.”
+
+“My dear! how very quiet you have kept!” cried our hostess delighted.
+“Do let me congratulate you.”
+
+The crush was too great and our hostess too distracted at the moment for
+any explanations. We were swept away, and both of us spent the remainder
+of the evening feebly protesting our singleness.
+
+If it had happened on the stage it would have taken us the whole play to
+get out of it. Stage people are not allowed to put things right when
+mistakes are made with their identity. If the light comedian is
+expecting a plumber, the first man that comes into the drawing-room has
+got to be a plumber. He is not allowed to point out that he never was a
+plumber; that he doesn’t look like a plumber; that no one not an idiot
+would mistake him for a plumber. He has got to be shut up in the
+bath-room and have water poured over him, just as if he were a plumber—a
+stage plumber, that is. Not till right away at the end of the last act
+is he permitted to remark that he happens to be the new curate.
+
+I sat out a play once at which most people laughed. It made me sad. A
+dear old lady entered towards the end of the first act. We knew she was
+the aunt. Nobody can possibly mistake the stage aunt—except the people
+on the stage. They, of course, mistook her for a circus rider, and shut
+her up in a cupboard. It is what cupboards seem to be reserved for on
+the stage. Nothing is ever put in them excepting the hero’s relations.
+When she wasn’t in the cupboard she was in a clothes basket, or tied up
+in a curtain. All she need have done was to hold on to something while
+remarking to the hero:
+
+“If you’ll stop shouting and jumping about for just ten seconds, and give
+me a chance to observe that I am your maiden aunt from Devonshire, all
+this tomfoolery can be avoided.”
+
+That would have ended it. As a matter of fact that did end it five
+minutes past eleven. It hadn’t occurred to her to say it before.
+
+In real life I never knew but of one case where a man suffered in silence
+unpleasantness he could have ended with a word; and that was the case of
+the late Corney Grain. He had been engaged to give his entertainment at
+a country house. The lady was a _nouvelle riche_ of snobbish instincts.
+She left instructions that Corney Grain when he arrived was to dine with
+the servants. The butler, who knew better, apologised; but Corney was a
+man not easily disconcerted. He dined well, and after dinner rose and
+addressed the assembled company.
+
+“Well, now, my good friends,” said Corney, “if we have all finished, and
+if you are all agreeable, I shall be pleased to present to you my little
+show.”
+
+The servants cheered. The piano was dispensed with. Corney contrived to
+amuse his audience very well for half-an-hour without it. At ten o’clock
+came down a message: Would Mr. Corney Grain come up into the
+drawing-room. Corney went. The company in the drawing-room were
+waiting, seated.
+
+“We are ready, Mr. Grain,” remarked the hostess.
+
+“Ready for what?” demanded Corney.
+
+“For your entertainment,” answered the hostess.
+
+“But I have given it already,” explained Corney; “and my engagement was
+for one performance only.”
+
+“Given it! Where? When?”
+
+“An hour ago, downstairs.”
+
+“But this is nonsense,” exclaimed the hostess.
+
+“It seemed to me somewhat unusual,” Corney replied; “but it has always
+been my privilege to dine with the company I am asked to entertain. I
+took it you had arranged a little treat for the servants.”
+
+And Corney left to catch his train.
+
+Another entertainer told me the following story, although a joke against
+himself. He and Corney Grain were sharing a cottage on the river. A man
+called early one morning to discuss affairs, and was talking to Corney in
+the parlour, which was on the ground floor. The window was open. The
+other entertainer—the man who told me the story—was dressing in the room
+above. Thinking he recognised the voice of the visitor below, he leant
+out of his bedroom window to hear better. He leant too far, and dived
+head foremost into a bed of flowers, his bare legs—and only his bare
+legs—showing through the open window of the parlour.
+
+“Good gracious!” exclaimed the visitor, turning at the moment and seeing
+a pair of wriggling legs above the window sill; “who’s that?”
+
+Corney fixed his eyeglass and strolled to the window.
+
+“Oh, it’s only What’s-his-name,” he explained. “Wonderful spirits. Can
+be funny in the morning.”
+
+
+
+
+SHOULD WOMEN BE BEAUTIFUL?
+
+
+PRETTY women are going to have a hard time of it later on. Hitherto,
+they have had things far too much their own way. In the future there are
+going to be no pretty girls, for the simple reason there will be no plain
+girls against which to contrast them. Of late I have done some
+systematic reading of ladies’ papers. The plain girl submits to a course
+of “treatment.” In eighteen months she bursts upon Society an
+acknowledged beauty. And it is all done by kindness. One girl writes:
+
+“Only a little while ago I used to look at myself in the glass and cry.
+Now I look at myself and laugh.”
+
+The letter is accompanied by two photographs of the young lady. I should
+have cried myself had I seen her as she was at first. She was a stumpy,
+flat-headed, squat-nosed, cross-eyed thing. She did not even look good.
+One virtue she appears to have had, however. It was faith. She believed
+what the label said, she did what the label told her. She is now a tall,
+ravishing young person, her only trouble being, I should say, to know
+what to do with her hair—it reaches to her knees and must be a nuisance
+to her. She would do better to give some of it away. Taking this young
+lady as a text, it means that the girl who declines to be a dream of
+loveliness does so out of obstinacy. What the raw material may be does
+not appear to matter. Provided no feature is absolutely missing, the
+result is one and the same.
+
+Arrived at years of discretion, the maiden proceeds to choose the style
+of beauty she prefers. Will she be a Juno, a Venus, or a Helen? Will
+she have a Grecian nose, or one tip-tilted like the petal of a rose? Let
+her try the tip-tilted style first. The professor has an idea it is
+going to be fashionable. If afterwards she does not like it, there will
+be time to try the Grecian. It is difficult to decide these points
+without experiment.
+
+Would the lady like a high or a low forehead? Some ladies like to look
+intelligent. It is purely a matter of taste. With the Grecian nose, the
+low broad forehead perhaps goes better. It is more according to
+precedent. On the other hand, the high brainy forehead would be more
+original. It is for the lady herself to select.
+
+We come to the question of eyes. The lady fancies a delicate blue, not
+too pronounced a colour—one of those useful shades that go with almost
+everything. At the same time there should be depth and passion. The
+professor understands exactly the sort of eye the lady means. But it
+will be expensive. There is a cheap quality; the professor does not
+recommend it. True that it passes muster by gaslight, but the sunlight
+shows it up. It lacks tenderness, and at the price you can hardly expect
+it to contain much hidden meaning. The professor advises the melting,
+Oh-George-take-me-in-your-arms-and-still-my-foolish-fears brand. It
+costs a little more, but it pays for itself in the end.
+
+Perhaps it will be best, now the eye has been fixed upon, to discuss the
+question of the hair. The professor opens his book of patterns. Maybe
+the lady is of a wilful disposition. She loves to run laughing through
+the woods during exceptionally rainy weather; or to gallop across the
+downs without a hat, her fair ringlets streaming in the wind, the old
+family coachman panting and expostulating in the rear. If one may trust
+the popular novel, extremely satisfactory husbands have often been
+secured in this way. You naturally look at a girl who is walking through
+a wood, laughing heartily apparently for no other reason than because it
+is raining—who rides at stretch gallop without a hat. If you have
+nothing else to do, you follow her. It is always on the cards that such
+a girl may do something really amusing before she gets home. Thus things
+begin.
+
+To a girl of this kind, naturally curly hair is essential. It must be
+the sort of hair that looks better when it is soaking wet. The bottle of
+stuff that makes this particular hair to grow may be considered dear, if
+you think merely of the price. But that is not the way to look at it.
+“What is it going to do for me?” That is what the girl has got to ask
+herself. It does not do to spoil the ship for a ha’porth of tar, as the
+saying is. If you are going to be a dashing, wilful beauty, you must
+have the hair for it, or the whole scheme falls to the ground.
+
+Eyebrows and eyelashes, the professor assumes, the lady would like to
+match the hair. Too much eccentricity the professor does not agree with.
+Nature, after all, is the best guide; neatness combined with taste, that
+is the ideal to be aimed at. The eyebrows should be almost straight, the
+professor thinks; the eyelashes long and silky, with just the suspicion
+of a curl. The professor would also suggest a little less cheekbone.
+Cheekbones are being worn low this season.
+
+Will the lady have a dimpled chin, or does she fancy the square-cut jaw?
+Maybe the square-cut jaw and the firm, sweet mouth are more suitable for
+the married woman. They go well enough with the baby and the tea-urn,
+and the strong, proud man in the background. For the unmarried girl the
+dimpled chin and the rosebud mouth are, perhaps, on the whole safer.
+Some gentlemen are so nervous of that firm, square jaw. For the present,
+at all events, let us keep to the rosebud and the dimple.
+
+Complexion! Well, there is only one complexion worth considering—a
+creamy white, relieved by delicate peach pink. It goes with everything,
+and is always effective. Rich olives, striking pallors—yes, you hear of
+these things doing well. The professor’s experience, however, is that
+for all-round work you will never improve upon the plain white and pink.
+It is less liable to get out of order, and is the easiest at all times to
+renew.
+
+For the figure, the professor recommends something lithe and supple.
+Five foot four is a good height, but that is a point that should be
+discussed first with the dressmaker. For trains, five foot six is,
+perhaps, preferable. But for the sporting girl, who has to wear short
+frocks, that height would, of course, be impossible.
+
+The bust and the waist are also points on which the dressmaker should be
+consulted. Nothing should be done in a hurry. What is the fashion going
+to be for the next two or three seasons? There are styles demanding that
+beginning at the neck you should curve out, like a pouter pigeon. There
+is apparently no difficulty whatever in obtaining this result. But if
+crinolines, for instance, are likely to come in again! The lady has only
+to imagine it for herself: the effect might be grotesque, suggestive of a
+walking hour-glass. So, too, with the waist. For some fashions it is
+better to have it just a foot from the neck. At other times it is more
+useful lower down. The lady will kindly think over these details and let
+the professor know. While one is about it, one may as well make a sound
+job.
+
+It is all so simple, and, when you come to think of it, really not
+expensive. Age, apparently, makes no difference. A woman is as old as
+she looks. In future, I take it, there will be no ladies over
+five-and-twenty. Wrinkles! Why any lady should still persist in wearing
+them is a mystery to me. With a moderate amount of care any middle-class
+woman could save enough out of the housekeeping money in a month to get
+rid of every one of them. Grey hair! Well, of course, if you cling to
+grey hair, there is no more to be said. But to ladies who would just as
+soon have rich wavy-brown or a delicate shade of gold, I would point out
+that there are one hundred and forty-seven inexpensive lotions on the
+market, any one of which, rubbed gently into the head with a tooth-brush
+(not too hard) just before going to bed will, to use a colloquialism, do
+the trick.
+
+Are you too stout, or are you too thin? All you have to do is to say
+which, and enclose stamps. But do not make a mistake and send for the
+wrong recipe. If you are already too thin, you might in consequence
+suddenly disappear before you found out your mistake. One very stout
+lady I knew worked at herself for eighteen months and got stouter every
+day. This discouraged her so much that she gave up trying. No doubt she
+had made a muddle and had sent for the wrong bottle, but she would not
+listen to further advice. She said she was tired of the whole thing.
+
+In future years there will be no need for a young man to look about him
+for a wife; he will take the nearest girl, tell her his ideal, and, if
+she really care for him, she will go to the shop and have herself fixed
+up to his pattern. In certain Eastern countries, I believe, something of
+this kind is done. A gentleman desirous of adding to his family sends
+round the neighbourhood the weight and size of his favourite wife,
+hinting that if another can be found of the same proportions, there is
+room for her. Fathers walk round among their daughters, choose the most
+likely specimen, and have her fattened up. That is their brutal Eastern
+way. Out West we shall be more delicate. Match-making mothers will
+probably revive the old confession book. Eligible bachelors will be
+invited to fill in a page: “Your favourite height in women,” “Your
+favourite measurement round the waist,” “Do you like brunettes or
+blondes?”
+
+The choice will be left to the girls.
+
+“I do think Henry William just too sweet for words,” the maiden of the
+future will murmur to herself. Gently, coyly, she will draw from him his
+ideal of what a woman should be. In from six months to a year she will
+burst upon him, the perfect She; height, size, weight, right to a T. He
+will clasp her in his arms.
+
+“At last,” he will cry, “I have found her, the woman of my dreams.”
+
+And if he does not change his mind, and the bottles do not begin to lose
+their effect, there will be every chance that they will be happy ever
+afterwards.
+
+Might not Science go even further? Why rest satisfied with making a
+world of merely beautiful women? Cannot Science, while she is about it,
+make them all good at the same time. I do not apologise for the
+suggestion. I used to think all women beautiful and good. It is their
+own papers that have disillusioned me. I used to look at this lady or at
+that—shyly, when nobody seemed to be noticing me—and think how fair she
+was, how stately. Now I only wonder who is her chemist.
+
+They used to tell me, when I was a little boy, that girls were made of
+sugar and spice. I know better now. I have read the recipes in the
+Answers to Correspondents.
+
+When I was quite a young man I used to sit in dark corners and listen,
+with swelling heart, while people at the piano told me where little girl
+babies got their wonderful eyes from, of the things they did to them in
+heaven that gave them dimples. Ah me! I wish now I had never come
+across those ladies’ papers. I know the stuff that causes those
+bewitching eyes. I know the shop where they make those dimples; I have
+passed it and looked in. I thought they were produced by angels’ kisses,
+but there was not an angel about the place, that I could see. Perhaps I
+have also been deceived as regards their goodness. Maybe all women are
+not so perfect as in the popular short story they appear to be. That is
+why I suggest that Science should proceed still further, and make them
+all as beautiful in mind as she is now able to make them in body. May we
+not live to see in the advertisement columns of the ladies’ paper of the
+future the portrait of a young girl sulking in a corner—“Before taking
+the lotion!” The same girl dancing among her little brothers and
+sisters, shedding sunlight through the home—“After the three first
+bottles!” May we not have the Caudle Mixture: One tablespoonful at
+bed-time guaranteed to make the lady murmur, “Good-night, dear; hope
+you’ll sleep well,” and at once to fall asleep, her lips parted in a
+smile? Maybe some specialist of the future will advertise Mind Massage:
+“Warranted to remove from the most obstinate subject all traces of
+hatred, envy, and malice.”
+
+And, when Science has done everything possible for women, there might be
+no harm in her turning her attention to us men. Her idea at present
+seems to be that we men are too beautiful, physically and morally, to
+need improvement. Personally, there are one or two points about which I
+should like to consult her.
+
+
+
+
+WHEN IS THE BEST TIME TO BE MERRY?
+
+
+THERE is so much I could do to improve things generally in and about
+Europe, if only I had a free hand. I should not propose any great
+fundamental changes. These poor people have got used to their own ways;
+it would be unwise to reform them all at once. But there are many little
+odds and ends that I could do for them, so many of their mistakes I could
+correct for them. They do not know this. If they only knew there was a
+man living in their midst willing to take them in hand and arrange things
+for them, how glad they would be. But the story is always the same. One
+reads it in the advertisements of the matrimonial column:
+
+“A lady, young, said to be good-looking”—she herself is not sure on the
+point; she feels that possibly she may be prejudiced; she puts before you
+merely the current gossip of the neighbourhood; people say she is
+beautiful; they may be right, they may be wrong: it is not for her to
+decide—“well-educated, of affectionate disposition, possessed of means,
+desires to meet gentleman with a view to matrimony.”
+
+Immediately underneath one reads of a gentleman of twenty-eight, “tall,
+fair, considered agreeable.” Really the modesty of the matrimonial
+advertiser teaches to us ordinary mortals quite a beautiful lesson. I
+know instinctively that were anybody to ask me suddenly:
+
+“Do you call yourself an agreeable man?” I should answer promptly:
+
+“An agreeable man! Of course I’m an agreeable man. What silly questions
+you do ask!” If he persisted in arguing the matter, saying:
+
+“But there are people who do not consider you an agreeable man.” I
+should get angry with him.
+
+“Oh, they think that, do they?” I should say. “Well, you tell them from
+me, with my compliments, that they are a set of blithering idiots. Not
+agreeable! You show me the man who says I’m not agreeable. I’ll soon
+let him know whether I’m agreeable or not.”
+
+These young men seeking a wife are silent on the subject of their own
+virtues. Such are for others to discover. The matrimonial advertiser
+confines himself to a simple statement of fact: “he is considered
+agreeable.” He is domestically inclined, and in receipt of a good
+income. He is desirous of meeting a lady of serious disposition, with
+view to matrimony. If possessed of means—well, it is a trifle hardly
+worth considering one way or the other. He does not insist upon it; on
+the other hand he does not exclude ladies of means; the main idea is
+matrimony.
+
+It is sad to reflect upon a young lady, said to be good-looking (let us
+say good-looking and be done with it: a neighbourhood does not rise up
+and declare a girl good-looking if she is not good-looking, that is only
+her modest way of putting it), let us say a young lady, good-looking,
+well-educated, of affectionate disposition—it is undeniably sad to
+reflect that such an one, matrimonially inclined, should be compelled to
+have recourse to the columns of a matrimonial journal. What are the
+young men in the neighbourhood thinking of? What more do they want? Is
+it Venus come to life again with ten thousand a year that they are
+waiting for! It makes me angry with my own sex reading these
+advertisements. And when one thinks of the girls that do get married!
+
+But life is a mystery. The fact remains: here is the ideal wife seeking
+in vain for a husband. And here, immediately underneath—I will not say
+the ideal husband, he may have faults; none of us are perfect, but as men
+go a decided acquisition to any domestic hearth, an agreeable gentleman,
+fond of home life, none of your gad-abouts—calls aloud to the four winds
+for a wife—any sort of a wife, provided she be of a serious disposition.
+In his despair, he has grown indifferent to all other considerations.
+“Is there in this world,” he has said to himself, “one unmarried woman,
+willing to marry me, an agreeable man, in receipt of a good income.”
+Possibly enough this twain have passed one another in the street, have
+sat side by side in the same tram-car, never guessing, each one, that the
+other was the very article of which they were in want to make life
+beautiful.
+
+Mistresses in search of a servant, not so much with the idea of getting
+work out of her, rather with the object of making her happy, advertise on
+one page. On the opposite page, domestic treasures—disciples of Carlyle,
+apparently, with a passionate love of work for its own sake—are seeking
+situations, not so much with the desire of gain as with the hope of
+finding openings where they may enjoy the luxury of feeling they are
+leading useful lives. These philanthropic mistresses, these toil-loving
+hand-maidens, have lived side by side in the same town for years, never
+knowing one another.
+
+So it is with these poor European peoples. They pass me in the street.
+They do not guess that I am ready and willing to take them under my care,
+to teach them common sense with a smattering of intelligence—to be, as
+one might say, a father to them. They look at me. There is nothing
+about me to tell them that I know what is good for them better than they
+do themselves. In the fairy tales the wise man wore a conical hat and a
+long robe with twiddly things all round the edge. You knew he was a
+clever man. It avoided the necessity of explanation. Unfortunately, the
+fashion has gone out. We wise men have to wear just ordinary clothes.
+Nobody knows we are wise men. Even when we tell them so, they don’t
+believe it. This it is that makes our task the more difficult.
+
+One of the first things I should take in hand, were European affairs
+handed over to my control, would be the rearrangement of the Carnival.
+As matters are, the Carnival takes place all over Europe in February. At
+Nice, in Spain, or in Italy, it may be occasionally possible to feel you
+want to dance about the streets in thin costume during February. But in
+more northern countries during Carnival time I have seen only one
+sensible masker; he was a man who had got himself up as a diver. It was
+in Antwerp. The rain was pouring down in torrents; a cheery, boisterous
+John Bull sort of an east wind was blustering through the streets at the
+rate of fifteen miles an hour. Pierrots, with frozen hands, were blowing
+blue noses. An elderly Cupid had borrowed an umbrella from a café and
+was waiting for a tram. A very little devil was crying with the cold,
+and wiping his eyes with the end of his own tail. Every doorway was
+crowded with shivering maskers. The diver alone walked erect, the water
+streaming from him.
+
+February is not the month for open air masquerading. The “confetti,”
+which has come to be nothing but coloured paper cut into small discs, is
+a sodden mass. When a lump of it strikes you in the eye, your instinct
+is not to laugh gaily, but to find out the man who threw it and to hit
+him back. This is not the true spirit of Carnival. The marvel is that,
+in spite of the almost invariably adverse weather, these Carnivals still
+continue. In Belgium, where Romanism still remains the dominant
+religion, Carnival maintains itself stronger than elsewhere in Northern
+Europe.
+
+At one small town, Binche, near the French border, it holds uninterrupted
+sway for three days and two nights, during which time the whole of the
+population, swelled by visitors from twenty miles round, shouts, romps,
+eats and drinks and dances. After which the visitors are packed like
+sardines into railway trains. They pin their tickets to their coats and
+promptly go to sleep. At every station the railway officials stumble up
+and down the trains with lanterns. The last feeble effort of the more
+wakeful reveller, before he adds himself to the heap of snoring humanity
+on the floor of the railway carriage, is to change the tickets of a
+couple of his unconscious companions. In this way gentlemen for the east
+are dragged out by the legs at junctions, and packed into trains going
+west; while southern fathers are shot out in the chill dawn at lonely
+northern stations, to find themselves greeted with enthusiasm by other
+people’s families.
+
+At Binche, they say—I have not counted them myself—that thirty thousand
+maskers can be seen dancing at the same time. When they are not dancing
+they are throwing oranges at one another. The houses board up their
+windows. The restaurants take down their mirrors and hide away the
+glasses. If I went masquerading at Binche I should go as a man in
+armour, period Henry the Seventh.
+
+“Doesn’t it hurt,” I asked a lady who had been there, “having oranges
+thrown at you? Which sort do they use, speaking generally, those fine
+juicy ones—Javas I think you call them—or the little hard brand with
+skins like a nutmeg-grater? And if both sorts are used indiscriminately,
+which do you personally prefer?”
+
+“The smart people,” she answered, “they are the same everywhere—they must
+be extravagant—they use the Java orange. If it hits you in the back I
+prefer the Java orange. It is more messy than the other, but it does not
+leave you with that curious sensation of having been temporarily stunned.
+Most people, of course, make use of the small hard orange. If you duck
+in time, and so catch it on the top of your head, it does not hurt so
+much as you would think. If, however, it hits you on a tender
+place—well, myself, I always find that a little sal volatile, with old
+cognac—half and half, you understand—is about the best thing. But it
+only happens once a year,” she added.
+
+Nearly every town gives prizes for the best group of maskers. In some
+cases the first prize amounts to as much as two hundred pounds. The
+butchers, the bakers, the candlestick makers, join together and compete.
+They arrive in wagons, each group with its band. Free trade is
+encouraged. Each neighbouring town and village “dumps” its load of
+picturesque merry-makers.
+
+It is in these smaller towns that the spirit of King Carnival finds
+happiest expression. Almost every third inhabitant takes part in the
+fun. In Brussels and the larger towns the thing appears ridiculous. A
+few hundred maskers force their way with difficulty through thousands of
+dull-clad spectators, looking like a Spanish river in the summer time, a
+feeble stream, dribbling through acres of muddy bank. At Charleroi, the
+centre of the Belgian Black Country, the chief feature of the Carnival is
+the dancing of the children. A space is specially roped off for them.
+
+If by chance the sun is kind enough to shine, the sight is a pretty one.
+How they love the dressing up and the acting, these small mites! One
+young hussy—she could hardly have been more than ten—was gotten up as a
+haughty young lady. Maybe some elder sister had served as a model. She
+wore a tremendous wig of flaxen hair, a hat that I guarantee would have
+made its mark even at Ascot on the Cup Day, a skirt that trailed two
+yards behind her, a pair of what had once been white kid gloves, and a
+blue silk parasol. Dignity! I have seen the offended barmaid, I have
+met the chorus girl—not by appointment, please don’t misunderstand me,
+merely as a spectator—up the river on Sunday. But never have I witnessed
+in any human being so much hauteur to the pound _avoir-dupois_ as was
+carried through the streets of Charleroi by that small brat. Companions
+of other days, mere vulgar boys and girls, claimed acquaintance with her.
+She passed them with a stare of such utter disdain that it sent them
+tumbling over one another backwards. By the time they had recovered
+themselves sufficiently to think of an old tin kettle lying handy in the
+gutter she had turned the corner.
+
+Two miserably clad urchins, unable to scrape together the few _sous_
+necessary for the hire of a rag or two, had nevertheless determined not
+to be altogether out of it. They had managed to borrow a couple of white
+blouses—not what you would understand by a white blouse, dear Madame, a
+dainty thing of frills and laces, but the coarse white sack the street
+sweeper wears over his clothes. They had also borrowed a couple of
+brooms. Ridiculous little objects they looked, the tiny head of each
+showing above the great white shroud as gravely they walked, the one
+behind the other, sweeping the mud into the gutter. They also were of
+the Carnival, playing at being scavengers.
+
+Another quaint sight I witnessed. The “serpentin” is a feature of the
+Belgian Carnival. It is a strip of coloured paper, some dozen yards
+long, perhaps. You fling it as you would a lassoo, entangling the head
+of some passer-by. Naturally, the object most aimed at by the Belgian
+youth is the Belgian maiden. And, naturally also, the maiden who finds
+herself most entangled is the maiden who—to use again the language of the
+matrimonial advertiser—“is considered good-looking.” The serpentin about
+her head is the “feather in her cap” of the Belgian maiden on Carnival
+Day. Coming suddenly round the corner I almost ran into a girl. Her
+back was towards me. It was a quiet street. She had half a dozen of
+these serpentins. Hurriedly, with trembling hands, she was twisting them
+round and round her own head. I looked at her as I passed. She flushed
+scarlet. Poor little snub-nosed pasty-faced woman! I wish she had not
+seen me. I could have bought sixpenny-worth, followed her, and tormented
+her with them; while she would have pretended indignation—sought,
+discreetly, to escape from me.
+
+Down South, where the blood flows quicker, King Carnival is, indeed, a
+jolly old soul. In Munich he reigns for six weeks, the end coming with a
+mad two days revel in the streets. During the whole of the period, folks
+in ordinary, every-day costume are regarded as curiosities; people wonder
+what they are up to. From the Grafin to the Dienstmädchen, from the Herr
+Professor to the “Piccolo,” as they term the small artist that answers to
+our page boy, the business of Munich is dancing, somewhere, somehow, in a
+fancy costume. Every theatre clears away the stage, every café crowds
+its chairs and tables into corners, the very streets are cleared for
+dancing. Munich goes mad.
+
+Munich is always a little mad. The maddest ball I ever danced at was in
+Munich. I went there with a Harvard University professor. He had been
+told what these balls were like. Ever seeking knowledge of all things,
+he determined to take the matter up for himself and examine it. The
+writer also must ever be learning. I agreed to accompany him. We had
+not intended to dance. Our idea was that we could be indulgent
+spectators, regarding from some coign of vantage the antics of the
+foolish crowd. The professor was clad as became a professor. Myself, I
+wore a simply-cut frock-coat, with trousering in French grey. The
+doorkeeper explained to us that this was a costume ball; he was sorry,
+but gentlemen could only be admitted in evening dress or in masquerade.
+
+It was half past one in the morning. We had sat up late on purpose; we
+had gone without our dinner; we had walked two miles. The professor
+suggested pinning up the tails of his clerically-cut coat and turning in
+his waistcoat. The doorkeeper feared it would not be quite the same
+thing. Besides, my French grey trousers refused to adapt themselves.
+The doorkeeper proposed our hiring a costume—a little speculation of his
+own; gentlemen found it simpler sometimes, especially married gentlemen,
+to hire a costume in this manner, changing back into sober garments
+before returning home. It reduced the volume of necessary explanation.
+
+“Have you anything, my good man,” said the professor, “anything that
+would effect a complete disguise?”
+
+The doorkeeper had the very thing—a Chinese arrangement, with combined
+mask and wig. It fitted neatly over the head, and was provided with a
+simple but ingenious piece of mechanism by means of which much could be
+done with the pigtail. Myself the doorkeeper hid from view under the
+cowl of a Carmelite monk.
+
+“I do hope nobody recognises us,” whispered my friend the professor as we
+entered.
+
+I can only hope sincerely that they did not. I do not wish to talk about
+myself. That would be egotism. But the mystery of the professor
+troubles me to this day. A grave, earnest gentleman, the father of a
+family, I saw him with my own eyes put that ridiculous pasteboard mask
+over his head. Later on—a good deal later on—I found myself walking
+again with him through silent star-lit streets. Where he had been in the
+interval, and who then was the strange creature under the Chinaman’s
+mask, will always remain to me an unsolved problem.
+
+
+
+
+DO WE LIE A-BED TOO LATE?
+
+
+IT was in Paris, many years ago, that I fell by chance into this habit of
+early rising. My night—by reasons that I need not enter into—had been a
+troubled one. Tired of the hot bed that gave no sleep, I rose and
+dressed myself, crept down the creaking stairs, experiencing the
+sensations of a burglar new to his profession, unbolted the great door of
+the hotel, and passed out into an unknown, silent city, bathed in a
+mysterious soft light. Since then, this strange sweet city of the dawn
+has never ceased to call to me. It may be in London, in Paris again, in
+Brussels, Berlin, Vienna, that I have gone to sleep, but if perchance I
+wake before the returning tide of human life has dimmed its glories with
+the mists and vapours of the noisy day, I know that beyond my window
+blind the fairy city, as I saw it first so many years ago—this city that
+knows no tears, no sorrow, through which there creeps no evil thing; this
+city of quiet vistas, fading into hope; this city of far-off voices
+whispering peace; this city of the dawn that still is young—invites me to
+talk with it awhile before the waking hours drive it before them, and
+with a sigh it passes whence it came.
+
+It is the great city’s one hour of purity, of dignity. The very
+rag-picker, groping with her filthy hands among the ashes, instead of an
+object of contempt, moves from door to door an accusing Figure, her thin
+soiled garments, her bent body, her scarred face, hideous with the wounds
+of poverty, an eloquent indictment of smug Injustice, sleeping behind its
+deaf shutters. Yet even into her dim brain has sunk the peace that fills
+for this brief hour the city. This, too, shall have its end, my sister!
+Men and women were not born to live on the husks that fill the pails
+outside the rich man’s door. Courage a little while longer, you and
+yours. Your rheumy eyes once were bright, your thin locks once soft and
+wavy, your poor bent back once straight; and maybe, as they tell you in
+their gilded churches, this bulging sack shall be lifted from your weary
+shoulders, your misshapen limbs be straight again. You pass not
+altogether unheeded through these empty streets. Not all the eyes of the
+universe are sleeping.
+
+The little seamstress, hurrying to her early work! A little later she
+will be one of the foolish crowd, joining in the foolish laughter, in the
+coarse jests of the work-room: but as yet the hot day has not claimed
+her. The work-room is far beyond, the home of mean cares and sordid
+struggles far behind. To her, also, in this moment are the sweet
+thoughts of womanhood. She puts down her bag, rests herself upon a seat.
+If all the day were dawn, this city of the morning always with us! A
+neighbouring clock chimes forth the hour. She starts up from her dream
+and hurries on—to the noisy work-room.
+
+A pair of lovers cross the park, holding each other’s hands. They will
+return later in the day, but there will be another expression in their
+eyes, another meaning in the pressure of their hands. Now the purity of
+the morning is with them.
+
+Some fat, middle-aged clerk comes puffing into view: his ridiculous
+little figure very podgy. He stops to take off his hat and mop his bald
+head with his handkerchief: even to him the morning lends romance. His
+fleshy face changes almost as one looks at him. One sees again the lad
+with his vague hopes, his absurd ambitions.
+
+There is a statue of Aphrodite in one of the smaller Paris parks. Twice
+in the same week, without particularly meaning it, I found myself early
+in the morning standing in front of this statue gazing listlessly at it,
+as one does when in dreamy mood; and on both occasions, turning to go, I
+encountered the same man, also gazing at it with, apparently, listless
+eyes. He was an uninteresting looking man—possibly he thought the same
+of me. From his dress he might have been a well-to-do tradesman, a minor
+Government official, doctor, or lawyer. Quite ten years later I paid my
+third visit to the same statue at about the same hour. This time he was
+there before me. I was hidden from him by some bushes. He glanced round
+but did not see me; and then he did a curious thing. Placing his hands
+on the top of the pedestal, which may have been some seven feet in
+height, he drew himself up, and kissed very gently, almost reverentially,
+the foot of the statue, begrimed though it was with the city’s dirt. Had
+he been some long-haired student of the Latin Quarter one would not have
+been so astonished. But he was such a very commonplace, quite
+respectable looking man. Afterwards he drew a pipe from his pocket,
+carefully filled and lighted it, took his umbrella from the seat where it
+had been lying, and walked away.
+
+Had it been their meeting-place long ago? Had he been wont to tell her,
+gazing at her with lover’s eyes, how like she was to the statue? The
+French sculptor has not to consider Mrs. Grundy. Maybe, the lady,
+raising her eyes, had been confused; perhaps for a moment angry—some
+little milliner or governess, one supposes. In France the _jeune fille_
+of good family does not meet her lover unattended. What had happened?
+Or was it but the vagrant fancy of a middle-aged bourgeois seeking in
+imagination the romance that reality so rarely gives us, weaving his love
+dream round his changeless statue?
+
+In one of Ibsen’s bitter comedies the lovers agree to part while they are
+still young, never to see each other in the flesh again. Into the future
+each will bear away the image of the other, godlike, radiant with the
+glory of youth and love; each will cherish the memory of a loved one who
+shall be beautiful always. That their parting may not appear such wild
+nonsense as at first it strikes us, Ibsen shows us other lovers who have
+married in the orthodox fashion. She was all that a mistress should be.
+They speak of her as they first knew her fifteen years ago, when every
+man was at her feet. He then was a young student, burning with fine
+ideals, with enthusiasm for all the humanities.
+
+They enter.
+
+What did you expect? Fifteen years have passed—fifteen years of struggle
+with the grim realities. He is fat and bald. Eleven children have to be
+provided for. High ideals will not even pay the bootmaker. To exist you
+have to fight for mean ends with mean weapons. And the sweet girl
+heroine! Now the worried mother of eleven brats! One rings down the
+curtain amid Satanic laughter.
+
+That is why, for one reason among so many, I love this mystic morning
+light. It has a strange power of revealing the beauty that is hidden
+from us by the coarser beams of the full day. These worn men and women,
+grown so foolish looking, so unromantic; these artisans and petty clerks
+plodding to their monotonous day’s work; these dull-eyed women of the
+people on their way to market to haggle over _sous_, to argue and contend
+over paltry handfuls of food. In this magic morning light the disguising
+body becomes transparent. They have grown beautiful, not ugly, with the
+years of toil and hardship; these lives, lived so patiently, are
+consecrated to the service of the world. Joy, hope, pleasure—they have
+done with all such, life for them is over. Yet they labour, ceaselessly,
+uncomplainingly. It is for the children.
+
+One morning, near Brussels, I encountered a cart of faggots, drawn by a
+hound so lean that stroking him might have hurt a dainty hand. I was
+shocked—angry, till I noticed his fellow beast of burden pushing the cart
+from behind. Such a scarecrow of an old woman! There was little to
+choose between them. I walked with them a little way. She lived near
+Waterloo. All day she gathered wood in the great forest, and starting at
+three o’clock each morning, the two lean creatures between them dragged
+the cart nine miles to Brussels, returning when they had sold their load.
+With luck she might reckon on a couple of francs. I asked her if she
+could not find something else to do.
+
+Yes, it was possible, but for the little one, her grandchild. Folks will
+not employ old women burdened with grandchildren.
+
+You fair, dainty ladies, who would never know it was morning if somebody
+did not enter to pull up the blind and tell you so! You do well not to
+venture out in this magic morning light. You would look so plain—almost
+ugly, by the side of these beautiful women.
+
+It is curious the attraction the Church has always possessed for the
+marketing classes. Christ drove them from the Temple, but still, in
+every continental city, they cluster round its outer walls. It makes a
+charming picture on a sunny morning, the great cathedral with its massive
+shadow forming the background; splashed about its feet, like a parterre
+of gay flowers around the trunk of some old tree, the women, young girls
+in their many coloured costumes, sitting before their piled-up baskets of
+green vegetables, of shining fruits.
+
+In Brussels the chief market is held on the Grande Place. The great
+gilded houses have looked down upon much the same scene every morning
+these four hundred years. In summer time it commences about half-past
+four; by five o’clock it is a roaring hive, the great city round about
+still sleeping.
+
+Here comes the thrifty housewife of the poor, to whom the difference of a
+tenth of a penny in the price of a cabbage is all-important, and the much
+harassed keeper of the petty _pension_. There are houses in Brussels
+where they will feed you, light you, sleep you, wait on you, for two
+francs a day. Withered old ladies, ancient governesses, who will teach
+you for forty centimes an hour, gather round these ricketty tables, wolf
+up the thin soup, grumble at the watery coffee, help themselves with
+unladylike greediness to the potato pie. It must need careful
+housewifery to keep these poor creatures on two francs a day and make a
+profit for yourself. So “Madame,” the much-grumbled-at, who has gone to
+bed about twelve, rises a little before five, makes her way down with her
+basket. Thus a few _sous_ may be saved upon the day’s economies.
+
+Sometimes it is a mere child who is the little housekeeper. One thinks
+that perhaps this early training in the art of haggling may not be good
+for her. Already there is a hard expression in the childish eyes, mean
+lines about the little mouth. The finer qualities of humanity are
+expensive luxuries, not to be afforded by the poor.
+
+They overwork their patient dogs, and underfeed them. During the two
+hours’ market the poor beasts, still fastened to their little “chariots,”
+rest in the open space about the neighbouring Bourse. They snatch at
+what you throw them; they do not even thank you with a wag of the tail.
+Gratitude! Politeness! What mean you? We have not heard of such. We
+only work. Some of them amid all the din lie sleeping between their
+shafts. Some are licking one another’s sores. One would they were
+better treated; alas! their owners, likewise, are overworked and
+underfed, housed in kennels no better. But if the majority in every
+society were not overworked and underfed and meanly housed, why, then the
+minority could not be underworked and overfed and housed luxuriously.
+But this is talk to which no respectable reader can be expected to
+listen.
+
+They are one babel of bargaining, these markets. The purchaser selects a
+cauliflower. Fortunately, cauliflowers have no feelings, or probably it
+would burst into tears at the expression with which it is regarded. It
+is impossible that any lady should desire such a cauliflower. Still, out
+of mere curiosity, she would know the price—that is, if the owner of the
+cauliflower is not too much ashamed of it to name a price.
+
+The owner of the cauliflower suggests six _sous_. The thing is too
+ridiculous for argument. The purchaser breaks into a laugh.
+
+The owner of the cauliflower is stung. She points out the beauties of
+that cauliflower. Apparently it is the cauliflower out of all her stock
+she loves the best; a better cauliflower never lived; if there were more
+cauliflowers in the world like this particular cauliflower things might
+be different. She gives a sketch of the cauliflower’s career, from its
+youth upwards. Hard enough it will be for her when the hour for parting
+from it comes. If the other lady has not sufficient knowledge of
+cauliflowers to appreciate it, will she kindly not paw it about, but put
+it down and go away, and never let the owner of the cauliflower see her
+again.
+
+The other lady, more as a friend than as a purchaser, points out the
+cauliflower’s defects. She wishes well to the owner of the cauliflower,
+and would like to teach her something about her business. A lady who
+thinks such a cauliflower worth six _sous_ can never hope to succeed as a
+cauliflower vendor. Has she really taken the trouble to examine the
+cauliflower for herself, or has love made her blind to its shortcomings?
+
+The owner of the cauliflower is too indignant to reply. She snatches it
+away, appears to be comforting it, replaces it in the basket. The other
+lady is grieved at human obstinacy and stupidity in general. If the
+owner of the cauliflower had had any sense she would have asked four
+_sous_. Eventually business is done at five.
+
+It is the custom everywhere abroad—asking the price of a thing is simply
+opening conversation. A lady told me that, the first day she began
+housekeeping in Florence, she handed over to a poulterer for a chicken
+the price he had demanded—with protestations that he was losing on the
+transaction, but wanted, for family reasons, apparently, to get rid of
+the chicken. He stood for half a minute staring at her, and then, being
+an honest sort of man, threw in a pigeon.
+
+Foreign housekeepers starting business in London appear hurt when our
+tradesmen decline to accept half-a-crown for articles marked
+three-and-six.
+
+“Then why mark it only three-and-sixpence?” is the foreign housekeeper’s
+argument.
+
+
+
+
+SHOULD MARRIED MEN PLAY GOLF?
+
+
+THAT we Englishmen attach too much importance to sport goes without
+saying—or, rather, it has been said so often as to have become a
+commonplace. One of these days some reforming English novelist will
+write a book, showing the evil effects of over-indulgence in sport: the
+neglected business, the ruined home, the slow but sure sapping of the
+brain—what there may have been of it in the beginning—leading to
+semi-imbecility and yearly increasing obesity.
+
+A young couple, I once heard of, went for their honeymoon to Scotland.
+The poor girl did not know he was a golfer (he had wooed and won her
+during a period of idleness enforced by a sprained shoulder), or maybe
+she would have avoided Scotland. The idea they started with was that of
+a tour. The second day the man went out for a stroll by himself. At
+dinner-time he observed, with a far-away look in his eyes, that it seemed
+a pretty spot they had struck, and suggested their staying there another
+day. The next morning after breakfast he borrowed a club from the hotel
+porter, and remarked that he would take a walk while she finished doing
+her hair. He said it amused him, swinging a club while he walked. He
+returned in time for lunch and seemed moody all the afternoon. He said
+the air suited him, and urged that they should linger yet another day.
+
+She was young and inexperienced, and thought, maybe, it was liver. She
+had heard much about liver from her father. The next morning he borrowed
+more clubs, and went out, this time before breakfast, returning to a late
+and not over sociable dinner. That was the end of their honeymoon so far
+as she was concerned. He meant well, but the thing had gone too far.
+The vice had entered into his blood, and the smell of the links drove out
+all other considerations.
+
+We are most of us familiar, I take it, with the story of the golfing
+parson, who could not keep from swearing when the balls went wrong.
+
+“Golf and the ministry don’t seem to go together,” his friend told him.
+“Take my advice before it’s too late, and give it up, Tammas.”
+
+A few months later Tammas met his friend again.
+
+“You were right, Jamie,” cried the parson cheerily, “they didna run well
+in harness; golf and the meenistry, I hae followed your advice: I hae
+gi’en it oop.”
+
+“Then what are ye doing with that sack of clubs?” inquired Jamie.
+
+“What am I doing with them?” repeated the puzzled Tammas. “Why I am
+going to play golf with them.” A light broke upon him. “Great Heavens,
+man!” he continued, “ye didna’ think ’twas the golf I’d gi’en oop?”
+
+The Englishman does not understand play. He makes a life-long labour of
+his sport, and to it sacrifices mind and body. The health resorts of
+Europe—to paraphrase a famous saying that nobody appears to have
+said—draw half their profits from the playing fields of Eton and
+elsewhere. In Swiss and German kurhausen enormously fat men bear down
+upon you and explain to you that once they were the champion sprinters or
+the high-jump representatives of their university—men who now hold on to
+the bannisters and groan as they haul themselves upstairs. Consumptive
+men, between paroxysms of coughing, tell you of the goals they scored
+when they were half-backs or forwards of extraordinary ability.
+Ex-light-weight amateur pugilists, with the figure now of an American
+roll-top desk, butt you into a corner of the billiard-room, and,
+surprised they cannot get as near you as they would desire, whisper to
+you the secret of avoiding the undercut by the swiftness of the backward
+leap. Broken-down tennis players, one-legged skaters, dropsical
+gentlemen-riders, are to be met with hobbling on crutches along every
+highway of the Engadine.
+
+They are pitiable objects. Never having learnt to read anything but the
+sporting papers, books are of no use to them. They never wasted much of
+their youth on thought, and, apparently, have lost the knack of it. They
+don’t care for art, and Nature only suggests to them the things they can
+no longer do. The snow-clad mountain reminds them that once they were
+daring tobogannists; the undulating common makes them sad because they
+can no longer handle a golf-club; by the riverside they sit down and tell
+you of the salmon they caught before they caught rheumatic fever; birds
+only make them long for guns; music raises visions of the local
+cricket-match of long ago, enlivened by the local band; a picturesque
+estaminet, with little tables spread out under the vines, recalls bitter
+memories of ping-pong. One is sorry for them, but their conversation is
+not exhilarating. The man who has other interests in life beyond sport
+is apt to find their reminiscences monotonous; while to one another they
+do not care to talk. One gathers that they do not altogether believe one
+another.
+
+The foreigner is taking kindly to our sports; one hopes he will be
+forewarned by our example and not overdo the thing. At present, one is
+bound to admit, he shows no sign of taking sport too seriously. Football
+is gaining favour more and more throughout Europe. But yet the Frenchman
+has not got it out of his head that the _coup_ to practise is kicking the
+ball high into the air and catching it upon his head. He would rather
+catch the ball upon his head than score a goal. If he can manœuvre the
+ball away into a corner, kick it up into the air twice running, and each
+time catch it on his head, he does not seem to care what happens after
+that. Anybody can have the ball; he has had his game and is happy.
+
+They talk of introducing cricket into Belgium; I shall certainly try to
+be present at the opening game. I am afraid that, until he learns from
+experience, the Belgian fielder will stop cricket balls with his head.
+That the head is the proper thing with which to play ball appears to be
+in his blood. My head is round, he argues, and hard, just like the ball
+itself; what part of the human frame more fit and proper with which to
+meet and stop a ball.
+
+Golf has not yet caught on, but tennis is firmly established from St.
+Petersburg to Bordeaux. The German, with the thoroughness characteristic
+of him, is working hard. University professors, stout majors, rising
+early in the morning, hire boys and practise back-handers and
+half-volleys. But to the Frenchman, as yet, it is a game. He plays it
+in a happy, merry fashion, that is shocking to English eyes.
+
+Your partner’s service rather astonishes you. An occasional yard or so
+beyond the line happens to anyone, but this man’s object appears to be to
+break windows. You feel you really must remonstrate, when the joyous
+laughter and tumultuous applause of the spectators explain the puzzle to
+you. He has not been trying to serve; he has been trying to hit a man in
+the next court who is stooping down to tie up his shoe-lace. With his
+last ball he has succeeded. He has hit the man in the small of the back,
+and has bowled him over. The unanimous opinion of the surrounding
+critics is that the ball could not possibly have been better placed. A
+Doherty has never won greater applause from the crowd. Even the man who
+has been hit appears pleased; it shows what a Frenchman can do when he
+does take up a game.
+
+But French honour demands revenge. He forgets his shoe, he forgets his
+game. He gathers together all the balls that he can find; his balls,
+your balls, anybody’s balls that happen to be handy. And then commences
+the return match. At this point it is best to crouch down under shelter
+of the net. Most of the players round about adopt this plan; the more
+timid make for the club-house, and, finding themselves there, order
+coffee and light up cigarettes. After a while both players appear to be
+satisfied. The other players then gather round to claim their balls.
+This makes a good game by itself. The object is to get as many balls as
+you can, your own and other people’s—for preference other people’s—and
+run off with them round the courts, followed by whooping claimants.
+
+In the course of half-an-hour or so, when everybody is dead beat, the
+game—the original game—is resumed. You demand the score; your partner
+promptly says it is “forty-fifteen.” Both your opponents rush up to the
+net, and apparently there is going to be a duel. It is only a friendly
+altercation; they very much doubt its being “forty-fifteen.”
+“Fifteen-forty” they could believe; they suggest it as a compromise. The
+discussion is concluded by calling it deuce. As it is rare for a game to
+proceed without some such incident occurring in the middle of it, the
+score generally is deuce. This avoids heart-burning; nobody wins a set
+and nobody loses. The one game generally suffices for the afternoon.
+
+To the earnest player, it is also confusing to miss your partner
+occasionally—to turn round and find that he is talking to a man. Nobody
+but yourself takes the slightest objection to his absence. The other
+side appear to regard it as a good opportunity to score. Five minutes
+later he resumes the game. His friend comes with him, also the dog of
+his friend. The dog is welcomed with enthusiasm; all balls are returned
+to the dog. Until the dog is tired you do not get a look in. But all
+this will no doubt soon be changed. There are some excellent French and
+Belgian players; from them their compatriots will gradually learn higher
+ideals. The Frenchman is young in the game. As the right conception of
+the game grows upon him, he will also learn to keep the balls lower.
+
+I suppose it is the continental sky. It is so blue, so beautiful; it
+naturally attracts one. Anyhow, the fact remains that most tennis
+players on the Continent, whether English or foreign, have a tendency to
+aim the ball direct at Heaven. At an English club in Switzerland there
+existed in my days a young Englishman who was really a wonderful player.
+To get the ball past him was almost an impossibility. It was his return
+that was weak. He only had one stroke; the ball went a hundred feet or
+so into the air and descended in his opponent’s court. The other man
+would stand watching it, a little speck in the Heavens, growing gradually
+bigger and bigger as it neared the earth. Newcomers would chatter to
+him, thinking he had detected a balloon or an eagle. He would wave them
+aside, explain to them that he would talk to them later, after the
+arrival of the ball. It would fall with a thud at his feet, rise another
+twenty yards or so and again descend. When it was at the proper height
+he would hit it back over the net, and the next moment it would be
+mounting the sky again. At tournaments I have seen that young man, with
+tears in his eyes, pleading to be given an umpire. Every umpire had
+fled. They hid behind trees, borrowed silk hats and umbrellas and
+pretended they were visitors—any device, however mean, to avoid the task
+of umpiring for that young man. Provided his opponent did not go to
+sleep or get cramp, one game might last all day. Anyone could return his
+balls; but, as I have said, to get a ball past him was almost an
+impossibility. He invariably won; the other man, after an hour or so,
+would get mad and try to lose. It was his only chance of dinner.
+
+It is a pretty sight, generally speaking, a tennis ground abroad. The
+women pay more attention to their costumes than do our lady players. The
+men are usually in spotless white. The ground is often charmingly
+situated, the club-house picturesque; there is always laughter and
+merriment. The play may not be so good to watch, but the picture is
+delightful. I accompanied a man a little while ago to his club on the
+outskirts of Brussels. The ground was bordered by a wood on one side,
+and surrounded on the other three by _petites fermes_—allotments, as we
+should call them in England, worked by the peasants themselves.
+
+It was a glorious spring afternoon. The courts were crowded. The red
+earth and the green grass formed a background against which the women, in
+their new Parisian toilets, under their bright parasols, stood out like
+wondrous bouquets of moving flowers. The whole atmosphere was a
+delightful mingling of idle gaiety, flirtation, and graceful
+sensuousness. A modern Watteau would have seized upon the scene with
+avidity.
+
+Just beyond—separated by the almost invisible wire fencing—a group of
+peasants were working in the field. An old woman and a young girl, with
+ropes about their shoulders, were drawing a harrow, guided by a withered
+old scarecrow of a man. They paused for a moment at the wire fencing,
+and looked through. It was an odd contrast; the two worlds divided by
+that wire fencing—so slight, almost invisible. The girl swept the sweat
+from her face with her hand; the woman pushed back her grey locks
+underneath the handkerchief knotted about her head; the old man
+straightened himself with some difficulty. So they stood, for perhaps a
+minute, gazing with quiet, passionless faces through that slight fencing,
+that a push from their work-hardened hands might have levelled.
+
+Was there any thought, I wonder, passing through their brains? The young
+girl—she was a handsome creature in spite of her disfiguring garments.
+The woman—it was a wonderfully fine face: clear, calm eyes, deep-set
+under a square broad brow. The withered old scarecrow—ever sowing the
+seed in the spring of the fruit that others shall eat.
+
+The old man bent again over the guiding ropes: gave the word. The team
+moved forward up the hill. It is Anatole France, I think, who says:
+Society is based upon the patience of the poor.
+
+
+
+
+ARE EARLY MARRIAGES A MISTAKE?
+
+
+I AM chary nowadays of offering counsel in connection with subjects
+concerning which I am not and cannot be an authority. Long ago I once
+took upon myself to write a paper about babies. It did not aim to be a
+textbook on the subject. It did not even claim to exhaust the topic. I
+was willing that others, coming after me, should continue the
+argument—that is if, upon reflection, they were still of opinion there
+was anything more to be said. I was pleased with the article. I went
+out of my way to obtain an early copy of the magazine in which it
+appeared, on purpose to show it to a lady friend of mine. She was the
+possessor of one or two babies of her own, specimens in no way
+remarkable, though she herself, as was natural enough, did her best to
+boom them. I thought it might be helpful to her: the views and
+observations, not of a rival fancier, who would be prejudiced, but of an
+intelligent amateur. I put the magazine into her hands, opened at the
+proper place.
+
+“Read it through carefully and quietly,” I said; “don’t let anything
+distract you. Have a pencil and a bit of paper ready at your side, and
+note down any points upon which you would like further information. If
+there is anything you think I have missed out let me know. It may be
+that here and there you will be disagreeing with me. If so, do not
+hesitate to mention it, I shall not be angry. If a demand arises I shall
+very likely issue an enlarged and improved edition of this paper in the
+form of a pamphlet, in which case hints and suggestions that to you may
+appear almost impertinent will be of distinct help to me.”
+
+“I haven’t got a pencil,” she said; “what’s it all about?”
+
+“It’s about babies,” I explained, and I lent her a pencil.
+
+That is another thing I have learnt. Never lend a pencil to a woman if
+you ever want to see it again. She has three answers to your request for
+its return. The first, that she gave it back to you and that you put it
+in your pocket, and that it’s there now, and that if it isn’t it ought to
+be. The second, that you never lent it to her. The third, that she
+wishes people would not lend her pencils and then clamour for them back,
+just when she has something else far more important to think about.
+
+“What do you know about babies?” she demanded.
+
+“If you will read the paper,” I replied, “you will see for yourself.
+It’s all there.”
+
+She flicked over the pages contemptuously.
+
+“There doesn’t seem much of it?” she retorted.
+
+“It is condensed,” I pointed out to her.
+
+“I am glad it is short. All right, I’ll read it,” she agreed.
+
+I thought my presence might disturb her, so went out into the garden. I
+wanted her to get the full benefit of it. I crept back now and again to
+peep through the open window. She did not seem to be making many notes.
+But I heard her making little noises to herself. When I saw she had
+reached the last page, I re-entered the room.
+
+“Well?” I said.
+
+“Is it meant to be funny,” she demanded, “or is it intended to be taken
+seriously?”
+
+“There may be flashes of humour here and there—”
+
+She did not wait for me to finish.
+
+“Because if it’s meant to be funny,” she said, “I don’t think it is at
+all funny. And if it is intended to be serious, there’s one thing very
+clear, and that is that you are not a mother.”
+
+With the unerring instinct of the born critic she had divined my one weak
+point. Other objections raised against me I could have met. But that
+one stinging reproach was unanswerable. It has made me, as I have
+explained, chary of tendering advice on matters outside my own department
+of life. Otherwise, every year, about Valentine’s day, there is much
+that I should like to say to my good friends the birds. I want to put it
+to them seriously. Is not the month of February just a little too early?
+Of course, their answer would be the same as in the case of my motherly
+friend.
+
+“Oh, what do you know about it? you are not a bird.”
+
+I know I am not a bird, but that is the very reason why they should
+listen to me. I bring a fresh mind to bear upon the subject. I am not
+tied down by bird convention. February, my dear friends—in these
+northern climes of ours at all events—is much too early. You have to
+build in a high wind, and nothing, believe me, tries a lady’s temper more
+than being blown about. Nature is nature, and womenfolk, my dear sirs,
+are the same all the world over, whether they be birds or whether they be
+human. I am an older person than most of you, and I speak with the
+weight of experience.
+
+If I were going to build a house with my wife, I should not choose a
+season of the year when the bricks and planks and things were liable to
+be torn out of her hand, her skirts blown over her head, and she left
+clinging for dear life to a scaffolding pole. I know the feminine biped
+and, you take it from me, that is not her notion of a honeymoon. In
+April or May, the sun shining, the air balmy—when, after carrying up to
+her a load or two of bricks, and a hod or two of mortar, we could knock
+off work for a few minutes without fear of the whole house being swept
+away into the next street—could sit side by side on the top of a wall,
+our legs dangling down, and peck and morsel together; after which I could
+whistle a bit to her—then housebuilding might be a pleasure.
+
+The swallows are wisest; June is their idea, and a very good idea, too.
+In a mountain village in the Tyrol, early one summer, I had the
+opportunity of watching very closely the building of a swallow’s nest.
+After coffee, the first morning, I stepped out from the great, cool, dark
+passage of the wirtschaft into the blazing sunlight, and, for no
+particular reason, pulled-to the massive door behind me. While filling
+my pipe, a swallow almost brushed by me, then wheeled round again, and
+took up a position on the fence only a few yards from me. He was
+carrying what to him was an exceptionally large and heavy brick. He put
+it down beside him on the fence, and called out something which I could
+not understand. I did not move. He got quite excited and said some
+more. It was undoubtable he was addressing me—nobody else was by. I
+judged from his tone that he was getting cross with me. At this point my
+travelling companion, his toilet unfinished, put his head out of the
+window just above me.
+
+“Such an odd thing,” he called down to me. “I never noticed it last
+night. A pair of swallows are building a nest here in the hall. You’ve
+got to be careful you don’t mistake it for a hat-peg. The old lady says
+they have built there regularly for the last three years.”
+
+Then it came to me what it was the gentleman had been saying to me: “I
+say, sir, you with the bit of wood in your mouth, you have been and shut
+the door and I can’t get in.”
+
+Now, with the key in my possession, it was so clear and understandable, I
+really forgot for the moment he was only a bird.
+
+“I beg your pardon,” I replied, “I had no idea. Such an extraordinary
+place to build a nest.”
+
+I opened the door for him, and, taking up his brick again, he entered,
+and I followed him in. There was a deal of talk.
+
+“He shut the door,” I heard him say, “Chap there, sucking the bit of
+wood. Thought I was never going to get in.”
+
+“I know,” was the answer; “it has been so dark in here, if you’ll believe
+me, I’ve hardly been able to see what I’ve been doing.”
+
+“Fine brick, isn’t it? Where will you have it?”
+
+Observing me sitting there, they lowered their voices. Evidently she
+wanted him to put the brick down and leave her to think. She was not
+quite sure where she would have it. He, on the other hand, was sure he
+had found the right place for it. He pointed it out to her and explained
+his views. Other birds quarrel a good deal during nest building, but
+swallows are the gentlest of little people. She let him put it where he
+wanted to, and he kissed her and ran out. She cocked her eye after him,
+watched till he was out of sight, then deftly and quickly slipped it out
+and fixed it the other side of the door.
+
+“Poor dears” (I could see it in the toss of her head); “they will think
+they know best; it is just as well not to argue with them.”
+
+Every summer I suffer much from indignation. I love to watch the
+swallows building. They build beneath the eaves outside my study window.
+Such cheerful little chatter-boxes they are. Long after sunset, when all
+the other birds are sleeping, the swallows still are chattering softly.
+It sounds as if they were telling one another some pretty story, and
+often I am sure there must be humour in it, for every now and then one
+hears a little twittering laugh. I delight in having them there, so
+close to me. The fancy comes to me that one day, when my brain has grown
+more cunning, I, too, listening in the twilight, shall hear the stories
+that they tell.
+
+One or two phrases already I have come to understand: “Once upon a
+time”—“Long, long ago”—“In a strange, far-off land.” I hear these words
+so constantly, I am sure I have them right. I call it “Swallow Street,”
+this row of six or seven nests. Two or three, like villas in their own
+grounds, stand alone, and others are semi-detached. It makes me angry
+that the sparrows will come and steal them. The sparrows will hang about
+deliberately waiting for a pair of swallows to finish their nest, and
+then, with a brutal laugh that makes my blood boil, drive the swallows
+away and take possession of it. And the swallows are so wonderfully
+patient.
+
+“Never mind, old girl,” says Tommy Swallow, after the first big cry is
+over, to Jenny Swallow, “let’s try again.”
+
+And half an hour later, full of fresh plans, they are choosing another
+likely site, chattering cheerfully once more. I watched the building of
+a particular nest for nearly a fortnight one year; and when, after two or
+three days’ absence, I returned and found a pair of sparrows comfortably
+encsonced therein, I just felt mad. I saw Mrs. Sparrow looking out.
+Maybe my anger was working upon my imagination, but it seemed to me that
+she nodded to me:
+
+“Nice little house, ain’t it? What I call well built.”
+
+Mr. Sparrow then flew up with a gaudy feather, dyed blue, which belonged
+to me. I recognised it. It had come out of the brush with which the
+girl breaks the china ornaments in our drawing-room. At any other time I
+should have been glad to see him flying off with the whole thing, handle
+included. But now I felt the theft of that one feather as an added
+injury. Mrs. Sparrow chirped with delight at sight of the gaudy
+monstrosity. Having got the house cheap, they were going to spend their
+small amount of energy upon internal decoration. That was their idea
+clearly, a “Liberty interior.” She looked more like a Cockney sparrow
+than a country one—had been born and bred in Regent Street, no doubt.
+
+“There is not much justice in this world,” said I to myself; “but there’s
+going to be some introduced into this business—that is, if I can find a
+ladder.”
+
+I did find a ladder, and fortunately it was long enough. Mr. and Mrs.
+Sparrow were out when I arrived, possibly on the hunt for cheap photo
+frames and Japanese fans. I did not want to make a mess. I removed the
+house neatly into a dust-pan, and wiped the street clear of every trace
+of it. I had just put back the ladder when Mrs. Sparrow returned with a
+piece of pink cotton-wool in her mouth. That was her idea of a colour
+scheme: apple-blossom pink and Reckitt’s blue side by side. She dropped
+her wool and sat on the waterspout, and tried to understand things.
+
+“Number one, number two, number four; where the blazes”—sparrows are
+essentially common, and the women are as bad as the men—“is number
+three?”
+
+Mr. Sparrow came up from behind, over the roof. He was carrying a piece
+of yellow-fluff, part of a lamp-shade, as far as I could judge.
+
+“Move yourself,” he said, “what’s the sense of sitting there in the
+rain?”
+
+“I went out just for a moment,” replied Mrs. Sparrow; “I could not have
+been gone, no, not a couple of minutes. When I came back—”
+
+“Oh, get indoors,” said Mr. Sparrow, “talk about it there.”
+
+“It’s what I’m telling you,” continued Mrs. Sparrow, “if you would only
+listen. There isn’t any door, there isn’t any house—”
+
+“Isn’t any—” Mr. Sparrow, holding on to the rim of the spout, turned
+himself topsy-turvy and surveyed the street. From where I was standing
+behind the laurel bushes I could see nothing but his back.
+
+He stood up again, looking angry and flushed.
+
+“What have you done with the house? Can’t I turn my back a minute—”
+
+“I ain’t done nothing with it. As I keep on telling you, I had only just
+gone—”
+
+“Oh, bother where you had gone. Where’s the darned house gone? that’s
+what I want to know.”
+
+They looked at one another. If ever astonishment was expressed in the
+attitude of a bird it was told by the tails of those two sparrows. They
+whispered wickedly together. The idea occurred to them that by force or
+cunning they might perhaps obtain possession of one of the other nests.
+But all the other nests were occupied, and even gentle Jenny Swallow,
+once in her own home with the children round about her, is not to be
+trifled with. Mr. Sparrow called at number two, put his head in at the
+door, and then returned to the waterspout.
+
+“Lady says we don’t live there,” he explained to Mrs. Sparrow. There was
+silence for a while.
+
+“Not what I call a classy street,” commented Mrs. Sparrow.
+
+“If it were not for that terrible tired feeling of mine,” said Mr.
+Sparrow, “blame if I wouldn’t build a house of my own.”
+
+“Perhaps,” said Mrs. Sparrow, “—I have heard it said that a little bit of
+work, now and then, does you good.”
+
+“All sorts of wild ideas about in the air nowadays,” said Mr. Sparrow,
+“it don’t do to listen to everybody.”
+
+“And it don’t do to sit still and do nothing neither,” snapped Mrs.
+Sparrow. “I don’t want to have to forget I’m a lady, but—well, any man
+who was a man would see things for himself.”
+
+“Why did I every marry?” retorted Mr. Sparrow.
+
+They flew away together, quarrelling.
+
+
+
+
+DO WRITERS WRITE TOO MUCH?
+
+
+ON a newspaper placard, the other day, I saw announced a new novel by a
+celebrated author. I bought a copy of the paper, and turned eagerly to
+the last page. I was disappointed to find that I had missed the first
+six chapters. The story had commenced the previous Saturday; this was
+Friday. I say I was disappointed and so I was, at first. But my
+disappointment did not last long. The bright and intelligent sub-editor,
+according to the custom now in vogue, had provided me with a short
+synopsis of those first six chapters, so that without the trouble of
+reading them I knew what they were all about.
+
+“The first instalment,” I learned, “introduces the reader to a brilliant
+and distinguished company, assembled in the drawing-room of Lady Mary’s
+maisonette in Park Street. Much smart talk is indulged in.”
+
+I know that “smart talk” so well. Had I not been lucky enough to miss
+that first chapter I should have had to listen to it once again.
+Possibly, here and there, it might have been new to me, but it would have
+read, I know, so very like the old. A dear, sweet white-haired lady of
+my acquaintance is never surprised at anything that happens.
+
+“Something very much of the same kind occurred,” she will remember, “one
+winter when we were staying in Brighton. Only on that occasion the man’s
+name, I think, was Robinson.”
+
+We do not live new stories—nor write them either. The man’s name in the
+old story was Robinson, we alter it to Jones. It happened, in the old
+forgotten tale, at Brighton, in the winter time; we change it to
+Eastbourne, in the spring. It is new and original—to those who have not
+heard “something very like it” once before.
+
+“Much smart talk is indulged in,” so the sub-editor has explained. There
+is absolutely no need to ask for more than that. There is a Duchess who
+says improper things. Once she used to shock me. But I know her now.
+She is really a nice woman; she doesn’t mean them. And when the heroine
+is in trouble, towards the middle of the book, she is just as amusing on
+the side of virtue. Then there is a younger lady whose speciality is
+proverbs. Apparently whenever she hears a proverb she writes it down and
+studies it with the idea of seeing into how many different forms it can
+be twisted. It looks clever; as a matter of fact, it is extremely easy.
+
+_Be virtuous and you will be happy_.
+
+She jots down all the possible variations: _Be virtuous and you will be
+unhappy_.
+
+“Too simple that one,” she tells herself. _Be virtuous and your friends
+will be happy if you are not_.
+
+“Better, but not wicked enough. Let us think again. _Be happy and
+people will jump to the conclusion that you are virtuous_.
+
+“That’s good, I’ll try that one at to-morrow’s party.”
+
+She is a painstaking lady. One feels that, better advised, she might
+have been of use in the world.
+
+There is likewise a disgraceful old Peer who tells naughty stories, but
+who is good at heart; and one person so very rude that the wonder is who
+invited him.
+
+Occasionally a slangy girl is included, and a clergyman, who takes the
+heroine aside and talks sense to her, flavoured with epigram. All these
+people chatter a mixture of Lord Chesterfield and Oliver Wendell Holmes,
+of Heine, Voltaire, Madame de Stael, and the late lamented H. J. Byron.
+“How they do it beats me,” as I once overheard at a music hall a stout
+lady confess to her friend while witnessing the performance of a clever
+troup, styling themselves “The Boneless Wonders of the Universe.”
+
+The synopsis added that: “Ursula Bart, a charming and unsophisticated
+young American girl possessed of an elusive expression makes her first
+acquaintance with London society.”
+
+Here you have a week’s unnecessary work on the part of the author boiled
+down to its essentials. She was young. One hardly expects an elderly
+heroine. The “young” might have been dispensed with, especially seeing
+it is told us that she was a girl. But maybe this is carping. There are
+young girls and old girls. Perhaps it is as well to have it in black and
+white; she was young. She was an American young girl. There is but one
+American young girl in English fiction. We know by heart the
+unconventional things that she will do, the startlingly original things
+that she will say, the fresh illuminating thoughts that will come to her
+as, clad in a loose robe of some soft clinging stuff, she sits before the
+fire, in the solitude of her own room.
+
+To complete her she had an “elusive expression.” The days when we used
+to catalogue the heroine’s “points” are past. Formerly it was possible.
+A man wrote perhaps some half-a-dozen novels during the whole course of
+his career. He could have a dark girl for the first, a light girl for
+the second, sketch a merry little wench for the third, and draw you
+something stately for the fourth. For the remaining two he could go
+abroad. Nowadays, when a man turns out a novel and six short stories
+once a year, description has to be dispensed with. It is not the
+writer’s fault. There is not sufficient variety in the sex. We used to
+introduce her thus:
+
+“Imagine to yourself, dear reader, an exquisite and gracious creature of
+five feet three. Her golden hair of that peculiar shade”—here would
+follow directions enabling the reader to work it out for himself. He was
+to pour some particular wine into some particular sort of glass, and wave
+it about before some particular sort of a light. Or he was to get up at
+five o’clock on a March morning and go into a wood. In this way he could
+satisfy himself as to the particular shade of gold the heroine’s hair
+might happen to be. If he were a careless or lazy reader he could save
+himself time and trouble by taking the author’s word for it. Many of
+them did.
+
+“Her eyes!” They were invariably deep and liquid. They had to be pretty
+deep to hold all the odds and ends that were hidden in them; sunlight and
+shadow, mischief, unsuspected possibilities, assorted emotions, strange
+wild yearnings. Anything we didn’t know where else to put we said was
+hidden in her eyes.
+
+“Her nose!” You could have made it for yourself out of a pen’orth of
+putty after reading our description of it.
+
+“Her forehead!” It was always “low and broad.” I don’t know why it was
+always low. Maybe because the intellectual heroine was not then popular.
+For the matter of that I doubt if she be really popular now. The
+brainless doll, one fears, will continue for many years to come to be
+man’s ideal woman—and woman’s ideal of herself for precisely the same
+period, one may be sure.
+
+“Her chin!” A less degree of variety was permissible in her chin. It
+had to be at an angle suggestive of piquancy, and it had to contain at
+least the suspicion of a dimple.
+
+To properly understand her complexion you were expected to provide
+yourself with a collection of assorted fruits and flowers. There are
+seasons in the year when it must have been difficult for the
+conscientious reader to have made sure of her complexion. Possibly it
+was for this purpose that wax flowers and fruit, carefully kept from the
+dust under glass cases, were common objects in former times upon the
+tables of the cultured.
+
+Nowadays we content ourselves—and our readers also, I am inclined to
+think—with dashing her off in a few bold strokes. We say that whenever
+she entered a room there came to one dreams of an old world garden, the
+sound of far-off bells. Or that her presence brought with it the scent
+of hollyhocks and thyme. As a matter of fact I don’t think hollyhocks do
+smell. It is a small point; about such we do not trouble ourselves. In
+the case of the homely type of girl I don’t see why we should not borrow
+Mr. Pickwick’s expression, and define her by saying that in some subtle
+way she always contrived to suggest an odour of chops and tomato sauce.
+
+If we desire to be exact we mention, as this particular author seems to
+have done, that she had an “elusive expression,” or a penetrating
+fragrance. Or we say that she moved, the centre of an indefinable
+nuance.
+
+But it is not policy to bind oneself too closely to detail. A wise
+friend of mine, who knows his business, describes his hero invariably in
+the vaguest terms. He will not even tell you whether the man is tall or
+short, clean shaven or bearded.
+
+“Make the fellow nice,” is his advice. “Let every woman reader picture
+him to herself as her particular man. Then everything he says and does
+becomes of importance to her. She is careful not to miss a word.”
+
+For the same reason he sees to it that his heroine has a bit of every
+girl in her. Generally speaking, she is a cross between Romola and Dora
+Copperfield. His novels command enormous sales. The women say he draws
+a man to the life, but does not seem to know much about women. The men
+like his women, but think his men stupid.
+
+Of another famous author no woman of my acquaintance is able to speak too
+highly. They tell me his knowledge of their sex is simply marvellous,
+his insight, his understanding of them almost uncanny. Thinking it might
+prove useful, I made an exhaustive study of his books. I noticed that
+his women were without exception brilliant charming creatures possessed
+of the wit of a Lady Wortlay Montagu, combined with the wisdom of a
+George Eliot. They were not all of them good women, but all of them were
+clever and all of them were fascinating. I came to the conclusion that
+his lady critics were correct: he did understand women. But to return to
+our synopsis.
+
+The second chapter, it appeared, transported us to Yorkshire where:
+“Basil Longleat, a typical young Englishman, lately home from college,
+resides with his widowed mother and two sisters. They are a delightful
+family.”
+
+What a world of trouble to both writer and to reader is here saved. “A
+typical young Englishman!” The author probably wrote five pages,
+elaborating. The five words of the sub-editor present him to me more
+vividly. I see him positively glistening from the effects of soap and
+water. I see his clear blue eye; his fair crisp locks, the natural
+curliness of which annoys him personally, though alluring to everybody
+else; his frank winning smile. He is “lately home from college.” That
+tells me that he is a first-class cricketer; a first-class oar; that as a
+half-back he is incomparable; that he swims like Captain Webb; is in the
+first rank of tennis players; that his half-volley at ping-pong has never
+been stopped. It doesn’t tell me much about his brain power. The
+description of him as a “typical young Englishman” suggests more
+information on this particular point. One assumes that the American girl
+with the elusive expression is going to have sufficient for both.
+
+“They are a delightful family.” The sub-editor does not say so, but I
+imagine the two sisters are likewise typical young Englishwomen. They
+ride and shoot and cook and make their own dresses, have common sense and
+love a joke.
+
+The third chapter is “taken up with the humours of a local cricket
+match.”
+
+Thank you, Mr. Sub-editor. I feel I owe you gratitude.
+
+In the fourth, Ursula Bart (I was beginning to get anxious about her)
+turns up again. She is staying at the useful Lady Mary’s place in
+Yorkshire. She meets Basil by accident one morning while riding alone.
+That is the advantage of having an American girl for your heroine. Like
+the British army: it goes anywhere and does anything.
+
+In chapter five Basil and Ursula meet again; this time at a picnic. The
+sub-editor does not wish to repeat himself, otherwise he possibly would
+have summed up chapter five by saying it was “taken up with the humours
+of the usual picnic.”
+
+In chapter six something happens:
+
+“Basil, returning home in the twilight, comes across Ursula Bart, in a
+lonely point of the moor, talking earnestly to a rough-looking stranger.
+His approach over the soft turf being unnoticed, he cannot help
+overhearing Ursula’s parting words to the forbidding-looking stranger: ‘I
+must see you again! To-morrow night at half-past nine! In the gateway
+of the ruined abbey!’ Who is he? And why must Ursula see him again at
+such an hour, in such a spot?”
+
+So here, at cost of reading twenty lines, I am landed, so to speak, at
+the beginning of the seventh chapter. Why don’t I set to work to read
+it? The sub-editor has spoiled me.
+
+“You read it,” I want to say to him. “Tell me to-morrow morning what it
+is all about. Who was this bounder? Why should Ursula want to see him
+again? Why choose a draughty place? Why half-past nine o’clock at
+night, which must have been an awkward time for both of them—likely to
+lead to talk? Why should I wade though this seventh chapter of three
+columns and a half? It’s your work. What are you paid for?”
+
+My fear is lest this sort of thing shall lead to a demand on the part of
+the public for condensed novels. What busy man is going to spend a week
+of evenings reading a book when a nice kind sub-editor is prepared in
+five minutes to tell him what it is all about!
+
+Then there will come a day—I feel it—when the business-like Editor will
+say to himself: “What in thunder is the sense of my paying one man to
+write a story of sixty thousand words and another man to read it and tell
+it again in sixteen hundred!”
+
+We shall be expected to write our novels in chapters not exceeding twenty
+words. Our short stories will be reduced to the formula: “Little boy.
+Pair of skates. Broken ice, Heaven’s gates.” Formerly an author,
+commissioned to supply a child’s tragedy of this genre for a Christmas
+number, would have spun it out into five thousand words. Personally, I
+should have commenced the previous spring—given the reader the summer and
+autumn to get accustomed to the boy. He would have been a good boy; the
+sort of boy that makes a bee-line for the thinnest ice. He would have
+lived in a cottage. I could have spread that cottage over two pages; the
+things that grew in the garden, the view from the front door. You would
+have known that boy before I had done with him—felt you had known him all
+your life. His quaint sayings, his childish thoughts, his great longings
+would have been impressed upon you. The father might have had a dash of
+humour in him, the mother’s early girlhood would have lent itself to
+pretty writing. For the ice we would have had a mysterious lake in the
+wood, said to be haunted. The boy would have loved o’ twilights to stand
+upon its margin. He would have heard strange voices calling to him. You
+would have felt the thing was coming.
+
+So much might have been done. When I think of that plot wasted in nine
+words it makes me positively angry.
+
+And what is to become of us writers if this is to be the new fashion in
+literature? We are paid by the length of our manuscript at rates from
+half-a-crown a thousand words, and upwards. In the case of fellows like
+Doyle and Kipling I am told it runs into pounds. How are we to live on
+novels the serial rights of which to most of us will work out at four and
+nine-pence.
+
+It can’t be done. It is no good telling me you can see no reason why we
+should live. That is no answer. I’m talking plain business.
+
+And what about book-rights? Who is going to buy novels of three pages?
+They will have to be printed as leaflets and sold at a penny a dozen.
+Marie Corelli and Hall Caine—if all I hear about them is true—will
+possibly make their ten or twelve shillings a week. But what about the
+rest of us? This thing is worrying me.
+
+
+
+
+SHOULD SOLDIERS BE POLITE?
+
+
+MY desire was once to pass a peaceful and pleasant winter in Brussels,
+attending to my work, improving my mind. Brussels is a bright and
+cheerful town, and I think I could have succeeded had it not been for the
+Belgian Army. The Belgian Army would follow me about and worry me.
+Judging of it from my own experience, I should say it was a good army.
+Napoleon laid it down as an axiom that your enemy never ought to be
+permitted to get away from you—never ought to be allowed to feel, even
+for a moment, that he had shaken you off. What tactics the Belgian Army
+might adopt under other conditions I am unable to say, but against me
+personally that was the plan of campaign it determined upon and carried
+out with a success that was astonishing, even to myself.
+
+I found it utterly impossible to escape from the Belgian Army. I made a
+point of choosing the quietest and most unlikely streets, I chose all
+hours—early in the morning, in the afternoon, late in the evening. There
+were moments of wild exaltation when I imagined I had given it the slip.
+I could not see it anywhere, I could not hear it.
+
+“Now,” said I to myself, “now for five minutes’ peace and quiet.”
+
+I had been doing it injustice: it had been working round me. Approaching
+the next corner, I would hear the tattoo of its drum. Before I had gone
+another quarter of a mile it would be in full pursuit of me. I would
+jump upon a tram, and travel for miles. Then, thinking I had shaken it
+off, I would alight and proceed upon my walk. Five minutes later another
+detachment would be upon my heels. I would slink home, the Belgian Army
+pursuing me with its exultant tattoo. Vanquished, shamed, my insular
+pride for ever vanished, I would creep up into my room and close the
+door. The victorious Belgian Army would then march back to barracks.
+
+If only it had followed me with a band: I like a band. I can loaf
+against a post, listening to a band with anyone. I should not have
+minded so much had it come after me with a band. But the Belgian Army,
+apparently, doesn’t run to a band. It has nothing but this drum. It has
+not even a real drum—not what I call a drum. It is a little boy’s drum,
+the sort of thing I used to play myself at one time, until people took it
+away from me, and threatened that if they heard it once again that day
+they would break it over my own head. It is cowardly going up and down,
+playing a drum of this sort, when there is nobody to stop you. The man
+would not dare to do it if his mother was about. He does not even play
+it. He walks along tapping it with a little stick. There’s no tune,
+there’s no sense in it. He does not even keep time. I used to think at
+first, hearing it in the distance, that it was the work of some young
+gamin who ought to be at school, or making himself useful taking the baby
+out in the perambulator: and I would draw back into dark doorways,
+determined, as he came by, to dart out and pull his ear for him. To my
+astonishment—for the first week—I learnt it was the Belgian Army, getting
+itself accustomed, one supposes, to the horrors of war. It had the
+effect of making me a peace-at-any-price man.
+
+They tell me these armies are necessary to preserve the tranquility of
+Europe. For myself, I should be willing to run the risk of an occasional
+row. Cannot someone tell them they are out of date, with their bits of
+feathers and their odds and ends of ironmongery—grown men that cannot be
+sent out for a walk unless accompanied by a couple of nursemen, blowing a
+tin whistle and tapping a drum out of a toy shop to keep them in order
+and prevent their running about: one might think they were chickens. A
+herd of soldiers with their pots and pans and parcels, and all their
+deadly things tied on to them, prancing about in time to a tune, makes me
+think always of the White Knight that Alice met in Wonderland. I take it
+that for practical purposes—to fight for your country, or to fight for
+somebody else’s country, which is, generally speaking, more popular—the
+thing essential is that a certain proportion of the populace should be
+able to shoot straight with a gun. How standing in a line and turning
+out your toes is going to assist you, under modern conditions of warfare,
+is one of the many things my intellect is incapable of grasping.
+
+In mediæval days, when men fought hand to hand, there must have been
+advantage in combined and precise movement. When armies were mere iron
+machines, the simple endeavour of each being to push the other off the
+earth, then the striking simultaneously with a thousand arms was part of
+the game. Now, when we shoot from behind cover with smokeless powder,
+brain not brute force—individual sense not combined solidity is surely
+the result to be aimed at. Cannot somebody, as I have suggested, explain
+to the military man that the proper place for the drill sergeant nowadays
+is under a glass case in some museum of antiquities?
+
+I lived once near the Hyde Park barracks, and saw much of the drill
+sergeant’s method. Generally speaking, he is a stout man with the walk
+of an egotistical pigeon. His voice is one of the most extraordinary
+things in nature: if you can distinguish it from the bark of a dog, you
+are clever. They tell me that the privates, after a little practice,
+can—which gives one a higher opinion of their intelligence than otherwise
+one might form. But myself I doubt even this statement. I was the owner
+of a fine retriever dog about the time of which I am speaking, and
+sometimes he and I would amuse ourselves by watching Mr. Sergeant
+exercising his squad. One morning he had been shouting out the usual
+“Whough, whough, whough!” for about ten minutes, and all had hitherto
+gone well. Suddenly, and evidently to his intense astonishment, the
+squad turned their backs upon him and commenced to walk towards the
+Serpentine.
+
+“Halt!” yelled the sergeant, the instant his amazed indignation permitted
+him to speak, which fortunately happened in time to save the detachment
+from a watery grave.
+
+The squad halted.
+
+“Who the thunder, and the blazes, and other things told you to do that?”
+
+The squad looked bewildered, but said nothing, and were brought back to
+the place where they were before. A minute later precisely the same
+thing occurred again. I really thought the sergeant would burst. I was
+preparing to hasten to the barracks for medical aid. But the paroxysm
+passed. Calling upon the combined forces of heaven and hell to sustain
+him in his trouble, he requested his squad, as man to man, to inform him
+of the reason why to all appearance they were dispensing with his
+services and drilling themselves.
+
+At this moment “Columbus” barked again, and the explanation came to him.
+
+“Please go away, sir,” he requested me. “How can I exercise my men with
+that dog of yours interfering every five minutes?”
+
+It was not only on that occasion. It happened at other times. The dog
+seemed to understand and take a pleasure in it. Sometimes meeting a
+soldier, walking with his sweetheart, Columbus, from behind my legs,
+would bark suddenly. Immediately the man would let go the girl and
+proceed, involuntarily, to perform military tricks.
+
+The War Office authorities accused me of having trained the dog. I had
+not trained him: that was his natural voice. I suggested to the War
+Office authorities that instead of quarrelling with my dog for talking
+his own language, they should train their sergeants to use English.
+
+They would not see it. Unpleasantness was in the air, and, living where
+I did at the time, I thought it best to part with Columbus. I could see
+what the War Office was driving at, and I did not desire that
+responsibility for the inefficiency of the British Army should be laid at
+my door.
+
+Some twenty years ago we, in London, were passing through a riotous
+period, and a call was made to law-abiding citizens to enrol themselves
+as special constables. I was young, and the hope of trouble appealed to
+me more than it does now. In company with some five or six hundred other
+more or less respectable citizens, I found myself one Sunday morning in
+the drill yard of the Albany Barracks. It was the opinion of the
+authorities that we could guard our homes and protect our wives and
+children better if first of all we learned to roll our “eyes right” or
+left at the given word of command, and to walk with our thumbs stuck out.
+Accordingly a drill sergeant was appointed to instruct us on these
+points. He came out of the canteen, wiping his mouth and flicking his
+leg, according to rule, with the regulation cane. But, as he approached
+us, his expression changed. We were stout, pompous-looking gentlemen,
+the majority of us, in frock coats and silk hats. The sergeant was a man
+with a sense of the fitness of things. The idea of shouting and swearing
+at us fell from him: and that gone there seemed to be no happy medium
+left to him. The stiffness departed from his back. He met us with a
+defferential attitude, and spoke to us in the language of social
+intercourse.
+
+“Good morning, gentlemen,” said the sergeant.
+
+“Good morning,” we replied: and there was a pause.
+
+The sergeant fidgetted upon his feet. We waited.
+
+“Well, now, gentlemen,” said the sergeant, with a pleasant smile, “what
+do you say to falling in?”
+
+We agreed to fall in. He showed us how to do it. He cast a critical eye
+along the back of our rear line.
+
+“A little further forward, number three, if you don’t mind, sir,” he
+suggested.
+
+Number three, who was an important-looking gentleman, stepped forward.
+
+The sergeant cast his critical eye along the front of the first line.
+
+“A little further back, if you don’t mind, sir,” he suggested, addressing
+the third gentleman from the end.
+
+“Can’t,” explained the third gentleman, “much as I can do to keep where I
+am.”
+
+The sergeant cast his critical eye between the lines.
+
+“Ah,” said the sergeant, “a little full-chested, some of us. We will
+make the distance another foot, if you please, gentlemen.”
+
+In pleasant manner, like to this, the drill proceeded.
+
+“Now then, gentlemen, shall we try a little walk? Quick march! Thank
+you, gentlemen. Sorry to trouble you, but it may be necessary to
+run—forward I mean, of course.. So if you really do not mind, we will
+now do the double quick. Halt! And if next time you can keep a little
+more in line—it has a more imposing appearance, if you understand me.
+The breathing comes with practice.”
+
+If the thing must be done at all, why should it not be done in this way?
+Why should not the sergeant address the new recruits politely:
+
+“Now then, you young chaps, are you all ready? Don’t hurry yourselves:
+no need to make hard work of what should be a pleasure to all of us.
+That’s right, that’s very good indeed—considering you are only novices.
+But there is still something to be desired in your attitude, Private
+Bully-boy. You will excuse my being personal, but are you knock-kneed
+naturally? Or could you, with an effort, do you think, contrive to give
+yourself less the appearance of a marionette whose strings have become
+loose? Thank you, that is better. These little things appear trivial, I
+know, but, after all, we may as well try and look our best—
+
+“Don’t you like your boots, Private Montmorency? Oh, I beg your pardon.
+I thought from the way you were bending down and looking at them that
+perhaps their appearance was dissatisfying to you. My mistake.
+
+“Are you suffering from indigestion, my poor fellow? Shall I get you a
+little brandy? It isn’t indigestion. Then what’s the matter with it?
+Why are you trying to hide it? It’s nothing to be ashamed of. We’ve all
+got one. Let it come forward man. Let’s see it.”
+
+Having succeeded, with a few such kindly words, in getting his line into
+order, he would proceed to recommend healthy exercise.
+
+“Shoulder arms! Good, gentlemen, very good for a beginning. Yet still,
+if I may be critical, not perfect. There is more in this thing than you
+might imagine, gentlemen. May I point out to Private Henry Thompson that
+a musket carried across the shoulder at right angles is apt to
+inconvenience the gentleman behind. Even from the point of view of his
+own comfort, I feel sure that Private Thompson would do better to follow
+the usual custom in this matter.
+
+“I would also suggest to Private St. Leonard that we are not here to
+practice the art of balancing a heavy musket on the outstretched palm of
+the hand. Private St. Leonard’s performance with the musket is decidedly
+clever. But it is not war.
+
+“Believe me, gentlemen, this thing has been carefully worked out, and no
+improvement is likely to result from individual effort. Let our idea be
+uniformity. It is monotonous, but it is safe. Now, then, gentlemen,
+once again.”
+
+The drill yard would be converted into a source of innocent delight to
+thousands. “Officer and gentleman” would become a phrase of meaning. I
+present the idea, for what it may be worth, with my compliments, to Pall
+Mall.
+
+The fault of the military man is that he studies too much, reads too much
+history, is over reflective. If, instead, he would look about him more
+he would notice that things are changing. Someone has told the British
+military man that Waterloo was won upon the playing fields of Eton. So
+he goes to Eton and plays. One of these days he will be called upon to
+fight another Waterloo: and afterwards—when it is too late—they will
+explain to him that it was won not upon the play field but in the class
+room.
+
+From the mound on the old Waterloo plain one can form a notion of what
+battles, under former conditions, must have been. The other battlefields
+of Europe are rapidly disappearing: useful Dutch cabbages, as Carlyle
+would have pointed out with justifiable satisfaction, hiding the theatre
+of man’s childish folly. You find, generally speaking, cobblers happily
+employed in cobbling shoes, women gossipping cheerfully over the washtub
+on the spot where a hundred years ago, according to the guide-book, a
+thousand men dressed in blue and a thousand men dressed in red rushed
+together like quarrelsome fox-terriers, and worried each other to death.
+
+But the field of Waterloo is little changed. The guide, whose
+grandfather was present at the battle—quite an extraordinary number of
+grandfathers must have fought at Waterloo: there must have been whole
+regiments composed of grandfathers—can point out to you the ground across
+which every charge was delivered, can show you every ridge, still
+existing, behind which the infantry crouched. The whole business was
+began and finished within a space little larger than a square mile. One
+can understand the advantage then to be derived from the perfect moving
+of the military machine; the uses of the echelon, the purposes of the
+linked battalion, the manipulation of centre, left wing and right wing.
+Then it may have been worth while—if war be ever worth the while—which
+grown men of sense are beginning to doubt—to waste two years of a
+soldier’s training, teaching him the goose-step. In the twentieth
+century, teaching soldiers the evolutions of the Thirty Years’ War is
+about as sensible as it would be loading our iron-clads with canvas.
+
+I followed once a company of Volunteers across Blackfriars Bridge on
+their way from Southwark to the Temple. At the bottom of Ludgate Hill
+the commanding officer, a young but conscientious gentleman, ordered
+“Left wheel!” At once the vanguard turned down a narrow alley—I forget
+its name—which would have led the troop into the purlieus of Whitefriars,
+where, in all probability, they would have been lost for ever. The whole
+company had to be halted, right-about-faced, and retired a hundred yards.
+Then the order “Quick march!” was given. The vanguard shot across
+Ludgate Circus, and were making for the Meat Market.
+
+At this point that young commanding officer gave up being a military man
+and talked sense.
+
+“Not that way,” he shouted: “up Fleet Street and through Middle Temple
+Lane.”
+
+Then without further trouble the army of the future went upon its way.
+
+
+
+
+OUGHT STORIES TO BE TRUE?
+
+
+THERE was once upon a time a charming young lady, possessed of much
+taste, who was asked by her anxious parent, the years passing and family
+expenditure not decreasing, which of the numerous and eligible young men
+then paying court to her she liked the best. She replied, that was her
+difficulty; she could not make up her mind which she liked the best.
+They were all so nice. She could not possibly select one to the
+exclusion of all the others. What she would have liked would have been
+to marry the lot; but that, she presumed, was impracticable.
+
+I feel I resemble that young lady, not so much in charm and beauty as in
+indecision of mind, when the question is that of my favourite author or
+my favourite book. It is as if one were asked one’s favourite food.
+There are times when one fancies an egg with one’s tea. On other
+occasions one dreams of a kipper. To-day one clamours for lobsters.
+To-morrow one feels one never wishes to see a lobster again. One
+determines to settle down, for a time, to a diet of bread and milk and
+rice pudding. Asked suddenly to say whether I preferred ices to soup, or
+beef-steak to caviare, I should be completely nonplussed.
+
+There may be readers who care for only one literary diet. I am a person
+of gross appetites, requiring many authors to satisfy me. There are
+moods when the savage strength of the Bronte sisters is companionable to
+me. One rejoices in the unrelieved gloom of “Wuthering Heights,” as in
+the lowering skies of a stormy autumn. Perhaps part of the marvel of the
+book comes from the knowledge that the authoress was a slight, delicate
+young girl. One wonders what her future work would have been, had she
+lived to gain a wider experience of life; or was it well for her fame
+that nature took the pen so soon from her hand? Her suppressed vehemence
+may have been better suited to those tangled Yorkshire byways than to the
+more open, cultivated fields of life.
+
+There is not much similarity between the two books, yet when recalling
+Emily Bronte my thoughts always run on to Olive Schreiner. Here, again,
+was a young girl with the voice of a strong man. Olive Schreiner, more
+fortunate, has lived; but I doubt if she will ever write a book that will
+remind us of her first. “The Story of an African Farm” is not a work to
+be repeated. We have advanced in literature of late. I can well
+remember the storm of indignation with which the “African Farm” was
+received by Mrs. Grundy and her then numerous, but now happily
+diminishing, school. It was a book that was to be kept from the hands of
+every young man and woman. But the hands of the young men and women
+stretched out and grasped it, to their help. It is a curious idea, this
+of Mrs. Grundy’s, that the young man and woman must never think—that all
+literature that does anything more than echo the conventions must be
+hidden away.
+
+Then there are times when I love to gallop through history on Sir
+Walter’s broomstick. At other hours it is pleasant to sit in converse
+with wise George Eliot. From her garden terrace I look down on Loamshire
+and its commonplace people; while in her quiet, deep voice she tells me
+of the hidden hearts that beat and throb beneath these velveteen jackets
+and lace falls.
+
+Who can help loving Thackeray, wittiest, gentlest of men, in spite of the
+faint suspicion of snobbishness that clings to him? There is something
+pathetic in the good man’s horror of this snobbishness, to which he
+himself was a victim. May it not have been an affectation, born
+unconsciously of self-consciousness? His heroes and heroines must needs
+be all fine folk, fit company for lady and gentlemen readers. To him the
+livery was too often the man. Under his stuffed calves even _Jeames de
+la Pluche_ himself stood upon the legs of a man, but Thackeray could
+never see deeper than the silk stockings. Thackeray lived and died in
+Clubland. One feels that the world was bounded for him by Temple Bar on
+the east and Park Lane on the west; but what there was good in Clubland
+he showed us, and for the sake of the great gentlemen and sweet ladies
+that his kindly eyes found in that narrow region, not too overpeopled
+with great gentlemen and sweet women, let us honour him.
+
+“Tom Jones,” “Peregrine Pickle,” and “Tristram Shandy” are books a man is
+the better for reading, if he read them wisely. They teach him that
+literature, to be a living force, must deal with all sides of life, and
+that little help comes to us from that silly pretence of ours that we are
+perfect in all things, leading perfect lives, that only the villain of
+the story ever deviates from the path of rectitude.
+
+This is a point that needs to be considered by both the makers and the
+buyers of stories. If literature is to be regarded solely as the
+amusement of an idle hour, then the less relationship it has to life the
+better. Looking into a truthful mirror of nature we are compelled to
+think; and when thought comes in at the window self-satisfaction goes out
+by the door. Should a novel or play call us to ponder upon the problems
+of existence, or lure us from the dusty high road of the world, for a
+while, into the pleasant meadows of dreamland? If only the latter, then
+let our heroes and our heroines be not what men and women are, but what
+they should be. Let Angelina be always spotless and Edwin always true.
+Let virtue ever triumph over villainy in the last chapter; and let us
+assume that the marriage service answers all the questions of the Sphinx.
+
+Very pleasant are these fairy tales where the prince is always brave and
+handsome; where the princess is always the best and most beautiful
+princess that ever lived; where one knows the wicked people at a glance
+by their ugliness and ill-temper, mistakes being thus rendered
+impossible; where the good fairies are, by nature, more powerful than the
+bad; where gloomy paths lead ever to fair palaces; where the dragon is
+ever vanquished; and where well-behaved husbands and wives can rely upon
+living happily ever afterwards. “The world is too much with us, late and
+soon.” It is wise to slip away from it at times to fairyland. But,
+alas, we cannot live in fairyland, and knowledge of its geography is of
+little help to us on our return to the rugged country of reality.
+
+Are not both branches of literature needful? By all means let us dream,
+on midsummer nights, of fond lovers led through devious paths to
+happiness by Puck; of virtuous dukes—one finds such in fairyland; of fate
+subdued by faith and gentleness. But may we not also, in our more
+serious humours, find satisfaction in thinking with Hamlet or Coriolanus?
+May not both Dickens and Zola have their booths in Vanity Fair? If
+literature is to be a help to us, as well as a pastime, it must deal with
+the ugly as well as with the beautiful; it must show us ourselves, not as
+we wish to appear, but as we know ourselves to be. Man has been
+described as a animal with aspirations reaching up to Heaven and
+instincts rooted—elsewhere. Is literature to flatter him, or reveal him
+to himself?
+
+Of living writers it is not safe, I suppose, to speak except, perhaps, of
+those who have been with us so long that we have come to forget they are
+not of the past. Has justice ever been done to Ouida’s undoubted genius
+by our shallow school of criticism, always very clever in discovering
+faults as obvious as pimples on a fine face? Her guardsmen “toy” with
+their food. Her horses win the Derby three years running. Her wicked
+women throw guinea peaches from the windows of the Star and Garter into
+the Thames at Richmond. The distance being about three hundred and fifty
+yards, it is a good throw. Well, well, books are not made worth reading
+by the absence of absurdities. Ouida possesses strength, tenderness,
+truth, passion; and these be qualities in a writer capable of carrying
+many more faults than Ouida is burdened with. But that is the method of
+our little criticism. It views an artist as Gulliver saw the Brobdingnag
+ladies. It is too small to see them in their entirety: a mole or a wart
+absorbs all its vision.
+
+Why was not George Gissing more widely read? If faithfulness to life
+were the key to literary success, Gissing’s sales would have been counted
+by the million instead of by the hundred.
+
+Have Mark Twain’s literary qualities, apart altogether from his humour,
+been recognised in literary circles as they ought to have been? “Huck
+Finn” would be a great work were there not a laugh in it from cover to
+cover. Among the Indians and some other savage tribes the fact that a
+member of the community has lost one of his senses makes greatly to his
+advantage; he is then regarded as a superior person. So among a school
+of Anglo-Saxon readers, it is necessary to a man, if he would gain
+literary credit, that he should lack the sense of humour. One or two
+curious modern examples occur to me of literary success secured chiefly
+by this failing.
+
+All these authors are my favourites; but such catholic taste is held
+nowadays to be no taste. One is told that if one loves Shakespeare, one
+must of necessity hate Ibsen; that one cannot appreciate Wagner and
+tolerate Beethoven; that if we admit any merit in Dore, we are incapable
+of understanding Whistler. How can I say which is my favourite novel? I
+can only ask myself which lives clearest in my memory, which is the book
+I run to more often than to another in that pleasant half hour before the
+dinner-bell, when, with all apologies to good Mr. Smiles, it is useless
+to think of work.
+
+I find, on examination, that my “David Copperfield” is more dilapidated
+than any other novel upon my shelves. As I turn its dog-eared pages,
+reading the familiar headlines “Mr. Micawber in difficulties,” “Mr.
+Micawber in prison,” “I fall in love with Dora,” “Mr. Barkis goes out
+with the tide,” “My child wife,” “Traddles in a nest of roses”—pages of
+my own life recur to me; so many of my sorrows, so many of my joys are
+woven in my mind with this chapter or the other. That day—how well I
+remember it when I read of “David’s” wooing, but Dora’s death I was
+careful to skip. Poor, pretty little Mrs. Copperfield at the gate,
+holding up her baby in her arms, is always associated in my memory with a
+child’s cry, long listened for. I found the book, face downwards on a
+chair, weeks afterwards, not moved from where I had hastily laid it.
+
+Old friends, all of you, how many times have I not slipped away from my
+worries into your pleasant company! Peggotty, you dear soul, the sight
+of your kind eyes is so good to me. Our mutual friend, Mr. Charles
+Dickens, is prone, we know, just ever so slightly to gush. Good fellow
+that he is, he can see no flaw in those he loves, but you, dear lady, if
+you will permit me to call you by a name much abused, he has drawn in
+true colours. I know you well, with your big heart, your quick temper,
+your homely, human ways of thought. You yourself will never guess your
+worth—how much the world is better for such as you! You think of
+yourself as of a commonplace person, useful only for the making of
+pastry, the darning of stockings, and if a man—not a young man, with only
+dim half-opened eyes, but a man whom life had made keen to see the beauty
+that lies hidden beneath plain faces—were to kneel and kiss your red,
+coarse hand, you would be much astonished. But he would be a wise man,
+Peggotty, knowing what things a man should take carelessly, and for what
+things he should thank God, who has fashioned fairness in many forms.
+
+Mr. Wilkins Micawber, and you, most excellent of faithful wives, Mrs.
+Emma Micawber, to you I also raise my hat. How often has the example of
+your philosophy saved me, when I, likewise, have suffered under the
+temporary pressure of pecuniary liabilities; when the sun of my
+prosperity, too, has sunk beneath the dark horizon of the world—in short,
+when I, also, have found myself in a tight corner. I have asked myself
+what would the Micawbers have done in my place. And I have answered
+myself. They would have sat down to a dish of lamb’s fry, cooked and
+breaded by the deft hands of Emma, followed by a brew of punch, concocted
+by the beaming Wilkins, and have forgotten all their troubles, for the
+time being. Whereupon, seeing first that sufficient small change was in
+my pocket, I have entered the nearest restaurant, and have treated myself
+to a repast of such sumptuousness as the aforesaid small change would
+command, emerging from that restaurant stronger and more fit for battle.
+And lo! the sun of my prosperity has peeped at me from over the clouds
+with a sly wink, as if to say “Cheer up; I am only round the corner.”
+
+Cheery, elastic Mr. and Mrs. Micawber, how would half the world face
+their fate but by the help of a kindly, shallow nature such as yours? I
+love to think that your sorrows can be drowned in nothing more harmful
+than a bowl of punch. Here’s to you, Emma, and to you, Wilkins, and to
+the twins!
+
+May you and such childlike folk trip lightly over the stones upon your
+path! May something ever turn up for you, my dears! May the rain of
+life ever fall as April showers upon your simple bald head, Micawber!
+
+And you, sweet Dora, let me confess I love you, though sensible friends
+deem you foolish. Ah, silly Dora, fashioned by wise Mother Nature who
+knows that weakness and helplessness are as a talisman calling forth
+strength and tenderness in man, trouble yourself not unduly about the
+oysters and the underdone mutton, little woman. Good plain cooks at
+twenty pounds a year will see to these things for us. Your work is to
+teach us gentleness and kindness. Lay your foolish curls just here,
+child. It is from such as you we learn wisdom. Foolish wise folk sneer
+at you. Foolish wise folk would pull up the laughing lilies, the
+needless roses from the garden, would plant in their places only useful,
+wholesome cabbage. But the gardener, knowing better, plants the silly,
+short-lived flowers, foolish wise folk asking for what purpose.
+
+Gallant Traddles, of the strong heart and the unruly hair; Sophy, dearest
+of girls; Betsy Trotwood, with your gentlemanly manners and your woman’s
+heart, you have come to me in shabby rooms, making the dismal place seem
+bright. In dark hours your kindly faces have looked out at me from the
+shadows, your kindly voices have cheered me.
+
+Little Em’ly and Agnes, it may be my bad taste, but I cannot share my
+friend Dickens’ enthusiasm for them. Dickens’ good women are all too
+good for human nature’s daily food. Esther Summerson, Florence Dombey,
+Little Nell—you have no faults to love you by.
+
+Scott’s women were likewise mere illuminated texts. Scott only drew one
+live heroine—Catherine Seton. His other women were merely the prizes the
+hero had to win in the end, like the sucking pig or the leg of mutton for
+which the yokel climbs the greasy pole. That Dickens could draw a woman
+to some likeness he proved by Bella Wilfer, and Estella in “Great
+Expectations.” But real women have never been popular in fiction. Men
+readers prefer the false, and women readers object to the truth.
+
+From an artistic point of view, “David Copperfield” is undoubtedly
+Dickens’ best work. Its humour is less boisterous; its pathos less
+highly coloured.
+
+One of Leech’s pictures represents a cab-man calmly sleeping in the
+gutter.
+
+“Oh, poor dear, he’s ill,” says a tender-hearted lady in the crowd.
+“Ill!” retorts a male bystander indignantly, “Ill! ’E’s ’ad too much of
+what I ain’t ’ad enough of.”
+
+Dickens suffered from too little of what some of us have too much
+of—criticism. His work met with too little resistance to call forth his
+powers. Too often his pathos sinks to bathos, and this not from want of
+skill, but from want of care. It is difficult to believe that the
+popular writer who allowed his sentimentality—or rather the public’s
+sentimentality—to run away with him in such scenes as the death of Paul
+Dombey and Little Nell was the artist who painted the death of Sidney
+Carton and of Barkis, the willing. The death of Barkis, next to the
+passing of Colonel Newcome, is, to my thinking, one of the most perfect
+pieces of pathos in English literature. No very deep emotion is
+concerned. He is a commonplace old man, clinging foolishly to a
+commonplace box. His simple wife and the old boatmen stand by, waiting
+calmly for the end. There is no straining after effect. One feels death
+enter, dignifying all things; and touched by that hand, foolish old
+Barkis grows great.
+
+In Uriah Heap and Mrs. Gummidge, Dickens draws types rather than
+characters. Pecksniff, Podsnap, Dolly Varden, Mr. Bumble, Mrs. Gamp,
+Mark Tapley, Turveydrop, Mrs. Jellyby—these are not characters; they are
+human characteristics personified.
+
+We have to go back to Shakespeare to find a writer who, through fiction,
+has so enriched the thought of the people. Admit all Dickens’ faults
+twice over, we still have one of the greatest writers of modern times.
+Such people as these creations of Dickens never lived, says your little
+critic. Nor was Prometheus, type of the spirit of man, nor was Niobe,
+mother of all mothers, a truthful picture of the citizen one was likely
+to meet often during a morning’s stroll through Athens. Nor grew there
+ever a wood like to the Forest of Arden, though every Rosalind and
+Orlando knows the path to glades having much resemblance thereto.
+
+Steerforth, upon whom Dickens evidently prided himself, I must confess,
+never laid hold of me. He is a melodramatic young man. The worst I
+could have wished him would have been that he should marry Rose Dartle
+and live with his mother. It would have served him right for being so
+attractive. Old Peggotty and Ham are, of course, impossible. One must
+accept them also as types. These Brothers Cheeryble, these Kits, Joe
+Gargeries, Boffins, Garlands, John Peerybingles, we will accept as types
+of the goodness that is in men—though in real life the amount of virtue
+that Dickens often wastes upon a single individual would by more
+economically minded nature, be made to serve for fifty.
+
+To sum up, “David Copperfield” is a plain tale, simply told; and such are
+all books that live. Eccentricities of style, artistic trickery, may
+please the critic of a day, but literature is a story that interests us,
+boys and girls, men and women. It is a sad book; and that, again, gives
+it an added charm in these sad later days. Humanity is nearing its old
+age, and we have come to love sadness, as the friend who has been longest
+with us. In the young days of our vigour we were merry. With Ulysses’
+boatmen, we took alike the sunshine and the thunder with frolic welcome.
+The red blood flowed in our veins, and we laughed, and our tales were of
+strength and hope. Now we sit like old men, watching faces in the fire;
+and the stories that we love are sad stories—like the stories we
+ourselves have lived.
+
+
+
+
+CREATURES THAT ONE DAY SHALL BE MEN.
+
+
+I OUGHT to like Russia better than I do, if only for the sake of the many
+good friends I am proud to possess amongst the Russians. A large square
+photograph I keep always on my mantel-piece; it helps me to maintain my
+head at that degree of distention necessary for the performance of all
+literary work. It presents in the centre a neatly-written address in
+excellent English that I frankly confess I am never tired of reading,
+around which are ranged some hundreds of names I am quite unable to read,
+but which, in spite of their strange lettering, I know to be the names of
+good Russian men and women to whom, a year or two ago, occurred the
+kindly idea of sending me as a Christmas card this message of
+encouragement. The individual Russian is one of the most charming
+creatures living. If he like you he does not hesitate to let you know
+it; not only by every action possible, but, by what perhaps is just as
+useful in this grey old world, by generous, impulsive speech.
+
+We Anglo-Saxons are apt to pride ourselves upon being undemonstrative.
+Max Adeler tells the tale of a boy who was sent out by his father to
+fetch wood. The boy took the opportunity of disappearing and did not
+show his face again beneath the paternal roof for over twenty years.
+Then one evening, a smiling, well-dressed stranger entered to the old
+couple, and announced himself as their long-lost child, returned at last.
+
+“Well, you haven’t hurried yourself,” grumbled the old man, “and blarm me
+if now you haven’t forgotten the wood.”
+
+I was lunching with an Englishman in a London restaurant one day. A man
+entered and took his seat at a table near by. Glancing round, and
+meeting my friend’s eyes, he smiled and nodded.
+
+“Excuse me a minute,” said my friend, “I must just speak to my
+brother—haven’t seen him for over five years.”
+
+He finished his soup and leisurely wiped his moustache before strolling
+across and shaking hands. They talked for a while. Then my friend
+returned to me.
+
+“Never thought to see him again,” observed my friend, “he was one of the
+garrison of that place in Africa—what’s the name of it?—that the Mahdi
+attacked. Only three of them escaped. Always was a lucky beggar, Jim.”
+
+“But wouldn’t you like to talk to him some more?” I suggested; “I can see
+you any time about this little business of ours.”
+
+“Oh, that’s all right,” he answered, “we have just fixed it up—shall be
+seeing him again to-morrow.”
+
+I thought of this scene one evening while dining with some Russian
+friends in a St. Petersburg Hotel. One of the party had not seen his
+second cousin, a mining engineer, for nearly eighteen months. They sat
+opposite to one another, and a dozen times at least during the course of
+the dinner one of them would jump up from his chair, and run round to
+embrace the other. They would throw their arms about one another,
+kissing one another on both cheeks, and then sit down again, with moist
+eyes. Their behaviour among their fellow countrymen excited no
+astonishment whatever.
+
+But the Russians’s anger is as quick and vehement as his love. On
+another occasion I was supping with friends in one of the chief
+restaurants on the Nevsky. Two gentlemen at an adjoining table, who up
+till the previous moment had been engaged in amicable conversation,
+suddenly sprang to their feet, and “went for” one another. One man
+secured the water-bottle, which he promptly broke over the other’s head.
+His opponent chose for his weapon a heavy mahogany chair, and leaping
+back for the purpose of securing a good swing, lurched against my
+hostess.
+
+“Do please be careful,” said the lady.
+
+“A thousand pardons, madame,” returned the stranger, from whom blood and
+water were streaming in equal copiousness; and taking the utmost care to
+avoid interfering with our comfort, he succeeded adroitly in flooring his
+antagonist by a well-directed blow.
+
+A policeman appeared upon the scene. He did not attempt to interfere,
+but running out into the street communicated the glad tidings to another
+policeman.
+
+“This is going to cost them a pretty penny,” observed my host, who was
+calmly continuing his supper; “why couldn’t they wait?”
+
+It did cost them a pretty penny. Some half a dozen policemen were round
+about before as many minutes had elapsed, and each one claimed his bribe.
+Then they wished both combatants good-night, and trooped out evidently in
+great good humour and the two gentlemen, with wet napkins round their
+heads, sat down again, and laughter and amicable conversation flowed
+freely as before.
+
+They strike the stranger as a childlike people, but you are possessed
+with a haunting sense of ugly traits beneath. The workers—slaves it
+would be almost more correct to call them—allow themselves to be
+exploited with the uncomplaining patience of intelligent animals. Yet
+every educated Russian you talk to on the subject knows that revolution
+is coming.
+
+But he talks to you about it with the door shut, for no man in Russia can
+be sure that his own servants are not police spies. I was discussing
+politics with a Russian official one evening in his study when his old
+housekeeper entered the room—a soft-eyed grey-haired woman who had been
+in his service over eight years, and whose position in the household was
+almost that of a friend. He stopped abruptly and changed the
+conversation. So soon as the door was closed behind her again, he
+explained himself.
+
+“It is better to chat upon such matters when one is quite alone,” he
+laughed.
+
+“But surely you can trust her,” I said, “She appears to be devoted to you
+all.”
+
+“It is safer to trust no one,” he answered. And then he continued from
+the point where we had been interrupted.
+
+“It is gathering,” he said; “there are times when I almost smell blood in
+the air. I am an old man and may escape it, but my children will have to
+suffer—suffer as children must for the sins of their fathers. We have
+made brute beasts of the people, and as brute beasts they will come upon
+us, cruel, and undiscriminating; right and wrong indifferently going down
+before them. But it has to be. It is needed.”
+
+It is a mistake to speak of the Russian classes opposing to all progress
+a dead wall of selfishness. The history of Russia will be the history of
+the French Revolution over again, but with this difference: that the
+educated classes, the thinkers, who are pushing forward the dumb masses
+are doing so with their eyes open. There will be no Maribeau, no Danton
+to be appalled at a people’s ingratitude. The men who are to-day working
+for revolution in Russia number among their ranks statesmen, soldiers,
+delicately-nurtured women, rich landowners, prosperous tradesmen,
+students familiar with the lessons of history. They have no
+misconceptions concerning the blind Monster into which they are breathing
+life. He will crush them, they know it; but with them he will crush the
+injustice and stupidity they have grown to hate more than they love
+themselves.
+
+The Russian peasant, when he rises, will prove more terrible, more
+pitiless than were the men of 1790. He is less intelligent, more brutal.
+They sing a wild, sad song, these Russian cattle, the while they work.
+They sing it in chorus on the quays while hauling the cargo, they sing it
+in the factory, they chant on the weary, endless steppes, reaping the
+corn they may not eat. It is of the good time their masters are having,
+of the feastings and the merrymakings, of the laughter of the children,
+of the kisses of the lovers.
+
+But the last line of every verse is the same. When you ask a Russian to
+translate it for you he shrugs his shoulders.
+
+“Oh, it means,” he says, “that their time will also come—some day.”
+
+It is a pathetic, haunting refrain. They sing it in the drawing-rooms of
+Moscow and St. Petersburg, and somehow the light talk and laughter die
+away, and a hush, like a chill breath, enters by the closed door and
+passes through. It is a curious song, like the wailing of a tired wind,
+and one day it will sweep over the land heralding terror.
+
+A Scotsman I met in Russia told me that when he first came out to act as
+manager of a large factory in St. Petersburg, belonging to his Scottish
+employers, he unwittingly made a mistake the first week when paying his
+workpeople. By a miscalculation of the Russian money he paid the men,
+each one, nearly a rouble short. He discovered his error before the
+following Saturday, and then put the matter right. The men accepted his
+explanation with perfect composure and without any comment whatever. The
+thing astonished him.
+
+“But you must have known I was paying you short,” he said to one of them.
+“Why didn’t you tell me of it?”
+
+“Oh,” answered the man, “we thought you were putting it in your own
+pocket and then if we had complained it would have meant dismissal for
+us. No one would have taken our word against yours.”
+
+Corruption appears to be so general throughout the whole of Russia that
+all classes have come to accept it as part of the established order of
+things. A friend gave me a little dog to bring away with me. It was a
+valuable animal, and I wished to keep it with me. It is strictly
+forbidden to take dogs into railway carriages. The list of the pains and
+penalties for doing so frightened me considerably.
+
+“Oh, that will be all right,” my friend assured me; “have a few roubles
+loose in your pocket.”
+
+I tipped the station master and I tipped the guard, and started pleased
+with myself. But I had not anticipated what was in store for me. The
+news that an Englishman with a dog in a basket and roubles in his pocket
+was coming must have been telegraphed all down the line. At almost every
+stopping-place some enormous official, wearing generally a sword and a
+helmet, boarded the train. At first these fellows terrified me. I took
+them for field-marshals at least.
+
+Visions of Siberia crossed my mind. Anxious and trembling, I gave the
+first one a gold piece. He shook me warmly by the hand—I thought he was
+going to kiss me. If I had offered him my cheek I am sure he would have
+done so. With the next one I felt less apprehensive. For a couple of
+roubles he blessed me, so I gathered; and, commending me to the care of
+the Almighty, departed. Before I had reached the German frontier, I was
+giving away the equivalent of English sixpences to men with the dress and
+carriage of major-generals; and to see their faces brighten up and to
+receive their heartfelt benediction was well worth the money.
+
+But to the man without roubles in his pocket, Russian officialdom is not
+so gracious. By the expenditure of a few more coins I got my dog through
+the Customs without trouble, and had leisure to look about me. A
+miserable object was being badgered by half a dozen men in uniform, and
+he—his lean face puckered up into a snarl—was returning them snappish
+answers; the whole scene suggested some half-starved mongrel being
+worried by school-boys. A slight informality had been discovered in his
+passport, so a fellow traveller with whom I had made friends informed me.
+He had no roubles in his pocket, and in consequence they were sending him
+back to St. Petersburg—some eighteen hours’ journey—in a wagon that in
+England would not be employed for the transport of oxen.
+
+It seemed a good joke to Russian officialdom; they would drop in every
+now and then, look at him as he sat crouched in a corner of the
+waiting-room, and pass out again, laughing. The snarl had died from his
+face; a dull, listless indifference had taken its place—the look one sees
+on the face of a beaten dog, after the beating is over, when it is lying
+very still, its great eyes staring into nothingness, and one wonders
+whether it is thinking.
+
+The Russian worker reads no newspaper, has no club, yet all things seem
+to be known to him. There is a prison on the banks of the Neva, in St.
+Petersburg. They say such things are done with now, but up till very
+recently there existed a small cell therein, below the level of the ice,
+and prisoners placed there would be found missing a day or two
+afterwards, nothing ever again known of them, except, perhaps, to the
+fishes of the Baltic. They talk of such like things among themselves:
+the sleigh-drivers round their charcoal fire, the field-workers going and
+coming in the grey dawn, the factory workers, their whispers deadened by
+the rattle of the looms.
+
+I was searching for a house in Brussels some winters ago, and there was
+one I was sent to in a small street leading out of the Avenue Louise. It
+was poorly furnished, but rich in pictures, large and small. They
+covered the walls of every room.
+
+“These pictures,” explained to me the landlady, an old, haggard-looking
+woman, “will not be left, I am taking them with me to London. They are
+all the work of my husband. He is arranging an exhibition.”
+
+The friend who had sent me had told me the woman was a widow, who had
+been living in Brussels eking out a precarious existence as a
+lodging-house keeper for the last ten years.
+
+“You have married again?” I questioned her.
+
+The woman smiled.
+
+“Not again. I was married eighteen years ago in Russia. My husband was
+transported to Siberia a few days after we were married, and I have never
+seen him since.”
+
+“I should have followed him,” she added, “only every year we thought he
+was going to be set free.”
+
+“He is really free now?” I asked.
+
+“Yes,” she answered. “They set him free last week. He will join me in
+London. We shall be able to finish our honeymoon.”
+
+She smiled, revealing to me that once she had been a girl.
+
+I read in the English papers of the exhibition in London. It was said
+the artist showed much promise. So possibly a career may at last be
+opening out for him.
+
+Nature has made life hard to Russian rich and poor alike. To the banks
+of the Neva, with its ague and influenza-bestowing fogs and mists, one
+imagines that the Devil himself must have guided Peter the Great.
+
+“Show me in all my dominions the most hopelessly unattractive site on
+which to build a city,” Peter must have prayed; and the Devil having
+discovered the site on which St. Petersburg now stands, must have
+returned to his master in high good feather.
+
+“I think, my dear Peter, I have found you something really unique. It is
+a pestilent swamp to which a mighty river brings bitter blasts and
+marrow-chilling fogs, while during the brief summer time the wind will
+bring you sand. In this way you will combine the disadvantages of the
+North Pole with those of the desert of Sahara.”
+
+In the winter time the Russians light their great stoves, and doubly
+barricade their doors and windows; and in this atmosphere, like to that
+of a greenhouse, many of their women will pass six months, never
+venturing out of doors. Even the men only go out at intervals. Every
+office, every shop is an oven. Men of forty have white hair and
+parchment faces; and the women are old at thirty. The farm labourers,
+during the few summer months, work almost entirely without sleep. They
+leave that for the winter, when they shut themselves up like dormice in
+their hovels, their store of food and vodka buried underneath the floor.
+For days together they sleep, then wake and dig, then sleep again.
+
+The Russian party lasts all night. In an adjoining room are beds and
+couches; half a dozen guests are always sleeping. An hour contents them,
+then they rejoin the company, and other guests take their places. The
+Russian eats when he feels so disposed; the table is always spread, the
+guests come and go. Once a year there is a great feast in Moscow. The
+Russian merchant and his friends sit down early in the day, and a sort of
+thick, sweet pancake is served up hot. The feast continues for many
+hours, and the ambition of the Russian merchant is to eat more than his
+neighbour. Fifty or sixty of these hot cakes a man will consume at a
+sitting, and a dozen funerals in Moscow is often the result.
+
+An uncivilised people, we call them in our lordly way, but they are
+young. Russian history is not yet three hundred years old. They will
+see us out, I am inclined to think. Their energy, their
+intelligence—when these show above the groundwork—are monstrous. I have
+known a Russian learn Chinese within six months. English! they learn it
+while you are talking to them. The children play at chess and study the
+violin for their own amusement.
+
+The world will be glad of Russia—when she has put her house in order.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH LITTLE.
+
+
+FOLKS suffering from Jingoism, Spreadeagleism, Chauvinism—all such like
+isms, to whatever country they belong—would be well advised to take a
+tour in Holland. It is the idea of the moment that size spells
+happiness. The bigger the country the better one is for living there.
+The happiest Frenchman cannot possibly be as happy as the most wretched
+Britisher, for the reason that Britain owns many more thousands of square
+miles than France possesses. The Swiss peasant, compared with the
+Russian serf, must, when he looks at the map of Europe and Asia, feel
+himself to be a miserable creature. The reason that everybody in America
+is happy and good is to be explained by the fact that America has an area
+equal to that of the entire moon. The American citizen who has backed
+the wrong horse, missed his train and lost his bag, remembers this and
+feels bucked up again.
+
+According to this argument, fishes should be the happiest of mortals, the
+sea consisting—at least, so says my atlas: I have not measured it
+myself—of a hundred and forty-four millions of square miles. But, maybe,
+the sea is also divided in ways we wot not of. Possibly the sardine who
+lives near the Brittainy coast is sad and discontented because the
+Norwegian sardine is the proud inhabitant of a larger sea. Perhaps that
+is why he has left the Brittainy coast. Ashamed of being a Brittainy
+sardine, he has emigrated to Norway, has become a naturalized Norwegian
+sardine, and is himself again.
+
+The happy Londoner on foggy days can warm himself with the reflection
+that the sun never sets on the British Empire. He does not often see the
+sun, but that is a mere detail. He regards himself as the owner of the
+sun; the sun begins his little day in the British Empire, ends his little
+day in the British Empire: for all practical purposes the sun is part of
+the British Empire. Foolish people in other countries sit underneath it
+and feel warm, but that is only their ignorance. They do not know it is
+a British possession; if they did they would feel cold.
+
+My views on this subject are, I know, heretical. I cannot get it into my
+unpatriotic head that size is the only thing worth worrying about. In
+England, when I venture to express my out-of-date opinions, I am called a
+Little Englander. It fretted me at first; I was becoming a mere shadow.
+But by now I have got used to it. It would be the same, I feel, wherever
+I went. In New York I should be a Little American; in Constantinople a
+Little Turk. But I wanted to talk about Holland. A holiday in Holland
+serves as a corrective to exaggerated Imperialistic notions.
+
+There are no poor in Holland. They may be an unhappy people, knowing
+what a little country it is they live in; but, if so, they hide the fact.
+To all seeming, the Dutch peasant, smoking his great pipe, is as much a
+man as the Whitechapel hawker or the moocher of the Paris boulevard. I
+saw a beggar once in Holland—in the townlet of Enkhuisen. Crowds were
+hurrying up from the side streets to have a look at him; the idea at
+first seemed to be that he was doing it for a bet. He turned out to be a
+Portuguese. They offered him work in the docks—until he could get
+something better to do—at wages equal in English money to about ten
+shillings a day. I inquired about him on my way back, and was told he
+had borrowed a couple of forms from the foreman and had left by the
+evening train. It is not the country for the loafer.
+
+In Holland work is easily found; this takes away the charm of looking for
+it. A farm labourer in Holland lives in a brick-built house of six
+rooms, which generally belongs to him, with an acre or so of ground, and
+only eats meat once a day. The rest of his time he fills up on eggs and
+chicken and cheese and beer. But you rarely hear him grumble. His wife
+and daughter may be seen on Sundays wearing gold and silver jewellery
+worth from fifty to one hundred pounds, and there is generally enough old
+delft and pewter in the house to start a local museum anywhere outside
+Holland. On high days and holidays, of which in Holland there are
+plenty, the average Dutch _vrouw_ would be well worth running away with.
+The Dutch peasant girl has no need of an illustrated journal once a week
+to tell her what the fashion is; she has it in the portrait of her
+mother, or of her grandmother, hanging over the glittering chimney-piece.
+
+When the Dutchwoman builds a dress she builds it to last; it descends
+from mother to daughter, but it is made of sound material in the
+beginning. A lady friend of mine thought the Dutch costume would serve
+well for a fancy-dress ball, so set about buying one, but abandoned the
+notion on learning what it would cost her. A Dutch girl in her Sunday
+clothes must be worth fifty pounds before you come to ornaments. In
+certain provinces she wears a close-fitting helmet, made either of solid
+silver or of solid gold. The Dutch gallant, before making himself known,
+walks on tiptoe a little while behind the Loved One, and looks at himself
+in her head-dress just to make sure that his hat is on straight and his
+front curl just where it ought to be.
+
+In most other European countries national costume is dying out. The
+slop-shop is year by year extending its hideous trade. But the country
+of Rubens and Rembrandt, of Teniers and Gerard Dow, remains still true to
+art. The picture post-card does not exaggerate. The men in those
+wondrous baggy knickerbockers, from the pockets of which you sometimes
+see a couple of chicken’s heads protruding; in gaudy coloured shirts, in
+worsted hose and mighty sabots, smoking their great pipes—the women in
+their petticoats of many hues, in gorgeously embroidered vest, in
+chemisette of dazzling white, crowned with a halo of many frills,
+glittering in gold and silver—are not the creatures of an artist’s fancy.
+You meet them in their thousands on holiday afternoons, walking gravely
+arm in arm, flirting with sober Dutch stolidity.
+
+On colder days the women wear bright-coloured capes made of fine spun
+silk, from underneath the ample folds of which you sometimes hear a
+little cry; and sometimes a little hooded head peeps out, regards with
+preternatural thoughtfulness the toy-like world without, then dives back
+into shelter. As for the children—women in miniature, the single
+difference in dress being the gay pinafore—you can only say of them that
+they look like Dutch dolls. But such plump, contented, cheerful little
+dolls! You remember the hollow-eyed, pale-faced dolls you see swarming
+in the great, big and therefore should be happy countries, and wish that
+mere land surface were of less importance to our statesmen and our able
+editors, and the happiness and well-being of the mere human items worth a
+little more of their thought.
+
+The Dutch peasant lives surrounded by canals, and reaches his cottage
+across a drawbridge. I suppose it is in the blood of the Dutch child not
+to tumble into a canal, and the Dutch mother never appears to anticipate
+such possibility. One can imagine the average English mother trying to
+bring up a family in a house surrounded by canals. She would never have
+a minute’s peace until the children were in bed. But then the mere sight
+of a canal to the English child suggests the delights of a sudden and
+unexpected bath. I put it to a Dutchman once. Did the Dutch child by
+any chance ever fall into a canal?
+
+“Yes,” he replied, “cases have been known.”
+
+“Don’t you do anything for it?” I enquired.
+
+“Oh, yes,” he answered, “we haul them out again.”
+
+“But what I mean is,” I explained, “don’t you do anything to prevent
+their falling in—to save them from falling in again?”
+
+“Yes,” he answered, “we spank ’em.”
+
+There is always a wind in Holland; it comes from over the sea. There is
+nothing to stay its progress. It leaps the low dykes and sweeps with a
+shriek across the sad, soft dunes, and thinks it is going to have a good
+time and play havoc in the land. But the Dutchman laughs behind his
+great pipe as it comes to him shouting and roaring. “Welcome, my hearty,
+welcome,” he chuckles, “come blustering and bragging; the bigger you are
+the better I like you.” And when it is once in the land, behind the
+long, straight dykes, behind the waving line of sandy dunes, he seizes
+hold of it, and will not let it go till it has done its tale of work.
+
+The wind is the Dutchman’s; servant before he lets it loose again it has
+turned ten thousand mills, has pumped the water and sawn the wood, has
+lighted the town and worked the loom, and forged the iron, and driven the
+great, slow, silent wherry, and played with the children in the garden.
+It is a sober wind when it gets back to sea, worn and weary, leaving the
+Dutchman laughing behind his everlasting pipe. There are canals in
+Holland down which you pass as though a field of wind-blown corn; a soft,
+low, rustling murmur ever in your ears. It is the ceaseless whirl of the
+great mill sails. Far out at sea the winds are as foolish savages,
+fighting, shrieking, tearing—purposeless. Here, in the street of mills,
+it is a civilized wind, crooning softly while it labours.
+
+What charms one in Holland is the neatness and cleanliness of all about
+one. Maybe to the Dutchman there are drawbacks. In a Dutch household
+life must be one long spring-cleaning. No milk-pail is considered fit
+that cannot just as well be used for a looking-glass. The great brass
+pans, hanging under the pent house roof outside the cottage door, flash
+like burnished gold. You could eat your dinner off the red-tiled floor,
+but that the deal table, scrubbed to the colour of cream cheese, is more
+convenient. By each threshold stands a row of empty sabots, and
+woe-betide the Dutchman who would dream of crossing it in anything but
+his stockinged feet.
+
+There is a fashion in sabots. Every spring they are freshly painted.
+One district fancies an orange yellow, another a red, a third white,
+suggesting purity and innocence. Members of the Smart Set indulge in
+ornamentation; a frieze in pink, a star upon the toe. Walking in sabots
+is not as easy as it looks. Attempting to run in sabots I do not
+recommend to the beginner.
+
+“How do you run in sabots?” I asked a Dutchman once. I had been
+experimenting, and had hurt myself.
+
+“We don’t run,” answered the Dutchman.
+
+And observation has proved to me he was right. The Dutch boy, when he
+runs, puts them for preference on his hands, and hits other Dutch boys
+over the head with them as he passes.
+
+The roads in Holland, straight and level, and shaded all the way with
+trees, look, from the railway-carriage window, as if they would be good
+for cycling; but this is a delusion. I crossed in the boat from Harwich
+once, with a well-known black and white artist, and an equally well-known
+and highly respected humorist. They had their bicycles with them,
+intending to tour Holland. I met them a fortnight later in Delft, or,
+rather, I met their remains. I was horrified at first. I thought it was
+drink. They could not stand still, they could not sit still, they
+trembled and shook in every limb, their teeth chattered when they tried
+to talk. The humorist hadn’t a joke left in him. The artist could not
+have drawn his own salary; he would have dropped it on the way to his
+pocket. The Dutch roads are paved their entire length with cobbles—big,
+round cobbles, over which your bicycle leaps and springs and plunges.
+
+If you would see Holland outside the big towns a smattering of Dutch is
+necessary. If you know German there is not much difficulty. Dutch—I
+speak as an amateur—appears to be very bad German mis-pronounced.
+Myself, I find my German goes well in Holland, even better than in
+Germany. The Anglo-Saxon should not attempt the Dutch G. It is hopeless
+to think of succeeding, and the attempt has been known to produce
+internal rupture. The Dutchman appears to keep his G in his stomach, and
+to haul it up when wanted. Myself, I find the ordinary G, preceded by a
+hiccough and followed by a sob, the nearest I can get to it. But they
+tell me it is not quite right, yet.
+
+One needs to save up beforehand if one desires to spend any length of
+time in Holland. One talks of dear old England, but the dearest land in
+all the world is little Holland. The florin there is equal to the franc
+in France and to the shilling in England. They tell you that cigars are
+cheap in Holland. A cheap Dutch cigar will last you a day. It is not
+until you have forgotten the taste of it that you feel you ever want to
+smoke again. I knew a man who reckoned that he had saved hundreds of
+pounds by smoking Dutch cigars for a month steadily. It was years before
+he again ventured on tobacco.
+
+Watching building operations in Holland brings home to you forcibly, what
+previously you have regarded as a meaningless formula—namely, that the
+country is built upon piles. A dozen feet below the level of the street
+one sees the labourers working in fishermen’s boots up to their knees in
+water, driving the great wooden blocks into the mud. Many of the older
+houses slope forward at such an angle that you almost fear to pass
+beneath them. I should be as nervous as a kitten, living in one of the
+upper storeys. But the Dutchman leans out of a window that is hanging
+above the street six feet beyond the perpendicular, and smokes
+contentedly.
+
+They have a merry custom in Holland of keeping the railway time twenty
+minutes ahead of the town time—or is it twenty minutes behind? I never
+can remember when I’m there, and I am not sure now. The Dutchman himself
+never knows.
+
+“You’ve plenty of time,” he says
+
+“But the train goes at ten,” you say; “the station is a mile away, and it
+is now half-past nine.”
+
+“Yes, but that means ten-twenty,” he answers, “you have nearly an hour.”
+
+Five minutes later he taps you on the shoulder.
+
+“My mistake, it’s twenty to ten. I was thinking it was the other way
+about.”
+
+Another argues with him that his first idea was right. They work it out
+by scientific methods. Meanwhile you have dived into a cab. The result
+is always the same: you are either forty minutes too soon, or you have
+missed the train by twenty minutes. A Dutch platform is always crowded
+with women explaining volubly to their husbands either that there was not
+any need to have hurried, or else that the thing would have been to have
+started half an hour before they did, the man in both cases being, of
+course, to blame. The men walk up and down and swear.
+
+The idea has been suggested that the railway time and the town time
+should be made to conform. The argument against the idea is that if it
+were carried out there would be nothing left to put the Dutchman out and
+worry him.
+
+
+
+
+SHOULD WE SAY WHAT WE THINK, OR THINK WHAT WE SAY?
+
+
+A MAD friend of mine will have it that the characteristic of the age is
+Make-Believe. He argues that all social intercourse is founded on
+make-believe. A servant enters to say that Mr. and Mrs. Bore are in the
+drawing-room.
+
+“Oh, damn!” says the man.
+
+“Hush!” says the woman. “Shut the door, Susan. How often am I to tell
+you never to leave the door open?”
+
+The man creeps upstairs on tiptoe and shuts himself in his study. The
+woman does things before a looking-glass, waits till she feels she is
+sufficiently mistress of herself not to show her feelings, and then
+enters the drawing-room with outstretched hands and the look of one
+welcoming an angel’s visit. She says how delighted she is to see the
+Bores—how good it was of them to come. Why did they not bring more Bores
+with them? Where is naughty Bore junior? Why does he never come to see
+her now? She will have to be really angry with him. And sweet little
+Flossie Bore? Too young to pay calls! Nonsense. An “At Home” day is
+not worth having where all the Bores are not.
+
+The Bores, who had hoped that she was out—who have only called because
+the etiquette book told them that they must call at least four times in
+the season, explain how they have been trying and trying to come.
+
+“This afternoon,” recounts Mrs. Bore, “we were determined to come.
+‘John, dear,’ I said this morning, ‘I shall go and see dear Mrs. Bounder
+this afternoon, no matter what happens.’”
+
+The idea conveyed is that the Prince of Wales, on calling at the Bores,
+was told that he could not come in. He might call again in the evening
+or come some other day.
+
+That afternoon the Bores were going to enjoy themselves in their own way;
+they were going to see Mrs. Bounder.
+
+“And how is Mr. Bounder?” demands Mrs. Bore.
+
+Mrs. Bounder remains mute for a moment, straining her ears. She can hear
+him creeping past the door on his way downstairs. She hears the front
+door softly opened and closed-to. She wakes, as from a dream. She has
+been thinking of the sorrow that will fall on Bounder when he returns
+home later and learns what he has missed.
+
+And thus it is, not only with the Bores and Bounders, but even with us
+who are not Bores or Bounders. Society in all ranks is founded on the
+make-believe that everybody is charming; that we are delighted to see
+everybody; that everybody is delighted to see us; that it is so good of
+everybody to come; that we are desolate at the thought that they really
+must go now.
+
+Which would we rather do—stop and finish our cigar or hasten into the
+drawing-room to hear Miss Screecher sing? Can you ask us? We tumble
+over each other in our hurry. Miss Screecher would really rather not
+sing; but if we insist—We do insist. Miss Screecher, with pretty
+reluctance, consents. We are careful not to look at one another. We sit
+with our eyes fixed on the ceiling. Miss Screecher finishes, and rises.
+
+“But it was so short,” we say, so soon as we can be heard above the
+applause. Is Miss Screecher quite sure that was the whole of it? Or has
+she been playing tricks upon us, the naughty lady, defrauding us of a
+verse? Miss Screecher assures us that the fault is the composer’s. But
+she knows another. At this hint, our faces lighten again with gladness.
+We clamour for more.
+
+Our host’s wine is always the most extraordinary we have ever tasted.
+No, not another glass; we dare not—doctor’s orders, very strict. Our
+host’s cigar! We did not know they made such cigars in this workaday
+world. No, we really could not smoke another. Well, if he will be so
+pressing, may we put it in our pocket? The truth is, we are not used to
+high smoking. Our hostess’s coffee! Would she confide to us her secret?
+The baby! We hardly trust ourselves to speak. The usual baby—we have
+seen it. As a rule, to be candid, we never could detect much beauty in
+babies—have always held the usual gush about them to be insincere. But
+this baby! We are almost on the point of asking them where they got it.
+It is just the kind we wanted for ourselves. Little Janet’s recitation:
+“A Visit to the Dentist!” Hitherto the amateur reciter has not appealed
+to us. But this is genius, surely. She ought to be trained for the
+stage. Her mother does not altogether approve of the stage. We plead
+for the stage—that it may not be deprived of such talent.
+
+Every bride is beautiful. Every bride looks charming in a simple costume
+of—for further particulars see local papers. Every marriage is a cause
+for universal rejoicing. With our wine-glass in our hand we picture the
+ideal life we know to be in store for them. How can it be otherwise?
+She, the daughter of her mother. (Cheers.) He—well, we all know him.
+(More cheers.) Also involuntary guffaw from ill-regulated young man at
+end of table, promptly suppressed.
+
+We carry our make-believe even into our religion. We sit in church, and
+in voices swelling with pride, mention to the Almighty, at stated
+intervals, that we are miserable worms—that there is no good in us. This
+sort of thing, we gather, is expected of us; it does us no harm, and is
+supposed to please.
+
+We make-believe that every woman is good, that every man is honest—until
+they insist on forcing us, against our will, to observe that they are
+not. Then we become very angry with them, and explain to them that they,
+being sinners, are not folk fit to mix with us perfect people. Our
+grief, when our rich aunt dies, is hardly to be borne. Drapers make
+fortunes, helping us to express feebly our desolation. Our only
+consolation is that she has gone to a better world.
+
+Everybody goes to a better world when they have got all they can out of
+this one.
+
+We stand around the open grave and tell each other so. The clergyman is
+so assured of it that, to save time, they have written out the formula
+for him and had it printed in a little book. As a child it used to
+surprise me—this fact that everybody went to heaven. Thinking of all the
+people that had died, I pictured the place overcrowded. Almost I felt
+sorry for the Devil, nobody ever coming his way, so to speak. I saw him
+in imagination, a lonely old gentleman, sitting at his gate day after
+day, hoping against hope, muttering to himself maybe that it hardly
+seemed worth while, from his point of view, keeping the show open. An
+old nurse whom I once took into my confidence was sure, if I continued
+talking in this sort of way, that he would get me anyhow. I must have
+been an evil-hearted youngster. The thought of how he would welcome me,
+the only human being that he had seen for years, had a certain
+fascination for me; for once in my existence I should be made a fuss
+about.
+
+At every public meeting the chief speaker is always “a jolly good
+fellow.” The man from Mars, reading our newspapers, would be convinced
+that every Member of Parliament was a jovial, kindly, high-hearted,
+generous-souled saint, with just sufficient humanity in him to prevent
+the angels from carrying him off bodily. Do not the entire audience,
+moved by one common impulse, declare him three times running, and in
+stentorian voice, to be this “jolly good fellow”? So say all of them.
+We have always listened with the most intense pleasure to the brilliant
+speech of our friend who has just sat down. When you thought we were
+yawning, we were drinking in his eloquence, open-mouthed.
+
+The higher one ascends in the social scale, the wider becomes this
+necessary base of make-believe. When anything sad happens to a very big
+person, the lesser people round about him hardly care to go on living.
+Seeing that the world is somewhat overstocked with persons of importance,
+and that something or another generally is happening to them, one wonders
+sometimes how it is the world continues to exist.
+
+Once upon a time there occurred an illness to a certain good and great
+man. I read in my daily paper that the whole nation was plunged in
+grief. People dining in public restaurants, on being told the news by
+the waiter, dropped their heads upon the table and sobbed. Strangers,
+meeting in the street, flung their arms about one another and cried like
+little children. I was abroad at the time, but on the point of returning
+home. I almost felt ashamed to go. I looked at myself in the glass, and
+was shocked at my own appearance: it was that of a man who had not been
+in trouble for weeks. I felt that to burst upon this grief-stricken
+nation with a countenance such as mine would be to add to their sorrow.
+It was borne in upon me that I must have a shallow, egotistical nature.
+I had had luck with a play in America, and for the life of me I could not
+look grief-stricken. There were moments when, if I was not keeping a
+watch over myself, I found myself whistling.
+
+Had it been possible I would have remained abroad till some stroke of
+ill-fortune had rendered me more in tune with my fellow-countrymen. But
+business was pressing. The first man I talked to on Dover pier was a
+Customs House official. You might have thought sorrow would have made
+him indifferent to a mere matter of forty-eight cigars. Instead of
+which, he appeared quite pleased when he found them. He demanded
+three-and-fourpence, and chuckled when he got it. On Dover platform a
+little girl laughed because a lady dropped a handbox on a dog; but then
+children are always callous—or, perhaps, she had not heard the news.
+
+What astonished me most, however, was to find in the railway carriage a
+respectable looking man reading a comic journal. True, he did not laugh
+much: he had got decency enough for that; but what was a grief-stricken
+citizen doing with a comic journal, anyhow? Before I had been in London
+an hour I had come to the conclusion that we English must be a people of
+wonderful self-control. The day before, according to the newspapers, the
+whole country was in serious danger of pining away and dying of a broken
+heart. In one day the nation had pulled itself together. “We have cried
+all day,” they had said to themselves, “we have cried all night. It does
+not seem to have done much good. Now let us once again take up the
+burden of life.” Some of them—I noticed it in the hotel dining-room that
+evening—were taking quite kindly to their food again.
+
+We make believe about quite serious things. In war, each country’s
+soldiers are always the most courageous in the world. The other
+country’s soldiers are always treacherous and tricky; that is why they
+sometimes win. Literature is the art of make-believe.
+
+“Now all of you sit round and throw your pennies in the cap,” says the
+author, “and I will pretend that there lives in Bayswater a young lady
+named Angelina, who is the most beautiful young lady that ever existed.
+And in Notting Hill, we will pretend, there resides a young man named
+Edwin, who is in love with Angelina.”
+
+And then, there being sufficient pennies in the cap, the author starts
+away, and pretends that Angelina thought this and said that, and that
+Edwin did all sorts of wonderful things. We know he is making it all up
+as he goes along. We know he is making up just what he thinks will
+please us. He, on the other hand, has to make-believe that he is doing
+it because he cannot help it, he being an artist. But we know well
+enough that, were we to stop throwing the pennies into the cap, he would
+find out precious soon that he could.
+
+The theatrical manager bangs his drum.
+
+“Walk up! walk up!” he cries, “we are going to pretend that Mrs. Johnson
+is a princess, and old man Johnson is going to pretend to be a pirate.
+Walk up, walk up, and be in time!”
+
+So Mrs. Johnson, pretending to be a princess, comes out of a wobbly thing
+that we agree to pretend is a castle; and old man Johnson, pretending to
+be a pirate, is pushed up and down on another wobbly thing that we agree
+to pretend is the ocean. Mrs. Johnson pretends to be in love with him,
+which we know she is not. And Johnson pretends to be a very terrible
+person; and Mrs. Johnson pretends, till eleven o’clock, to believe it.
+And we pay prices, varying from a shilling to half-a-sovereign, to sit
+for two hours and listen to them.
+
+But as I explained at the beginning, my friend is a mad sort of person.
+
+
+
+
+IS THE AMERICAN HUSBAND MADE ENTIRELY OF STAINED GLASS.
+
+
+I AM glad I am not an American husband. At first sight this may appear a
+remark uncomplimentary to the American wife. It is nothing of the sort.
+It is the other way about. We, in Europe, have plenty of opportunity of
+judging the American wife. In America you hear of the American wife, you
+are told stories about the American wife, you see her portrait in the
+illustrated journals. By searching under the heading “Foreign
+Intelligence,” you can find out what she is doing. But here in Europe we
+know her, meet her face to face, talk to her, flirt with her. She is
+charming, delightful. That is why I say I am glad I am not an American
+husband. If the American husband only knew how nice was the American
+wife, he would sell his business and come over here, where now and then
+he could see her.
+
+Years ago, when I first began to travel about Europe, I argued to myself
+that America must be a deadly place to live in. How sad it is, I thought
+to myself, to meet thus, wherever one goes, American widows by the
+thousand. In one narrow by-street of Dresden I calculated fourteen
+American mothers, possessing nine-and-twenty American children, and not a
+father among them—not a single husband among the whole fourteen. I
+pictured fourteen lonely graves, scattered over the United States. I saw
+as in a vision those fourteen head-stones of best material, hand-carved,
+recording the virtues of those fourteen dead and buried husbands.
+
+Odd, thought I to myself, decidedly odd. These American husbands, they
+must be a delicate type of humanity. The wonder is their mothers ever
+reared them. They marry fine girls, the majority of them; two or three
+sweet children are born to them, and after that there appears to be no
+further use for them, as far as this world is concerned. Can nothing be
+done to strengthen their constitutions? Would a tonic be of any help to
+them? Not the customary tonic, I don’t mean, the sort of tonic merely
+intended to make gouty old gentlemen feel they want to buy a hoop, but
+the sort of tonic for which it was claimed that three drops poured upon a
+ham sandwich and the thing would begin to squeak.
+
+It struck me as pathetic, the picture of these American widows leaving
+their native land, coming over in shiploads to spend the rest of their
+blighted lives in exile. The mere thought of America, I took it, had for
+ever become to them distasteful. The ground that once his feet had
+pressed! The old familiar places once lighted by his smile! Everything
+in America would remind them of him. Snatching their babes to their
+heaving bosoms they would leave the country where lay buried all the joy
+of their lives, seek in the retirement of Paris, Florence or Vienna,
+oblivion of the past.
+
+Also, it struck me as beautiful, the noble resignation with which they
+bore their grief, hiding their sorrow from the indifferent stranger.
+Some widows make a fuss, go about for weeks looking gloomy and depressed,
+making not the slightest effort to be merry. These fourteen widows—I
+knew them personally, all of them, I lived in the same street—what a
+brave show of cheerfulness they put on! What a lesson to the common or
+European widow, the humpy type of widow! One could spend whole days in
+their company—I had done it—commencing quite early in the morning with a
+sleighing excursion, finishing up quite late in the evening with a little
+supper party, followed by an impromptu dance; and never detect from their
+outward manner that they were not thoroughly enjoying themselves.
+
+From the mothers I turned my admiring eyes towards the children. This is
+the secret of American success, said I to myself; this high-spirited
+courage, this Spartan contempt for suffering. Look at them! the gallant
+little men and women. Who would think that they had lost a father? Why,
+I have seen a British child more upset at losing sixpence.
+
+Talking to a little girl one day, I enquired of her concerning the health
+of her father. The next moment I could have bitten my tongue out,
+remembering that there wasn’t such a thing as a father—not an American
+father—in the whole street. She did not burst into tears as they do in
+the story-books. She said:
+
+“He is quite well, thank you,” simply, pathetically, just like that.
+
+“I am sure of it,” I replied with fervour, “well and happy as he deserves
+to be, and one day you will find him again; you will go to him.”
+
+“Ah, yes,” she answered, a shining light, it seemed to me, upon her fair
+young face. “Momma says she is getting just a bit tired of this
+one-horse sort of place. She is quite looking forward to seeing him
+again.”
+
+It touched me very deeply: this weary woman, tired of her long
+bereavement, actually looking forward to the fearsome passage leading to
+where her loved one waited for her in a better land.
+
+For one bright breezy creature I grew to feel a real regard. All the
+months that I had known her, seen her almost daily, never once had I
+heard a single cry of pain escape her lips, never once had I heard her
+cursing fate. Of the many who called upon her in her charming flat, not
+one had ever, to my knowledge, offered her consolation or condolence. It
+seemed to me cruel, callous. The over-burdened heart, finding no outlet
+for its imprisoned grief, finding no sympathetic ear into which to pour
+its tale of woe, breaks, we are told; anyhow, it isn’t good for it. I
+decided—no one else seeming keen—that I would supply that sympathetic
+ear. The very next time I found myself alone with her I introduced the
+subject.
+
+“You have been living here in Dresden a long time, have you not?” I
+asked.
+
+“About five years,” she answered, “on and off.”
+
+“And all alone,” I commented, with a sigh intended to invite to
+confidence.
+
+“Well, hardly alone,” she corrected me, while a look of patient
+resignation added dignity to her piquant features. “You see, there are
+the dear children always round about me, during the holidays.”
+
+“Besides,” she added, “the people here are real kind to me; they hardly
+ever let me feel myself alone. We make up little parties, you know,
+picnics and excursions. And then, of course, there is the Opera and the
+Symphony Concerts, and the subscription dances. The dear old king has
+been doing a good deal this winter, too; and I must say the Embassy folks
+have been most thoughtful, so far as I am concerned. No, it would not be
+right for me to complain of loneliness, not now that I have got to know a
+few people, as it were.”
+
+“But don’t you miss your husband?” I suggested.
+
+A cloud passed over her usually sunny face. “Oh, please don’t talk of
+him,” she said, “it makes me feel real sad, thinking about him.”
+
+But having commenced, I was determined that my sympathy should not be
+left to waste.
+
+“What did he die of?” I asked.
+
+She gave me a look the pathos of which I shall never forget.
+
+“Say, young man,” she cried, “are you trying to break it to me gently?
+Because if so, I’d rather you told me straight out. What did he die of?”
+
+“Then isn’t he dead?” I asked, “I mean so far as you know.”
+
+“Never heard a word about his being dead till you started the idea,” she
+retorted. “So far as I know he’s alive and well.”
+
+I said that I was sorry. I went on to explain that I did not mean I was
+sorry to hear that in all probability he was alive and well. What I
+meant was I was sorry I had introduced a painful subject.
+
+“What’s a painful subject?”
+
+“Why, your husband,” I replied.
+
+“But why should you call him a painful subject?”
+
+I had an idea she was getting angry with me. She did not say so. I
+gathered it. But I had to explain myself somehow.
+
+“Well,” I answered, “I take it, you didn’t get on well together, and I am
+sure it must have been his fault.”
+
+“Now look here,” she said, “don’t you breathe a word against my husband
+or we shall quarrel. A nicer, dearer fellow never lived.”
+
+“Then what did you divorce him for?” I asked. It was impertinent, it was
+unjustifiable. My excuse is that the mystery surrounding the American
+husband had been worrying me for months. Here had I stumbled upon the
+opportunity of solving it. Instinctively I clung to my advantage.
+
+“There hasn’t been any divorce,” she said. “There isn’t going to be any
+divorce. You’ll make me cross in another minute.”
+
+But I was becoming reckless. “He is not dead. You are not divorced from
+him. Where is he?” I demanded with some heat.
+
+“Where is he?” she replied, astonished. “Where should he be? At home,
+of course.”
+
+I looked around the luxuriously-furnished room with its air of cosy
+comfort, of substantial restfulness.
+
+“What home?” I asked.
+
+“What home! Why, our home, in Detroit.”
+
+“What is he doing there?” I had become so much in earnest that my voice
+had assumed unconsciously an authoritative tone. Presumably, it
+hypnotised her, for she answered my questions as though she had been in
+the witness-box.
+
+“How do I know? How can I possibly tell you what he is doing? What do
+people usually do at home?”
+
+“Answer the questions, madam, don’t ask them. What are you doing here?
+Quite truthfully, if you please.” My eyes were fixed upon her.
+
+“Enjoying myself. He likes me to enjoy myself. Besides, I am educating
+the children.”
+
+“You mean they are here at boarding-school while you are gadding about.
+What is wrong with American education? When did you see your husband
+last?”
+
+“Last? Let me see. No, last Christmas I was in Berlin. It must have
+been the Christmas before, I think.”
+
+“If he is the dear kind fellow you say he is, how is it you haven’t seen
+him for two years?”
+
+“Because, as I tell you, he is at home, in Detroit. How can I see him
+when I am here in Dresden and he is in Detroit? You do ask foolish
+questions. He means to try and come over in the summer, if he can spare
+the time, and then, of course—
+
+“Answer my questions, please. I’ve spoken to you once about it. Do you
+think you are performing your duty as a wife, enjoying yourself in
+Dresden and Berlin while your husband is working hard in Detroit?”
+
+“He was quite willing for me to come. The American husband is a good
+fellow who likes his wife to enjoy herself.”
+
+“I am not asking for your views on the American husband. I am asking
+your views on the American wife—on yourself. The American husband
+appears to be a sort of stained-glass saint, and you American wives are
+imposing upon him. It is doing you no good, and it won’t go on for ever.
+There will come a day when the American husband will wake up to the fact
+he is making a fool of himself, and by over-indulgence, over-devotion,
+turning the American woman into a heartless, selfish creature. What sort
+of a home do you think it is in Detroit, with you and the children over
+here? Tell me, is the American husband made entirely of driven snow,
+with blood distilled from moonbeams, or is he composed of the ordinary
+ingredients? Because, if the latter, you take my advice and get back
+home. I take it that in America, proper, there are millions of real
+homes where the woman does her duty and plays the game. But also it is
+quite clear there are thousands of homes in America, mere echoing rooms,
+where the man walks by himself, his wife and children scattered over
+Europe. It isn’t going to work, it isn’t right that it should work.”
+
+“You take the advice of a sincere friend. Pack up—you and the
+children—and get home.”
+
+I left. It was growing late. I felt it was time to leave. Whether she
+took my counsel I cannot say. I only know that there still remain in
+Europe a goodly number of American wives to whom it is applicable.
+
+
+
+
+DOES THE YOUNG MAN KNOW EVERYTHING WORTH KNOWING?
+
+
+I AM told that American professors are “mourning the lack of ideals” at
+Columbia University—possibly also at other universities scattered through
+the United States. If it be any consolation to these mourning American
+professors, I can assure them that they do not mourn alone. I live not
+far from Oxford, and enjoy the advantage of occasionally listening to the
+jeremiads of English University professors. More than once a German
+professor has done me the honour to employ me as an object on which to
+sharpen his English. He also has mourned similar lack of ideals at
+Heidelberg, at Bonn. Youth is youth all the world over; it has its own
+ideals; they are not those of the University professor. The explanation
+is tolerably simple. Youth is young, and the University professor,
+generally speaking, is middle-aged.
+
+I can sympathise with the mourning professor. I, in my time, have
+suffered like despair. I remember the day so well; it was my twelfth
+birthday. I recall the unholy joy with which I reflected that for the
+future my unfortunate parents would be called upon to pay for me full
+railway fare; it marked a decided step towards manhood. I was now in my
+teens. That very afternoon there came to visit us a relative of ours.
+She brought with her three small children: a girl, aged six; a precious,
+golden-haired thing in a lace collar that called itself a boy, aged five;
+and a third still smaller creature, it might have been male, it might
+have been female; I could not have told you at the time, I cannot tell
+you now. This collection of atoms was handed over to me.
+
+“Now, show yourself a man,” said my dear mother, “remember you are in
+your teens. Take them out for a walk and amuse them; and mind nothing
+happens to them.”
+
+To the children themselves their own mother gave instructions that they
+were to do everything that I told them, and not to tear their clothes or
+make themselves untidy. These directions, even to myself, at the time,
+appeared contradictory. But I said nothing. And out into the wilds the
+four of us departed.
+
+I was an only child. My own infancy had passed from my memory. To me,
+at twelve, the ideas of six were as incomprehensible as are those of
+twenty to the University professor of forty. I wanted to be a pirate.
+Round the corner and across the road building operations were in
+progress. Planks and poles lay ready to one’s hand. Nature, in the
+neighbourhood, had placed conveniently a shallow pond. It was Saturday
+afternoon. The nearest public-house was a mile away. Immunity from
+interference by the British workman was thus assured. It occurred to me
+that by placing my three depressed looking relatives on one raft,
+attacking them myself from another, taking the eldest girl’s sixpence
+away from her, disabling their raft, and leaving them to drift without a
+rudder, innocent amusement would be provided for half an hour at least.
+
+They did not want to play at pirates. At first sight of the pond the
+thing that called itself a boy began to cry. The six-year-old lady said
+she did not like the smell of it. Not even after I had explained the
+game to them were they any the more enthusiastic for it.
+
+I proposed Red Indians. They could go to sleep in the unfinished
+building upon a sack of lime, I would creep up through the grass, set
+fire to the house, and dance round it, whooping and waving my tomahawk,
+watching with fiendish delight the frantic but futile efforts of the
+palefaces to escape their doom.
+
+It did not “catch on”—not even that. The precious thing in the lace
+collar began to cry again. The creature concerning whom I could not have
+told you whether it was male or female made no attempt at argument, but
+started to run; it seemed to have taken a dislike to this particular
+field. It stumbled over a scaffolding pole, and then it also began to
+cry. What could one do to amuse such people? I left it to them to
+propose something. They thought they would like to play at “Mothers”—not
+in this field, but in some other field.
+
+The eldest girl would be mother. The other two would represent her
+children. They had been taken suddenly ill. “Waterworks,” as I had
+christened him, was to hold his hands to his middle and groan. His face
+brightened up at the suggestion. The nondescript had the toothache. It
+took up its part without a moment’s hesitation, and set to work to
+scream. I could be the doctor and look at their tongues.
+
+That was their “ideal” game. As I have said, remembering that afternoon,
+I can sympathise with the University professor mourning the absence of
+University ideals in youth. Possibly at six my own ideal game may have
+been “Mothers.” Looking back from the pile of birthdays upon which I now
+stand, it occurs to me that very probably it was. But from the
+perspective of twelve, the reflection that there were beings in the world
+who could find recreation in such fooling saddened me.
+
+Eight years later, his father not being able to afford the time, I
+conducted Master “Waterworks,” now a healthy, uninteresting, gawky lad,
+to a school in Switzerland. It was my first Continental trip. I should
+have enjoyed it better had he not been with me. He thought Paris a
+“beastly hole.” He did not share my admiration for the Frenchwoman; he
+even thought her badly dressed.
+
+“Why she’s so tied up, she can’t walk straight,” was the only impression
+she left upon him.
+
+We changed the subject; it irritated me to hear him talk. The beautiful
+Juno-like creatures we came across further on in Germany, he said were
+too fat. He wanted to see them run. I found him utterly soulless.
+
+To expect a boy to love learning and culture is like expecting him to
+prefer old vintage claret to gooseberry wine. Culture for the majority
+is an acquired taste. Speaking personally, I am entirely in agreement
+with the University professor. I find knowledge, prompting to
+observation and leading to reflection, the most satisfactory luggage with
+which a traveller through life can provide himself. I would that I had
+more of it. To be able to enjoy a picture is of more advantage than to
+be able to buy it.
+
+All that the University professor can urge in favour of idealism I am
+prepared to endorse. But then I am—let us say, thirty-nine. At fourteen
+my candid opinion was that he was talking “rot.” I looked at the old
+gentleman himself—a narrow-chested, spectacled old gentleman, who lived
+up a by street. He did not seem to have much fun of any sort. It was
+not my ideal. He told me things had been written in a language called
+Greek that I should enjoy reading, but I had not even read all Captain
+Marryat. There were tales by Sir Walter Scott and “Jack Harkaway’s
+Schooldays!” I felt I could wait a while. There was a chap called
+Aristophanes who had written comedies, satirising the political
+institutions of a country that had disappeared two thousand years ago. I
+say, without shame, Drury Lane pantomime and Barnum’s Circus called to me
+more strongly.
+
+Wishing to give the old gentleman a chance, I dipped into translations.
+Some of these old fellows were not as bad as I had imagined them. A
+party named Homer had written some really interesting stuff. Here and
+there, maybe, he was a bit long-winded, but, taking him as a whole, there
+was “go” in him. There was another of them—Ovid was his name. He could
+tell a story, Ovid could. He had imagination. He was almost as good as
+“Robinson Crusoe.” I thought it would please my professor, telling him
+that I was reading these, his favourite authors.
+
+“Reading them!” he cried, “but you don’t know Greek or Latin.”
+
+“But I know English,” I answered; “they have all been translated into
+English. You never told me that!”
+
+It appeared it was not the same thing. There were subtle delicacies of
+diction bound to escape even the best translator. These subtle
+delicacies of diction I could enjoy only by devoting the next seven or
+eight years of my life to the study of Greek and Latin. It will grieve
+the University professor to hear it, but the enjoyment of those subtle
+delicacies of diction did not appear to me—I was only fourteen at the
+time, please remember—to be worth the time and trouble.
+
+The boy is materially inclined—the mourning American professor has
+discovered it. I did not want to be an idealist living up a back street.
+I wanted to live in the biggest house in the best street of the town. I
+wanted to ride a horse, wear a fur coat, and have as much to eat and
+drink as ever I liked. I wanted to marry the most beautiful woman in the
+world, to have my name in the newspaper, and to know that everybody was
+envying me.
+
+Mourn over it, my dear professor, as you will—that is the ideal of youth;
+and, so long as human nature remains what it is, will continue to be so.
+It is a materialistic ideal—a sordid ideal. Maybe it is necessary.
+Maybe the world would not move much if the young men started thinking too
+early. They want to be rich, so they fling themselves frenziedly into
+the struggle. They build the towns, and make the railway tracks, hew
+down the forests, dig the ore out of the ground. There comes a day when
+it is borne in upon them that trying to get rich is a poor sort of
+game—that there is only one thing more tiresome than being a millionaire,
+and that is trying to be a millionaire. But, meanwhile, the world has
+got its work done.
+
+The American professor fears that the artistic development of America
+leaves much to be desired. I fear the artistic development of most
+countries leaves much to be desired. Why the Athenians themselves
+sandwiched their drama between wrestling competitions and boxing bouts.
+The plays of Sophocles, or Euripides, were given as “side shows.” The
+chief items of the fair were the games and races. Besides, America is
+still a young man. It has been busy “getting on in the world.” It has
+not yet quite finished. Yet there are signs that young America is
+approaching the thirty-nines. He is finding a little time, a little
+money to spare for art. One can almost hear young America—not quite so
+young as he was—saying to Mrs. Europe as he enters and closes the shop
+door:
+
+“Well, ma’am, here I am, and maybe you’ll be glad to hear I’ve a little
+money to spend. Yes, ma’am, I’ve fixed things all right across the
+water; we shan’t starve. So now, ma’am, you and I can have a chat
+concerning this art I’ve been hearing so much about. Let’s have a look
+at it, ma’am, trot it out, and don’t you be afraid of putting a fair
+price upon it.”
+
+I am inclined to think that Mrs. Europe has not hesitated to put a good
+price upon the art she has sold to Uncle Sam. I am afraid Mrs. Europe
+has occasionally “unloaded” on Uncle Sam. I talked to a certain dealer
+one afternoon, now many years ago, at the Uwantit Club.
+
+“What is the next picture likely to be missing?” I asked him in the
+course of general conversation.
+
+“Thome little thing of Hoppner’th, if it mutht be,” he replied with
+confidence.
+
+“Hoppner,” I murmured, “I seem to have heard the name.”
+
+“Yeth; you’ll hear it a bit oftener during the next eighteen month or
+tho. You take care you don’t get tired of hearing it, thath all,” he
+laughed. “Yeth,” he continued, thoughtfully, “Reynoldth ith played out.
+Nothing much to be made of Gainthborough, either. Dealing in that lot
+now, why, it’th like keeping a potht offith. Hoppner’th the coming man.”
+
+“You’ve been buying Hoppners up cheap,” I suggested.
+
+“Between uth,” he answered, “yeth, I think we’ve got them all. Maybe a
+few more. I don’t think we’ve mithed any.”
+
+“You will sell them for more than you gave for them,” I hinted.
+
+“You’re thmart,” he answered, regarding me admiringly, “you thee through
+everything you do.”
+
+“How do you work it?” I asked him. There is a time in the day when he is
+confidential. “Here is this man, Hoppner. I take it that you have
+bought him up at an average of a hundred pounds a picture, and that at
+that price most owners were fairly glad to sell. Few folks outside the
+art schools have ever heard of him. I bet that at the present moment
+there isn’t one art critic who could spell his name without reference to
+a dictionary. In eighteen months you will be selling him for anything
+from one thousand to ten thousand pounds. How is it done?”
+
+“How ith everything done that’th done well?” he answered. “By earnetht
+effort.” He hitched his chair nearer to me, “I get a chap—one of your
+thort of chapth—he writ’th an article about Hoppner. I get another to
+anthwer him. Before I’ve done there’ll be a hundred articleth about
+Hoppner—hith life, hith early thruggie, anecdo’th about hith wife. Then
+a Hoppner will be thold at public auchtion for a thouthand guineath.”
+
+“But how can you be certain it will fetch a thousand guineas?” I
+interrupted.
+
+“I happen to know the man whoth going to buy it.” He winked, and I
+understood.
+
+“A fortnight later there will be a thale of half-a-dothen, and the prithe
+will be gone up by that time.”
+
+“And after that?” I said.
+
+“After that,” he replied, rising, “the American millionaire! He’ll jutht
+be waiting on the door-thtep for the thale-room to open.”
+
+“If by any chance I come across a Hoppner?” I said, laughing, as I turned
+to go.
+
+“Don’t you hold on to it too long, that’th all,” was his advice.
+
+
+
+
+HOW MANY CHARMS HATH MUSIC, WOULD YOU SAY?
+
+
+THE argument of the late Herr Wagner was that grand opera—the music
+drama, as he called it—included, and therefore did away with the
+necessity for—all other arts. Music in all its branches, of course, it
+provides: so much I will concede to the late Herr Wagner. There are
+times, I confess, when my musical yearnings might shock the late Herr
+Wagner—times when I feel unequal to following three distinct themes at
+one and the same instant.
+
+“Listen,” whispers the Wagnerian enthusiast to me, “the cornet has now
+the Brunnhilda motive.” It seems to me, in my then state of depravity,
+as if the cornet had even more than this the matter with him.
+
+“The second violins,” continues the Wagnerian enthusiast, “are carrying
+on the Wotan theme.” That they are carrying on goes without saying: the
+players’ faces are streaming with perspiration.
+
+“The brass,” explains my friend—his object is to cultivate my ear—“is
+accompanying the singers.” I should have said drowning them. There are
+occasions when I can rave about Wagner with the best of them. High class
+moods come to all of us. The difference between the really high-class
+man and us commonplace, workaday men is the difference between, say, the
+eagle and the barnyard chicken. I am the barnyard chicken. I have my
+wings. There are ecstatic moments when I feel I want to spurn the sordid
+earth and soar into the realms of art. I do fly a little, but my body is
+heavy, and I only get as far as the fence. After a while I find it
+lonesome on the fence, and I hop down again among my fellows.
+
+Listening to Wagner, during such temporary Philistinic mood, my sense of
+fair play is outraged. A lone, lorn woman stands upon the stage trying
+to make herself heard. She has to do this sort of thing for her living;
+maybe an invalid mother, younger brothers and sisters are dependent upon
+her. One hundred and forty men, all armed with powerful instruments,
+well-organised, and most of them looking well-fed, combine to make it
+impossible for a single note of that poor woman’s voice to be heard above
+their din. I see her standing there, opening and shutting her mouth,
+getting redder and redder in the face. She is singing, one feels sure of
+it; one could hear her if only those one hundred and forty men would ease
+up for a minute. She makes one mighty, supreme effort; above the banging
+of the drums, the blare of the trumpets, the shrieking of the strings,
+that last despairing note is distinctly heard.
+
+She has won, but the victory has cost her dear. She sinks down fainting
+on the stage and is carried off by supers. Chivalrous indignation has
+made it difficult for me to keep my seat watching the unequal contest.
+My instinct was to leap the barrier, hurl the bald-headed chief of her
+enemies from his high chair, and lay about me with the trombone or the
+clarionet—whichever might have come the easier to my snatch.
+
+“You cowardly lot of bullies,” I have wanted to cry, “are you not ashamed
+of yourselves? A hundred and forty of you against one, and that one a
+still beautiful and, comparatively speaking, young lady. Be quiet for a
+minute—can’t you? Give the poor girl a chance.”
+
+A lady of my acquaintance says that sitting out a Wagnerian opera seems
+to her like listening to a singer accompanied by four orchestras playing
+different tunes at the same time. As I have said, there are times when
+Wagner carries me along with him, when I exult in the crash and whirl of
+his contending harmonies. But, alas! there are those other moods—those
+after dinner moods—when my desire is for something distinctly resembling
+a tune. Still, there are other composers of grand opera besides Wagner.
+I grant to the late Herr Wagner, that, in so far as music is concerned,
+opera can supply us with all we can need.
+
+But it was also Wagner’s argument that grand opera could supply us with
+acting, and there I am compelled to disagree with him. Wagner thought
+that the arts of acting and singing could be combined. I have seen
+artists the great man has trained himself. As singers they left nothing
+to be desired, but the acting in grand opera has never yet impressed me.
+Wagner never succeeded in avoiding the operatic convention and nobody
+else ever will. When the operatic lover meets his sweetheart he puts her
+in a corner and, turning his back upon her, comes down to the footlights
+and tells the audience how he adores her. When he has finished, he, in
+his turn, retires into the corner, and she comes down and tells the
+audience that she is simply mad about him.
+
+Overcome with joy at finding she really cares for him, he comes down
+right and says that this is the happiest moment of his life; and she
+stands left, twelve feet away from him, and has the presentiment that all
+this sort of thing is much too good to last. They go off together,
+backwards, side by side. If there is any love-making, such as I
+understand by the term, it is done “off.” This is not my idea of acting.
+But I do not see how you are going to substitute for it anything more
+natural. When you are singing at the top of your voice, you don’t want a
+heavy woman hanging round your neck. When you are killing a man and
+warbling about it at the same time, you don’t want him fooling around you
+defending himself. You want him to have a little reasonable patience,
+and to wait in his proper place till you have finished, telling him, or
+rather telling the crowd, how much you hate and despise him.
+
+When the proper time comes, and if he is where you expect to find him
+while thinking of your upper C, you will hit him lightly on the shoulder
+with your sword, and then he can die to his own particular tune. If you
+have been severely wounded in battle, or in any other sort of row, and
+have got to sing a long ballad before you finally expire, you don’t want
+to have to think how a man would really behave who knew he had only got a
+few minutes to live and was feeling bad about it. The chances are that
+he would not want to sing at all. The woman who really loved him would
+not encourage him to sing. She would want him to keep quiet while she
+moved herself about a bit, in case there was anything that could be done
+for him.
+
+If a mob is climbing the stairs thirsting for your blood, you do not want
+to stand upright with your arms stretched out, a good eighteen inches
+from the door, while you go over at some length the varied incidents
+leading up to the annoyance. If your desire were to act naturally you
+would push against that door for all you were worth, and yell for
+somebody to bring you a chest of drawers and a bedstead, and things like
+that, to pile up against it. If you were a king, and were giving a
+party, you would not want your guests to fix you up at the other end of
+the room and leave you there, with nobody to talk to but your own wife,
+while they turned their backs upon you, and had a long and complicated
+dance all to themselves. You would want to be in it; you would want to
+let them know that you were king.
+
+In acting, all these little points have to be considered. In opera,
+everything is rightly sacrificed to musical necessity. I have seen the
+young, enthusiastic opera-singer who thought that he or she could act and
+sing at the same time. The experienced artist takes the centre of the
+stage and husbands his resources. Whether he is supposed to be indignant
+because somebody has killed his mother, or cheerful because he is going
+out to fight his country’s foes, who are only waiting until he has
+finished singing to attack the town, he leaves it to the composer to make
+clear.
+
+Also it was Herr Wagner’s idea that the back cloth would leave the
+opera-goer indifferent to the picture gallery. The castle on the rock,
+accessible only by balloon, in which every window lights up
+simultaneously and instantaneously, one minute after sunset, while the
+full moon is rushing up the sky at the pace of a champion comet—that
+wonderful sea that suddenly opens and swallows up the ship—those
+snow-clad mountains, over which the shadow of the hero passes like a
+threatening cloud—the grand old chateau, trembling in the wind—what need,
+will ask the opera-goer of the future, of your Turners and your Corots,
+when, for prices ranging from a shilling upwards, we can have a dozen
+pictures such as these rolled up and down before us every evening?
+
+But perhaps the most daring hope of all was the dream that came to Herr
+Wagner that his opera singers, his grouped choruses, would eventually
+satisfy the craving of the public for high class statuary. I am not
+quite sure the general public does care for statuary. I do not know
+whether the idea has ever occurred to the Anarchist, but, were I myself
+organising secret committee meetings for unholy purposes, I should invite
+my comrades to meet in that section of the local museum devoted to
+statuary. I can conceive of no place where we should be freer from
+prying eyes and listening ears. A select few, however, do appreciate
+statuary; and such, I am inclined to think, will not be weaned from their
+passion by the contemplation of the opera singer in his or her various
+quaint costumes.
+
+And even if the tenor always satisfied our ideal of Apollo, and the
+soprano were always as sylph-like as she is described in the libretto,
+even then I should doubt the average operatic chorus being regarded by
+the _connoisseur_ as a cheap and pleasant substitute for a bas relief
+from the Elgin marbles. The great thing required of that operatic chorus
+is experience. The young and giddy-pated the chorus master has no use
+for. The sober, honest, industrious lady or gentleman, with a knowledge
+of music is very properly his ideal.
+
+What I admire about the chorus chiefly is its unity. The whole village
+dresses exactly alike. In wicked, worldly villages there is rivalry,
+leading to heartburn and jealously. One lady comes out suddenly, on,
+say, a Bank Holiday, in a fetching blue that conquers every male heart.
+Next holiday her rival cuts her out with a green hat. In the operatic
+village it must be that the girls gather together beforehand to arrange
+this thing. There is probably a meeting called.
+
+“The dear Count’s wedding,” announces the chairwoman, “you will all be
+pleased to hear, has been fixed for the fourteenth, at eleven o’clock in
+the morning. The entire village will be assembled at ten-thirty to await
+the return of the bridal _cortège_ from the church, and offer its
+felicitations. Married ladies, will, of course, come accompanied by
+their husbands. Unmarried ladies must each bring a male partner as near
+their own height as possible. Fortunately, in this village the number of
+males is exactly equal to that of females, so that the picture need not
+be spoiled. The children will organise themselves into an independent
+body and will group themselves picturesquely. It has been thought
+advisable,” continues the chairwoman, “that the village should meet the
+dear Count and his bride at some spot not too far removed from the local
+alehouse. The costume to be worn by the ladies will consist of a short
+pink skirt terminating at the knees and ornamented with festoons of
+flowers; above will be worn a bolero in mauve silk without sleeves and
+cut _décolleté_. The shoes should be of yellow satin over flesh-coloured
+stockings. Ladies who are ‘out’ will wear pearl necklaces, and a simple
+device in emeralds to decorate the hair. Thank God, we can all of us
+afford it, and provided the weather holds up and nothing unexpected
+happens—he is not what I call a lucky man, our Count, and it is always as
+well to be prepared for possibilities—well, I think we may look forward
+to a really pleasant day.”
+
+It cannot be done, Herr Wagner, believe me. You cannot substitute the
+music drama for all the arts combined. The object to be aimed at by the
+wise composer should be to make us, while listening to his music,
+forgetful of all remaining artistic considerations.
+
+
+
+
+THE WHITE MAN’S BURDEN! NEED IT BE SO HEAVY?
+
+
+IT is a delightful stroll on a sunny summer morning from the Hague to the
+Huis ten Bosch, the little “house in the wood,” built for Princess
+Amalia, widow of Stadtholter Frederick Henry, under whom Holland escaped
+finally from the bondage of her foes and entered into the promised land
+of Liberty. Leaving the quiet streets, the tree-bordered canals, with
+their creeping barges, you pass through a pleasant park, where the
+soft-eyed deer press round you, hurt and indignant if you have brought
+nothing in your pocket—not even a piece of sugar—to offer them. It is
+not that they are grasping—it is the want of attention that wounds them.
+
+“I thought he was a gentleman,” they seem to be saying to one another, if
+you glance back, “he looked like a gentleman.”
+
+Their mild eyes haunt you; on the next occasion you do not forget. The
+Park merges into the forest; you go by winding ways till you reach the
+trim Dutch garden, moat-encircled, in the centre of which stands the prim
+old-fashioned villa, which, to the simple Dutchman, appears a palace.
+The _concierge_, an old soldier, bows low to you and introduces you to
+his wife—a stately, white-haired dame, who talks most languages a little,
+so far as relates to all things within and appertaining to this tiny
+palace of the wood. To things without, beyond the wood, her powers of
+conversation do not extend: apparently such matters do not interest her.
+
+She conducts you to the Chinese Room; the sun streams through the
+windows, illuminating the wondrous golden dragons standing out in bold
+relief from the burnished lacquer work, decorating still further with
+light and shade the delicate silk embroideries thin taper hands have
+woven with infinite pains. The walls are hung with rice paper, depicting
+the conventional scenes of the conventional Chinese life.
+
+You find your thoughts wandering. These grotesque figures, these
+caricatures of humanity! A comical creature, surely, this Chinaman, the
+pantaloon of civilization. How useful he has been to us for our farces,
+our comic operas! This yellow baby, in his ample pinafore, who lived
+thousands of years ago, who has now passed into this strange second
+childhood.
+
+But is he dying—or does the life of a nation wake again, as after sleep?
+Is he this droll, harmless thing he here depicts himself? And if not?
+Suppose fresh sap be stirring through his three hundred millions? We
+thought he was so very dead; we thought the time had come to cut him up
+and divide him, the only danger being lest we should quarrel over his
+carcase among ourselves.
+
+Suppose it turns out as the fable of the woodcutter and the bear? The
+woodcutter found the bear lying in the forest. At first he was much
+frightened, but the bear lay remarkably still. So the woodman crept
+nearer, ventured to kick the bear—very gently, ready to run if need be.
+Surely the bear was dead! And parts of a bear are good to eat, and
+bearskin to poor woodfolk on cold winter nights is grateful. So the
+woodman drew his knife and commenced the necessary preliminaries. But
+the bear was not dead.
+
+If the Chinaman be not dead? If the cutting-up process has only served
+to waken him? In a little time from now we shall know.
+
+From the Chinese Room the white-haired dame leads us to the Japanese
+Room. Had gentle-looking Princess Amalia some vague foreshadowing of the
+future in her mind when she planned these two rooms leading into one
+another? The Japanese decorations are more grotesque, the designs less
+cheerfully comical than those of cousin Chinaman. These monstrous,
+mis-shapen wrestlers, these patient-looking gods, with their inscrutable
+eyes! Was it always there, or is it only by the light of present events
+that one reads into the fantastic fancies of the artist working long ago
+in the doorway of his paper house, a meaning that has hitherto escaped
+us?
+
+But the chief attraction of the Huis ten Bosch is the gorgeous Orange
+Saloon, lighted by a cupola, fifty feet above the floor, the walls one
+blaze of pictures, chiefly of the gorgeous Jordaen school—“The Defeat of
+the Vices,” “Time Vanquishing Slander”—mostly allegorical, in praise of
+all the virtues, in praise of enlightenment and progress. Aptly enough
+in a room so decorated, here was held the famous Peace Congress that
+closed the last century. One can hardly avoid smiling as one thinks of
+the solemn conclave of grandees assembled to proclaim the popularity of
+Peace.
+
+It was in the autumn of the same year that Europe decided upon the
+dividing-up of China, that soldiers were instructed by Christian monarchs
+to massacre men, women and children, the idea being to impress upon the
+Heathen Chinee the superior civilization of the white man. The Boer war
+followed almost immediately. Since when the white man has been pretty
+busy all over the world with his “expeditions” and his “missions.” The
+world is undoubtedly growing more refined. We do not care for ugly
+words. Even the burglar refers airily to the “little job” he has on
+hand. You would think he had found work in the country. I should not be
+surprised to learn that he says a prayer before starting, telegraphs home
+to his anxious wife the next morning that his task has been crowned with
+blessing.
+
+Until the far-off date of Universal Brotherhood war will continue.
+Matters considered unimportant by both parties will—with a mighty
+flourish of trumpets—be referred to arbitration. I was talking of a
+famous financier a while ago with a man who had been his secretary.
+Amongst other anecdotes, he told me of a certain agreement about which
+dispute had arisen. The famous financier took the paper into his own
+hands and made a few swift calculations.
+
+“Let it go,” he concluded, “it is only a thousand pounds at the outside.
+May as well be honest.”
+
+Concerning a dead fisherman or two, concerning boundaries through
+unproductive mountain ranges we shall arbitrate and feel virtuous. For
+gold mines and good pasture lands, mixed up with a little honour to give
+respectability to the business, we shall fight it out, as previously.
+War being thus inevitable, the humane man will rejoice that by one of
+those brilliant discoveries, so simple when they are explained, war in
+the future is going to be rendered equally satisfactory to victor and to
+vanquished.
+
+In by-elections, as a witty writer has pointed out, there are no
+defeats—only victories and moral victories. The idea seems to have
+caught on. War in the future is evidently going to be conducted on the
+same understanding. Once upon a time, from a far-off land, a certain
+general telegraphed home congratulating his Government that the enemy had
+shown no inclination whatever to prevent his running away. The whole
+country rejoiced.
+
+“Why, they never even tried to stop him,” citizens, meeting other
+citizens in the street, told each other. “Ah, they’ve had enough of him.
+I bet they are only too glad to get rid of him. Why, they say he ran for
+miles without seeing a trace of the foe.”
+
+The enemy’s general, on the other hand, also wrote home congratulating
+his Government. In this way the same battle can be mafficked over by
+both parties. Contentment is the great secret of happiness. Everything
+happens for the best, if only you look at it the right way. That is
+going to be the argument. The general of the future will telegraph to
+headquarters that he is pleased to be able to inform His Majesty that the
+enemy, having broken down all opposition, has succeeded in crossing the
+frontier and is now well on his way to His Majesty’s capital.
+
+“I am luring him on,” he will add, “as fast as I can. At our present
+rate of progress, I am in hopes of bringing him home by the tenth.”
+
+Lest foolish civilian sort of people should wonder whereabouts lies the
+cause for rejoicing, the military man will condescend to explain. The
+enemy is being enticed farther and farther from his base. The defeated
+general—who is not really defeated, who is only artful, and who appears
+to be running away, is not really running away at all. On the contrary,
+he is running home—bringing, as he explains, the enemy with him.
+
+If I remember rightly—it is long since I played it—there is a parlour
+game entitled “Puss in the Corner.” You beckon another player to you
+with your finger. “Puss, puss!” you cry. Thereupon he has to leave his
+chair—his “base,” as the military man would term it—and try to get to you
+without anything happening to him.
+
+War in the future is going to be Puss in the Corner on a bigger scale.
+You lure your enemy away from his base. If all goes well—if he does not
+see the trap that is being laid for him—why, then, almost before he knows
+it, he finds himself in your capital. That finishes the game. You find
+out what it is he really wants. Provided it is something within reason,
+and you happen to have it handy, you give it to him. He goes home
+crowing, and you, on your side, laugh when you think how cleverly you
+succeeded in luring him away from his base.
+
+There is a bright side to all things. The gentleman charged with the
+defence of a fortress will meet the other gentleman who has captured it
+and shake hands with him mid the ruins.
+
+“So here you are at last!” he will explain. “Why didn’t you come before?
+We have been waiting for you.”
+
+And he will send off dispatches felicitating his chief on having got that
+fortress off their hands, together with all the worry and expense it has
+been to them. When prisoners are taken you will console yourself with
+the reflection that the cost of feeding them for the future will have to
+be borne by the enemy. Captured cannon you will watch being trailed away
+with a sigh of relief.
+
+“Confounded heavy things!” you will say to yourself. “Thank goodness
+I’ve got rid of them. Let him have the fun of dragging them about these
+ghastly roads. See how he likes the job!”
+
+War is a ridiculous method of settling disputes. Anything that can tend
+to make its ridiculous aspect more apparent is to be welcomed. The new
+school of military dispatch-writers may succeed in turning even the
+laughter of the mob against it.
+
+The present trouble in the East would never have occurred but for the
+white man’s enthusiasm for bearing other people’s burdens. What we call
+the yellow danger is the fear that the yellow man may before long request
+us, so far as he is concerned, to put his particular burden down. It may
+occur to him that, seeing it is his property, he would just as soon carry
+it himself. A London policeman told me a story the other day that struck
+him as an example of Cockney humour under trying circumstances. But it
+may also serve as a fable. From a lonely street in the neighbourhood of
+Covent Garden, early one morning, the constable heard cries of “Stop
+thief!” shouted in a childish treble. He arrived on the scene just in
+time to collar a young hooligan, who, having snatched a basket of fruit
+from a small lad—a greengrocer’s errand boy, as it turned out—was, with
+it, making tracks. The greengrocer’s boy, between panting and tears,
+delivered his accusation. The hooligan regarded him with an expression
+of amazed indignation.
+
+“What d’yer mean, stealing it?” exclaimed Mr. Hooligan. “Why, I was
+carrying it for yer!”
+
+The white man has got into the way of “carrying” other people’s burdens,
+and now it looks as if the yellow man were going to object to our
+carrying his any further. Maybe he is going to get nasty, and insist on
+carrying it himself. We call this “the yellow danger.”
+
+A friend of mine—he is a man who in the street walks into lamp-posts, and
+apologises—sees rising from the East the dawn of a new day in the world’s
+history. The yellow danger is to him a golden hope. He sees a race long
+stagnant, stretching its giant limbs with the first vague movements of
+returning life. He is a poor sort of patriot; he calls himself, I
+suppose, a white man, yet he shamelessly confesses he would rather see
+Asia’s millions rise from the ruins of their ancient civilization to take
+their part in the future of humanity, than that half the population of
+the globe should remain bound in savagery for the pleasure and the profit
+of his own particular species.
+
+He even goes so far as to think that the white man may have something to
+learn. The world has belonged to him now for some thousands of years.
+Has he done all with it that could have been done? Are his ideals the
+last word?
+
+Not what the yellow man has absorbed from Europe, but what he is going to
+give Europe it is that interests my friend. He is watching the birth of
+a new force—an influence as yet unknown. He clings to the fond belief
+that new ideas, new formulæ, to replace the old worn shibboleths, may,
+during these thousands of years, have been developing in those keen
+brains that behind the impressive yellow mask have been working so long
+in silence and in mystery.
+
+
+
+
+WHY DIDN’T HE MARRY THE GIRL?
+
+
+WHAT is wrong with marriage, anyhow? I find myself pondering this
+question so often, when reading high-class literature. I put it to
+myself again the other evening, during a performance of Faust. Why could
+not Faust have married the girl? I would not have married her myself for
+any consideration whatsoever; but that is not the argument. Faust,
+apparently, could not see anything amiss with her. Both of them were mad
+about each other. Yet the idea of a quiet, unostentatious marriage with
+a week’s honeymoon, say, in Vienna, followed by a neat little cottage
+_orné_, not too far from Nürnberg, so that their friends could have come
+out to them, never seems to have occurred to either of them.
+
+There could have been a garden. Marguerite might have kept chickens and
+a cow. That sort of girl, brought up to hard work and by no means too
+well educated, is all the better for having something to do. Later, with
+the gradual arrival of the family, a good, all-round woman might have
+been hired in to assist. Faust, of course, would have had his study and
+got to work again; that would have kept him out of further mischief. The
+idea that a brainy man, his age, was going to be happy with nothing to do
+all day but fool round a petticoat was ridiculous from the beginning.
+Valentine—a good fellow, Valentine, with nice ideas—would have spent his
+Saturdays to Monday with them. Over a pipe and a glass of wine, he and
+Faust would have discussed the local politics.
+
+He would have danced the children on his knee, have told them tales about
+the war—taught the eldest boy to shoot. Faust, with a practical man like
+Valentine to help him, would probably have invented a new gun. Valentine
+would have got it taken up.
+
+Things might have come of it. Sybil, in course of time, would have
+married and settled down—perhaps have taken a little house near to them.
+He and Marguerite would have joked—when Mrs. Sybil was not around—about
+his early infatuation. The old mother would have toddled over from
+Nürnberg—not too often, just for the day.
+
+The picture grows upon one the more one thinks of it. Why did it never
+occur to them? There would have been a bit of a bother with the Old Man.
+I can imagine Mephistopheles being upset about it, thinking himself
+swindled. Of course, if that was the reason—if Faust said to himself:
+
+“I should like to marry the girl, but I won’t do it; it would not be fair
+to the Old Man; he has been to a lot of trouble working this thing up; in
+common gratitude I cannot turn round now and behave like a decent,
+sensible man; it would not be playing the game”—if this was the way Faust
+looked at the matter there is nothing more to be said. Indeed, it shows
+him in rather a fine light—noble, if quixotic.
+
+If, on the other hand, he looked at the question from the point of view
+of himself and the girl, I think the thing might have been managed. All
+one had to do in those days when one wanted to get rid of the Devil was
+to show him a sword hilt. Faust and Marguerite could have slipped into a
+church one morning, and have kept him out of the way with a sword hilt
+till the ceremony was through. They might have hired a small boy:
+
+“You see the gentleman in red? Well, he wants us and we don’t want him.
+That is the only difference between us. Now, you take this sword, and
+when you see him coming show him the hilt. Don’t hurt him; just show him
+the sword and shake your head. He will understand.”
+
+The old gentleman’s expression, when subsequently Faust presented him to
+Marguerite, would have been interesting:
+
+“Allow me, my wife. My dear, a—a friend of mine. You may remember
+meeting him that night at your aunt’s.”
+
+As I have said, there would have been ructions; but I do not myself see
+what could have been done. There was nothing in the bond to the effect
+that Faust should not marry, so far as we are told. The Old Man had a
+sense of humour. My own opinion is that, after getting over the first
+annoyance, he himself would have seen the joke. I can even picture him
+looking in now and again on Mr. and Mrs. Faust. The children would be
+hurried off to bed. There would be, for a while, an atmosphere of
+constraint.
+
+But the Old Man had a way with him. He would have told one or two
+stories at which Marguerite would have blushed, at which Faust would have
+grinned. I can see the old fellow occasionally joining the homely social
+board. The children, awed at first, would have sat silent, with staring
+eyes. But, as I have said, the Old Man had a way with him. Why should
+he not have reformed? The good woman’s unconsciously exerted
+influence—the sweet childish prattle! One hears of such things. Might
+he not have come to be known as “Nunkie”?
+
+Myself—I believe I have already mentioned it—I would not have married
+Marguerite. She is not my ideal of a good girl. I never liked the way
+she deceived her mother. And that aunt of hers! Well, a nice girl would
+not have been friends with such a woman. She did not behave at all too
+well to Sybil, either. It is clear to me that she led the boy on. And
+what was she doing with that box of jewels, anyhow? She was not a fool.
+She could not have gone every day to that fountain, chatted with those
+girl friends of hers, and learnt nothing. She must have known that
+people don’t go leaving twenty thousand pounds’ worth of jewels about on
+doorsteps as part of a round game. Her own instinct, if she had been a
+good girl, would have told her to leave the thing alone.
+
+I don’t believe in these innocent people who do not know what they are
+doing half their time. Ask any London magistrate what he thinks of the
+lady who explains that she picked up the diamond brooch:—
+
+“Not meaning, of course, your Worship, to take it. I would not do such a
+thing. It just happened this way, your Worship. I was standing as you
+might say here, and not seeing anyone about in the shop I opened the case
+and took it out, thinking as perhaps it might belong to someone; and then
+this gentleman here, as I had not noticed before, comes up quite suddenly
+and says; ‘You come along with me,’ he says. ‘What for,’ I says, ‘when I
+don’t even know you?’ I says. ‘For stealing,’ he says. ‘Well, that’s a
+hard word to use to a lady,’ I says; ‘I don’t know what you mean, I’m
+sure.’”
+
+And if she had put them all on, not thinking, what would a really nice
+girl have done when the gentleman came up and assured her they were hers?
+She would have been thirty seconds taking them off and flinging them back
+into the box.
+
+“Thank you,” she would have said, “I’ll trouble you to leave this garden
+as quickly as you entered it and take them with you. I’m not that sort
+of girl.”
+
+Marguerite clings to the jewels, and accepts the young man’s arm for a
+moonlight promenade. And when it does enter into her innocent head that
+he and she have walked that shady garden long enough, what does she do
+when she has said good-bye and shut the door? She opens the ground-floor
+window and begins to sing!
+
+Maybe I am not poetical, but I do like justice. When other girls do
+these sort of things they get called names. I cannot see why this
+particular girl should be held up as an ideal. She kills her mother.
+According to her own account this was an accident. It is not an original
+line of defence, and we are not allowed to hear the evidence for the
+prosecution. She also kills her baby. You are not to blame her for
+that, because at the time she was feeling poorly. I don’t see why this
+girl should have a special line of angels to take her up to heaven.
+There must have been decent, hard-working women in Nürnburg more entitled
+to the ticket.
+
+Why is it that all these years we have been content to accept Marguerite
+as a type of innocence and virtue? The explanation is, I suppose, that
+Goethe wrote at a time when it was the convention to regard all women as
+good. Anything in petticoats was virtuous. If she did wrong it was
+always somebody else’s fault. _Cherchez la femme_ was a later notion.
+In the days of Goethe it was always _Cherchez l’homme_. It was the man’s
+fault. It was the devil’s fault. It was anybody’s fault you liked, but
+not her’s.
+
+The convention has not yet died out. I was reading the other day a most
+interesting book by a brilliant American authoress. Seeing I live far
+away from the lady’s haunts, I venture to mention names. I am speaking
+of “Patience Sparhawk,” by Gertrude Atherton. I take this book because
+it is typical of a large body of fiction. Miss Sparhawk lives a troubled
+life: it puzzles her. She asks herself what is wrong. Her own idea is
+that it is civilisation.
+
+If it is not civilisation, then it is the American man or Nature—or
+Democracy. Miss Sparhawk marries the wrong man. Later on she gets
+engaged to another wrong man. In the end we are left to believe she is
+about to be married to the right man. I should be better satisfied if I
+could hear Miss Sparhawk talking six months after that last marriage.
+But if a mistake has again been made I am confident that, in Miss
+Sparhawk’s opinion, the fault will not be Miss Sparhawk’s. The argument
+is always the same: Miss Sparhawk, being a lady, can do no wrong.
+
+If Miss Sparhawk cared to listen to me for five minutes, I feel I could
+put her right on this point.
+
+“It is quite true, my dear girl,” I should say to her, “something is
+wrong—very wrong. But it is not the American man. Never you mind the
+American man: you leave him to worry out his own salvation. You are not
+the girl to put him right, even where he is wrong. And it is not
+civilisation. Civilisation has a deal to answer for, I admit: don’t you
+load it up with this additional trouble. The thing that is wrong in this
+case of yours—if you will forgive my saying so—is you. You make a fool
+of yourself; you marry a man who is a mere animal because he appeals to
+your animal instincts. Then, like the lady who cried out ‘Alack, I’ve
+married a black,’ you appeal to heaven against the injustice of being
+mated with a clown. You are not a nice girl, either in your ideas or in
+your behaviour. I don’t blame you for it; you did not make yourself.
+But when you set to work to attract all that is lowest in man, why be so
+astonished at your own success? There are plenty of shocking American
+men, I agree. One meets the class even outside America. But nice
+American girls will tell you that there are also nice American men.
+There is an old proverb about birds of a feather. Next time you find
+yourself in the company of a shocking American man, you just ask yourself
+how he got there, and how it is he seems to be feeling at home. You
+learn self-control. Get it out of your head that you are the centre of
+the universe, and grasp the idea that a petticoat is not a halo, and you
+will find civilisation not half as wrong as you thought it.”
+
+I know what Miss Sparhawk’s reply would be.
+
+“You say all this to me—to me, a lady? Great Heavens! What has become
+of chivalry?”
+
+A Frenchman was once put on trial for murdering his father and mother.
+He confessed his guilt, but begged for mercy on the plea that he was an
+orphan. Chivalry was founded on the assumption that woman was worthy to
+be worshipped. The modern woman’s notion is that when she does wrong she
+ought to be excused by chivalrous man because she is a lady.
+
+I like the naughty heroine; we all of us do. The early Victorian
+heroine—the angel in a white frock, was a bore. We knew exactly what she
+was going to do—the right thing. We did not even have to ask ourselves,
+“What will she think is the right thing to do under the circumstances?”
+It was always the conventional right thing. You could have put it to a
+Sunday school and have got the answer every time. The heroine with
+passions, instincts, emotions, is to be welcomed. But I want her to
+grasp the fact that after all she is only one of us. I should like her
+better if, instead of demanding:
+
+“What is wrong in civilisation? What is the world coming to?” and so
+forth, she would occasionally say to herself:
+
+“Guess I’ve made a fool of myself this time. I do feel that ’shamed of
+myself.”
+
+She would not lose by it. We should respect her all the more.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT MRS. WILKINS THOUGHT ABOUT IT.
+
+
+LAST year, travelling on the Underground Railway, I met a man; he was one
+of the saddest-looking men I had seen for years. I used to know him well
+in the old days when we were journalists together. I asked him, in a
+sympathetic tone, how things were going with him. I expected his
+response would be a flood of tears, and that in the end I should have to
+fork out a fiver. To my astonishment, his answer was that things were
+going exceedingly well with him. I did not want to say to him bluntly:
+
+“Then what has happened to you to make you look like a mute at a
+temperance funeral?” I said:
+
+“And how are all at home?”
+
+I thought that if the trouble lay there he would take the opportunity.
+It brightened him somewhat, the necessity of replying to the question.
+It appeared that his wife was in the best of health.
+
+“You remember her,” he continued with a smile; “wonderful spirits, always
+cheerful, nothing seems to put her out, not even—”
+
+He ended the sentence abruptly with a sigh.
+
+His mother-in-law, I learned from further talk with him, had died since I
+had last met him, and had left them a comfortable addition to their
+income. His eldest daughter was engaged to be married.
+
+“It is entirely a love match,” he explained, “and he is such a dear, good
+fellow, that I should not have made any objection even had he been poor.
+But, of course, as it is, I am naturally all the more content.”
+
+His eldest boy, having won the Mottle Scholarship, was going up to
+Cambridge in the Autumn. His own health, he told me, had greatly
+improved; and a novel he had written in his leisure time promised to be
+one of the successes of the season. Then it was that I spoke plainly.
+
+“If I am opening a wound too painful to be touched,” I said, “tell me.
+If, on the contrary, it is an ordinary sort of trouble upon which the
+sympathy of a fellow worker may fall as balm, let me hear it.”
+
+“So far as I am concerned,” he replied, “I should be glad to tell you.
+Speaking about it does me good, and may lead—so I am always in hopes—to
+an idea. But, for your own sake, if you take my advice, you will not
+press me.”
+
+“How can it affect me?” I asked, “it is nothing to do with me, is it?”
+
+“It need have nothing to do with you,” he answered, “if you are sensible
+enough to keep out of it. If I tell you: from this time onward it will
+be your trouble also. Anyhow, that is what has happened in four other
+separate cases. If you like to be the fifth and complete the half dozen
+of us, you are welcome. But remember I have warned you.”
+
+“What has it done to the other five?” I demanded.
+
+“It has changed them from cheerful, companionable persons into gloomy
+one-idead bores,” he told me. “They think of but one thing, they talk of
+but one thing, they dream of but one thing. Instead of getting over it,
+as time goes on, it takes possession of them more and more. There are
+men, of course, who would be unaffected by it—who could shake it off. I
+warn you in particular against it, because, in spite of all that is said,
+I am convinced you have a sense of humour; and that being so, it will lay
+hold of you. It will plague you night and day. You see what it has made
+of me! Three months ago a lady interviewer described me as of a sunny
+temperament. If you know your own business you will get out at the next
+station.”
+
+I wish now I had followed his advice. As it was, I allowed my curiosity
+to take possession of me, and begged him to explain. And he did so.
+
+“It was just about Christmas time,” he said. “We were discussing the
+Drury Lane Pantomime—some three or four of us—in the smoking room of the
+Devonshire Club, and young Gold said he thought it would prove a mistake,
+the introduction of a subject like the Fiscal question into the story of
+Humpty Dumpty. The two things, so far as he could see, had nothing to do
+with one another. He added that he entertained a real regard for Mr. Dan
+Leno, whom he had once met on a steamboat, but that there were other
+topics upon which he would prefer to seek that gentleman’s guidance.
+Nettleship, on the other hand, declared that he had no sympathy with the
+argument that artists should never intrude upon public affairs. The
+actor was a fellow citizen with the rest of us. He said that, whether
+one agreed with their conclusions or not, one must admit that the nation
+owed a debt of gratitude to Mrs. Brown Potter and to Miss Olga Nethersole
+for giving to it the benefit of their convictions. He had talked to both
+ladies in private on the subject and was convinced they knew as much
+about it as did most people.
+
+“Burnside, who was one of the party, contended that if sides were to be
+taken, a pantomime should surely advocate the Free-Food Cause, seeing it
+was a form of entertainment supposed to appeal primarily to the tastes of
+the Little Englander. Then I came into the discussion.
+
+“‘The Fiscal question,’ I said, ‘is on everybody’s tongue. Such being
+the case, it is fit and proper it should be referred to in our annual
+pantomime, which has come to be regarded as a review of the year’s
+doings. But it should not have been dealt with from the political
+standpoint. The proper attitude to have assumed towards it was that of
+innocent raillery, free from all trace of partisanship.’
+
+“Old Johnson had strolled up and was standing behind us.
+
+“‘The very thing I have been trying to get hold of for weeks,’ he said—‘a
+bright, amusing _resumé_ of the whole problem that should give offence to
+neither side. You know our paper,’ he continued; ‘we steer clear of
+politics, but, at the same time, try to be up-to-date; it is not always
+easy. The treatment of the subject, on the lines you suggest, is just
+what we require. I do wish you would write me something.’
+
+“He is a good old sort, Johnson; it seemed an easy thing. I said I
+would. Since that time I have been thinking how to do it. As a matter
+of fact, I have not thought of much else. Maybe you can suggest
+something.”
+
+I was feeling in a good working mood the next morning.
+
+“Pilson,” said I to myself, “shall have the benefit of this. He does not
+need anything boisterously funny. A few playfully witty remarks on the
+subject will be the ideal.”
+
+I lit a pipe and sat down to think. At half-past twelve, having to write
+some letters before going out to lunch, I dismissed the Fiscal question
+from my mind.
+
+But not for long. It worried me all the afternoon. I thought, maybe,
+something would come to me in the evening. I wasted all that evening,
+and I wasted all the following morning. Everything has its amusing side,
+I told myself. One turns out comic stories about funerals, about
+weddings. Hardly a misfortune that can happen to mankind but has
+produced its comic literature. An American friend of mine once took a
+contract from the Editor of an Insurance Journal to write four humorous
+stories; one was to deal with an earthquake, the second with a cyclone,
+the third with a flood, and the fourth with a thunderstorm. And more
+amusing stories I have never read. What is the matter with the Fiscal
+question?
+
+I myself have written lightly on Bime-metallism. Home Rule we used to be
+merry over in the eighties. I remember one delightful evening at the
+Codgers’ Hall. It would have been more delightful still, but for a
+raw-boned Irishman, who rose towards eleven o’clock and requested to be
+informed if any other speaker was wishful to make any more jokes on the
+subject of Ould Ireland; because, if so, the raw-boned gentleman was
+prepared to save time by waiting and dealing with them altogether. But
+if not, then—so the raw-boned gentleman announced—his intention was to go
+for the last speaker and the last speaker but two at once and without
+further warning.
+
+No other humourist rising, the raw-boned gentleman proceeded to make good
+his threat, with the result that the fun degenerated somewhat. Even on
+the Boer War we used to whisper jokes to one another in quiet places. In
+this Fiscal question there must be fun. Where is it?
+
+For days I thought of little else. My laundress—as we call them in the
+Temple—noticed my trouble.
+
+“Mrs. Wilkins,” I confessed, “I am trying to think of something
+innocently amusing to say on the Fiscal question.”
+
+“I’ve ’eard about it,” she said, “but I don’t ’ave much time to read the
+papers. They want to make us pay more for our food, don’t they?”
+
+“For some of it,” I explained. “But, then, we shall pay less for other
+things, so that really we shan’t be paying more at all.”
+
+“There don’t seem much in it, either way,” was Mrs. Wilkins’ opinion.
+
+“Just so,” I agreed, “that is the advantage of the system. It will cost
+nobody anything, and will result in everybody being better off.”
+
+“The pity is,” said Mrs. Wilkins “that pity nobody ever thought of it
+before.”
+
+“The whole trouble hitherto,” I explained, “has been the foreigner.”
+
+“Ah,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “I never ’eard much good of ’em, though they do
+say the Almighty ’as a use for almost everything.”
+
+“These foreigners,” I continued, “these Germans and Americans, they dump
+things on us, you know.”
+
+“What’s that?” demanded Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+“What’s dump? Well, it’s dumping, you know. You take things, and you
+dump them down.”
+
+“But what things? ’Ow do they do it?” asked Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+“Why, all sorts of things: pig iron, bacon, door-mats—everything. They
+bring them over here—in ships, you understand—and then, if you please,
+just dump them down upon our shores.”
+
+“You don’t mean surely to tell me that they just throw them out and leave
+them there?” queried Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+“Of course not,” I replied; “when I say they dump these things upon our
+shores, that is a figure of speech. What I mean is they sell them to
+us.”
+
+“But why do we buy them if we don’t want them?” asked Mrs. Wilkins;
+“we’re not bound to buy them, are we?”
+
+“It is their artfulness,” I explained, “these Germans and Americans, and
+the others; they are all just as bad as one another—they insist on
+selling us these things at less price than they cost to make.”
+
+“It seems a bit silly of them, don’t it?” thought Mrs. Wilkins. “I
+suppose being foreigners, poor things, they ain’t naturally got much
+sense.”
+
+“It does seem silly of them, if you look at it that way,” I admitted,
+“but what we have got to consider is, the injury it is doing us.”
+
+“Don’t see ’ow it can do us much ’arm,” argued Mrs. Wilkins; “seems a bit
+of luck so far as we are concerned. There’s a few more things they’d be
+welcome to dump round my way.”
+
+“I don’t seem to be putting this thing quite in the right light to you,
+Mrs. Wilkins,” I confessed. “It is a long argument, and you might not be
+able to follow it; but you must take it as a fact now generally admitted
+that the cheaper you buy things the sooner your money goes. By allowing
+the foreigner to sell us all these things at about half the cost price,
+he is getting richer every day, and we are getting poorer. Unless we, as
+a country, insist on paying at least twenty per cent. more for everything
+we want, it is calculated that in a very few years England won’t have a
+penny left.”
+
+“Sounds a bit topsy turvy,” suggested Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+“It may sound so,” I answered, “but I fear there can be no doubt of it.
+The Board of Trade Returns would seem to prove it conclusively.”
+
+“Well, God be praised, we’ve found it out in time,” ejaculated Mrs.
+Wilkins piously.
+
+“It is a matter of congratulation,” I agreed; “the difficulty is that a
+good many other people say that far from being ruined, we are doing very
+well indeed, and are growing richer every year.”
+
+“But ’ow can they say that,” argued Mrs. Wilkins, “when, as you tell me,
+those Trade Returns prove just the opposite?”
+
+“Well, they say the same, Mrs. Wilkins, that the Board of Trade Returns
+prove just the opposite.”
+
+“Well, they can’t both be right,” said Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+“You would be surprised, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, “how many things can be
+proved from Board of Trade Returns!”
+
+But I have not yet thought of that article for Pilson.
+
+
+
+
+SHALL WE BE RUINED BY CHINESE CHEAP LABOUR?
+
+
+“WHAT is all this talk I ’ear about the Chinese?” said Mrs. Wilkins to me
+the other morning. We generally indulge in a little chat while Mrs.
+Wilkins is laying the breakfast-table. Letters and newspapers do not
+arrive in my part of the Temple much before nine. From half-past eight
+to nine I am rather glad of Mrs. Wilkins. “They ’ave been up to some of
+their tricks again, ’aven’t they?”
+
+“The foreigner, Mrs. Wilkins,” I replied, “whether he be Chinee or any
+other he, is always up to tricks. Was not England specially prepared by
+an all-wise Providence to frustrate these knavish tricks? Which of such
+particular tricks may you be referring to at the moment, Mrs. Wilkins?”
+
+“Well, ’e’s comin’ over ’ere—isn’t he, sir? to take the work out of our
+mouths, as it were.”
+
+“Well, not exactly over here, to England, Mrs. Wilkins,” I explained.
+“He has been introduced into Africa to work in the mines there.”
+
+“It’s a funny thing,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “but to ’ear the way some of
+them talk in our block, you might run away with the notion—that is, if
+you didn’t know ’em—that work was their only joy. I said to one of ’em,
+the other evening—a man as calls ’isself a brass finisher, though, Lord
+knows, the only brass ’e ever finishes is what ’is poor wife earns and
+isn’t quick enough to ’ide away from ’im—well, whatever ’appens, I says,
+it will be clever of ’em if they take away much work from you. It made
+them all laugh, that did,” added Mrs. Wilkins, with a touch of pardonable
+pride.
+
+“Ah,” continued the good lady, “it’s surprising ’ow contented they can be
+with a little, some of ’em. Give ’em a ’ard-working woman to look after
+them, and a day out once a week with a procession of the unemployed, they
+don’t ask for nothing more. There’s that beauty my poor sister Jane was
+fool enough to marry. Serves ’er right, as I used to tell ’er at first,
+till there didn’t seem any more need to rub it into ’er. She’d ’ad one
+good ’usband. It wouldn’t ’ave been fair for ’er to ’ave ’ad another,
+even if there’d been a chance of it, seeing the few of ’em there is to go
+round among so many. But it’s always the same with us widows: if we
+’appen to ’ave been lucky the first time, we put it down to our own
+judgment—think we can’t ever make a mistake; and if we draw a wrong ’un,
+as the saying is, we argue as if it was the duty of Providence to make it
+up to us the second time. Why, I’d a been making a fool of myself three
+years ago if ’e ’adn’t been good-natured enough to call one afternoon
+when I was out, and ’ook it off with two pounds eight in the best teapot
+that I ’ad been soft enough to talk to ’im about: and never let me set
+eyes on ’im again. God bless ’im! ’E’s one of the born-tireds, ’e is,
+as poor Jane might ’ave seen for ’erself, if she ’ad only looked at ’im,
+instead of listening to ’im.
+
+“But that’s courtship all the world over—old and young alike, so far as
+I’ve been able to see it,” was the opinion of Mrs. Wilkins. “The man’s
+all eyes and the woman all ears. They don’t seem to ’ave any other
+senses left ’em. I ran against ’im the other night, on my way ’ome, at
+the corner of Gray’s Inn Road. There was the usual crowd watching a pack
+of them Italians laying down the asphalt in ’Olborn, and ’e was among
+’em. ’E ’ad secured the only lamp-post, and was leaning agen it.
+
+“’Ullo,’ I says, ‘glad to see you ’aven’t lost your job. Nothin’ like
+stickin’ to it, when you’ve dropped into somethin’ that really suits
+you.’
+
+“‘What do you mean, Martha?’ ’e says. ’E’s not one of what I call your
+smart sort. It takes a bit of sarcasm to get through ’is ’ead.
+
+“‘Well,’ I says, ‘you’re still on the old track, I see, looking for work.
+Take care you don’t ’ave an accident one of these days and run up agen it
+before you’ve got time to get out of its way.’
+
+“‘It’s these miserable foreigners,’ ’e says. ‘Look at ’em,’ ’e says.
+
+“‘There’s enough of you doing that,’ I says. ‘I’ve got my room to put
+straight and three hours needlework to do before I can get to bed. But
+don’t let me ’inder you. You might forget what work was like, if you
+didn’t take an opportunity of watching it now and then.’
+
+“‘They come over ’ere,’ ’e says, ‘and take the work away from us chaps.’
+
+“‘Ah,’ I says, ‘poor things, perhaps they ain’t married.’
+
+“‘Lazy devils! ’e says. ‘Look at ’em, smoking cigarettes. I could do
+that sort of work. There’s nothing in it. It don’t take ’eathen
+foreigners to dab a bit of tar about a road.’
+
+“‘Yes,’ I says, ‘you always could do anybody else’s work but your own.’
+
+“‘I can’t find it, Martha,’ ’e says.
+
+“‘No,’ I says, ‘and you never will in the sort of places you go looking
+for it. They don’t ’ang it out on lamp-posts, and they don’t leave it
+about at the street corners. Go ’ome,’ I says, ‘and turn the mangle for
+your poor wife. That’s big enough for you to find, even in the dark.’
+
+“Looking for work!” snorted Mrs. Wilkins with contempt; “we women never
+’ave much difficulty in finding it, I’ve noticed. There are times when I
+feel I could do with losing it for a day.”
+
+“But what did he reply, Mrs. Wilkins,” I asked; “your brass-finishing
+friend, who was holding forth on the subject of Chinese cheap labour.”
+Mrs. Wilkins as a conversationalist is not easily kept to the point. I
+was curious to know what the working classes were thinking on the
+subject.
+
+“Oh, that,” replied Mrs. Wilkins, “’e did not say nothing. ’E ain’t the
+sort that’s got much to say in an argument. ’E belongs to the crowd that
+’angs about at the back, and does the shouting. But there was another of
+’em, a young fellow as I feels sorry for, with a wife and three small
+children, who ’asn’t ’ad much luck for the last six months; and that
+through no fault of ’is own, I should say, from the look of ’im. ‘I was
+a fool,’ says ’e, ‘when I chucked a good situation and went out to the
+war. They told me I was going to fight for equal rights for all white
+men. I thought they meant that all of us were going to ’ave a better
+chance, and it seemed worth making a bit of sacrifice for, that did. I
+should be glad if they would give me a job in their mines that would
+enable me to feed my wife and children. That’s all I ask them for!’”
+
+“It is a difficult problem, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said. “According to the
+mine owners—”
+
+“Ah,” said Mrs. Wilkins. “They don’t seem to be exactly what you’d call
+popular, them mine owners, do they? Daresay they’re not as bad as
+they’re painted.”
+
+“Some people, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, “paint them very black. There are
+those who hold that the South African mine-owner is not a man at all, but
+a kind of pantomime demon. You take Goliath, the whale that swallowed
+Jonah, a selection from the least respectable citizens of Sodom and
+Gomorrah at their worst, Bluebeard, Bloody Queen Mary, Guy Fawkes, and
+the sea-serpent—or, rather, you take the most objectionable attributes of
+all these various personages, and mix them up together. The result is
+the South African mine-owner, a monster who would willingly promote a
+company for the putting on the market of a new meat extract, prepared
+exclusively from new-born infants, provided the scheme promised a fair
+and reasonable opportunity of fleecing the widow and orphan.”
+
+“I’ve ’eard they’re a bad lot,” said Mrs. Wilkins. “But we’re most of us
+that, if we listen to what other people say about us.”
+
+“Quite so, Mrs. Wilkins,” I agreed. “One never arrives at the truth by
+listening to one side only. On the other hand, for example, there are
+those who stoutly maintain that the South African mine-owner is a kind of
+spiritual creature, all heart and sentiment, who, against his own will,
+has been, so to speak, dumped down upon this earth as the result of
+over-production up above of the higher class of archangel. The stock of
+archangels of superior finish exceeds the heavenly demand; the surplus
+has been dropped down into South Africa and has taken to mine owning. It
+is not that these celestial visitors of German sounding nomenclature care
+themselves about the gold. Their only desire is, during this earthly
+pilgrimage of theirs, to benefit the human race. Nothing can be obtained
+in this world without money—”
+
+“That’s true,” said Mrs. Wilkins, with a sigh.
+
+“For gold, everything can be obtained. The aim of the mine-owning
+archangel is to provide the world with gold. Why should the world
+trouble to grow things and make things? ‘Let us,’ say these archangels,
+temporarily dwelling in South Africa, ‘dig up and distribute to the world
+plenty of gold, then the world can buy whatever it wants, and be happy.’
+
+“There may be a flaw in the argument, Mrs. Wilkins,” I allowed. “I am
+not presenting it to you as the last word upon the subject. I am merely
+quoting the view of the South African mine-owner, feeling himself a much
+misunderstood benefactor of mankind.”
+
+“I expect,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “they are just the ordinary sort of
+Christian, like the rest of us, anxious to do the best they can for
+themselves, and not too particular as to doing other people in the
+process.”
+
+“I am inclined to think, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, “that you are not very
+far from the truth. A friend of mine, a year ago, was very bitter on
+this subject of Chinese cheap labour. A little later there died a
+distant relative of his who left him twenty thousand South African mining
+shares. He thinks now that to object to the Chinese is narrow-minded,
+illiberal, and against all religious teaching. He has bought an abridged
+edition of Confucius, and tells me that there is much that is ennobling
+in Chinese morality. Indeed, I gather from him that the introduction of
+the Chinese into South Africa will be the saving of that country. The
+noble Chinese will afford an object lesson to the poor white man,
+displaying to him the virtues of sobriety, thrift, and humility. I also
+gather that it will be of inestimable benefit to the noble Chinee
+himself. The Christian missionary will get hold of him in bulk, so to
+speak, and imbue him with the higher theology. It appears to be one of
+those rare cases where everybody is benefited at the expense of nobody.
+It is always a pity to let these rare opportunities slip by.”
+
+“Well,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “I’ve nothin’ to say agen the Chinaman, as a
+Chinaman. As to ’is being a ’eathen, well, throwin’ stones at a church,
+as the sayin’ is, don’t make a Christian of you. There’s Christians I’ve
+met as couldn’t do themselves much ’arm by changing their religion; and
+as to cleanliness, well, I’ve never met but one, and ’e was a
+washerwoman, and I’d rather ’ave sat next to ’im in a third-class
+carriage on a Bank ’Oliday than next to some of ’em.
+
+“Seems to me,” continued Mrs. Wilkins, “we’ve got into the ’abit of
+talkin’ a bit too much about other people’s dirt. The London atmosphere
+ain’t nat’rally a dry-cleanin’ process in itself, but there’s a goodish
+few as seem to think it is. One comes across Freeborn Britons ’ere and
+there as I’d be sorry to scrub clean for a shillin’ and find my own
+soap.”
+
+“It is a universal failing, Mrs. Wilkins,” I explained. “If you talk to
+a travelled Frenchman, he contrasts to his own satisfaction the Paris
+_ouvrier_ in his blue blouse with the appearance of the London labourer.”
+
+“I daresay they’re all right according to their lights,” said Mrs.
+Wilkins, “but it does seem a bit wrong that if our own chaps are willin’
+and anxious to work, after all they’ve done, too, in the way of getting
+the mines for us, they shouldn’t be allowed the job.”
+
+“Again, Mrs. Wilkins, it is difficult to arrive at a just conclusion,” I
+said. “The mine-owner, according to his enemies, hates the British
+workman with the natural instinct that evil creatures feel towards the
+noble and virtuous. He will go to trouble and expense merely to spite
+the British workman, to keep him out of South Africa. According to his
+friends, the mine-owner sets his face against the idea of white labour
+for two reasons. First and foremost, it is not nice work; the mine-owner
+hates the thought of his beloved white brother toiling in the mines. It
+is not right that the noble white man should demean himself by such work.
+Secondly, white labour is too expensive. If for digging gold men had to
+be paid anything like the same prices they are paid for digging coal, the
+mines could not be worked. The world would lose the gold that the
+mine-owner is anxious to bestow upon it.
+
+“The mine-owner, following his own inclinations, would take a little
+farm, grow potatoes, and live a beautiful life—perhaps write a little
+poetry. A slave to sense of duty, he is chained to the philanthropic
+work of gold-mining. If we hamper him and worry him the danger is that
+he will get angry with us—possibly he will order his fiery chariot and
+return to where he came from.”
+
+“Well, ’e can’t take the gold with him, wherever ’e goes to?” argued Mrs.
+Wilkins.
+
+“You talk, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, “as if the gold were of more value to
+the world than is the mine-owner.”
+
+“Well, isn’t it?” demanded Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+“It’s a new idea, Mrs. Wilkins,” I answered; “it wants thinking out.”
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO SOLVE THE SERVANT PROBLEM.
+
+
+“I AM glad to see, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, “that the Women’s Domestic
+Guild of America has succeeded in solving the servant girl problem—none
+too soon, one might almost say.”
+
+“Ah,” said Mrs. Wilkins, as she took the cover off the bacon and gave an
+extra polish to the mustard-pot with her apron, “they are clever people
+over there; leastways, so I’ve always ’eard.”
+
+“This, their latest, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, “I am inclined to regard as
+their greatest triumph. My hope is that the Women’s Domestic Guild of
+America, when it has finished with the United States and Canada, will,
+perhaps, see its way to establishing a branch in England. There are
+ladies of my acquaintance who would welcome, I feel sure, any really
+satisfactory solution of the problem.”
+
+“Well, good luck to it, is all I say,” responded Mrs. Wilkins, “and if it
+makes all the gals contented with their places, and all the mistresses
+satisfied with what they’ve got and ’appy in their minds, why, God bless
+it, say I.”
+
+“The mistake hitherto,” I said, “from what I read, appears to have been
+that the right servant was not sent to the right place. What the Women’s
+Domestic Guild of America proposes to do is to find the right servant for
+the right place. You see the difference, don’t you, Mrs. Wilkins?”
+
+“That’s the secret,” agreed Mrs. Wilkins. “They don’t anticipate any
+difficulty in getting the right sort of gal, I take it?”
+
+“I gather not, Mrs. Wilkins,” I replied.
+
+Mrs. Wilkins is of a pessimistic turn of mind.
+
+“I am not so sure about it,” she said; “the Almighty don’t seem to ’ave
+made too many of that sort. Unless these American ladies that you speak
+of are going to start a factory of their own. I am afraid there is
+disappointment in store for them.”
+
+“Don’t throw cold water on the idea before it is fairly started, Mrs.
+Wilkins,” I pleaded.
+
+“Well, sir,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “I ’ave been a gal myself in service; and
+in my time I‘ve ’ad a few mistresses of my own, and I’ve ’eard a good
+deal about others. There are ladies and ladies, as you may know, sir,
+and some of them, if they aren’t exactly angels, are about as near to it
+as can be looked for in this climate, and they are not the ones that do
+most of the complaining. But, as for the average mistress—well it ain’t
+a gal she wants, it’s a plaster image, without any natural innards—a sort
+of thing as ain’t ’uman, and ain’t to be found in ’uman nature. And then
+she’d grumble at it, if it didn’t ’appen to be able to be in two places
+at once.”
+
+“You fear that the standard for that ‘right girl’ is likely to be set a
+trifle too high Mrs. Wilkins,” I suggested.
+
+“That ‘right gal,’ according to the notions of some of ’em,” retorted
+Mrs. Wilkins, “’er place ain’t down ’ere among us mere mortals; ’er place
+is up in ’eaven with a ’arp and a golden crown. There’s my niece, Emma,
+I don’t say she is a saint, but a better ’earted, ’arder working gal, at
+twenty pounds a year, you don’t expect to find, unless maybe you’re a
+natural born fool that can’t ’elp yourself. She wanted a place. She ’ad
+been ’ome for nearly six months, nursing ’er old father, as ’ad been down
+all the winter with rheumatic fever; and ’ard-put to it she was for a few
+clothes. You ’ear ’em talk about gals as insists on an hour a day for
+practising the piano, and the right to invite their young man to spend
+the evening with them in the drawing-room. Perhaps it is meant to be
+funny; I ain’t come across that type of gal myself, outside the pictures
+in the comic papers; and I’ll never believe, till I see ’er myself, that
+anybody else ’as. They sent ’er from the registry office to a lady at
+Clapton.
+
+“‘I ’ope you are good at getting up early in the morning?’ says the lady,
+‘I like a gal as rises cheerfully to ’er work.’
+
+“‘Well, ma’am,’ says Emma, ‘I can’t say as I’ve got a passion for it.
+But it’s one of those things that ’as to be done, and I guess I’ve learnt
+the trick.’
+
+“‘I’m a great believer in early rising,’ says my lady; ‘in the morning,
+one is always fresher for one’s work; my ’usband and the younger children
+breakfast at ’arf past seven; myself and my eldest daughter ’ave our
+breakfest in bed at eight.’
+
+“‘That’ll be all right, ma’am,’ says Emma.
+
+“‘And I ’ope,’ says the lady, ‘you are of an amiable disposition. Some
+gals when you ring the bell come up looking so disagreeable, one almost
+wishes one didn’t want them.’
+
+“‘Well, it ain’t a thing,’ explains Emma, ‘as makes you want to burst out
+laughing, ’earing the bell go off for the twentieth time, and ’aving
+suddenly to put down your work at, perhaps, a critical moment. Some
+ladies don’t seem able to reach down their ’at for themselves.’
+
+“‘I ’ope you are not impertinent,’ says the lady; ‘if there’s one thing
+that I object to in a servant it is impertinence.’
+
+“‘We none of us like being answered back,’ says Emma, ‘more particularly
+when we are in the wrong. But I know my place ma’am, and I shan’t give
+you no lip. It always leads to less trouble, I find, keeping your mouth
+shut, rather than opening it.’
+
+“‘Are you fond of children,’ asks my lady.
+
+“‘It depends upon the children,’ says Emma; ‘there are some I ’ave ’ad to
+do with as made the day seem pleasanter, and I’ve come across others as I
+could ’ave parted from at any moment without tears.’
+
+“‘I like a gal,’ says the lady, ‘who is naturally fond of children, it
+shows a good character.’
+
+“‘How many of them are there?’ says Emma.
+
+“‘Four of them,’ answers my lady, ‘but you won’t ’ave much to do except
+with the two youngest. The great thing with young children is to
+surround them with good examples. Are you a Christian?’ asks my lady.
+
+“‘That’s what I’m generally called,’ says Emma.
+
+“‘Every other Sunday evening out is my rule,’ says the lady, ‘but of
+course I shall expect you to go to church.’
+
+“‘Do you mean in my time, ma’am,’ says Emma, ‘or in yours.’
+
+“‘I mean on your evening of course,’ says my lady. ‘’Ow else could you
+go?’
+
+“‘Well, ma’am,’ says Emma, ‘I like to see my people now and then.’
+
+“‘There are better things,’ says my lady, ‘than seeing what you call your
+people, and I should not care to take a girl into my ’ouse as put ’er
+pleasure before ’er religion. You are not engaged, I ’ope?’
+
+“‘Walking out, ma’am, do you mean?’ says Emma. ‘No, ma’am, there is
+nobody I’ve got in my mind—not just at present.’
+
+“‘I never will take a gal,’ explains my lady, ‘who is engaged. I find it
+distracts ’er attention from ’er work. And I must insist if you come to
+me,’ continues my lady, ‘that you get yourself another ’at and jacket.
+If there is one thing I object to in a servant it is a disposition to
+cheap finery.’
+
+“’Er own daughter was sitting there beside ’er with ’alf a dozen silver
+bangles on ’er wrist, and a sort of thing ’anging around ’er neck, as,
+’ad it been real, would ’ave been worth perhaps a thousand pounds. But
+Emma wanted a job, so she kept ’er thoughts to ’erself.
+
+“‘I can put these things by and get myself something else,’ she says, ‘if
+you don’t mind, ma’am, advancing me something out of my first three
+months’ wages. I’m afraid my account at the bank is a bit overdrawn.’
+
+“The lady whispered something to ’er daughter. ‘I am afraid, on thinking
+it over,’ she says, ‘that you won’t suit, after all. You don’t look
+serious enough. I feel sure, from the way you do your ’air,’ says my
+lady, ‘there’s a frivolous side to your nature.’
+
+“So Emma came away, and was not, on the whole, too sorry.”
+
+“But do they get servants to come to them, this type of mistress, do you
+think, Mrs. Wilkins?” I asked.
+
+“They get them all right,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “and if it’s a decent gal,
+it makes a bad gal of ’er, that ever afterwards looks upon every mistress
+as ’er enemy, and acts accordingly. And if she ain’t a naturally good
+gal, it makes ’er worse, and then you ’ear what awful things gals are. I
+don’t say it’s an easy problem,” continued Mrs. Wilkins, “it’s just like
+marriages. The good mistress gets ’old of the bad servant, and the bad
+mistress, as often as not is lucky.”
+
+“But how is it,” I argued, “that in hotels, for instance, the service is
+excellent, and the girls, generally speaking, seem contented? The work
+is hard, and the wages not much better, if as good.”
+
+“Ah,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “you ’ave ’it the right nail on the ’ead, there,
+sir. They go into the ’otels and work like niggers, knowing that if a
+single thing goes wrong they will be bully-ragged and sworn at till they
+don’t know whether they are standing on their ’ead or their ’eels. But
+they ’ave their hours; the gal knows when ’er work is done, and when the
+clock strikes she is a ’uman being once again. She ’as got that moment
+to look forward to all day, and it keeps ’er going. In private service
+there’s no moment in the day to ’ope for. If the lady is reasonable she
+ain’t overworked; but no ’ow can she ever feel she is her own mistress,
+free to come and go, to wear ’er bit of finery, to ’ave ’er bit of fun.
+She works from six in the morning till eleven or twelve at night, and
+then she only goes to bed provided she ain’t wanted. She don’t belong to
+’erself at all; it’s that that irritates them.”
+
+“I see your point, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, “and, of course, in a house
+where two or three servants were kept some such plan might easily be
+arranged. The girl who commenced work at six o’clock in the morning
+might consider herself free at six o’clock in the evening. What she did
+with herself, how she dressed herself in her own time, would be her
+affair. What church the clerk or the workman belongs to, what company he
+keeps, is no concern of the firm. In such matters, mistresses, I am
+inclined to think, saddle themselves with a responsibility for which
+there is no need. If the girl behaves herself while in the house, and
+does her work, there the contract ends. The mistress who thinks it her
+duty to combine the _rôles_ of employer and of maiden aunt is naturally
+resented. The next month the girl might change her hours from twelve to
+twelve, and her fellow-servant could enjoy the six a.m. to six p.m.
+shift. But how do you propose to deal, Mrs. Wilkins, with the smaller
+_menage_, that employs only one servant?”
+
+“Well, sir,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “it seems to me simple enough. Ladies
+talk pretty about the dignity of labour, and are never tired of pointing
+out why gals should prefer domestic service to all other kinds of work.
+Suppose they practise what they preach. In the ’ouse, where there’s only
+the master and the mistress, and, say a couple of small children, let the
+lady take her turn. After all, it’s only her duty, same as the office or
+the shop is the man’s. Where, on the other ’and, there are biggish boys
+and gals about the place, well it wouldn’t do them any ’arm to be taught
+to play a little less, and to look after themselves a little more. It’s
+just arranging things—that’s all that’s wanted.”
+
+“You remind me of a family I once knew, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said; “it
+consisted of the usual father and mother, and of five sad, healthy girls.
+They kept two servants—or, rather, they never kept any servants; they
+lived always looking for servants, breaking their hearts over servants,
+packing servants off at a moment’s notice, standing disconsolately
+looking after servants who had packed themselves off at a moment’s
+notice, wondering generally what the world was coming too. It occurred
+to me at the time, that without much trouble, they could have lived a
+peaceful life without servants. The eldest girl was learning
+painting—and seemed unable to learn anything else. It was poor sort of
+painting; she noticed it herself. But she seemed to think that, if she
+talked a lot about it, and thought of nothing else, that somehow it would
+all come right. The second girl played the violin. She played it from
+early morning till late evening, and friends fell away from them. There
+wasn’t a spark of talent in the family, but they all had a notion that a
+vague longing to be admired was just the same as genius.
+
+“Another daughter fancied she would like to be an actress, and screamed
+all day in the attic. The fourth wrote poetry on a typewriter, and
+wondered why nobody seemed to want it; while the fifth one suffered from
+a weird belief that smearing wood with a red-hot sort of poker was a
+thing worth doing for its own sake. All of them seemed willing enough to
+work, provided only that it was work of no use to any living soul. With
+a little sense, and the occasional assistance of a charwoman, they could
+have led a merrier life.”
+
+“If I was giving away secrets,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “I’d say to the
+mistresses: ‘Show yourselves able to be independent.’ It’s because the
+gals know that the mistresses can’t do without them that they sometimes
+gives themselves airs.”
+
+
+
+
+WHY WE HATE THE FOREIGNER.
+
+
+The advantage that the foreigner possesses over the Englishman is that he
+is born good. He does not have to try to be good, as we do. He does not
+have to start the New Year with the resolution to be good, and succeed,
+bar accidents, in being so till the middle of January. He is just good
+all the year round. When a foreigner is told to mount or descend from a
+tram on the near side, it does not occur to him that it would be humanly
+possible to secure egress from or ingress to that tram from the off side.
+
+In Brussels once I witnessed a daring attempt by a lawless foreigner to
+enter a tram from the wrong side. The gate was open: he was standing
+close beside it. A line of traffic was in his way: to have got round to
+the right side of that tram would have meant missing it. He entered when
+the conductor was not looking, and took his seat. The astonishment of
+the conductor on finding him there was immense. How did he get there?
+The conductor had been watching the proper entrance, and the man had not
+passed him. Later, the true explanation suggested itself to the
+conductor, but for a while he hesitated to accuse a fellow human being of
+such crime.
+
+He appealed to the passenger himself. Was his presence to be accounted
+for by miracle or by sin? The passenger confessed. It was more in
+sorrow than in anger that the conductor requested him at once to leave.
+This tram was going to be kept respectable. The passenger proved
+refractory, a halt was called, and the gendarmerie appealed to. After
+the manner of policemen, they sprang, as it were, from the ground, and
+formed up behind an imposing officer, whom I took to be the sergeant. At
+first the sergeant could hardly believe the conductor’s statement. Even
+then, had the passenger asserted that he had entered by the proper
+entrance, his word would have been taken. Much easier to the foreign
+official mind would it have been to believe that the conductor had been
+stricken with temporary blindness, than that man born of woman would have
+deliberately done anything expressly forbidden by a printed notice.
+
+Myself, in his case, I should have lied and got the trouble over. But he
+was a proud man, or had not much sense—one of the two, and so held fast
+to the truth. It was pointed out to him that he must descend immediately
+and wait for the next tram. Other gendarmes were arriving from every
+quarter: resistance in the circumstances seemed hopeless. He said he
+would get down. He made to descend this time by the proper gate, but
+that was not justice. He had mounted the wrong side, he must alight on
+the wrong side. Accordingly, he was put out amongst the traffic, after
+which the conductor preached a sermon from the centre of the tram on the
+danger of ascents and descents conducted from the wrong quarter.
+
+There is a law throughout Germany—an excellent law it is: I would we had
+it in England—that nobody may scatter paper about the street. An English
+military friend told me that, one day in Dresden, unacquainted with this
+rule, he tore a long letter he had been reading into some fifty fragments
+and threw them behind him. A policeman stopped him and explained to him
+quite politely the law upon the subject. My military friend agreed that
+it was a very good law, thanked the man for his information, and said
+that for the future he would bear it in mind. That, as the policeman
+pointed out, would make things right enough for the future, but meanwhile
+it was necessary to deal with the past—with the fifty or so pieces of
+paper lying scattered about the road and pavement.
+
+My military friend, with a pleasant laugh, confessed he did not see what
+was to be done. The policeman, more imaginative, saw a way out. It was
+that my military friend should set to work and pick up those fifty scraps
+of paper. He is an English General on the Retired List, and of imposing
+appearance: his manner on occasion is haughty. He did not see himself on
+his hands and knees in the chief street of Dresden, in the middle of the
+afternoon, picking up paper.
+
+The German policeman himself admitted that the situation was awkward. If
+the English General could not accept it there happened to be an
+alternative. It was that the English General should accompany the
+policeman through the streets, followed by the usual crowd, to the
+nearest prison, some three miles off. It being now four o’clock in the
+afternoon, they would probably find the judge departed. But the most
+comfortable thing possible in prison cells should be allotted to him, and
+the policeman had little doubt that the General, having paid his fine of
+forty marks, would find himself a free man again in time for lunch the
+following day. The general suggested hiring a boy to pick up the paper.
+The policeman referred to the wording of the law, and found that this
+would not be permitted.
+
+“I thought the matter out,” my friend told me, “imagining all the
+possible alternatives, including that of knocking the fellow down and
+making a bolt, and came to the conclusion that his first suggestion
+would, on the whole, result in the least discomfort. But I had no idea
+that picking up small scraps of thin paper off greasy stones was the
+business that I found it! It took me nearly ten minutes, and afforded
+amusement, I calculate, to over a thousand people. But it is a good law,
+mind you: all I wish is that I had known it beforehand.”
+
+On one occasion I accompanied an American lady to a German Opera House.
+The taking-off of hats in the German Schausspielhaus is obligatory, and
+again I would it were so in England. But the American lady is accustomed
+to disregard rules made by mere man. She explained to the doorkeeper
+that she was going to wear her hat. He, on his side, explained to her
+that she was not: they were both a bit short with one another. I took
+the opportunity to turn aside and buy a programme: the fewer people there
+are mixed up in an argument, I always think, the better.
+
+My companion explained quite frankly to the doorkeeper that it did not
+matter what he said, she was not going to take any notice of him. He did
+not look a talkative man at any time, and, maybe, this announcement
+further discouraged him. In any case, he made no attempt to answer. All
+he did was to stand in the centre of the doorway with a far-away look in
+his eyes. The doorway was some four feet wide: he was about three feet
+six across, and weighed about twenty stone. As I explained, I was busy
+buying a programme, and when I returned my friend had her hat in her
+hand, and was digging pins into it: I think she was trying to make
+believe it was the heart of the doorkeeper. She did not want to listen
+to the opera, she wanted to talk all the time about that doorkeeper, but
+the people round us would not even let her do that.
+
+She has spent three winters in Germany since then. Now when she feels
+like passing through a door that is standing wide open just in front of
+her, and which leads to just the place she wants to get to, and an
+official shakes his head at her, and explains that she must not, but must
+go up two flights of stairs and along a corridor and down another flight
+of stairs, and so get to her place that way, she apologises for her error
+and trots off looking ashamed of herself.
+
+Continental Governments have trained their citizens to perfection.
+Obedience is the Continent’s first law. The story that is told of a
+Spanish king who was nearly drowned because the particular official whose
+duty it was to dive in after Spanish kings when they tumbled out of boats
+happened to be dead, and his successor had not yet been appointed, I can
+quite believe. On the Continental railways if you ride second class with
+a first-class ticket you render yourself liable to imprisonment. What
+the penalty is for riding first with a second-class ticket I cannot
+say—probably death, though a friend of mine came very near on one
+occasion to finding out.
+
+All would have gone well with him if he had not been so darned honest.
+He is one of those men who pride themselves on being honest. I believe
+he takes a positive pleasure in being honest. He had purchased a
+second-class ticket for a station up a mountain, but meeting, by chance
+on the platform, a lady acquaintance, had gone with her into a
+first-class apartment. On arriving at the journey’s end he explained to
+the collector what he had done, and, with his purse in his hand, demanded
+to know the difference. They took him into a room and locked the door.
+They wrote out his confession and read it over to him, and made him sign
+it, and then they sent for a policeman.
+
+The policeman cross-examined him for about a quarter of an hour. They
+did not believe the story about the lady. Where was the lady? He did
+not know. They searched the neighbourhood for her, but could not find
+her. He suggested—what turned out to be the truth—that, tired of
+loitering about the station, she had gone up the mountain. An Anarchist
+outrage had occurred in the neighbouring town some months before. The
+policeman suggested searching for bombs. Fortunately, a Cook’s agent,
+returning with a party of tourists, arrived upon the scene, and took it
+upon himself to explain in delicate language that my friend was a bit of
+an ass and could not tell first class from second. It was the red
+cushions that had deceived my friend: he thought it was first class, as a
+matter of fact it was second class.
+
+Everybody breathed again. The confession was torn up amid universal joy:
+and then the fool of a ticket collector wanted to know about the lady—who
+must have travelled in a second-class compartment with a first-class
+ticket. It looked as if a bad time were in store for her on her return
+to the station.
+
+But the admirable representative of Cook was again equal to the occasion.
+He explained that my friend was also a bit of a liar. When he said he
+had travelled with this lady he was merely boasting. He would like to
+have travelled with her, that was all he meant, only his German was
+shaky. Joy once more entered upon the scene. My friend’s character
+appeared to be re-established. He was not the abandoned wretch for whom
+they had taken him—only, apparently, a wandering idiot. Such an one the
+German official could respect. At the expense of such an one the German
+official even consented to drink beer.
+
+Not only the foreign man, woman and child, but the foreign dog is born
+good. In England, if you happen to be the possessor of a dog, much of
+your time is taken up dragging him out of fights, quarrelling with the
+possessor of the other dog as to which began it, explaining to irate
+elderly ladies that he did not kill the cat, that the cat must have died
+of heart disease while running across the road, assuring disbelieving
+game-keepers that he is not your dog, that you have not the faintest
+notion whose dog he is. With the foreign dog, life is a peaceful
+proceeding. When the foreign dog sees a row, tears spring to his eyes:
+he hastens on and tries to find a policeman. When the foreign dog sees a
+cat in a hurry, he stands aside to allow her to pass. They dress the
+foreign dog—some of them—in a little coat, with a pocket for his
+handkerchief, and put shoes on his feet. They have not given him a
+hat—not yet. When they do, he will contrive by some means or another to
+raise it politely when he meets a cat he thinks he knows.
+
+One morning, in a Continental city, I came across a disturbance—it might
+be more correct to say the disturbance came across me: it swept down upon
+me, enveloped me before I knew that I was in it. A fox-terrier it was,
+belonging to a very young lady—it was when the disturbance was to a
+certain extent over that we discovered he belonged to this young lady.
+She arrived towards the end of the disturbance, very much out of breath:
+she had been running for a mile, poor girl, and shouting most of the way.
+When she looked round and saw all the things that had happened, and had
+had other things that she had missed explained to her, she burst into
+tears. An English owner of that fox-terrier would have given one look
+round and then have jumped upon the nearest tram going anywhere. But, as
+I have said, the foreigner is born good. I left her giving her name and
+address to seven different people.
+
+But it was about the dog I wished to speak more particularly. He had
+commenced innocently enough, trying to catch a sparrow. Nothing delights
+a sparrow more than being chased by a dog. A dozen times he thought he
+had the sparrow. Then another dog had got in his way. I don’t know what
+they call this breed of dog, but abroad it is popular: it has no tail and
+looks like a pig—when things are going well with it. This particular
+specimen, when I saw him, looked more like part of a doormat. The
+fox-terrier had seized it by the scruff of the neck and had rolled it
+over into the gutter just in front of a motor cycle. Its owner, a large
+lady, had darted out to save it, and had collided with the motor cyclist.
+The large lady had been thrown some half a dozen yards against an Italian
+boy carrying a tray load of plaster images.
+
+I have seen a good deal of trouble in my life, but never one yet that did
+not have an Italian image-vendor somehow or other mixed up in it. Where
+these boys hide in times of peace is a mystery. The chance of being
+upset brings them out as sunshine brings out flies. The motor cycle had
+dashed into a little milk-cart and had spread it out neatly in the middle
+of the tram lines. The tram traffic looked like being stopped for a
+quarter of an hour; but the idea of every approaching tram driver
+appeared to be that if he rang his bell with sufficient vigor this
+seeming obstruction would fade away and disappear.
+
+In an English town all this would not have attracted much attention.
+Somebody would have explained that a dog was the original cause, and the
+whole series of events would have appeared ordinary and natural. Upon
+these foreigners the fear descended that the Almighty, for some reason,
+was angry with them. A policeman ran to catch the dog.
+
+The delighted dog rushed backwards, barking furiously, and tried to throw
+up paving stones with its hind legs. That frightened a nursemaid who was
+wheeling a perambulator, and then it was that I entered into the
+proceedings. Seated on the edge of the pavement, with a perambulator on
+one side of me and a howling baby on the other, I told that dog what I
+thought of him.
+
+Forgetful that I was in a foreign land—that he might not understand me—I
+told it him in English, I told it him at length, I told it very loud and
+clear. He stood a yard in front of me, listening to me with an
+expression of ecstatic joy I have never before or since seen equalled on
+any face, human or canine. He drank it in as though it had been music
+from Paradise.
+
+“Where have I heard that song before?” he seemed to be saying to himself,
+“the old familiar language they used to talk to me when I was young?”
+
+He approached nearer to me; there were almost tears in his eyes when I
+had finished.
+
+“Say it again!” he seemed to be asking of me. “Oh! say it all over
+again, the dear old English oaths and curses that in this God-forsaken
+land I never hoped to hear again.”
+
+I learnt from the young lady that he was an English-born fox-terrier.
+That explained everything. The foreign dog does not do this sort of
+thing. The foreigner is born good: that is why we hate him.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IDLE IDEAS IN 1905***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 3140-0.txt or 3140-0.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/1/4/3140
+
+
+
+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. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+ www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
+North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
+contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
+Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/3140-0.zip b/3140-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4ed80d9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/3140-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/3140-h.zip b/3140-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0da6242
--- /dev/null
+++ b/3140-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/3140-h/3140-h.htm b/3140-h/3140-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..33f16f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/3140-h/3140-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,6320 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Idle Ideas in 1905, by Jerome K. Jerome</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ P { margin-top: .75em;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ P.gutsumm { margin-left: 5%;}
+ P.poetry {margin-left: 3%; }
+ .GutSmall { font-size: 0.7em; }
+ H1, H2 {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ }
+ H3, H4, H5 {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ }
+ BODY{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+ table { border-collapse: collapse; }
+table {margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto;}
+ td { vertical-align: top; border: 1px solid black;}
+ td p { margin: 0.2em; }
+ .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */
+
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ .pagenum {position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: right;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ color: gray;
+ }
+ img { border: none; }
+ img.dc { float: left; width: 50px; height: 50px; }
+ p.gutindent { margin-left: 2em; }
+ div.gapspace { height: 0.8em; }
+ div.gapline { height: 0.8em; width: 100%; border-top: 1px solid;}
+ div.gapmediumline { height: 0.3em; width: 40%; margin-left:30%;
+ border-top: 1px solid; }
+ div.gapmediumdoubleline { height: 0.3em; width: 40%; margin-left:30%;
+ border-top: 1px solid; border-bottom: 1px solid;}
+ div.gapshortdoubleline { height: 0.3em; width: 20%;
+ margin-left: 40%; border-top: 1px solid;
+ border-bottom: 1px solid; }
+ div.gapdoubleline { height: 0.3em; width: 50%;
+ margin-left: 25%; border-top: 1px solid;
+ border-bottom: 1px solid;}
+ div.gapshortline { height: 0.3em; width: 20%; margin-left:40%;
+ border-top: 1px solid; }
+ .citation {vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration: none;}
+ img.floatleft { float: left;
+ margin-right: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ img.floatright { float: right;
+ margin-left: 1em; margin-top: 0.5em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ img.clearcenter {display: block;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto; margin-top: 0.5em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5em}
+ -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Idle Ideas in 1905, by Jerome K. Jerome
+
+
+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: Idle Ideas in 1905
+
+
+Author: Jerome K. Jerome
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2013 [eBook #3140]
+[This file was first posted on December 30, 2000]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IDLE IDEAS IN 1905***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1905 Hurst and Blackett edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>IDLE IDEAS<br />
+in 1905</h1>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="GutSmall">BY</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">JEROME K. JEROME</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">AUTHOR
+OF</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;Three Men in a
+Boat,&rdquo;<br />
+&ldquo;Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow,&rdquo;<br />
+etc.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/tpb.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Decorative graphic"
+title=
+"Decorative graphic"
+src="images/tps.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="GutSmall">LONDON</span><br />
+HURST AND BLACKETT, LIMITED<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">182, HIGH HOLBORN, W.C.</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">CHAP.</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">PAGE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">I.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Are we as interesting as we think we
+are</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">II.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Should women be beautiful</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page16">16</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">III.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">When is the best time to be
+merry</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page29">29</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Do we lie a-bed too late</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page46">46</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">V.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Should married men play
+golf</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page60">60</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Are early marriages a
+mistake</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page74">74</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Do writers write too much</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page89">89</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Should soldiers be polite</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page105">105</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Ought stories to be true</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page122">122</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">X.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Creatures that one day shall be
+men</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page141">141</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">How to be happy though
+little</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page158">158</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Should we say what we think, or think
+what we say</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page173">173</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Is the American husband made entirely
+of stained glass</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page186">186</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Does the young man know everything
+worth knowing</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page199">199</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">How many charms hath music, would you
+say</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page213">213</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XVI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The white man&rsquo;s burden!&nbsp;
+Need it be so heavy</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page225">225</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XVII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Why didn&rsquo;t he marry the
+girl</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page238">238</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XVIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">What Mrs. Wilkins thought about
+it</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page251">251</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Shall we be ruined by Chinese cheap
+labour</span>?</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page264">264</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">How to solve the servant
+problem</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page278">278</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XXI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Why we hate the foreigner</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page292">292</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 1</span>ARE WE
+AS INTERESTING AS WE THINK WE ARE?</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Charmed</span>.&nbsp; Very hot
+weather we&rsquo;ve been having of late&mdash;I mean cold.&nbsp;
+Let me see, I did not quite catch your name just now.&nbsp; Thank
+you so much.&nbsp; Yes, it is a bit close.&rdquo;&nbsp; And a
+silence falls, neither of us being able to think what next to
+say.</p>
+<p>What has happened is this: My host has met me in the doorway,
+and shaken me heartily by the hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So glad you were able to come,&rdquo; he has
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Some friends of mine here, very anxious to
+meet you.&rdquo;&nbsp; He has bustled me across the room.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Delightful people.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ll like them&mdash;have
+read all your books.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He has brought me up to a stately lady, and has presented
+me.&nbsp; We have exchanged the customary commonplaces, and she,
+I feel, is waiting for me to say something clever, original and
+tactful.&nbsp; And I don&rsquo;t know whether she is Presbyterian
+or Mormon; a Protectionist or a Free Trader; whether she is
+engaged to be married or has lately been divorced!</p>
+<p>A friend of mine adopts the sensible plan of always providing
+you with a short history of the person to whom he is about to
+lead you.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want to introduce you to a Mrs. Jones,&rdquo; he
+whispers.&nbsp; &ldquo;Clever woman.&nbsp; Wrote a book two years
+ago.&nbsp; Forget the name of it.&nbsp; Something about
+twins.&nbsp; Keep away from sausages.&nbsp; Father ran a pork
+shop in the Borough.&nbsp; Husband on the Stock Exchange.&nbsp;
+Keep off coke.&nbsp; Unpleasantness about a company.&nbsp;
+You&rsquo;ll get on best by sticking to the book.&nbsp; Lot in it
+about platonic friendship.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t seem to be looking
+too closely at her.&nbsp; Has a slight squint she tries to
+hide.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By this time we have reached the lady, and he introduces me as
+a friend of his who is simply dying to know her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wants to talk about your book,&rdquo; he
+explains.&nbsp; &ldquo;Disagrees with you entirely on the subject
+of platonic friendship.&nbsp; Sure you&rsquo;ll be able to
+convince him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It saves us both a deal of trouble.&nbsp; I start at once on
+platonic friendship, and ask her questions about twins, avoiding
+sausages and coke.&nbsp; She thinks me an unusually interesting
+man, and I am less bored than otherwise I might be.</p>
+<p>I have sometimes thought it would be a serviceable device if,
+in Society, we all of us wore a neat card&mdash;pinned, say, upon
+our back&mdash;setting forth such information as was necessary;
+our name legibly written, and how to be pronounced; our age (not
+necessarily in good faith, but for purposes of
+conversation.&nbsp; Once I seriously hurt a German lady by
+demanding of her information about the Franco-German war.&nbsp;
+She looked to me as if she could not object to being taken for
+forty.&nbsp; It turned out she was thirty-seven.&nbsp; Had I not
+been an Englishman I might have had to fight a duel); our
+religious and political beliefs; together with a list of the
+subjects we were most at home upon; and a few facts concerning
+our career&mdash;sufficient to save the stranger from, what is
+vulgarly termed &ldquo;putting his foot in it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Before making jokes about &ldquo;Dumping,&rdquo; or discussing
+the question of Chinese Cheap Labour, one would glance behind and
+note whether one&rsquo;s companion was ticketed
+&ldquo;Whole-hogger,&rdquo; or &ldquo;Pro-Boer.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Guests desirous of agreeable partners&mdash;an &ldquo;agreeable
+person,&rdquo; according to the late Lord Beaconsfield&rsquo;s
+definition, being &ldquo;a person who agrees with
+you&rdquo;&mdash;could make their own selection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me.&nbsp; Would you mind turning round a
+minute?&nbsp; Ah, &lsquo;Wagnerian Crank!&rsquo;&nbsp; I am
+afraid we should not get on together. I prefer the Italian
+school.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Or, &ldquo;How delightful.&nbsp; I see you don&rsquo;t believe
+in vaccination.&nbsp; May I take you into supper?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Those, on the other hand, fond of argument would choose a
+suitable opponent.&nbsp; A master of ceremonies might be provided
+who would stand in the centre of the room and call for partners:
+&ldquo;Lady with strong views in favour of female franchise
+wishes to meet gentleman holding the opinions of St. Paul.&nbsp;
+With view to argument.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>An American lady, a year or two ago, wrote me a letter that
+did me real good: she appreciated my work with so much
+understanding, criticised it with such sympathetic
+interest.&nbsp; She added that, when in England the summer
+before, she had been on the point of accepting an invitation to
+meet me; but at the last moment she had changed her mind; she
+felt so sure&mdash;she put it pleasantly, but this is what it
+came to&mdash;that in my own proper person I should fall short of
+her expectations.&nbsp; For my own sake I felt sorry she had
+cried off; it would have been worth something to have met so
+sensible a woman.&nbsp; An author introduced to people who have
+read&mdash;or who say that they have read&mdash;his books, feels
+always like a man taken for the first time to be shown to his
+future wife&rsquo;s relations.&nbsp; They are very
+pleasant.&nbsp; They try to put him at his ease.&nbsp; But he
+knows instinctively they are disappointed with him.&nbsp; I
+remember, when a very young man, attending a party at which a
+famous American humorist was the chief guest.&nbsp; I was
+standing close behind a lady who was talking to her husband.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t look a bit funny,&rdquo; said the
+lady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Great Scott!&rdquo; answered her husband.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;How did you expect him to look?&nbsp; Did you think he
+would have a red nose and a patch over one eye?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, well, he might look funnier than that,
+anyhow,&rdquo; retorted the lady, highly dissatisfied.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t worth coming for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We all know the story of the hostess who, leaning across the
+table during the dessert, requested of the funny man that he
+would kindly say something amusing soon, because the dear
+children were waiting to go to bed.&nbsp; Children, I suppose,
+have no use for funny people who don&rsquo;t choose to be
+funny.&nbsp; I once invited a friend down to my house for a
+Saturday to Monday.&nbsp; He is an entertaining man, and before
+he came I dilated on his powers of humour&mdash;somewhat
+foolishly perhaps&mdash;in the presence of a certain youthful
+person who resides with me, and who listens when she
+oughtn&rsquo;t to, and never when she ought.&nbsp; He happened
+not to be in a humorous mood that evening.&nbsp; My young
+relation, after dinner, climbed upon my knee.&nbsp; For quite
+five minutes she sat silent.&nbsp; Then she whispered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Has he said anything funny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush.&nbsp; No, not yet; don&rsquo;t be
+silly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Five minutes later: &ldquo;Was that funny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, of course not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because&mdash;can&rsquo;t you hear?&nbsp; We are
+talking about Old Age Pensions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s&mdash;oh, never mind now.&nbsp; It
+isn&rsquo;t a subject on which one can be funny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then what&rsquo;s he want to talk about it
+for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She waited for another quarter of an hour.&nbsp; Then,
+evidently bored, and much to my relief, suggested herself that
+she might as well go to bed.&nbsp; She ran to me the next morning
+in the garden with an air of triumph.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said something so funny last night,&rdquo; she told
+me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, what was it?&rdquo; I inquired.&nbsp; It seemed to
+me I must have missed it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I can&rsquo;t exactly &rsquo;member it,&rdquo;
+she explained, &ldquo;not just at the moment.&nbsp; But it was so
+funny.&nbsp; I dreamed it, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For folks not Lions, but closely related to Lions,
+introductions must be trying ordeals.&nbsp; You tell them that
+for years you have been yearning to meet them.&nbsp; You assure
+them, in a voice trembling with emotion, that this is indeed a
+privilege.&nbsp; You go on to add that when a boy&mdash;</p>
+<p>At this point they have to interrupt you to explain that they
+are not the Mr. So-and-So, but only his cousin or his
+grandfather; and all you can think of to say is: &ldquo;Oh,
+I&rsquo;m so sorry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had a nephew who was once the amateur long-distance bicycle
+champion.&nbsp; I have him still, but he is stouter and has come
+down to a motor car.&nbsp; In sporting circles I was always
+introduced as &ldquo;Shorland&rsquo;s Uncle.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Close-cropped young men would gaze at me with rapture; and then
+inquire: &ldquo;And do you do anything yourself, Mr.
+Jerome?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But my case was not so bad as that of a friend of mine, a
+doctor.&nbsp; He married a leading actress, and was known ever
+afterwards as &ldquo;Miss B&mdash;&rsquo;s husband.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At public dinners, where one takes one&rsquo;s seat for the
+evening next to someone that one possibly has never met before,
+and is never likely to meet again, conversation is difficult and
+dangerous.&nbsp; I remember talking to a lady at a Vagabond Club
+dinner.&nbsp; She asked me during the <i>entree</i>&mdash;with a
+light laugh, as I afterwards recalled&mdash;what I thought,
+candidly, of the last book of a certain celebrated
+authoress.&nbsp; I told her, and a coldness sprang up between
+us.&nbsp; She happened to be the certain celebrated authoress;
+she had changed her place at the last moment so as to avoid
+sitting next to another lady novelist, whom she hated.</p>
+<p>One has to shift oneself, sometimes, on these occasions.&nbsp;
+A newspaper man came up to me last Ninth of November at the
+Mansion House.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you mind changing seats with me?&rdquo; he
+asked.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a bit awkward.&nbsp; They&rsquo;ve
+put me next to my first wife.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had a troubled evening myself once long ago.&nbsp; I
+accompanied a young widow lady to a musical At Home, given by a
+lady who had more acquaintances than she knew.&nbsp; We met the
+butler at the top of the stairs.&nbsp; My friend spoke first:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say Mrs. Dash and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The butler did not wait for more&mdash;he was a youngish
+man&mdash;but shouted out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. and Mrs. Dash.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear! how very quiet you have kept!&rdquo; cried our
+hostess delighted.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do let me congratulate
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The crush was too great and our hostess too distracted at the
+moment for any explanations.&nbsp; We were swept away, and both
+of us spent the remainder of the evening feebly protesting our
+singleness.</p>
+<p>If it had happened on the stage it would have taken us the
+whole play to get out of it.&nbsp; Stage people are not allowed
+to put things right when mistakes are made with their
+identity.&nbsp; If the light comedian is expecting a plumber, the
+first man that comes into the drawing-room has got to be a
+plumber.&nbsp; He is not allowed to point out that he never was a
+plumber; that he doesn&rsquo;t look like a plumber; that no one
+not an idiot would mistake him for a plumber.&nbsp; He has got to
+be shut up in the bath-room and have water poured over him, just
+as if he were a plumber&mdash;a stage plumber, that is.&nbsp; Not
+till right away at the end of the last act is he permitted to
+remark that he happens to be the new curate.</p>
+<p>I sat out a play once at which most people laughed.&nbsp; It
+made me sad.&nbsp; A dear old lady entered towards the end of the
+first act.&nbsp; We knew she was the aunt.&nbsp; Nobody can
+possibly mistake the stage aunt&mdash;except the people on the
+stage.&nbsp; They, of course, mistook her for a circus rider, and
+shut her up in a cupboard.&nbsp; It is what cupboards seem to be
+reserved for on the stage.&nbsp; Nothing is ever put in them
+excepting the hero&rsquo;s relations.&nbsp; When she wasn&rsquo;t
+in the cupboard she was in a clothes basket, or tied up in a
+curtain.&nbsp; All she need have done was to hold on to something
+while remarking to the hero:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you&rsquo;ll stop shouting and jumping about for
+just ten seconds, and give me a chance to observe that I am your
+maiden aunt from Devonshire, all this tomfoolery can be
+avoided.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That would have ended it.&nbsp; As a matter of fact that did
+end it five minutes past eleven.&nbsp; It hadn&rsquo;t occurred
+to her to say it before.</p>
+<p>In real life I never knew but of one case where a man suffered
+in silence unpleasantness he could have ended with a word; and
+that was the case of the late Corney Grain.&nbsp; He had been
+engaged to give his entertainment at a country house.&nbsp; The
+lady was a <i>nouvelle riche</i> of snobbish instincts.&nbsp; She
+left instructions that Corney Grain when he arrived was to dine
+with the servants.&nbsp; The butler, who knew better, apologised;
+but Corney was a man not easily disconcerted.&nbsp; He dined
+well, and after dinner rose and addressed the assembled
+company.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, my good friends,&rdquo; said Corney,
+&ldquo;if we have all finished, and if you are all agreeable, I
+shall be pleased to present to you my little show.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The servants cheered.&nbsp; The piano was dispensed
+with.&nbsp; Corney contrived to amuse his audience very well for
+half-an-hour without it.&nbsp; At ten o&rsquo;clock came down a
+message: Would Mr. Corney Grain come up into the
+drawing-room.&nbsp; Corney went.&nbsp; The company in the
+drawing-room were waiting, seated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are ready, Mr. Grain,&rdquo; remarked the
+hostess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ready for what?&rdquo; demanded Corney.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For your entertainment,&rdquo; answered the
+hostess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I have given it already,&rdquo; explained Corney;
+&ldquo;and my engagement was for one performance only.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Given it!&nbsp; Where?&nbsp; When?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An hour ago, downstairs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this is nonsense,&rdquo; exclaimed the hostess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seemed to me somewhat unusual,&rdquo; Corney
+replied; &ldquo;but it has always been my privilege to dine with
+the company I am asked to entertain.&nbsp; I took it you had
+arranged a little treat for the servants.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Corney left to catch his train.</p>
+<p>Another entertainer told me the following story, although a
+joke against himself.&nbsp; He and Corney Grain were sharing a
+cottage on the river.&nbsp; A man called early one morning to
+discuss affairs, and was talking to Corney in the parlour, which
+was on the ground floor.&nbsp; The window was open.&nbsp; The
+other entertainer&mdash;the man who told me the story&mdash;was
+dressing in the room above.&nbsp; Thinking he recognised the
+voice of the visitor below, he leant out of his bedroom window to
+hear better.&nbsp; He leant too far, and dived head foremost into
+a bed of flowers, his bare legs&mdash;and only his bare
+legs&mdash;showing through the open window of the parlour.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good gracious!&rdquo; exclaimed the visitor, turning at
+the moment and seeing a pair of wriggling legs above the window
+sill; &ldquo;who&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Corney fixed his eyeglass and strolled to the window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s only What&rsquo;s-his-name,&rdquo; he
+explained.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wonderful spirits.&nbsp; Can be funny in
+the morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>SHOULD
+WOMEN BE BEAUTIFUL?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Pretty</span> women are going to have a
+hard time of it later on.&nbsp; Hitherto, they have had things
+far too much their own way.&nbsp; In the future there are going
+to be no pretty girls, for the simple reason there will be no
+plain girls against which to contrast them.&nbsp; Of late I have
+done some systematic reading of ladies&rsquo; papers.&nbsp; The
+plain girl submits to a course of &ldquo;treatment.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In eighteen months she bursts upon Society an acknowledged
+beauty.&nbsp; And it is all done by kindness.&nbsp; One girl
+writes:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only a little while ago I used to look at myself in the
+glass and cry.&nbsp; Now I look at myself and laugh.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The letter is accompanied by two photographs of the young
+lady.&nbsp; I should have cried myself had I seen her as she was
+at first.&nbsp; She was a stumpy, flat-headed, squat-nosed,
+cross-eyed thing.&nbsp; She did not even look good.&nbsp; One
+virtue she appears to have had, however.&nbsp; It was
+faith.&nbsp; She believed what the label said, she did what the
+label told her.&nbsp; She is now a tall, ravishing young person,
+her only trouble being, I should say, to know what to do with her
+hair&mdash;it reaches to her knees and must be a nuisance to
+her.&nbsp; She would do better to give some of it away.&nbsp;
+Taking this young lady as a text, it means that the girl who
+declines to be a dream of loveliness does so out of
+obstinacy.&nbsp; What the raw material may be does not appear to
+matter.&nbsp; Provided no feature is absolutely missing, the
+result is one and the same.</p>
+<p>Arrived at years of discretion, the maiden proceeds to choose
+the style of beauty she prefers.&nbsp; Will she be a Juno, a
+Venus, or a Helen?&nbsp; Will she have a Grecian nose, or one
+tip-tilted like the petal of a rose?&nbsp; Let her try the
+tip-tilted style first.&nbsp; The professor has an idea it is
+going to be fashionable.&nbsp; If afterwards she does not like
+it, there will be time to try the Grecian.&nbsp; It is difficult
+to decide these points without experiment.</p>
+<p>Would the lady like a high or a low forehead?&nbsp; Some
+ladies like to look intelligent.&nbsp; It is purely a matter of
+taste.&nbsp; With the Grecian nose, the low broad forehead
+perhaps goes better.&nbsp; It is more according to
+precedent.&nbsp; On the other hand, the high brainy forehead
+would be more original.&nbsp; It is for the lady herself to
+select.</p>
+<p>We come to the question of eyes.&nbsp; The lady fancies a
+delicate blue, not too pronounced a colour&mdash;one of those
+useful shades that go with almost everything.&nbsp; At the same
+time there should be depth and passion.&nbsp; The professor
+understands exactly the sort of eye the lady means.&nbsp; But it
+will be expensive.&nbsp; There is a cheap quality; the professor
+does not recommend it.&nbsp; True that it passes muster by
+gaslight, but the sunlight shows it up.&nbsp; It lacks
+tenderness, and at the price you can hardly expect it to contain
+much hidden meaning.&nbsp; The professor advises the melting,
+Oh-George-take-me-in-your-arms-and-still-my-foolish-fears
+brand.&nbsp; It costs a little more, but it pays for itself in
+the end.</p>
+<p>Perhaps it will be best, now the eye has been fixed upon, to
+discuss the question of the hair.&nbsp; The professor opens his
+book of patterns.&nbsp; Maybe the lady is of a wilful
+disposition.&nbsp; She loves to run laughing through the woods
+during exceptionally rainy weather; or to gallop across the downs
+without a hat, her fair ringlets streaming in the wind, the old
+family coachman panting and expostulating in the rear.&nbsp; If
+one may trust the popular novel, extremely satisfactory husbands
+have often been secured in this way.&nbsp; You naturally look at
+a girl who is walking through a wood, laughing heartily
+apparently for no other reason than because it is
+raining&mdash;who rides at stretch gallop without a hat.&nbsp; If
+you have nothing else to do, you follow her.&nbsp; It is always
+on the cards that such a girl may do something really amusing
+before she gets home.&nbsp; Thus things begin.</p>
+<p>To a girl of this kind, naturally curly hair is
+essential.&nbsp; It must be the sort of hair that looks better
+when it is soaking wet.&nbsp; The bottle of stuff that makes this
+particular hair to grow may be considered dear, if you think
+merely of the price.&nbsp; But that is not the way to look at
+it.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is it going to do for me?&rdquo;&nbsp; That
+is what the girl has got to ask herself.&nbsp; It does not do to
+spoil the ship for a ha&rsquo;porth of tar, as the saying
+is.&nbsp; If you are going to be a dashing, wilful beauty, you
+must have the hair for it, or the whole scheme falls to the
+ground.</p>
+<p>Eyebrows and eyelashes, the professor assumes, the lady would
+like to match the hair.&nbsp; Too much eccentricity the professor
+does not agree with.&nbsp; Nature, after all, is the best guide;
+neatness combined with taste, that is the ideal to be aimed
+at.&nbsp; The eyebrows should be almost straight, the professor
+thinks; the eyelashes long and silky, with just the suspicion of
+a curl.&nbsp; The professor would also suggest a little less
+cheekbone.&nbsp; Cheekbones are being worn low this season.</p>
+<p>Will the lady have a dimpled chin, or does she fancy the
+square-cut jaw?&nbsp; Maybe the square-cut jaw and the firm,
+sweet mouth are more suitable for the married woman.&nbsp; They
+go well enough with the baby and the tea-urn, and the strong,
+proud man in the background.&nbsp; For the unmarried girl the
+dimpled chin and the rosebud mouth are, perhaps, on the whole
+safer.&nbsp; Some gentlemen are so nervous of that firm, square
+jaw.&nbsp; For the present, at all events, let us keep to the
+rosebud and the dimple.</p>
+<p>Complexion!&nbsp; Well, there is only one complexion worth
+considering&mdash;a creamy white, relieved by delicate peach
+pink.&nbsp; It goes with everything, and is always
+effective.&nbsp; Rich olives, striking pallors&mdash;yes, you
+hear of these things doing well.&nbsp; The professor&rsquo;s
+experience, however, is that for all-round work you will never
+improve upon the plain white and pink.&nbsp; It is less liable to
+get out of order, and is the easiest at all times to renew.</p>
+<p>For the figure, the professor recommends something lithe and
+supple.&nbsp; Five foot four is a good height, but that is a
+point that should be discussed first with the dressmaker.&nbsp;
+For trains, five foot six is, perhaps, preferable.&nbsp; But for
+the sporting girl, who has to wear short frocks, that height
+would, of course, be impossible.</p>
+<p>The bust and the waist are also points on which the dressmaker
+should be consulted.&nbsp; Nothing should be done in a
+hurry.&nbsp; What is the fashion going to be for the next two or
+three seasons?&nbsp; There are styles demanding that beginning at
+the neck you should curve out, like a pouter pigeon.&nbsp; There
+is apparently no difficulty whatever in obtaining this
+result.&nbsp; But if crinolines, for instance, are likely to come
+in again!&nbsp; The lady has only to imagine it for herself: the
+effect might be grotesque, suggestive of a walking
+hour-glass.&nbsp; So, too, with the waist.&nbsp; For some
+fashions it is better to have it just a foot from the neck.&nbsp;
+At other times it is more useful lower down.&nbsp; The lady will
+kindly think over these details and let the professor know.&nbsp;
+While one is about it, one may as well make a sound job.</p>
+<p>It is all so simple, and, when you come to think of it, really
+not expensive.&nbsp; Age, apparently, makes no difference.&nbsp;
+A woman is as old as she looks.&nbsp; In future, I take it, there
+will be no ladies over five-and-twenty.&nbsp; Wrinkles!&nbsp; Why
+any lady should still persist in wearing them is a mystery to
+me.&nbsp; With a moderate amount of care any middle-class woman
+could save enough out of the housekeeping money in a month to get
+rid of every one of them.&nbsp; Grey hair!&nbsp; Well, of course,
+if you cling to grey hair, there is no more to be said.&nbsp; But
+to ladies who would just as soon have rich wavy-brown or a
+delicate shade of gold, I would point out that there are one
+hundred and forty-seven inexpensive lotions on the market, any
+one of which, rubbed gently into the head with a tooth-brush (not
+too hard) just before going to bed will, to use a colloquialism,
+do the trick.</p>
+<p>Are you too stout, or are you too thin?&nbsp; All you have to
+do is to say which, and enclose stamps.&nbsp; But do not make a
+mistake and send for the wrong recipe.&nbsp; If you are already
+too thin, you might in consequence suddenly disappear before you
+found out your mistake.&nbsp; One very stout lady I knew worked
+at herself for eighteen months and got stouter every day.&nbsp;
+This discouraged her so much that she gave up trying.&nbsp; No
+doubt she had made a muddle and had sent for the wrong bottle,
+but she would not listen to further advice.&nbsp; She said she
+was tired of the whole thing.</p>
+<p>In future years there will be no need for a young man to look
+about him for a wife; he will take the nearest girl, tell her his
+ideal, and, if she really care for him, she will go to the shop
+and have herself fixed up to his pattern.&nbsp; In certain
+Eastern countries, I believe, something of this kind is
+done.&nbsp; A gentleman desirous of adding to his family sends
+round the neighbourhood the weight and size of his favourite
+wife, hinting that if another can be found of the same
+proportions, there is room for her.&nbsp; Fathers walk round
+among their daughters, choose the most likely specimen, and have
+her fattened up.&nbsp; That is their brutal Eastern way.&nbsp;
+Out West we shall be more delicate.&nbsp; Match-making mothers
+will probably revive the old confession book.&nbsp; Eligible
+bachelors will be invited to fill in a page: &ldquo;Your
+favourite height in women,&rdquo; &ldquo;Your favourite
+measurement round the waist,&rdquo; &ldquo;Do you like brunettes
+or blondes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The choice will be left to the girls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do think Henry William just too sweet for
+words,&rdquo; the maiden of the future will murmur to
+herself.&nbsp; Gently, coyly, she will draw from him his ideal of
+what a woman should be.&nbsp; In from six months to a year she
+will burst upon him, the perfect She; height, size, weight, right
+to a T.&nbsp; He will clasp her in his arms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At last,&rdquo; he will cry, &ldquo;I have found her,
+the woman of my dreams.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And if he does not change his mind, and the bottles do not
+begin to lose their effect, there will be every chance that they
+will be happy ever afterwards.</p>
+<p>Might not Science go even further?&nbsp; Why rest satisfied
+with making a world of merely beautiful women?&nbsp; Cannot
+Science, while she is about it, make them all good at the same
+time.&nbsp; I do not apologise for the suggestion.&nbsp; I used
+to think all women beautiful and good.&nbsp; It is their own
+papers that have disillusioned me.&nbsp; I used to look at this
+lady or at that&mdash;shyly, when nobody seemed to be noticing
+me&mdash;and think how fair she was, how stately.&nbsp; Now I
+only wonder who is her chemist.</p>
+<p>They used to tell me, when I was a little boy, that girls were
+made of sugar and spice.&nbsp; I know better now.&nbsp; I have
+read the recipes in the Answers to Correspondents.</p>
+<p>When I was quite a young man I used to sit in dark corners and
+listen, with swelling heart, while people at the piano told me
+where little girl babies got their wonderful eyes from, of the
+things they did to them in heaven that gave them dimples.&nbsp;
+Ah me!&nbsp; I wish now I had never come across those
+ladies&rsquo; papers.&nbsp; I know the stuff that causes those
+bewitching eyes.&nbsp; I know the shop where they make those
+dimples; I have passed it and looked in.&nbsp; I thought they
+were produced by angels&rsquo; kisses, but there was not an angel
+about the place, that I could see.&nbsp; Perhaps I have also been
+deceived as regards their goodness.&nbsp; Maybe all women are not
+so perfect as in the popular short story they appear to be.&nbsp;
+That is why I suggest that Science should proceed still further,
+and make them all as beautiful in mind as she is now able to make
+them in body.&nbsp; May we not live to see in the advertisement
+columns of the ladies&rsquo; paper of the future the portrait of
+a young girl sulking in a corner&mdash;&ldquo;Before taking the
+lotion!&rdquo;&nbsp; The same girl dancing among her little
+brothers and sisters, shedding sunlight through the
+home&mdash;&ldquo;After the three first bottles!&rdquo;&nbsp; May
+we not have the Caudle Mixture: One tablespoonful at bed-time
+guaranteed to make the lady murmur, &ldquo;Good-night, dear; hope
+you&rsquo;ll sleep well,&rdquo; and at once to fall asleep, her
+lips parted in a smile?&nbsp; Maybe some specialist of the future
+will advertise Mind Massage: &ldquo;Warranted to remove from the
+most obstinate subject all traces of hatred, envy, and
+malice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And, when Science has done everything possible for women,
+there might be no harm in her turning her attention to us
+men.&nbsp; Her idea at present seems to be that we men are too
+beautiful, physically and morally, to need improvement.&nbsp;
+Personally, there are one or two points about which I should like
+to consult her.</p>
+<h2><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>WHEN
+IS THE BEST TIME TO BE MERRY?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is so much I could do to
+improve things generally in and about Europe, if only I had a
+free hand.&nbsp; I should not propose any great fundamental
+changes.&nbsp; These poor people have got used to their own ways;
+it would be unwise to reform them all at once.&nbsp; But there
+are many little odds and ends that I could do for them, so many
+of their mistakes I could correct for them.&nbsp; They do not
+know this.&nbsp; If they only knew there was a man living in
+their midst willing to take them in hand and arrange things for
+them, how glad they would be.&nbsp; But the story is always the
+same.&nbsp; One reads it in the advertisements of the matrimonial
+column:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A lady, young, said to be good-looking&rdquo;&mdash;she
+herself is not sure on the point; she feels that possibly she may
+be prejudiced; she puts before you merely the current gossip of
+the neighbourhood; people say she is beautiful; they may be
+right, they may be wrong: it is not for her to
+decide&mdash;&ldquo;well-educated, of affectionate disposition,
+possessed of means, desires to meet gentleman with a view to
+matrimony.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Immediately underneath one reads of a gentleman of
+twenty-eight, &ldquo;tall, fair, considered
+agreeable.&rdquo;&nbsp; Really the modesty of the matrimonial
+advertiser teaches to us ordinary mortals quite a beautiful
+lesson.&nbsp; I know instinctively that were anybody to ask me
+suddenly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you call yourself an agreeable man?&rdquo; I should
+answer promptly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An agreeable man!&nbsp; Of course I&rsquo;m an
+agreeable man.&nbsp; What silly questions you do
+ask!&rdquo;&nbsp; If he persisted in arguing the matter,
+saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But there are people who do not consider you an
+agreeable man.&rdquo;&nbsp; I should get angry with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they think that, do they?&rdquo; I should
+say.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, you tell them from me, with my
+compliments, that they are a set of blithering idiots.&nbsp; Not
+agreeable!&nbsp; You show me the man who says I&rsquo;m not
+agreeable.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll soon let him know whether I&rsquo;m
+agreeable or not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These young men seeking a wife are silent on the subject of
+their own virtues.&nbsp; Such are for others to discover.&nbsp;
+The matrimonial advertiser confines himself to a simple statement
+of fact: &ldquo;he is considered agreeable.&rdquo;&nbsp; He is
+domestically inclined, and in receipt of a good income.&nbsp; He
+is desirous of meeting a lady of serious disposition, with view
+to matrimony.&nbsp; If possessed of means&mdash;well, it is a
+trifle hardly worth considering one way or the other.&nbsp; He
+does not insist upon it; on the other hand he does not exclude
+ladies of means; the main idea is matrimony.</p>
+<p>It is sad to reflect upon a young lady, said to be
+good-looking (let us say good-looking and be done with it: a
+neighbourhood does not rise up and declare a girl good-looking if
+she is not good-looking, that is only her modest way of putting
+it), let us say a young lady, good-looking, well-educated, of
+affectionate disposition&mdash;it is undeniably sad to reflect
+that such an one, matrimonially inclined, should be compelled to
+have recourse to the columns of a matrimonial journal.&nbsp; What
+are the young men in the neighbourhood thinking of?&nbsp; What
+more do they want?&nbsp; Is it Venus come to life again with ten
+thousand a year that they are waiting for!&nbsp; It makes me
+angry with my own sex reading these advertisements.&nbsp; And
+when one thinks of the girls that do get married!</p>
+<p>But life is a mystery.&nbsp; The fact remains: here is the
+ideal wife seeking in vain for a husband.&nbsp; And here,
+immediately underneath&mdash;I will not say the ideal husband, he
+may have faults; none of us are perfect, but as men go a decided
+acquisition to any domestic hearth, an agreeable gentleman, fond
+of home life, none of your gad-abouts&mdash;calls aloud to the
+four winds for a wife&mdash;any sort of a wife, provided she be
+of a serious disposition.&nbsp; In his despair, he has grown
+indifferent to all other considerations.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is there in
+this world,&rdquo; he has said to himself, &ldquo;one unmarried
+woman, willing to marry me, an agreeable man, in receipt of a
+good income.&rdquo;&nbsp; Possibly enough this twain have passed
+one another in the street, have sat side by side in the same
+tram-car, never guessing, each one, that the other was the very
+article of which they were in want to make life beautiful.</p>
+<p>Mistresses in search of a servant, not so much with the idea
+of getting work out of her, rather with the object of making her
+happy, advertise on one page.&nbsp; On the opposite page,
+domestic treasures&mdash;disciples of Carlyle, apparently, with a
+passionate love of work for its own sake&mdash;are seeking
+situations, not so much with the desire of gain as with the hope
+of finding openings where they may enjoy the luxury of feeling
+they are leading useful lives.&nbsp; These philanthropic
+mistresses, these toil-loving hand-maidens, have lived side by
+side in the same town for years, never knowing one another.</p>
+<p>So it is with these poor European peoples.&nbsp; They pass me
+in the street.&nbsp; They do not guess that I am ready and
+willing to take them under my care, to teach them common sense
+with a smattering of intelligence&mdash;to be, as one might say,
+a father to them.&nbsp; They look at me.&nbsp; There is nothing
+about me to tell them that I know what is good for them better
+than they do themselves.&nbsp; In the fairy tales the wise man
+wore a conical hat and a long robe with twiddly things all round
+the edge.&nbsp; You knew he was a clever man.&nbsp; It avoided
+the necessity of explanation.&nbsp; Unfortunately, the fashion
+has gone out.&nbsp; We wise men have to wear just ordinary
+clothes.&nbsp; Nobody knows we are wise men.&nbsp; Even when we
+tell them so, they don&rsquo;t believe it.&nbsp; This it is that
+makes our task the more difficult.</p>
+<p>One of the first things I should take in hand, were European
+affairs handed over to my control, would be the rearrangement of
+the Carnival.&nbsp; As matters are, the Carnival takes place all
+over Europe in February.&nbsp; At Nice, in Spain, or in Italy, it
+may be occasionally possible to feel you want to dance about the
+streets in thin costume during February.&nbsp; But in more
+northern countries during Carnival time I have seen only one
+sensible masker; he was a man who had got himself up as a
+diver.&nbsp; It was in Antwerp.&nbsp; The rain was pouring down
+in torrents; a cheery, boisterous John Bull sort of an east wind
+was blustering through the streets at the rate of fifteen miles
+an hour.&nbsp; Pierrots, with frozen hands, were blowing blue
+noses.&nbsp; An elderly Cupid had borrowed an umbrella from a
+caf&eacute; and was waiting for a tram.&nbsp; A very little devil
+was crying with the cold, and wiping his eyes with the end of his
+own tail.&nbsp; Every doorway was crowded with shivering
+maskers.&nbsp; The diver alone walked erect, the water streaming
+from him.</p>
+<p>February is not the month for open air masquerading.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;confetti,&rdquo; which has come to be nothing but coloured
+paper cut into small discs, is a sodden mass.&nbsp; When a lump
+of it strikes you in the eye, your instinct is not to laugh
+gaily, but to find out the man who threw it and to hit him
+back.&nbsp; This is not the true spirit of Carnival.&nbsp; The
+marvel is that, in spite of the almost invariably adverse
+weather, these Carnivals still continue.&nbsp; In Belgium, where
+Romanism still remains the dominant religion, Carnival maintains
+itself stronger than elsewhere in Northern Europe.</p>
+<p>At one small town, Binche, near the French border, it holds
+uninterrupted sway for three days and two nights, during which
+time the whole of the population, swelled by visitors from twenty
+miles round, shouts, romps, eats and drinks and dances.&nbsp;
+After which the visitors are packed like sardines into railway
+trains.&nbsp; They pin their tickets to their coats and promptly
+go to sleep.&nbsp; At every station the railway officials stumble
+up and down the trains with lanterns.&nbsp; The last feeble
+effort of the more wakeful reveller, before he adds himself to
+the heap of snoring humanity on the floor of the railway
+carriage, is to change the tickets of a couple of his unconscious
+companions.&nbsp; In this way gentlemen for the east are dragged
+out by the legs at junctions, and packed into trains going west;
+while southern fathers are shot out in the chill dawn at lonely
+northern stations, to find themselves greeted with enthusiasm by
+other people&rsquo;s families.</p>
+<p>At Binche, they say&mdash;I have not counted them
+myself&mdash;that thirty thousand maskers can be seen dancing at
+the same time.&nbsp; When they are not dancing they are throwing
+oranges at one another.&nbsp; The houses board up their
+windows.&nbsp; The restaurants take down their mirrors and hide
+away the glasses.&nbsp; If I went masquerading at Binche I should
+go as a man in armour, period Henry the Seventh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t it hurt,&rdquo; I asked a lady who had
+been there, &ldquo;having oranges thrown at you?&nbsp; Which sort
+do they use, speaking generally, those fine juicy
+ones&mdash;Javas I think you call them&mdash;or the little hard
+brand with skins like a nutmeg-grater?&nbsp; And if both sorts
+are used indiscriminately, which do you personally
+prefer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The smart people,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;they are
+the same everywhere&mdash;they must be extravagant&mdash;they use
+the Java orange.&nbsp; If it hits you in the back I prefer the
+Java orange.&nbsp; It is more messy than the other, but it does
+not leave you with that curious sensation of having been
+temporarily stunned.&nbsp; Most people, of course, make use of
+the small hard orange.&nbsp; If you duck in time, and so catch it
+on the top of your head, it does not hurt so much as you would
+think.&nbsp; If, however, it hits you on a tender
+place&mdash;well, myself, I always find that a little sal
+volatile, with old cognac&mdash;half and half, you
+understand&mdash;is about the best thing.&nbsp; But it only
+happens once a year,&rdquo; she added.</p>
+<p>Nearly every town gives prizes for the best group of
+maskers.&nbsp; In some cases the first prize amounts to as much
+as two hundred pounds.&nbsp; The butchers, the bakers, the
+candlestick makers, join together and compete.&nbsp; They arrive
+in wagons, each group with its band.&nbsp; Free trade is
+encouraged.&nbsp; Each neighbouring town and village
+&ldquo;dumps&rdquo; its load of picturesque merry-makers.</p>
+<p>It is in these smaller towns that the spirit of King Carnival
+finds happiest expression.&nbsp; Almost every third inhabitant
+takes part in the fun.&nbsp; In Brussels and the larger towns the
+thing appears ridiculous.&nbsp; A few hundred maskers force their
+way with difficulty through thousands of dull-clad spectators,
+looking like a Spanish river in the summer time, a feeble stream,
+dribbling through acres of muddy bank.&nbsp; At Charleroi, the
+centre of the Belgian Black Country, the chief feature of the
+Carnival is the dancing of the children.&nbsp; A space is
+specially roped off for them.</p>
+<p>If by chance the sun is kind enough to shine, the sight is a
+pretty one.&nbsp; How they love the dressing up and the acting,
+these small mites!&nbsp; One young hussy&mdash;she could hardly
+have been more than ten&mdash;was gotten up as a haughty young
+lady.&nbsp; Maybe some elder sister had served as a model.&nbsp;
+She wore a tremendous wig of flaxen hair, a hat that I guarantee
+would have made its mark even at Ascot on the Cup Day, a skirt
+that trailed two yards behind her, a pair of what had once been
+white kid gloves, and a blue silk parasol.&nbsp; Dignity!&nbsp; I
+have seen the offended barmaid, I have met the chorus
+girl&mdash;not by appointment, please don&rsquo;t misunderstand
+me, merely as a spectator&mdash;up the river on Sunday.&nbsp; But
+never have I witnessed in any human being so much hauteur to the
+pound <i>avoir-dupois</i> as was carried through the streets of
+Charleroi by that small brat.&nbsp; Companions of other days,
+mere vulgar boys and girls, claimed acquaintance with her.&nbsp;
+She passed them with a stare of such utter disdain that it sent
+them tumbling over one another backwards.&nbsp; By the time they
+had recovered themselves sufficiently to think of an old tin
+kettle lying handy in the gutter she had turned the corner.</p>
+<p>Two miserably clad urchins, unable to scrape together the few
+<i>sous</i> necessary for the hire of a rag or two, had
+nevertheless determined not to be altogether out of it.&nbsp;
+They had managed to borrow a couple of white blouses&mdash;not
+what you would understand by a white blouse, dear Madame, a
+dainty thing of frills and laces, but the coarse white sack the
+street sweeper wears over his clothes.&nbsp; They had also
+borrowed a couple of brooms.&nbsp; Ridiculous little objects they
+looked, the tiny head of each showing above the great white
+shroud as gravely they walked, the one behind the other, sweeping
+the mud into the gutter.&nbsp; They also were of the Carnival,
+playing at being scavengers.</p>
+<p>Another quaint sight I witnessed.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;serpentin&rdquo; is a feature of the Belgian
+Carnival.&nbsp; It is a strip of coloured paper, some dozen yards
+long, perhaps.&nbsp; You fling it as you would a lassoo,
+entangling the head of some passer-by.&nbsp; Naturally, the
+object most aimed at by the Belgian youth is the Belgian
+maiden.&nbsp; And, naturally also, the maiden who finds herself
+most entangled is the maiden who&mdash;to use again the language
+of the matrimonial advertiser&mdash;&ldquo;is considered
+good-looking.&rdquo;&nbsp; The serpentin about her head is the
+&ldquo;feather in her cap&rdquo; of the Belgian maiden on
+Carnival Day.&nbsp; Coming suddenly round the corner I almost ran
+into a girl.&nbsp; Her back was towards me.&nbsp; It was a quiet
+street.&nbsp; She had half a dozen of these serpentins.&nbsp;
+Hurriedly, with trembling hands, she was twisting them round and
+round her own head.&nbsp; I looked at her as I passed.&nbsp; She
+flushed scarlet.&nbsp; Poor little snub-nosed pasty-faced
+woman!&nbsp; I wish she had not seen me.&nbsp; I could have
+bought sixpenny-worth, followed her, and tormented her with them;
+while she would have pretended indignation&mdash;sought,
+discreetly, to escape from me.</p>
+<p>Down South, where the blood flows quicker, King Carnival is,
+indeed, a jolly old soul.&nbsp; In Munich he reigns for six
+weeks, the end coming with a mad two days revel in the
+streets.&nbsp; During the whole of the period, folks in ordinary,
+every-day costume are regarded as curiosities; people wonder what
+they are up to.&nbsp; From the Grafin to the Dienstm&auml;dchen,
+from the Herr Professor to the &ldquo;Piccolo,&rdquo; as they
+term the small artist that answers to our page boy, the business
+of Munich is dancing, somewhere, somehow, in a fancy
+costume.&nbsp; Every theatre clears away the stage, every
+caf&eacute; crowds its chairs and tables into corners, the very
+streets are cleared for dancing.&nbsp; Munich goes mad.</p>
+<p>Munich is always a little mad.&nbsp; The maddest ball I ever
+danced at was in Munich.&nbsp; I went there with a Harvard
+University professor.&nbsp; He had been told what these balls
+were like.&nbsp; Ever seeking knowledge of all things, he
+determined to take the matter up for himself and examine
+it.&nbsp; The writer also must ever be learning.&nbsp; I agreed
+to accompany him.&nbsp; We had not intended to dance.&nbsp; Our
+idea was that we could be indulgent spectators, regarding from
+some coign of vantage the antics of the foolish crowd.&nbsp; The
+professor was clad as became a professor.&nbsp; Myself, I wore a
+simply-cut frock-coat, with trousering in French grey.&nbsp; The
+doorkeeper explained to us that this was a costume ball; he was
+sorry, but gentlemen could only be admitted in evening dress or
+in masquerade.</p>
+<p>It was half past one in the morning.&nbsp; We had sat up late
+on purpose; we had gone without our dinner; we had walked two
+miles.&nbsp; The professor suggested pinning up the tails of his
+clerically-cut coat and turning in his waistcoat.&nbsp; The
+doorkeeper feared it would not be quite the same thing.&nbsp;
+Besides, my French grey trousers refused to adapt
+themselves.&nbsp; The doorkeeper proposed our hiring a
+costume&mdash;a little speculation of his own; gentlemen found it
+simpler sometimes, especially married gentlemen, to hire a
+costume in this manner, changing back into sober garments before
+returning home.&nbsp; It reduced the volume of necessary
+explanation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you anything, my good man,&rdquo; said the
+professor, &ldquo;anything that would effect a complete
+disguise?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The doorkeeper had the very thing&mdash;a Chinese arrangement,
+with combined mask and wig.&nbsp; It fitted neatly over the head,
+and was provided with a simple but ingenious piece of mechanism
+by means of which much could be done with the pigtail.&nbsp;
+Myself the doorkeeper hid from view under the cowl of a Carmelite
+monk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do hope nobody recognises us,&rdquo; whispered my
+friend the professor as we entered.</p>
+<p>I can only hope sincerely that they did not.&nbsp; I do not
+wish to talk about myself.&nbsp; That would be egotism.&nbsp; But
+the mystery of the professor troubles me to this day.&nbsp; A
+grave, earnest gentleman, the father of a family, I saw him with
+my own eyes put that ridiculous pasteboard mask over his
+head.&nbsp; Later on&mdash;a good deal later on&mdash;I found
+myself walking again with him through silent star-lit
+streets.&nbsp; Where he had been in the interval, and who then
+was the strange creature under the Chinaman&rsquo;s mask, will
+always remain to me an unsolved problem.</p>
+<h2><a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>DO WE
+LIE A-BED TOO LATE?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was in Paris, many years ago,
+that I fell by chance into this habit of early rising.&nbsp; My
+night&mdash;by reasons that I need not enter into&mdash;had been
+a troubled one.&nbsp; Tired of the hot bed that gave no sleep, I
+rose and dressed myself, crept down the creaking stairs,
+experiencing the sensations of a burglar new to his profession,
+unbolted the great door of the hotel, and passed out into an
+unknown, silent city, bathed in a mysterious soft light.&nbsp;
+Since then, this strange sweet city of the dawn has never ceased
+to call to me.&nbsp; It may be in London, in Paris again, in
+Brussels, Berlin, Vienna, that I have gone to sleep, but if
+perchance I wake before the returning tide of human life has
+dimmed its glories with the mists and vapours of the noisy day, I
+know that beyond my window blind the fairy city, as I saw it
+first so many years ago&mdash;this city that knows no tears, no
+sorrow, through which there creeps no evil thing; this city of
+quiet vistas, fading into hope; this city of far-off voices
+whispering peace; this city of the dawn that still is
+young&mdash;invites me to talk with it awhile before the waking
+hours drive it before them, and with a sigh it passes whence it
+came.</p>
+<p>It is the great city&rsquo;s one hour of purity, of
+dignity.&nbsp; The very rag-picker, groping with her filthy hands
+among the ashes, instead of an object of contempt, moves from
+door to door an accusing Figure, her thin soiled garments, her
+bent body, her scarred face, hideous with the wounds of poverty,
+an eloquent indictment of smug Injustice, sleeping behind its
+deaf shutters.&nbsp; Yet even into her dim brain has sunk the
+peace that fills for this brief hour the city.&nbsp; This, too,
+shall have its end, my sister!&nbsp; Men and women were not born
+to live on the husks that fill the pails outside the rich
+man&rsquo;s door.&nbsp; Courage a little while longer, you and
+yours.&nbsp; Your rheumy eyes once were bright, your thin locks
+once soft and wavy, your poor bent back once straight; and maybe,
+as they tell you in their gilded churches, this bulging sack
+shall be lifted from your weary shoulders, your misshapen limbs
+be straight again.&nbsp; You pass not altogether unheeded through
+these empty streets.&nbsp; Not all the eyes of the universe are
+sleeping.</p>
+<p>The little seamstress, hurrying to her early work!&nbsp; A
+little later she will be one of the foolish crowd, joining in the
+foolish laughter, in the coarse jests of the work-room: but as
+yet the hot day has not claimed her.&nbsp; The work-room is far
+beyond, the home of mean cares and sordid struggles far
+behind.&nbsp; To her, also, in this moment are the sweet thoughts
+of womanhood.&nbsp; She puts down her bag, rests herself upon a
+seat.&nbsp; If all the day were dawn, this city of the morning
+always with us!&nbsp; A neighbouring clock chimes forth the
+hour.&nbsp; She starts up from her dream and hurries on&mdash;to
+the noisy work-room.</p>
+<p>A pair of lovers cross the park, holding each other&rsquo;s
+hands.&nbsp; They will return later in the day, but there will be
+another expression in their eyes, another meaning in the pressure
+of their hands.&nbsp; Now the purity of the morning is with
+them.</p>
+<p>Some fat, middle-aged clerk comes puffing into view: his
+ridiculous little figure very podgy.&nbsp; He stops to take off
+his hat and mop his bald head with his handkerchief: even to him
+the morning lends romance.&nbsp; His fleshy face changes almost
+as one looks at him.&nbsp; One sees again the lad with his vague
+hopes, his absurd ambitions.</p>
+<p>There is a statue of Aphrodite in one of the smaller Paris
+parks.&nbsp; Twice in the same week, without particularly meaning
+it, I found myself early in the morning standing in front of this
+statue gazing listlessly at it, as one does when in dreamy mood;
+and on both occasions, turning to go, I encountered the same man,
+also gazing at it with, apparently, listless eyes.&nbsp; He was
+an uninteresting looking man&mdash;possibly he thought the same
+of me.&nbsp; From his dress he might have been a well-to-do
+tradesman, a minor Government official, doctor, or lawyer.&nbsp;
+Quite ten years later I paid my third visit to the same statue at
+about the same hour.&nbsp; This time he was there before
+me.&nbsp; I was hidden from him by some bushes.&nbsp; He glanced
+round but did not see me; and then he did a curious thing.&nbsp;
+Placing his hands on the top of the pedestal, which may have been
+some seven feet in height, he drew himself up, and kissed very
+gently, almost reverentially, the foot of the statue, begrimed
+though it was with the city&rsquo;s dirt.&nbsp; Had he been some
+long-haired student of the Latin Quarter one would not have been
+so astonished.&nbsp; But he was such a very commonplace, quite
+respectable looking man.&nbsp; Afterwards he drew a pipe from his
+pocket, carefully filled and lighted it, took his umbrella from
+the seat where it had been lying, and walked away.</p>
+<p>Had it been their meeting-place long ago?&nbsp; Had he been
+wont to tell her, gazing at her with lover&rsquo;s eyes, how like
+she was to the statue?&nbsp; The French sculptor has not to
+consider Mrs. Grundy.&nbsp; Maybe, the lady, raising her eyes,
+had been confused; perhaps for a moment angry&mdash;some little
+milliner or governess, one supposes.&nbsp; In France the <i>jeune
+fille</i> of good family does not meet her lover
+unattended.&nbsp; What had happened?&nbsp; Or was it but the
+vagrant fancy of a middle-aged bourgeois seeking in imagination
+the romance that reality so rarely gives us, weaving his love
+dream round his changeless statue?</p>
+<p>In one of Ibsen&rsquo;s bitter comedies the lovers agree to
+part while they are still young, never to see each other in the
+flesh again.&nbsp; Into the future each will bear away the image
+of the other, godlike, radiant with the glory of youth and love;
+each will cherish the memory of a loved one who shall be
+beautiful always.&nbsp; That their parting may not appear such
+wild nonsense as at first it strikes us, Ibsen shows us other
+lovers who have married in the orthodox fashion.&nbsp; She was
+all that a mistress should be.&nbsp; They speak of her as they
+first knew her fifteen years ago, when every man was at her
+feet.&nbsp; He then was a young student, burning with fine
+ideals, with enthusiasm for all the humanities.</p>
+<p>They enter.</p>
+<p>What did you expect?&nbsp; Fifteen years have
+passed&mdash;fifteen years of struggle with the grim
+realities.&nbsp; He is fat and bald.&nbsp; Eleven children have
+to be provided for.&nbsp; High ideals will not even pay the
+bootmaker.&nbsp; To exist you have to fight for mean ends with
+mean weapons.&nbsp; And the sweet girl heroine!&nbsp; Now the
+worried mother of eleven brats!&nbsp; One rings down the curtain
+amid Satanic laughter.</p>
+<p>That is why, for one reason among so many, I love this mystic
+morning light.&nbsp; It has a strange power of revealing the
+beauty that is hidden from us by the coarser beams of the full
+day.&nbsp; These worn men and women, grown so foolish looking, so
+unromantic; these artisans and petty clerks plodding to their
+monotonous day&rsquo;s work; these dull-eyed women of the people
+on their way to market to haggle over <i>sous</i>, to argue and
+contend over paltry handfuls of food.&nbsp; In this magic morning
+light the disguising body becomes transparent.&nbsp; They have
+grown beautiful, not ugly, with the years of toil and hardship;
+these lives, lived so patiently, are consecrated to the service
+of the world.&nbsp; Joy, hope, pleasure&mdash;they have done with
+all such, life for them is over.&nbsp; Yet they labour,
+ceaselessly, uncomplainingly.&nbsp; It is for the children.</p>
+<p>One morning, near Brussels, I encountered a cart of faggots,
+drawn by a hound so lean that stroking him might have hurt a
+dainty hand.&nbsp; I was shocked&mdash;angry, till I noticed his
+fellow beast of burden pushing the cart from behind.&nbsp; Such a
+scarecrow of an old woman!&nbsp; There was little to choose
+between them.&nbsp; I walked with them a little way.&nbsp; She
+lived near Waterloo.&nbsp; All day she gathered wood in the great
+forest, and starting at three o&rsquo;clock each morning, the two
+lean creatures between them dragged the cart nine miles to
+Brussels, returning when they had sold their load.&nbsp; With
+luck she might reckon on a couple of francs.&nbsp; I asked her if
+she could not find something else to do.</p>
+<p>Yes, it was possible, but for the little one, her
+grandchild.&nbsp; Folks will not employ old women burdened with
+grandchildren.</p>
+<p>You fair, dainty ladies, who would never know it was morning
+if somebody did not enter to pull up the blind and tell you
+so!&nbsp; You do well not to venture out in this magic morning
+light.&nbsp; You would look so plain&mdash;almost ugly, by the
+side of these beautiful women.</p>
+<p>It is curious the attraction the Church has always possessed
+for the marketing classes.&nbsp; Christ drove them from the
+Temple, but still, in every continental city, they cluster round
+its outer walls.&nbsp; It makes a charming picture on a sunny
+morning, the great cathedral with its massive shadow forming the
+background; splashed about its feet, like a parterre of gay
+flowers around the trunk of some old tree, the women, young girls
+in their many coloured costumes, sitting before their piled-up
+baskets of green vegetables, of shining fruits.</p>
+<p>In Brussels the chief market is held on the Grande
+Place.&nbsp; The great gilded houses have looked down upon much
+the same scene every morning these four hundred years.&nbsp; In
+summer time it commences about half-past four; by five
+o&rsquo;clock it is a roaring hive, the great city round about
+still sleeping.</p>
+<p>Here comes the thrifty housewife of the poor, to whom the
+difference of a tenth of a penny in the price of a cabbage is
+all-important, and the much harassed keeper of the petty
+<i>pension</i>.&nbsp; There are houses in Brussels where they
+will feed you, light you, sleep you, wait on you, for two francs
+a day.&nbsp; Withered old ladies, ancient governesses, who will
+teach you for forty centimes an hour, gather round these ricketty
+tables, wolf up the thin soup, grumble at the watery coffee, help
+themselves with unladylike greediness to the potato pie.&nbsp; It
+must need careful housewifery to keep these poor creatures on two
+francs a day and make a profit for yourself.&nbsp; So
+&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; the much-grumbled-at, who has gone to bed
+about twelve, rises a little before five, makes her way down with
+her basket.&nbsp; Thus a few <i>sous</i> may be saved upon the
+day&rsquo;s economies.</p>
+<p>Sometimes it is a mere child who is the little
+housekeeper.&nbsp; One thinks that perhaps this early training in
+the art of haggling may not be good for her.&nbsp; Already there
+is a hard expression in the childish eyes, mean lines about the
+little mouth.&nbsp; The finer qualities of humanity are expensive
+luxuries, not to be afforded by the poor.</p>
+<p>They overwork their patient dogs, and underfeed them.&nbsp;
+During the two hours&rsquo; market the poor beasts, still
+fastened to their little &ldquo;chariots,&rdquo; rest in the open
+space about the neighbouring Bourse.&nbsp; They snatch at what
+you throw them; they do not even thank you with a wag of the
+tail.&nbsp; Gratitude!&nbsp; Politeness!&nbsp; What mean
+you?&nbsp; We have not heard of such.&nbsp; We only work.&nbsp;
+Some of them amid all the din lie sleeping between their
+shafts.&nbsp; Some are licking one another&rsquo;s sores.&nbsp;
+One would they were better treated; alas! their owners, likewise,
+are overworked and underfed, housed in kennels no better.&nbsp;
+But if the majority in every society were not overworked and
+underfed and meanly housed, why, then the minority could not be
+underworked and overfed and housed luxuriously.&nbsp; But this is
+talk to which no respectable reader can be expected to
+listen.</p>
+<p>They are one babel of bargaining, these markets.&nbsp; The
+purchaser selects a cauliflower.&nbsp; Fortunately, cauliflowers
+have no feelings, or probably it would burst into tears at the
+expression with which it is regarded.&nbsp; It is impossible that
+any lady should desire such a cauliflower.&nbsp; Still, out of
+mere curiosity, she would know the price&mdash;that is, if the
+owner of the cauliflower is not too much ashamed of it to name a
+price.</p>
+<p>The owner of the cauliflower suggests six <i>sous</i>.&nbsp;
+The thing is too ridiculous for argument.&nbsp; The purchaser
+breaks into a laugh.</p>
+<p>The owner of the cauliflower is stung.&nbsp; She points out
+the beauties of that cauliflower.&nbsp; Apparently it is the
+cauliflower out of all her stock she loves the best; a better
+cauliflower never lived; if there were more cauliflowers in the
+world like this particular cauliflower things might be
+different.&nbsp; She gives a sketch of the cauliflower&rsquo;s
+career, from its youth upwards.&nbsp; Hard enough it will be for
+her when the hour for parting from it comes.&nbsp; If the other
+lady has not sufficient knowledge of cauliflowers to appreciate
+it, will she kindly not paw it about, but put it down and go
+away, and never let the owner of the cauliflower see her
+again.</p>
+<p>The other lady, more as a friend than as a purchaser, points
+out the cauliflower&rsquo;s defects.&nbsp; She wishes well to the
+owner of the cauliflower, and would like to teach her something
+about her business.&nbsp; A lady who thinks such a cauliflower
+worth six <i>sous</i> can never hope to succeed as a cauliflower
+vendor.&nbsp; Has she really taken the trouble to examine the
+cauliflower for herself, or has love made her blind to its
+shortcomings?</p>
+<p>The owner of the cauliflower is too indignant to reply.&nbsp;
+She snatches it away, appears to be comforting it, replaces it in
+the basket.&nbsp; The other lady is grieved at human obstinacy
+and stupidity in general.&nbsp; If the owner of the cauliflower
+had had any sense she would have asked four <i>sous</i>.&nbsp;
+Eventually business is done at five.</p>
+<p>It is the custom everywhere abroad&mdash;asking the price of a
+thing is simply opening conversation.&nbsp; A lady told me that,
+the first day she began housekeeping in Florence, she handed over
+to a poulterer for a chicken the price he had demanded&mdash;with
+protestations that he was losing on the transaction, but wanted,
+for family reasons, apparently, to get rid of the chicken.&nbsp;
+He stood for half a minute staring at her, and then, being an
+honest sort of man, threw in a pigeon.</p>
+<p>Foreign housekeepers starting business in London appear hurt
+when our tradesmen decline to accept half-a-crown for articles
+marked three-and-six.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why mark it only three-and-sixpence?&rdquo; is the
+foreign housekeeper&rsquo;s argument.</p>
+<h2><a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>SHOULD
+MARRIED MEN PLAY GOLF?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">That</span> we Englishmen attach too much
+importance to sport goes without saying&mdash;or, rather, it has
+been said so often as to have become a commonplace.&nbsp; One of
+these days some reforming English novelist will write a book,
+showing the evil effects of over-indulgence in sport: the
+neglected business, the ruined home, the slow but sure sapping of
+the brain&mdash;what there may have been of it in the
+beginning&mdash;leading to semi-imbecility and yearly increasing
+obesity.</p>
+<p>A young couple, I once heard of, went for their honeymoon to
+Scotland.&nbsp; The poor girl did not know he was a golfer (he
+had wooed and won her during a period of idleness enforced by a
+sprained shoulder), or maybe she would have avoided
+Scotland.&nbsp; The idea they started with was that of a
+tour.&nbsp; The second day the man went out for a stroll by
+himself.&nbsp; At dinner-time he observed, with a far-away look
+in his eyes, that it seemed a pretty spot they had struck, and
+suggested their staying there another day.&nbsp; The next morning
+after breakfast he borrowed a club from the hotel porter, and
+remarked that he would take a walk while she finished doing her
+hair.&nbsp; He said it amused him, swinging a club while he
+walked.&nbsp; He returned in time for lunch and seemed moody all
+the afternoon.&nbsp; He said the air suited him, and urged that
+they should linger yet another day.</p>
+<p>She was young and inexperienced, and thought, maybe, it was
+liver.&nbsp; She had heard much about liver from her
+father.&nbsp; The next morning he borrowed more clubs, and went
+out, this time before breakfast, returning to a late and not over
+sociable dinner.&nbsp; That was the end of their honeymoon so far
+as she was concerned.&nbsp; He meant well, but the thing had gone
+too far.&nbsp; The vice had entered into his blood, and the smell
+of the links drove out all other considerations.</p>
+<p>We are most of us familiar, I take it, with the story of the
+golfing parson, who could not keep from swearing when the balls
+went wrong.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Golf and the ministry don&rsquo;t seem to go
+together,&rdquo; his friend told him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Take my advice
+before it&rsquo;s too late, and give it up, Tammas.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A few months later Tammas met his friend again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were right, Jamie,&rdquo; cried the parson
+cheerily, &ldquo;they didna run well in harness; golf and the
+meenistry, I hae followed your advice: I hae gi&rsquo;en it
+oop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then what are ye doing with that sack of clubs?&rdquo;
+inquired Jamie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What am I doing with them?&rdquo; repeated the puzzled
+Tammas.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why I am going to play golf with
+them.&rdquo;&nbsp; A light broke upon him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Great
+Heavens, man!&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;ye didna&rsquo; think
+&rsquo;twas the golf I&rsquo;d gi&rsquo;en oop?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Englishman does not understand play.&nbsp; He makes a
+life-long labour of his sport, and to it sacrifices mind and
+body.&nbsp; The health resorts of Europe&mdash;to paraphrase a
+famous saying that nobody appears to have said&mdash;draw half
+their profits from the playing fields of Eton and
+elsewhere.&nbsp; In Swiss and German kurhausen enormously fat men
+bear down upon you and explain to you that once they were the
+champion sprinters or the high-jump representatives of their
+university&mdash;men who now hold on to the bannisters and groan
+as they haul themselves upstairs.&nbsp; Consumptive men, between
+paroxysms of coughing, tell you of the goals they scored when
+they were half-backs or forwards of extraordinary ability.&nbsp;
+Ex-light-weight amateur pugilists, with the figure now of an
+American roll-top desk, butt you into a corner of the
+billiard-room, and, surprised they cannot get as near you as they
+would desire, whisper to you the secret of avoiding the undercut
+by the swiftness of the backward leap.&nbsp; Broken-down tennis
+players, one-legged skaters, dropsical gentlemen-riders, are to
+be met with hobbling on crutches along every highway of the
+Engadine.</p>
+<p>They are pitiable objects.&nbsp; Never having learnt to read
+anything but the sporting papers, books are of no use to
+them.&nbsp; They never wasted much of their youth on thought,
+and, apparently, have lost the knack of it.&nbsp; They
+don&rsquo;t care for art, and Nature only suggests to them the
+things they can no longer do.&nbsp; The snow-clad mountain
+reminds them that once they were daring tobogannists; the
+undulating common makes them sad because they can no longer
+handle a golf-club; by the riverside they sit down and tell you
+of the salmon they caught before they caught rheumatic fever;
+birds only make them long for guns; music raises visions of the
+local cricket-match of long ago, enlivened by the local band; a
+picturesque estaminet, with little tables spread out under the
+vines, recalls bitter memories of ping-pong.&nbsp; One is sorry
+for them, but their conversation is not exhilarating.&nbsp; The
+man who has other interests in life beyond sport is apt to find
+their reminiscences monotonous; while to one another they do not
+care to talk.&nbsp; One gathers that they do not altogether
+believe one another.</p>
+<p>The foreigner is taking kindly to our sports; one hopes he
+will be forewarned by our example and not overdo the thing.&nbsp;
+At present, one is bound to admit, he shows no sign of taking
+sport too seriously.&nbsp; Football is gaining favour more and
+more throughout Europe.&nbsp; But yet the Frenchman has not got
+it out of his head that the <i>coup</i> to practise is kicking
+the ball high into the air and catching it upon his head.&nbsp;
+He would rather catch the ball upon his head than score a
+goal.&nbsp; If he can man&oelig;uvre the ball away into a corner,
+kick it up into the air twice running, and each time catch it on
+his head, he does not seem to care what happens after that.&nbsp;
+Anybody can have the ball; he has had his game and is happy.</p>
+<p>They talk of introducing cricket into Belgium; I shall
+certainly try to be present at the opening game.&nbsp; I am
+afraid that, until he learns from experience, the Belgian fielder
+will stop cricket balls with his head.&nbsp; That the head is the
+proper thing with which to play ball appears to be in his
+blood.&nbsp; My head is round, he argues, and hard, just like the
+ball itself; what part of the human frame more fit and proper
+with which to meet and stop a ball.</p>
+<p>Golf has not yet caught on, but tennis is firmly established
+from St. Petersburg to Bordeaux.&nbsp; The German, with the
+thoroughness characteristic of him, is working hard.&nbsp;
+University professors, stout majors, rising early in the morning,
+hire boys and practise back-handers and half-volleys.&nbsp; But
+to the Frenchman, as yet, it is a game.&nbsp; He plays it in a
+happy, merry fashion, that is shocking to English eyes.</p>
+<p>Your partner&rsquo;s service rather astonishes you.&nbsp; An
+occasional yard or so beyond the line happens to anyone, but this
+man&rsquo;s object appears to be to break windows.&nbsp; You feel
+you really must remonstrate, when the joyous laughter and
+tumultuous applause of the spectators explain the puzzle to
+you.&nbsp; He has not been trying to serve; he has been trying to
+hit a man in the next court who is stooping down to tie up his
+shoe-lace.&nbsp; With his last ball he has succeeded.&nbsp; He
+has hit the man in the small of the back, and has bowled him
+over.&nbsp; The unanimous opinion of the surrounding critics is
+that the ball could not possibly have been better placed.&nbsp; A
+Doherty has never won greater applause from the crowd.&nbsp; Even
+the man who has been hit appears pleased; it shows what a
+Frenchman can do when he does take up a game.</p>
+<p>But French honour demands revenge.&nbsp; He forgets his shoe,
+he forgets his game.&nbsp; He gathers together all the balls that
+he can find; his balls, your balls, anybody&rsquo;s balls that
+happen to be handy.&nbsp; And then commences the return
+match.&nbsp; At this point it is best to crouch down under
+shelter of the net.&nbsp; Most of the players round about adopt
+this plan; the more timid make for the club-house, and, finding
+themselves there, order coffee and light up cigarettes.&nbsp;
+After a while both players appear to be satisfied.&nbsp; The
+other players then gather round to claim their balls.&nbsp; This
+makes a good game by itself.&nbsp; The object is to get as many
+balls as you can, your own and other people&rsquo;s&mdash;for
+preference other people&rsquo;s&mdash;and run off with them round
+the courts, followed by whooping claimants.</p>
+<p>In the course of half-an-hour or so, when everybody is dead
+beat, the game&mdash;the original game&mdash;is resumed.&nbsp;
+You demand the score; your partner promptly says it is
+&ldquo;forty-fifteen.&rdquo;&nbsp; Both your opponents rush up to
+the net, and apparently there is going to be a duel.&nbsp; It is
+only a friendly altercation; they very much doubt its being
+&ldquo;forty-fifteen.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Fifteen-forty&rdquo;
+they could believe; they suggest it as a compromise.&nbsp; The
+discussion is concluded by calling it deuce.&nbsp; As it is rare
+for a game to proceed without some such incident occurring in the
+middle of it, the score generally is deuce.&nbsp; This avoids
+heart-burning; nobody wins a set and nobody loses.&nbsp; The one
+game generally suffices for the afternoon.</p>
+<p>To the earnest player, it is also confusing to miss your
+partner occasionally&mdash;to turn round and find that he is
+talking to a man.&nbsp; Nobody but yourself takes the slightest
+objection to his absence.&nbsp; The other side appear to regard
+it as a good opportunity to score.&nbsp; Five minutes later he
+resumes the game.&nbsp; His friend comes with him, also the dog
+of his friend.&nbsp; The dog is welcomed with enthusiasm; all
+balls are returned to the dog.&nbsp; Until the dog is tired you
+do not get a look in.&nbsp; But all this will no doubt soon be
+changed.&nbsp; There are some excellent French and Belgian
+players; from them their compatriots will gradually learn higher
+ideals.&nbsp; The Frenchman is young in the game.&nbsp; As the
+right conception of the game grows upon him, he will also learn
+to keep the balls lower.</p>
+<p>I suppose it is the continental sky.&nbsp; It is so blue, so
+beautiful; it naturally attracts one.&nbsp; Anyhow, the fact
+remains that most tennis players on the Continent, whether
+English or foreign, have a tendency to aim the ball direct at
+Heaven.&nbsp; At an English club in Switzerland there existed in
+my days a young Englishman who was really a wonderful
+player.&nbsp; To get the ball past him was almost an
+impossibility.&nbsp; It was his return that was weak.&nbsp; He
+only had one stroke; the ball went a hundred feet or so into the
+air and descended in his opponent&rsquo;s court.&nbsp; The other
+man would stand watching it, a little speck in the Heavens,
+growing gradually bigger and bigger as it neared the earth.&nbsp;
+Newcomers would chatter to him, thinking he had detected a
+balloon or an eagle.&nbsp; He would wave them aside, explain to
+them that he would talk to them later, after the arrival of the
+ball.&nbsp; It would fall with a thud at his feet, rise another
+twenty yards or so and again descend.&nbsp; When it was at the
+proper height he would hit it back over the net, and the next
+moment it would be mounting the sky again.&nbsp; At tournaments I
+have seen that young man, with tears in his eyes, pleading to be
+given an umpire.&nbsp; Every umpire had fled.&nbsp; They hid
+behind trees, borrowed silk hats and umbrellas and pretended they
+were visitors&mdash;any device, however mean, to avoid the task
+of umpiring for that young man.&nbsp; Provided his opponent did
+not go to sleep or get cramp, one game might last all day.&nbsp;
+Anyone could return his balls; but, as I have said, to get a ball
+past him was almost an impossibility.&nbsp; He invariably won;
+the other man, after an hour or so, would get mad and try to
+lose.&nbsp; It was his only chance of dinner.</p>
+<p>It is a pretty sight, generally speaking, a tennis ground
+abroad.&nbsp; The women pay more attention to their costumes than
+do our lady players.&nbsp; The men are usually in spotless
+white.&nbsp; The ground is often charmingly situated, the
+club-house picturesque; there is always laughter and
+merriment.&nbsp; The play may not be so good to watch, but the
+picture is delightful.&nbsp; I accompanied a man a little while
+ago to his club on the outskirts of Brussels.&nbsp; The ground
+was bordered by a wood on one side, and surrounded on the other
+three by <i>petites fermes</i>&mdash;allotments, as we should
+call them in England, worked by the peasants themselves.</p>
+<p>It was a glorious spring afternoon.&nbsp; The courts were
+crowded.&nbsp; The red earth and the green grass formed a
+background against which the women, in their new Parisian
+toilets, under their bright parasols, stood out like wondrous
+bouquets of moving flowers.&nbsp; The whole atmosphere was a
+delightful mingling of idle gaiety, flirtation, and graceful
+sensuousness.&nbsp; A modern Watteau would have seized upon the
+scene with avidity.</p>
+<p>Just beyond&mdash;separated by the almost invisible wire
+fencing&mdash;a group of peasants were working in the
+field.&nbsp; An old woman and a young girl, with ropes about
+their shoulders, were drawing a harrow, guided by a withered old
+scarecrow of a man.&nbsp; They paused for a moment at the wire
+fencing, and looked through.&nbsp; It was an odd contrast; the
+two worlds divided by that wire fencing&mdash;so slight, almost
+invisible.&nbsp; The girl swept the sweat from her face with her
+hand; the woman pushed back her grey locks underneath the
+handkerchief knotted about her head; the old man straightened
+himself with some difficulty.&nbsp; So they stood, for perhaps a
+minute, gazing with quiet, passionless faces through that slight
+fencing, that a push from their work-hardened hands might have
+levelled.</p>
+<p>Was there any thought, I wonder, passing through their
+brains?&nbsp; The young girl&mdash;she was a handsome creature in
+spite of her disfiguring garments.&nbsp; The woman&mdash;it was a
+wonderfully fine face: clear, calm eyes, deep-set under a square
+broad brow.&nbsp; The withered old scarecrow&mdash;ever sowing
+the seed in the spring of the fruit that others shall eat.</p>
+<p>The old man bent again over the guiding ropes: gave the
+word.&nbsp; The team moved forward up the hill.&nbsp; It is
+Anatole France, I think, who says: Society is based upon the
+patience of the poor.</p>
+<h2><a name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>ARE
+EARLY MARRIAGES A MISTAKE?</h2>
+<p>I <span class="smcap">am</span> chary nowadays of offering
+counsel in connection with subjects concerning which I am not and
+cannot be an authority.&nbsp; Long ago I once took upon myself to
+write a paper about babies.&nbsp; It did not aim to be a textbook
+on the subject.&nbsp; It did not even claim to exhaust the
+topic.&nbsp; I was willing that others, coming after me, should
+continue the argument&mdash;that is if, upon reflection, they
+were still of opinion there was anything more to be said.&nbsp; I
+was pleased with the article.&nbsp; I went out of my way to
+obtain an early copy of the magazine in which it appeared, on
+purpose to show it to a lady friend of mine.&nbsp; She was the
+possessor of one or two babies of her own, specimens in no way
+remarkable, though she herself, as was natural enough, did her
+best to boom them.&nbsp; I thought it might be helpful to her:
+the views and observations, not of a rival fancier, who would be
+prejudiced, but of an intelligent amateur.&nbsp; I put the
+magazine into her hands, opened at the proper place.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Read it through carefully and quietly,&rdquo; I said;
+&ldquo;don&rsquo;t let anything distract you.&nbsp; Have a pencil
+and a bit of paper ready at your side, and note down any points
+upon which you would like further information.&nbsp; If there is
+anything you think I have missed out let me know.&nbsp; It may be
+that here and there you will be disagreeing with me.&nbsp; If so,
+do not hesitate to mention it, I shall not be angry.&nbsp; If a
+demand arises I shall very likely issue an enlarged and improved
+edition of this paper in the form of a pamphlet, in which case
+hints and suggestions that to you may appear almost impertinent
+will be of distinct help to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t got a pencil,&rdquo; she said;
+&ldquo;what&rsquo;s it all about?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s about babies,&rdquo; I explained, and I lent
+her a pencil.</p>
+<p>That is another thing I have learnt.&nbsp; Never lend a pencil
+to a woman if you ever want to see it again.&nbsp; She has three
+answers to your request for its return.&nbsp; The first, that she
+gave it back to you and that you put it in your pocket, and that
+it&rsquo;s there now, and that if it isn&rsquo;t it ought to
+be.&nbsp; The second, that you never lent it to her.&nbsp; The
+third, that she wishes people would not lend her pencils and then
+clamour for them back, just when she has something else far more
+important to think about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you know about babies?&rdquo; she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you will read the paper,&rdquo; I replied,
+&ldquo;you will see for yourself.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s all
+there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She flicked over the pages contemptuously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There doesn&rsquo;t seem much of it?&rdquo; she
+retorted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is condensed,&rdquo; I pointed out to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad it is short.&nbsp; All right, I&rsquo;ll read
+it,&rdquo; she agreed.</p>
+<p>I thought my presence might disturb her, so went out into the
+garden.&nbsp; I wanted her to get the full benefit of it.&nbsp; I
+crept back now and again to peep through the open window.&nbsp;
+She did not seem to be making many notes.&nbsp; But I heard her
+making little noises to herself.&nbsp; When I saw she had reached
+the last page, I re-entered the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; I said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it meant to be funny,&rdquo; she demanded, &ldquo;or
+is it intended to be taken seriously?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There may be flashes of humour here and
+there&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not wait for me to finish.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because if it&rsquo;s meant to be funny,&rdquo; she
+said, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think it is at all funny.&nbsp; And if
+it is intended to be serious, there&rsquo;s one thing very clear,
+and that is that you are not a mother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With the unerring instinct of the born critic she had divined
+my one weak point.&nbsp; Other objections raised against me I
+could have met.&nbsp; But that one stinging reproach was
+unanswerable.&nbsp; It has made me, as I have explained, chary of
+tendering advice on matters outside my own department of
+life.&nbsp; Otherwise, every year, about Valentine&rsquo;s day,
+there is much that I should like to say to my good friends the
+birds.&nbsp; I want to put it to them seriously.&nbsp; Is not the
+month of February just a little too early?&nbsp; Of course, their
+answer would be the same as in the case of my motherly
+friend.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, what do you know about it? you are not a
+bird.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I know I am not a bird, but that is the very reason why they
+should listen to me.&nbsp; I bring a fresh mind to bear upon the
+subject.&nbsp; I am not tied down by bird convention.&nbsp;
+February, my dear friends&mdash;in these northern climes of ours
+at all events&mdash;is much too early.&nbsp; You have to build in
+a high wind, and nothing, believe me, tries a lady&rsquo;s temper
+more than being blown about.&nbsp; Nature is nature, and
+womenfolk, my dear sirs, are the same all the world over, whether
+they be birds or whether they be human.&nbsp; I am an older
+person than most of you, and I speak with the weight of
+experience.</p>
+<p>If I were going to build a house with my wife, I should not
+choose a season of the year when the bricks and planks and things
+were liable to be torn out of her hand, her skirts blown over her
+head, and she left clinging for dear life to a scaffolding
+pole.&nbsp; I know the feminine biped and, you take it from me,
+that is not her notion of a honeymoon.&nbsp; In April or May, the
+sun shining, the air balmy&mdash;when, after carrying up to her a
+load or two of bricks, and a hod or two of mortar, we could knock
+off work for a few minutes without fear of the whole house being
+swept away into the next street&mdash;could sit side by side on
+the top of a wall, our legs dangling down, and peck and morsel
+together; after which I could whistle a bit to her&mdash;then
+housebuilding might be a pleasure.</p>
+<p>The swallows are wisest; June is their idea, and a very good
+idea, too.&nbsp; In a mountain village in the Tyrol, early one
+summer, I had the opportunity of watching very closely the
+building of a swallow&rsquo;s nest.&nbsp; After coffee, the first
+morning, I stepped out from the great, cool, dark passage of the
+wirtschaft into the blazing sunlight, and, for no particular
+reason, pulled-to the massive door behind me.&nbsp; While filling
+my pipe, a swallow almost brushed by me, then wheeled round
+again, and took up a position on the fence only a few yards from
+me.&nbsp; He was carrying what to him was an exceptionally large
+and heavy brick.&nbsp; He put it down beside him on the fence,
+and called out something which I could not understand.&nbsp; I
+did not move.&nbsp; He got quite excited and said some
+more.&nbsp; It was undoubtable he was addressing me&mdash;nobody
+else was by.&nbsp; I judged from his tone that he was getting
+cross with me.&nbsp; At this point my travelling companion, his
+toilet unfinished, put his head out of the window just above
+me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Such an odd thing,&rdquo; he called down to me.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I never noticed it last night.&nbsp; A pair of swallows
+are building a nest here in the hall.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ve got to
+be careful you don&rsquo;t mistake it for a hat-peg.&nbsp; The
+old lady says they have built there regularly for the last three
+years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then it came to me what it was the gentleman had been saying
+to me: &ldquo;I say, sir, you with the bit of wood in your mouth,
+you have been and shut the door and I can&rsquo;t get
+in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now, with the key in my possession, it was so clear and
+understandable, I really forgot for the moment he was only a
+bird.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I beg your pardon,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;I had no
+idea.&nbsp; Such an extraordinary place to build a
+nest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I opened the door for him, and, taking up his brick again, he
+entered, and I followed him in.&nbsp; There was a deal of
+talk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He shut the door,&rdquo; I heard him say, &ldquo;Chap
+there, sucking the bit of wood.&nbsp; Thought I was never going
+to get in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; was the answer; &ldquo;it has been so
+dark in here, if you&rsquo;ll believe me, I&rsquo;ve hardly been
+able to see what I&rsquo;ve been doing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fine brick, isn&rsquo;t it?&nbsp; Where will you have
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Observing me sitting there, they lowered their voices.&nbsp;
+Evidently she wanted him to put the brick down and leave her to
+think.&nbsp; She was not quite sure where she would have
+it.&nbsp; He, on the other hand, was sure he had found the right
+place for it.&nbsp; He pointed it out to her and explained his
+views.&nbsp; Other birds quarrel a good deal during nest
+building, but swallows are the gentlest of little people.&nbsp;
+She let him put it where he wanted to, and he kissed her and ran
+out.&nbsp; She cocked her eye after him, watched till he was out
+of sight, then deftly and quickly slipped it out and fixed it the
+other side of the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor dears&rdquo; (I could see it in the toss of her
+head); &ldquo;they will think they know best; it is just as well
+not to argue with them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Every summer I suffer much from indignation.&nbsp; I love to
+watch the swallows building.&nbsp; They build beneath the eaves
+outside my study window.&nbsp; Such cheerful little chatter-boxes
+they are.&nbsp; Long after sunset, when all the other birds are
+sleeping, the swallows still are chattering softly.&nbsp; It
+sounds as if they were telling one another some pretty story, and
+often I am sure there must be humour in it, for every now and
+then one hears a little twittering laugh.&nbsp; I delight in
+having them there, so close to me.&nbsp; The fancy comes to me
+that one day, when my brain has grown more cunning, I, too,
+listening in the twilight, shall hear the stories that they
+tell.</p>
+<p>One or two phrases already I have come to understand:
+&ldquo;Once upon a time&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Long, long
+ago&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;In a strange, far-off land.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I hear these words so constantly, I am sure I have them
+right.&nbsp; I call it &ldquo;Swallow Street,&rdquo; this row of
+six or seven nests.&nbsp; Two or three, like villas in their own
+grounds, stand alone, and others are semi-detached.&nbsp; It
+makes me angry that the sparrows will come and steal them.&nbsp;
+The sparrows will hang about deliberately waiting for a pair of
+swallows to finish their nest, and then, with a brutal laugh that
+makes my blood boil, drive the swallows away and take possession
+of it.&nbsp; And the swallows are so wonderfully patient.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind, old girl,&rdquo; says Tommy Swallow, after
+the first big cry is over, to Jenny Swallow, &ldquo;let&rsquo;s
+try again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And half an hour later, full of fresh plans, they are choosing
+another likely site, chattering cheerfully once more.&nbsp; I
+watched the building of a particular nest for nearly a fortnight
+one year; and when, after two or three days&rsquo; absence, I
+returned and found a pair of sparrows comfortably encsonced
+therein, I just felt mad.&nbsp; I saw Mrs. Sparrow looking
+out.&nbsp; Maybe my anger was working upon my imagination, but it
+seemed to me that she nodded to me:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nice little house, ain&rsquo;t it?&nbsp; What I call
+well built.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Sparrow then flew up with a gaudy feather, dyed blue,
+which belonged to me.&nbsp; I recognised it.&nbsp; It had come
+out of the brush with which the girl breaks the china ornaments
+in our drawing-room.&nbsp; At any other time I should have been
+glad to see him flying off with the whole thing, handle
+included.&nbsp; But now I felt the theft of that one feather as
+an added injury.&nbsp; Mrs. Sparrow chirped with delight at sight
+of the gaudy monstrosity.&nbsp; Having got the house cheap, they
+were going to spend their small amount of energy upon internal
+decoration.&nbsp; That was their idea clearly, a &ldquo;Liberty
+interior.&rdquo;&nbsp; She looked more like a Cockney sparrow
+than a country one&mdash;had been born and bred in Regent Street,
+no doubt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is not much justice in this world,&rdquo; said I
+to myself; &ldquo;but there&rsquo;s going to be some introduced
+into this business&mdash;that is, if I can find a
+ladder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I did find a ladder, and fortunately it was long enough.&nbsp;
+Mr. and Mrs. Sparrow were out when I arrived, possibly on the
+hunt for cheap photo frames and Japanese fans.&nbsp; I did not
+want to make a mess.&nbsp; I removed the house neatly into a
+dust-pan, and wiped the street clear of every trace of it.&nbsp;
+I had just put back the ladder when Mrs. Sparrow returned with a
+piece of pink cotton-wool in her mouth.&nbsp; That was her idea
+of a colour scheme: apple-blossom pink and Reckitt&rsquo;s blue
+side by side.&nbsp; She dropped her wool and sat on the
+waterspout, and tried to understand things.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Number one, number two, number four; where the
+blazes&rdquo;&mdash;sparrows are essentially common, and the
+women are as bad as the men&mdash;&ldquo;is number
+three?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Sparrow came up from behind, over the roof.&nbsp; He was
+carrying a piece of yellow-fluff, part of a lamp-shade, as far as
+I could judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Move yourself,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;what&rsquo;s the
+sense of sitting there in the rain?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I went out just for a moment,&rdquo; replied Mrs.
+Sparrow; &ldquo;I could not have been gone, no, not a couple of
+minutes.&nbsp; When I came back&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, get indoors,&rdquo; said Mr. Sparrow, &ldquo;talk
+about it there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m telling you,&rdquo; continued
+Mrs. Sparrow, &ldquo;if you would only listen.&nbsp; There
+isn&rsquo;t any door, there isn&rsquo;t any
+house&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t any&mdash;&rdquo; Mr. Sparrow, holding on
+to the rim of the spout, turned himself topsy-turvy and surveyed
+the street.&nbsp; From where I was standing behind the laurel
+bushes I could see nothing but his back.</p>
+<p>He stood up again, looking angry and flushed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What have you done with the house?&nbsp; Can&rsquo;t I
+turn my back a minute&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t done nothing with it.&nbsp; As I keep on
+telling you, I had only just gone&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, bother where you had gone.&nbsp; Where&rsquo;s the
+darned house gone? that&rsquo;s what I want to know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They looked at one another.&nbsp; If ever astonishment was
+expressed in the attitude of a bird it was told by the tails of
+those two sparrows.&nbsp; They whispered wickedly together.&nbsp;
+The idea occurred to them that by force or cunning they might
+perhaps obtain possession of one of the other nests.&nbsp; But
+all the other nests were occupied, and even gentle Jenny Swallow,
+once in her own home with the children round about her, is not to
+be trifled with.&nbsp; Mr. Sparrow called at number two, put his
+head in at the door, and then returned to the waterspout.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady says we don&rsquo;t live there,&rdquo; he
+explained to Mrs. Sparrow.&nbsp; There was silence for a
+while.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not what I call a classy street,&rdquo; commented Mrs.
+Sparrow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it were not for that terrible tired feeling of
+mine,&rdquo; said Mr. Sparrow, &ldquo;blame if I wouldn&rsquo;t
+build a house of my own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; said Mrs. Sparrow, &ldquo;&mdash;I have
+heard it said that a little bit of work, now and then, does you
+good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All sorts of wild ideas about in the air
+nowadays,&rdquo; said Mr. Sparrow, &ldquo;it don&rsquo;t do to
+listen to everybody.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And it don&rsquo;t do to sit still and do nothing
+neither,&rdquo; snapped Mrs. Sparrow.&nbsp; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+want to have to forget I&rsquo;m a lady, but&mdash;well, any man
+who was a man would see things for himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did I every marry?&rdquo; retorted Mr. Sparrow.</p>
+<p>They flew away together, quarrelling.</p>
+<h2><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>DO
+WRITERS WRITE TOO MUCH?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">On</span> a newspaper placard, the other
+day, I saw announced a new novel by a celebrated author.&nbsp; I
+bought a copy of the paper, and turned eagerly to the last
+page.&nbsp; I was disappointed to find that I had missed the
+first six chapters.&nbsp; The story had commenced the previous
+Saturday; this was Friday.&nbsp; I say I was disappointed and so
+I was, at first.&nbsp; But my disappointment did not last
+long.&nbsp; The bright and intelligent sub-editor, according to
+the custom now in vogue, had provided me with a short synopsis of
+those first six chapters, so that without the trouble of reading
+them I knew what they were all about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first instalment,&rdquo; I learned,
+&ldquo;introduces the reader to a brilliant and distinguished
+company, assembled in the drawing-room of Lady Mary&rsquo;s
+maisonette in Park Street.&nbsp; Much smart talk is indulged
+in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I know that &ldquo;smart talk&rdquo; so well.&nbsp; Had I not
+been lucky enough to miss that first chapter I should have had to
+listen to it once again.&nbsp; Possibly, here and there, it might
+have been new to me, but it would have read, I know, so very like
+the old.&nbsp; A dear, sweet white-haired lady of my acquaintance
+is never surprised at anything that happens.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something very much of the same kind occurred,&rdquo;
+she will remember, &ldquo;one winter when we were staying in
+Brighton.&nbsp; Only on that occasion the man&rsquo;s name, I
+think, was Robinson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We do not live new stories&mdash;nor write them either.&nbsp;
+The man&rsquo;s name in the old story was Robinson, we alter it
+to Jones.&nbsp; It happened, in the old forgotten tale, at
+Brighton, in the winter time; we change it to Eastbourne, in the
+spring.&nbsp; It is new and original&mdash;to those who have not
+heard &ldquo;something very like it&rdquo; once before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Much smart talk is indulged in,&rdquo; so the
+sub-editor has explained.&nbsp; There is absolutely no need to
+ask for more than that.&nbsp; There is a Duchess who says
+improper things.&nbsp; Once she used to shock me.&nbsp; But I
+know her now.&nbsp; She is really a nice woman; she doesn&rsquo;t
+mean them.&nbsp; And when the heroine is in trouble, towards the
+middle of the book, she is just as amusing on the side of
+virtue.&nbsp; Then there is a younger lady whose speciality is
+proverbs.&nbsp; Apparently whenever she hears a proverb she
+writes it down and studies it with the idea of seeing into how
+many different forms it can be twisted.&nbsp; It looks clever; as
+a matter of fact, it is extremely easy.</p>
+<p><i>Be virtuous and you will be happy</i>.</p>
+<p>She jots down all the possible variations: <i>Be virtuous and
+you will be unhappy</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Too simple that one,&rdquo; she tells herself.&nbsp;
+<i>Be virtuous and your friends will be happy if you are
+not</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better, but not wicked enough.&nbsp; Let us think
+again.&nbsp; <i>Be happy and people will jump to the conclusion
+that you are virtuous</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good, I&rsquo;ll try that one at
+to-morrow&rsquo;s party.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She is a painstaking lady.&nbsp; One feels that, better
+advised, she might have been of use in the world.</p>
+<p>There is likewise a disgraceful old Peer who tells naughty
+stories, but who is good at heart; and one person so very rude
+that the wonder is who invited him.</p>
+<p>Occasionally a slangy girl is included, and a clergyman, who
+takes the heroine aside and talks sense to her, flavoured with
+epigram.&nbsp; All these people chatter a mixture of Lord
+Chesterfield and Oliver Wendell Holmes, of Heine, Voltaire,
+Madame de Stael, and the late lamented H. J. Byron.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;How they do it beats me,&rdquo; as I once overheard at a
+music hall a stout lady confess to her friend while witnessing
+the performance of a clever troup, styling themselves &ldquo;The
+Boneless Wonders of the Universe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The synopsis added that: &ldquo;Ursula Bart, a charming and
+unsophisticated young American girl possessed of an elusive
+expression makes her first acquaintance with London
+society.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here you have a week&rsquo;s unnecessary work on the part of
+the author boiled down to its essentials.&nbsp; She was
+young.&nbsp; One hardly expects an elderly heroine.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;young&rdquo; might have been dispensed with, especially
+seeing it is told us that she was a girl.&nbsp; But maybe this is
+carping.&nbsp; There are young girls and old girls.&nbsp; Perhaps
+it is as well to have it in black and white; she was young.&nbsp;
+She was an American young girl.&nbsp; There is but one American
+young girl in English fiction.&nbsp; We know by heart the
+unconventional things that she will do, the startlingly original
+things that she will say, the fresh illuminating thoughts that
+will come to her as, clad in a loose robe of some soft clinging
+stuff, she sits before the fire, in the solitude of her own
+room.</p>
+<p>To complete her she had an &ldquo;elusive
+expression.&rdquo;&nbsp; The days when we used to catalogue the
+heroine&rsquo;s &ldquo;points&rdquo; are past.&nbsp; Formerly it
+was possible.&nbsp; A man wrote perhaps some half-a-dozen novels
+during the whole course of his career.&nbsp; He could have a dark
+girl for the first, a light girl for the second, sketch a merry
+little wench for the third, and draw you something stately for
+the fourth.&nbsp; For the remaining two he could go abroad.&nbsp;
+Nowadays, when a man turns out a novel and six short stories once
+a year, description has to be dispensed with.&nbsp; It is not the
+writer&rsquo;s fault.&nbsp; There is not sufficient variety in
+the sex.&nbsp; We used to introduce her thus:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Imagine to yourself, dear reader, an exquisite and
+gracious creature of five feet three.&nbsp; Her golden hair of
+that peculiar shade&rdquo;&mdash;here would follow directions
+enabling the reader to work it out for himself.&nbsp; He was to
+pour some particular wine into some particular sort of glass, and
+wave it about before some particular sort of a light.&nbsp; Or he
+was to get up at five o&rsquo;clock on a March morning and go
+into a wood.&nbsp; In this way he could satisfy himself as to the
+particular shade of gold the heroine&rsquo;s hair might happen to
+be.&nbsp; If he were a careless or lazy reader he could save
+himself time and trouble by taking the author&rsquo;s word for
+it.&nbsp; Many of them did.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her eyes!&rdquo;&nbsp; They were invariably deep and
+liquid.&nbsp; They had to be pretty deep to hold all the odds and
+ends that were hidden in them; sunlight and shadow, mischief,
+unsuspected possibilities, assorted emotions, strange wild
+yearnings.&nbsp; Anything we didn&rsquo;t know where else to put
+we said was hidden in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her nose!&rdquo;&nbsp; You could have made it for
+yourself out of a pen&rsquo;orth of putty after reading our
+description of it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her forehead!&rdquo;&nbsp; It was always &ldquo;low and
+broad.&rdquo;&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know why it was always
+low.&nbsp; Maybe because the intellectual heroine was not then
+popular.&nbsp; For the matter of that I doubt if she be really
+popular now.&nbsp; The brainless doll, one fears, will continue
+for many years to come to be man&rsquo;s ideal woman&mdash;and
+woman&rsquo;s ideal of herself for precisely the same period, one
+may be sure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her chin!&rdquo;&nbsp; A less degree of variety was
+permissible in her chin.&nbsp; It had to be at an angle
+suggestive of piquancy, and it had to contain at least the
+suspicion of a dimple.</p>
+<p>To properly understand her complexion you were expected to
+provide yourself with a collection of assorted fruits and
+flowers.&nbsp; There are seasons in the year when it must have
+been difficult for the conscientious reader to have made sure of
+her complexion.&nbsp; Possibly it was for this purpose that wax
+flowers and fruit, carefully kept from the dust under glass
+cases, were common objects in former times upon the tables of the
+cultured.</p>
+<p>Nowadays we content ourselves&mdash;and our readers also, I am
+inclined to think&mdash;with dashing her off in a few bold
+strokes.&nbsp; We say that whenever she entered a room there came
+to one dreams of an old world garden, the sound of far-off
+bells.&nbsp; Or that her presence brought with it the scent of
+hollyhocks and thyme.&nbsp; As a matter of fact I don&rsquo;t
+think hollyhocks do smell.&nbsp; It is a small point; about such
+we do not trouble ourselves.&nbsp; In the case of the homely type
+of girl I don&rsquo;t see why we should not borrow Mr.
+Pickwick&rsquo;s expression, and define her by saying that in
+some subtle way she always contrived to suggest an odour of chops
+and tomato sauce.</p>
+<p>If we desire to be exact we mention, as this particular author
+seems to have done, that she had an &ldquo;elusive
+expression,&rdquo; or a penetrating fragrance.&nbsp; Or we say
+that she moved, the centre of an indefinable nuance.</p>
+<p>But it is not policy to bind oneself too closely to
+detail.&nbsp; A wise friend of mine, who knows his business,
+describes his hero invariably in the vaguest terms.&nbsp; He will
+not even tell you whether the man is tall or short, clean shaven
+or bearded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make the fellow nice,&rdquo; is his advice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Let every woman reader picture him to herself as her
+particular man.&nbsp; Then everything he says and does becomes of
+importance to her.&nbsp; She is careful not to miss a
+word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For the same reason he sees to it that his heroine has a bit
+of every girl in her.&nbsp; Generally speaking, she is a cross
+between Romola and Dora Copperfield.&nbsp; His novels command
+enormous sales.&nbsp; The women say he draws a man to the life,
+but does not seem to know much about women.&nbsp; The men like
+his women, but think his men stupid.</p>
+<p>Of another famous author no woman of my acquaintance is able
+to speak too highly.&nbsp; They tell me his knowledge of their
+sex is simply marvellous, his insight, his understanding of them
+almost uncanny.&nbsp; Thinking it might prove useful, I made an
+exhaustive study of his books.&nbsp; I noticed that his women
+were without exception brilliant charming creatures possessed of
+the wit of a Lady Wortlay Montagu, combined with the wisdom of a
+George Eliot.&nbsp; They were not all of them good women, but all
+of them were clever and all of them were fascinating.&nbsp; I
+came to the conclusion that his lady critics were correct: he did
+understand women.&nbsp; But to return to our synopsis.</p>
+<p>The second chapter, it appeared, transported us to Yorkshire
+where: &ldquo;Basil Longleat, a typical young Englishman, lately
+home from college, resides with his widowed mother and two
+sisters.&nbsp; They are a delightful family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What a world of trouble to both writer and to reader is here
+saved.&nbsp; &ldquo;A typical young Englishman!&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+author probably wrote five pages, elaborating.&nbsp; The five
+words of the sub-editor present him to me more vividly.&nbsp; I
+see him positively glistening from the effects of soap and
+water.&nbsp; I see his clear blue eye; his fair crisp locks, the
+natural curliness of which annoys him personally, though alluring
+to everybody else; his frank winning smile.&nbsp; He is
+&ldquo;lately home from college.&rdquo;&nbsp; That tells me that
+he is a first-class cricketer; a first-class oar; that as a
+half-back he is incomparable; that he swims like Captain Webb; is
+in the first rank of tennis players; that his half-volley at
+ping-pong has never been stopped.&nbsp; It doesn&rsquo;t tell me
+much about his brain power.&nbsp; The description of him as a
+&ldquo;typical young Englishman&rdquo; suggests more information
+on this particular point.&nbsp; One assumes that the American
+girl with the elusive expression is going to have sufficient for
+both.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are a delightful family.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+sub-editor does not say so, but I imagine the two sisters are
+likewise typical young Englishwomen.&nbsp; They ride and shoot
+and cook and make their own dresses, have common sense and love a
+joke.</p>
+<p>The third chapter is &ldquo;taken up with the humours of a
+local cricket match.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thank you, Mr. Sub-editor.&nbsp; I feel I owe you
+gratitude.</p>
+<p>In the fourth, Ursula Bart (I was beginning to get anxious
+about her) turns up again.&nbsp; She is staying at the useful
+Lady Mary&rsquo;s place in Yorkshire.&nbsp; She meets Basil by
+accident one morning while riding alone.&nbsp; That is the
+advantage of having an American girl for your heroine.&nbsp; Like
+the British army: it goes anywhere and does anything.</p>
+<p>In chapter five Basil and Ursula meet again; this time at a
+picnic.&nbsp; The sub-editor does not wish to repeat himself,
+otherwise he possibly would have summed up chapter five by saying
+it was &ldquo;taken up with the humours of the usual
+picnic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In chapter six something happens:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Basil, returning home in the twilight, comes across
+Ursula Bart, in a lonely point of the moor, talking earnestly to
+a rough-looking stranger.&nbsp; His approach over the soft turf
+being unnoticed, he cannot help overhearing Ursula&rsquo;s
+parting words to the forbidding-looking stranger: &lsquo;I must
+see you again!&nbsp; To-morrow night at half-past nine!&nbsp; In
+the gateway of the ruined abbey!&rsquo;&nbsp; Who is he?&nbsp;
+And why must Ursula see him again at such an hour, in such a
+spot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So here, at cost of reading twenty lines, I am landed, so to
+speak, at the beginning of the seventh chapter.&nbsp; Why
+don&rsquo;t I set to work to read it?&nbsp; The sub-editor has
+spoiled me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You read it,&rdquo; I want to say to him.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Tell me to-morrow morning what it is all about.&nbsp; Who
+was this bounder?&nbsp; Why should Ursula want to see him
+again?&nbsp; Why choose a draughty place?&nbsp; Why half-past
+nine o&rsquo;clock at night, which must have been an awkward time
+for both of them&mdash;likely to lead to talk?&nbsp; Why should I
+wade though this seventh chapter of three columns and a
+half?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s your work.&nbsp; What are you paid
+for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My fear is lest this sort of thing shall lead to a demand on
+the part of the public for condensed novels.&nbsp; What busy man
+is going to spend a week of evenings reading a book when a nice
+kind sub-editor is prepared in five minutes to tell him what it
+is all about!</p>
+<p>Then there will come a day&mdash;I feel it&mdash;when the
+business-like Editor will say to himself: &ldquo;What in thunder
+is the sense of my paying one man to write a story of sixty
+thousand words and another man to read it and tell it again in
+sixteen hundred!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We shall be expected to write our novels in chapters not
+exceeding twenty words.&nbsp; Our short stories will be reduced
+to the formula: &ldquo;Little boy.&nbsp; Pair of skates.&nbsp;
+Broken ice, Heaven&rsquo;s gates.&rdquo;&nbsp; Formerly an
+author, commissioned to supply a child&rsquo;s tragedy of this
+genre for a Christmas number, would have spun it out into five
+thousand words.&nbsp; Personally, I should have commenced the
+previous spring&mdash;given the reader the summer and autumn to
+get accustomed to the boy.&nbsp; He would have been a good boy;
+the sort of boy that makes a bee-line for the thinnest ice.&nbsp;
+He would have lived in a cottage.&nbsp; I could have spread that
+cottage over two pages; the things that grew in the garden, the
+view from the front door.&nbsp; You would have known that boy
+before I had done with him&mdash;felt you had known him all your
+life.&nbsp; His quaint sayings, his childish thoughts, his great
+longings would have been impressed upon you.&nbsp; The father
+might have had a dash of humour in him, the mother&rsquo;s early
+girlhood would have lent itself to pretty writing.&nbsp; For the
+ice we would have had a mysterious lake in the wood, said to be
+haunted.&nbsp; The boy would have loved o&rsquo; twilights to
+stand upon its margin.&nbsp; He would have heard strange voices
+calling to him.&nbsp; You would have felt the thing was
+coming.</p>
+<p>So much might have been done.&nbsp; When I think of that plot
+wasted in nine words it makes me positively angry.</p>
+<p>And what is to become of us writers if this is to be the new
+fashion in literature?&nbsp; We are paid by the length of our
+manuscript at rates from half-a-crown a thousand words, and
+upwards.&nbsp; In the case of fellows like Doyle and Kipling I am
+told it runs into pounds.&nbsp; How are we to live on novels the
+serial rights of which to most of us will work out at four and
+nine-pence.</p>
+<p>It can&rsquo;t be done.&nbsp; It is no good telling me you can
+see no reason why we should live.&nbsp; That is no answer.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;m talking plain business.</p>
+<p>And what about book-rights?&nbsp; Who is going to buy novels
+of three pages?&nbsp; They will have to be printed as leaflets
+and sold at a penny a dozen.&nbsp; Marie Corelli and Hall
+Caine&mdash;if all I hear about them is true&mdash;will possibly
+make their ten or twelve shillings a week.&nbsp; But what about
+the rest of us?&nbsp; This thing is worrying me.</p>
+<h2><a name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+105</span>SHOULD SOLDIERS BE POLITE?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">My</span> desire was once to pass a
+peaceful and pleasant winter in Brussels, attending to my work,
+improving my mind.&nbsp; Brussels is a bright and cheerful town,
+and I think I could have succeeded had it not been for the
+Belgian Army.&nbsp; The Belgian Army would follow me about and
+worry me.&nbsp; Judging of it from my own experience, I should
+say it was a good army.&nbsp; Napoleon laid it down as an axiom
+that your enemy never ought to be permitted to get away from
+you&mdash;never ought to be allowed to feel, even for a moment,
+that he had shaken you off.&nbsp; What tactics the Belgian Army
+might adopt under other conditions I am unable to say, but
+against me personally that was the plan of campaign it determined
+upon and carried out with a success that was astonishing, even to
+myself.</p>
+<p>I found it utterly impossible to escape from the Belgian
+Army.&nbsp; I made a point of choosing the quietest and most
+unlikely streets, I chose all hours&mdash;early in the morning,
+in the afternoon, late in the evening.&nbsp; There were moments
+of wild exaltation when I imagined I had given it the slip.&nbsp;
+I could not see it anywhere, I could not hear it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said I to myself, &ldquo;now for five
+minutes&rsquo; peace and quiet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had been doing it injustice: it had been working round
+me.&nbsp; Approaching the next corner, I would hear the tattoo of
+its drum.&nbsp; Before I had gone another quarter of a mile it
+would be in full pursuit of me.&nbsp; I would jump upon a tram,
+and travel for miles.&nbsp; Then, thinking I had shaken it off, I
+would alight and proceed upon my walk.&nbsp; Five minutes later
+another detachment would be upon my heels.&nbsp; I would slink
+home, the Belgian Army pursuing me with its exultant
+tattoo.&nbsp; Vanquished, shamed, my insular pride for ever
+vanished, I would creep up into my room and close the door.&nbsp;
+The victorious Belgian Army would then march back to
+barracks.</p>
+<p>If only it had followed me with a band: I like a band.&nbsp; I
+can loaf against a post, listening to a band with anyone.&nbsp; I
+should not have minded so much had it come after me with a
+band.&nbsp; But the Belgian Army, apparently, doesn&rsquo;t run
+to a band.&nbsp; It has nothing but this drum.&nbsp; It has not
+even a real drum&mdash;not what I call a drum.&nbsp; It is a
+little boy&rsquo;s drum, the sort of thing I used to play myself
+at one time, until people took it away from me, and threatened
+that if they heard it once again that day they would break it
+over my own head.&nbsp; It is cowardly going up and down, playing
+a drum of this sort, when there is nobody to stop you.&nbsp; The
+man would not dare to do it if his mother was about.&nbsp; He
+does not even play it.&nbsp; He walks along tapping it with a
+little stick.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s no tune, there&rsquo;s no sense
+in it.&nbsp; He does not even keep time.&nbsp; I used to think at
+first, hearing it in the distance, that it was the work of some
+young gamin who ought to be at school, or making himself useful
+taking the baby out in the perambulator: and I would draw back
+into dark doorways, determined, as he came by, to dart out and
+pull his ear for him.&nbsp; To my astonishment&mdash;for the
+first week&mdash;I learnt it was the Belgian Army, getting itself
+accustomed, one supposes, to the horrors of war.&nbsp; It had the
+effect of making me a peace-at-any-price man.</p>
+<p>They tell me these armies are necessary to preserve the
+tranquility of Europe.&nbsp; For myself, I should be willing to
+run the risk of an occasional row.&nbsp; Cannot someone tell them
+they are out of date, with their bits of feathers and their odds
+and ends of ironmongery&mdash;grown men that cannot be sent out
+for a walk unless accompanied by a couple of nursemen, blowing a
+tin whistle and tapping a drum out of a toy shop to keep them in
+order and prevent their running about: one might think they were
+chickens.&nbsp; A herd of soldiers with their pots and pans and
+parcels, and all their deadly things tied on to them, prancing
+about in time to a tune, makes me think always of the White
+Knight that Alice met in Wonderland.&nbsp; I take it that for
+practical purposes&mdash;to fight for your country, or to fight
+for somebody else&rsquo;s country, which is, generally speaking,
+more popular&mdash;the thing essential is that a certain
+proportion of the populace should be able to shoot straight with
+a gun.&nbsp; How standing in a line and turning out your toes is
+going to assist you, under modern conditions of warfare, is one
+of the many things my intellect is incapable of grasping.</p>
+<p>In medi&aelig;val days, when men fought hand to hand, there
+must have been advantage in combined and precise movement.&nbsp;
+When armies were mere iron machines, the simple endeavour of each
+being to push the other off the earth, then the striking
+simultaneously with a thousand arms was part of the game.&nbsp;
+Now, when we shoot from behind cover with smokeless powder, brain
+not brute force&mdash;individual sense not combined solidity is
+surely the result to be aimed at.&nbsp; Cannot somebody, as I
+have suggested, explain to the military man that the proper place
+for the drill sergeant nowadays is under a glass case in some
+museum of antiquities?</p>
+<p>I lived once near the Hyde Park barracks, and saw much of the
+drill sergeant&rsquo;s method.&nbsp; Generally speaking, he is a
+stout man with the walk of an egotistical pigeon.&nbsp; His voice
+is one of the most extraordinary things in nature: if you can
+distinguish it from the bark of a dog, you are clever.&nbsp; They
+tell me that the privates, after a little practice,
+can&mdash;which gives one a higher opinion of their intelligence
+than otherwise one might form.&nbsp; But myself I doubt even this
+statement.&nbsp; I was the owner of a fine retriever dog about
+the time of which I am speaking, and sometimes he and I would
+amuse ourselves by watching Mr. Sergeant exercising his
+squad.&nbsp; One morning he had been shouting out the usual
+&ldquo;Whough, whough, whough!&rdquo; for about ten minutes, and
+all had hitherto gone well.&nbsp; Suddenly, and evidently to his
+intense astonishment, the squad turned their backs upon him and
+commenced to walk towards the Serpentine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Halt!&rdquo; yelled the sergeant, the instant his
+amazed indignation permitted him to speak, which fortunately
+happened in time to save the detachment from a watery grave.</p>
+<p>The squad halted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who the thunder, and the blazes, and other things told
+you to do that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The squad looked bewildered, but said nothing, and were
+brought back to the place where they were before.&nbsp; A minute
+later precisely the same thing occurred again.&nbsp; I really
+thought the sergeant would burst.&nbsp; I was preparing to hasten
+to the barracks for medical aid.&nbsp; But the paroxysm
+passed.&nbsp; Calling upon the combined forces of heaven and hell
+to sustain him in his trouble, he requested his squad, as man to
+man, to inform him of the reason why to all appearance they were
+dispensing with his services and drilling themselves.</p>
+<p>At this moment &ldquo;Columbus&rdquo; barked again, and the
+explanation came to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please go away, sir,&rdquo; he requested me.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;How can I exercise my men with that dog of yours
+interfering every five minutes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was not only on that occasion.&nbsp; It happened at other
+times.&nbsp; The dog seemed to understand and take a pleasure in
+it.&nbsp; Sometimes meeting a soldier, walking with his
+sweetheart, Columbus, from behind my legs, would bark
+suddenly.&nbsp; Immediately the man would let go the girl and
+proceed, involuntarily, to perform military tricks.</p>
+<p>The War Office authorities accused me of having trained the
+dog.&nbsp; I had not trained him: that was his natural
+voice.&nbsp; I suggested to the War Office authorities that
+instead of quarrelling with my dog for talking his own language,
+they should train their sergeants to use English.</p>
+<p>They would not see it.&nbsp; Unpleasantness was in the air,
+and, living where I did at the time, I thought it best to part
+with Columbus.&nbsp; I could see what the War Office was driving
+at, and I did not desire that responsibility for the inefficiency
+of the British Army should be laid at my door.</p>
+<p>Some twenty years ago we, in London, were passing through a
+riotous period, and a call was made to law-abiding citizens to
+enrol themselves as special constables.&nbsp; I was young, and
+the hope of trouble appealed to me more than it does now.&nbsp;
+In company with some five or six hundred other more or less
+respectable citizens, I found myself one Sunday morning in the
+drill yard of the Albany Barracks.&nbsp; It was the opinion of
+the authorities that we could guard our homes and protect our
+wives and children better if first of all we learned to roll our
+&ldquo;eyes right&rdquo; or left at the given word of command,
+and to walk with our thumbs stuck out.&nbsp; Accordingly a drill
+sergeant was appointed to instruct us on these points.&nbsp; He
+came out of the canteen, wiping his mouth and flicking his leg,
+according to rule, with the regulation cane.&nbsp; But, as he
+approached us, his expression changed.&nbsp; We were stout,
+pompous-looking gentlemen, the majority of us, in frock coats and
+silk hats.&nbsp; The sergeant was a man with a sense of the
+fitness of things.&nbsp; The idea of shouting and swearing at us
+fell from him: and that gone there seemed to be no happy medium
+left to him.&nbsp; The stiffness departed from his back.&nbsp; He
+met us with a defferential attitude, and spoke to us in the
+language of social intercourse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good morning, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the sergeant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good morning,&rdquo; we replied: and there was a
+pause.</p>
+<p>The sergeant fidgetted upon his feet.&nbsp; We waited.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the sergeant, with a
+pleasant smile, &ldquo;what do you say to falling in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We agreed to fall in.&nbsp; He showed us how to do it.&nbsp;
+He cast a critical eye along the back of our rear line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little further forward, number three, if you
+don&rsquo;t mind, sir,&rdquo; he suggested.</p>
+<p>Number three, who was an important-looking gentleman, stepped
+forward.</p>
+<p>The sergeant cast his critical eye along the front of the
+first line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little further back, if you don&rsquo;t mind,
+sir,&rdquo; he suggested, addressing the third gentleman from the
+end.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t,&rdquo; explained the third gentleman,
+&ldquo;much as I can do to keep where I am.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sergeant cast his critical eye between the lines.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;a little
+full-chested, some of us.&nbsp; We will make the distance another
+foot, if you please, gentlemen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In pleasant manner, like to this, the drill proceeded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now then, gentlemen, shall we try a little walk?&nbsp;
+Quick march!&nbsp; Thank you, gentlemen.&nbsp; Sorry to trouble
+you, but it may be necessary to run&mdash;forward I mean, of
+course..&nbsp; So if you really do not mind, we will now do the
+double quick.&nbsp; Halt!&nbsp; And if next time you can keep a
+little more in line&mdash;it has a more imposing appearance, if
+you understand me.&nbsp; The breathing comes with
+practice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If the thing must be done at all, why should it not be done in
+this way?&nbsp; Why should not the sergeant address the new
+recruits politely:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now then, you young chaps, are you all ready?&nbsp;
+Don&rsquo;t hurry yourselves: no need to make hard work of what
+should be a pleasure to all of us.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s right,
+that&rsquo;s very good indeed&mdash;considering you are only
+novices.&nbsp; But there is still something to be desired in your
+attitude, Private Bully-boy.&nbsp; You will excuse my being
+personal, but are you knock-kneed naturally?&nbsp; Or could you,
+with an effort, do you think, contrive to give yourself less the
+appearance of a marionette whose strings have become loose?&nbsp;
+Thank you, that is better.&nbsp; These little things appear
+trivial, I know, but, after all, we may as well try and look our
+best&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you like your boots, Private
+Montmorency?&nbsp; Oh, I beg your pardon.&nbsp; I thought from
+the way you were bending down and looking at them that perhaps
+their appearance was dissatisfying to you.&nbsp; My mistake.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you suffering from indigestion, my poor
+fellow?&nbsp; Shall I get you a little brandy?&nbsp; It
+isn&rsquo;t indigestion.&nbsp; Then what&rsquo;s the matter with
+it?&nbsp; Why are you trying to hide it?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s nothing
+to be ashamed of.&nbsp; We&rsquo;ve all got one.&nbsp; Let it
+come forward man.&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s see it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having succeeded, with a few such kindly words, in getting his
+line into order, he would proceed to recommend healthy
+exercise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shoulder arms!&nbsp; Good, gentlemen, very good for a
+beginning.&nbsp; Yet still, if I may be critical, not
+perfect.&nbsp; There is more in this thing than you might
+imagine, gentlemen.&nbsp; May I point out to Private Henry
+Thompson that a musket carried across the shoulder at right
+angles is apt to inconvenience the gentleman behind.&nbsp; Even
+from the point of view of his own comfort, I feel sure that
+Private Thompson would do better to follow the usual custom in
+this matter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would also suggest to Private St. Leonard that we are
+not here to practice the art of balancing a heavy musket on the
+outstretched palm of the hand.&nbsp; Private St. Leonard&rsquo;s
+performance with the musket is decidedly clever.&nbsp; But it is
+not war.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Believe me, gentlemen, this thing has been carefully
+worked out, and no improvement is likely to result from
+individual effort.&nbsp; Let our idea be uniformity.&nbsp; It is
+monotonous, but it is safe.&nbsp; Now, then, gentlemen, once
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The drill yard would be converted into a source of innocent
+delight to thousands.&nbsp; &ldquo;Officer and gentleman&rdquo;
+would become a phrase of meaning.&nbsp; I present the idea, for
+what it may be worth, with my compliments, to Pall Mall.</p>
+<p>The fault of the military man is that he studies too much,
+reads too much history, is over reflective.&nbsp; If, instead, he
+would look about him more he would notice that things are
+changing.&nbsp; Someone has told the British military man that
+Waterloo was won upon the playing fields of Eton.&nbsp; So he
+goes to Eton and plays.&nbsp; One of these days he will be called
+upon to fight another Waterloo: and afterwards&mdash;when it is
+too late&mdash;they will explain to him that it was won not upon
+the play field but in the class room.</p>
+<p>From the mound on the old Waterloo plain one can form a notion
+of what battles, under former conditions, must have been.&nbsp;
+The other battlefields of Europe are rapidly disappearing: useful
+Dutch cabbages, as Carlyle would have pointed out with
+justifiable satisfaction, hiding the theatre of man&rsquo;s
+childish folly.&nbsp; You find, generally speaking, cobblers
+happily employed in cobbling shoes, women gossipping cheerfully
+over the washtub on the spot where a hundred years ago, according
+to the guide-book, a thousand men dressed in blue and a thousand
+men dressed in red rushed together like quarrelsome fox-terriers,
+and worried each other to death.</p>
+<p>But the field of Waterloo is little changed.&nbsp; The guide,
+whose grandfather was present at the battle&mdash;quite an
+extraordinary number of grandfathers must have fought at
+Waterloo: there must have been whole regiments composed of
+grandfathers&mdash;can point out to you the ground across which
+every charge was delivered, can show you every ridge, still
+existing, behind which the infantry crouched.&nbsp; The whole
+business was began and finished within a space little larger than
+a square mile.&nbsp; One can understand the advantage then to be
+derived from the perfect moving of the military machine; the uses
+of the echelon, the purposes of the linked battalion, the
+manipulation of centre, left wing and right wing.&nbsp; Then it
+may have been worth while&mdash;if war be ever worth the
+while&mdash;which grown men of sense are beginning to
+doubt&mdash;to waste two years of a soldier&rsquo;s training,
+teaching him the goose-step.&nbsp; In the twentieth century,
+teaching soldiers the evolutions of the Thirty Years&rsquo; War
+is about as sensible as it would be loading our iron-clads with
+canvas.</p>
+<p>I followed once a company of Volunteers across Blackfriars
+Bridge on their way from Southwark to the Temple.&nbsp; At the
+bottom of Ludgate Hill the commanding officer, a young but
+conscientious gentleman, ordered &ldquo;Left wheel!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+At once the vanguard turned down a narrow alley&mdash;I forget
+its name&mdash;which would have led the troop into the purlieus
+of Whitefriars, where, in all probability, they would have been
+lost for ever.&nbsp; The whole company had to be halted,
+right-about-faced, and retired a hundred yards.&nbsp; Then the
+order &ldquo;Quick march!&rdquo; was given.&nbsp; The vanguard
+shot across Ludgate Circus, and were making for the Meat
+Market.</p>
+<p>At this point that young commanding officer gave up being a
+military man and talked sense.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not that way,&rdquo; he shouted: &ldquo;up Fleet Street
+and through Middle Temple Lane.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then without further trouble the army of the future went upon
+its way.</p>
+<h2><a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+122</span>OUGHT STORIES TO BE TRUE?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was once upon a time a
+charming young lady, possessed of much taste, who was asked by
+her anxious parent, the years passing and family expenditure not
+decreasing, which of the numerous and eligible young men then
+paying court to her she liked the best.&nbsp; She replied, that
+was her difficulty; she could not make up her mind which she
+liked the best.&nbsp; They were all so nice.&nbsp; She could not
+possibly select one to the exclusion of all the others.&nbsp;
+What she would have liked would have been to marry the lot; but
+that, she presumed, was impracticable.</p>
+<p>I feel I resemble that young lady, not so much in charm and
+beauty as in indecision of mind, when the question is that of my
+favourite author or my favourite book.&nbsp; It is as if one were
+asked one&rsquo;s favourite food.&nbsp; There are times when one
+fancies an egg with one&rsquo;s tea.&nbsp; On other occasions one
+dreams of a kipper.&nbsp; To-day one clamours for lobsters.&nbsp;
+To-morrow one feels one never wishes to see a lobster
+again.&nbsp; One determines to settle down, for a time, to a diet
+of bread and milk and rice pudding.&nbsp; Asked suddenly to say
+whether I preferred ices to soup, or beef-steak to caviare, I
+should be completely nonplussed.</p>
+<p>There may be readers who care for only one literary
+diet.&nbsp; I am a person of gross appetites, requiring many
+authors to satisfy me.&nbsp; There are moods when the savage
+strength of the Bronte sisters is companionable to me.&nbsp; One
+rejoices in the unrelieved gloom of &ldquo;Wuthering
+Heights,&rdquo; as in the lowering skies of a stormy
+autumn.&nbsp; Perhaps part of the marvel of the book comes from
+the knowledge that the authoress was a slight, delicate young
+girl.&nbsp; One wonders what her future work would have been, had
+she lived to gain a wider experience of life; or was it well for
+her fame that nature took the pen so soon from her hand?&nbsp;
+Her suppressed vehemence may have been better suited to those
+tangled Yorkshire byways than to the more open, cultivated fields
+of life.</p>
+<p>There is not much similarity between the two books, yet when
+recalling Emily Bronte my thoughts always run on to Olive
+Schreiner.&nbsp; Here, again, was a young girl with the voice of
+a strong man.&nbsp; Olive Schreiner, more fortunate, has lived;
+but I doubt if she will ever write a book that will remind us of
+her first.&nbsp; &ldquo;The Story of an African Farm&rdquo; is
+not a work to be repeated.&nbsp; We have advanced in literature
+of late.&nbsp; I can well remember the storm of indignation with
+which the &ldquo;African Farm&rdquo; was received by Mrs. Grundy
+and her then numerous, but now happily diminishing, school.&nbsp;
+It was a book that was to be kept from the hands of every young
+man and woman.&nbsp; But the hands of the young men and women
+stretched out and grasped it, to their help.&nbsp; It is a
+curious idea, this of Mrs. Grundy&rsquo;s, that the young man and
+woman must never think&mdash;that all literature that does
+anything more than echo the conventions must be hidden away.</p>
+<p>Then there are times when I love to gallop through history on
+Sir Walter&rsquo;s broomstick.&nbsp; At other hours it is
+pleasant to sit in converse with wise George Eliot.&nbsp; From
+her garden terrace I look down on Loamshire and its commonplace
+people; while in her quiet, deep voice she tells me of the hidden
+hearts that beat and throb beneath these velveteen jackets and
+lace falls.</p>
+<p>Who can help loving Thackeray, wittiest, gentlest of men, in
+spite of the faint suspicion of snobbishness that clings to
+him?&nbsp; There is something pathetic in the good man&rsquo;s
+horror of this snobbishness, to which he himself was a
+victim.&nbsp; May it not have been an affectation, born
+unconsciously of self-consciousness?&nbsp; His heroes and
+heroines must needs be all fine folk, fit company for lady and
+gentlemen readers.&nbsp; To him the livery was too often the
+man.&nbsp; Under his stuffed calves even <i>Jeames de la
+Pluche</i> himself stood upon the legs of a man, but Thackeray
+could never see deeper than the silk stockings.&nbsp; Thackeray
+lived and died in Clubland.&nbsp; One feels that the world was
+bounded for him by Temple Bar on the east and Park Lane on the
+west; but what there was good in Clubland he showed us, and for
+the sake of the great gentlemen and sweet ladies that his kindly
+eyes found in that narrow region, not too overpeopled with great
+gentlemen and sweet women, let us honour him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tom Jones,&rdquo; &ldquo;Peregrine Pickle,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Tristram Shandy&rdquo; are books a man is the better for
+reading, if he read them wisely.&nbsp; They teach him that
+literature, to be a living force, must deal with all sides of
+life, and that little help comes to us from that silly pretence
+of ours that we are perfect in all things, leading perfect lives,
+that only the villain of the story ever deviates from the path of
+rectitude.</p>
+<p>This is a point that needs to be considered by both the makers
+and the buyers of stories.&nbsp; If literature is to be regarded
+solely as the amusement of an idle hour, then the less
+relationship it has to life the better.&nbsp; Looking into a
+truthful mirror of nature we are compelled to think; and when
+thought comes in at the window self-satisfaction goes out by the
+door.&nbsp; Should a novel or play call us to ponder upon the
+problems of existence, or lure us from the dusty high road of the
+world, for a while, into the pleasant meadows of dreamland?&nbsp;
+If only the latter, then let our heroes and our heroines be not
+what men and women are, but what they should be.&nbsp; Let
+Angelina be always spotless and Edwin always true.&nbsp; Let
+virtue ever triumph over villainy in the last chapter; and let us
+assume that the marriage service answers all the questions of the
+Sphinx.</p>
+<p>Very pleasant are these fairy tales where the prince is always
+brave and handsome; where the princess is always the best and
+most beautiful princess that ever lived; where one knows the
+wicked people at a glance by their ugliness and ill-temper,
+mistakes being thus rendered impossible; where the good fairies
+are, by nature, more powerful than the bad; where gloomy paths
+lead ever to fair palaces; where the dragon is ever vanquished;
+and where well-behaved husbands and wives can rely upon living
+happily ever afterwards.&nbsp; &ldquo;The world is too much with
+us, late and soon.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is wise to slip away from it
+at times to fairyland.&nbsp; But, alas, we cannot live in
+fairyland, and knowledge of its geography is of little help to us
+on our return to the rugged country of reality.</p>
+<p>Are not both branches of literature needful?&nbsp; By all
+means let us dream, on midsummer nights, of fond lovers led
+through devious paths to happiness by Puck; of virtuous
+dukes&mdash;one finds such in fairyland; of fate subdued by faith
+and gentleness.&nbsp; But may we not also, in our more serious
+humours, find satisfaction in thinking with Hamlet or
+Coriolanus?&nbsp; May not both Dickens and Zola have their booths
+in Vanity Fair?&nbsp; If literature is to be a help to us, as
+well as a pastime, it must deal with the ugly as well as with the
+beautiful; it must show us ourselves, not as we wish to appear,
+but as we know ourselves to be.&nbsp; Man has been described as a
+animal with aspirations reaching up to Heaven and instincts
+rooted&mdash;elsewhere.&nbsp; Is literature to flatter him, or
+reveal him to himself?</p>
+<p>Of living writers it is not safe, I suppose, to speak except,
+perhaps, of those who have been with us so long that we have come
+to forget they are not of the past.&nbsp; Has justice ever been
+done to Ouida&rsquo;s undoubted genius by our shallow school of
+criticism, always very clever in discovering faults as obvious as
+pimples on a fine face?&nbsp; Her guardsmen &ldquo;toy&rdquo;
+with their food.&nbsp; Her horses win the Derby three years
+running.&nbsp; Her wicked women throw guinea peaches from the
+windows of the Star and Garter into the Thames at Richmond.&nbsp;
+The distance being about three hundred and fifty yards, it is a
+good throw.&nbsp; Well, well, books are not made worth reading by
+the absence of absurdities.&nbsp; Ouida possesses strength,
+tenderness, truth, passion; and these be qualities in a writer
+capable of carrying many more faults than Ouida is burdened
+with.&nbsp; But that is the method of our little criticism.&nbsp;
+It views an artist as Gulliver saw the Brobdingnag ladies.&nbsp;
+It is too small to see them in their entirety: a mole or a wart
+absorbs all its vision.</p>
+<p>Why was not George Gissing more widely read?&nbsp; If
+faithfulness to life were the key to literary success,
+Gissing&rsquo;s sales would have been counted by the million
+instead of by the hundred.</p>
+<p>Have Mark Twain&rsquo;s literary qualities, apart altogether
+from his humour, been recognised in literary circles as they
+ought to have been? &ldquo;Huck Finn&rdquo; would be a great work
+were there not a laugh in it from cover to cover.&nbsp; Among the
+Indians and some other savage tribes the fact that a member of
+the community has lost one of his senses makes greatly to his
+advantage; he is then regarded as a superior person.&nbsp; So
+among a school of Anglo-Saxon readers, it is necessary to a man,
+if he would gain literary credit, that he should lack the sense
+of humour.&nbsp; One or two curious modern examples occur to me
+of literary success secured chiefly by this failing.</p>
+<p>All these authors are my favourites; but such catholic taste
+is held nowadays to be no taste.&nbsp; One is told that if one
+loves Shakespeare, one must of necessity hate Ibsen; that one
+cannot appreciate Wagner and tolerate Beethoven; that if we admit
+any merit in Dore, we are incapable of understanding
+Whistler.&nbsp; How can I say which is my favourite novel?&nbsp;
+I can only ask myself which lives clearest in my memory, which is
+the book I run to more often than to another in that pleasant
+half hour before the dinner-bell, when, with all apologies to
+good Mr. Smiles, it is useless to think of work.</p>
+<p>I find, on examination, that my &ldquo;David
+Copperfield&rdquo; is more dilapidated than any other novel upon
+my shelves.&nbsp; As I turn its dog-eared pages, reading the
+familiar headlines &ldquo;Mr. Micawber in difficulties,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Mr. Micawber in prison,&rdquo; &ldquo;I fall in love with
+Dora,&rdquo; &ldquo;Mr. Barkis goes out with the tide,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;My child wife,&rdquo; &ldquo;Traddles in a nest of
+roses&rdquo;&mdash;pages of my own life recur to me; so many of
+my sorrows, so many of my joys are woven in my mind with this
+chapter or the other.&nbsp; That day&mdash;how well I remember it
+when I read of &ldquo;David&rsquo;s&rdquo; wooing, but
+Dora&rsquo;s death I was careful to skip.&nbsp; Poor, pretty
+little Mrs. Copperfield at the gate, holding up her baby in her
+arms, is always associated in my memory with a child&rsquo;s cry,
+long listened for.&nbsp; I found the book, face downwards on a
+chair, weeks afterwards, not moved from where I had hastily laid
+it.</p>
+<p>Old friends, all of you, how many times have I not slipped
+away from my worries into your pleasant company!&nbsp; Peggotty,
+you dear soul, the sight of your kind eyes is so good to
+me.&nbsp; Our mutual friend, Mr. Charles Dickens, is prone, we
+know, just ever so slightly to gush.&nbsp; Good fellow that he
+is, he can see no flaw in those he loves, but you, dear lady, if
+you will permit me to call you by a name much abused, he has
+drawn in true colours.&nbsp; I know you well, with your big
+heart, your quick temper, your homely, human ways of
+thought.&nbsp; You yourself will never guess your worth&mdash;how
+much the world is better for such as you!&nbsp; You think of
+yourself as of a commonplace person, useful only for the making
+of pastry, the darning of stockings, and if a man&mdash;not a
+young man, with only dim half-opened eyes, but a man whom life
+had made keen to see the beauty that lies hidden beneath plain
+faces&mdash;were to kneel and kiss your red, coarse hand, you
+would be much astonished.&nbsp; But he would be a wise man,
+Peggotty, knowing what things a man should take carelessly, and
+for what things he should thank God, who has fashioned fairness
+in many forms.</p>
+<p>Mr. Wilkins Micawber, and you, most excellent of faithful
+wives, Mrs. Emma Micawber, to you I also raise my hat.&nbsp; How
+often has the example of your philosophy saved me, when I,
+likewise, have suffered under the temporary pressure of pecuniary
+liabilities; when the sun of my prosperity, too, has sunk beneath
+the dark horizon of the world&mdash;in short, when I, also, have
+found myself in a tight corner.&nbsp; I have asked myself what
+would the Micawbers have done in my place.&nbsp; And I have
+answered myself.&nbsp; They would have sat down to a dish of
+lamb&rsquo;s fry, cooked and breaded by the deft hands of Emma,
+followed by a brew of punch, concocted by the beaming Wilkins,
+and have forgotten all their troubles, for the time being.&nbsp;
+Whereupon, seeing first that sufficient small change was in my
+pocket, I have entered the nearest restaurant, and have treated
+myself to a repast of such sumptuousness as the aforesaid small
+change would command, emerging from that restaurant stronger and
+more fit for battle.&nbsp; And lo! the sun of my prosperity has
+peeped at me from over the clouds with a sly wink, as if to say
+&ldquo;Cheer up; I am only round the corner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cheery, elastic Mr. and Mrs. Micawber, how would half the
+world face their fate but by the help of a kindly, shallow nature
+such as yours?&nbsp; I love to think that your sorrows can be
+drowned in nothing more harmful than a bowl of punch.&nbsp;
+Here&rsquo;s to you, Emma, and to you, Wilkins, and to the
+twins!</p>
+<p>May you and such childlike folk trip lightly over the stones
+upon your path!&nbsp; May something ever turn up for you, my
+dears!&nbsp; May the rain of life ever fall as April showers upon
+your simple bald head, Micawber!</p>
+<p>And you, sweet Dora, let me confess I love you, though
+sensible friends deem you foolish.&nbsp; Ah, silly Dora,
+fashioned by wise Mother Nature who knows that weakness and
+helplessness are as a talisman calling forth strength and
+tenderness in man, trouble yourself not unduly about the oysters
+and the underdone mutton, little woman.&nbsp; Good plain cooks at
+twenty pounds a year will see to these things for us.&nbsp; Your
+work is to teach us gentleness and kindness.&nbsp; Lay your
+foolish curls just here, child.&nbsp; It is from such as you we
+learn wisdom.&nbsp; Foolish wise folk sneer at you.&nbsp; Foolish
+wise folk would pull up the laughing lilies, the needless roses
+from the garden, would plant in their places only useful,
+wholesome cabbage.&nbsp; But the gardener, knowing better, plants
+the silly, short-lived flowers, foolish wise folk asking for what
+purpose.</p>
+<p>Gallant Traddles, of the strong heart and the unruly hair;
+Sophy, dearest of girls; Betsy Trotwood, with your gentlemanly
+manners and your woman&rsquo;s heart, you have come to me in
+shabby rooms, making the dismal place seem bright.&nbsp; In dark
+hours your kindly faces have looked out at me from the shadows,
+your kindly voices have cheered me.</p>
+<p>Little Em&rsquo;ly and Agnes, it may be my bad taste, but I
+cannot share my friend Dickens&rsquo; enthusiasm for them.&nbsp;
+Dickens&rsquo; good women are all too good for human
+nature&rsquo;s daily food.&nbsp; Esther Summerson, Florence
+Dombey, Little Nell&mdash;you have no faults to love you by.</p>
+<p>Scott&rsquo;s women were likewise mere illuminated
+texts.&nbsp; Scott only drew one live heroine&mdash;Catherine
+Seton.&nbsp; His other women were merely the prizes the hero had
+to win in the end, like the sucking pig or the leg of mutton for
+which the yokel climbs the greasy pole.&nbsp; That Dickens could
+draw a woman to some likeness he proved by Bella Wilfer, and
+Estella in &ldquo;Great Expectations.&rdquo;&nbsp; But real women
+have never been popular in fiction.&nbsp; Men readers prefer the
+false, and women readers object to the truth.</p>
+<p>From an artistic point of view, &ldquo;David
+Copperfield&rdquo; is undoubtedly Dickens&rsquo; best work.&nbsp;
+Its humour is less boisterous; its pathos less highly
+coloured.</p>
+<p>One of Leech&rsquo;s pictures represents a cab-man calmly
+sleeping in the gutter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, poor dear, he&rsquo;s ill,&rdquo; says a
+tender-hearted lady in the crowd.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ill!&rdquo;
+retorts a male bystander indignantly, &ldquo;Ill!
+&rsquo;E&rsquo;s &rsquo;ad too much of what I ain&rsquo;t
+&rsquo;ad enough of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dickens suffered from too little of what some of us have too
+much of&mdash;criticism.&nbsp; His work met with too little
+resistance to call forth his powers.&nbsp; Too often his pathos
+sinks to bathos, and this not from want of skill, but from want
+of care.&nbsp; It is difficult to believe that the popular writer
+who allowed his sentimentality&mdash;or rather the public&rsquo;s
+sentimentality&mdash;to run away with him in such scenes as the
+death of Paul Dombey and Little Nell was the artist who painted
+the death of Sidney Carton and of Barkis, the willing.&nbsp; The
+death of Barkis, next to the passing of Colonel Newcome, is, to
+my thinking, one of the most perfect pieces of pathos in English
+literature.&nbsp; No very deep emotion is concerned.&nbsp; He is
+a commonplace old man, clinging foolishly to a commonplace
+box.&nbsp; His simple wife and the old boatmen stand by, waiting
+calmly for the end.&nbsp; There is no straining after
+effect.&nbsp; One feels death enter, dignifying all things; and
+touched by that hand, foolish old Barkis grows great.</p>
+<p>In Uriah Heap and Mrs. Gummidge, Dickens draws types rather
+than characters.&nbsp; Pecksniff, Podsnap, Dolly Varden, Mr.
+Bumble, Mrs. Gamp, Mark Tapley, Turveydrop, Mrs.
+Jellyby&mdash;these are not characters; they are human
+characteristics personified.</p>
+<p>We have to go back to Shakespeare to find a writer who,
+through fiction, has so enriched the thought of the people.&nbsp;
+Admit all Dickens&rsquo; faults twice over, we still have one of
+the greatest writers of modern times.&nbsp; Such people as these
+creations of Dickens never lived, says your little critic.&nbsp;
+Nor was Prometheus, type of the spirit of man, nor was Niobe,
+mother of all mothers, a truthful picture of the citizen one was
+likely to meet often during a morning&rsquo;s stroll through
+Athens.&nbsp; Nor grew there ever a wood like to the Forest of
+Arden, though every Rosalind and Orlando knows the path to glades
+having much resemblance thereto.</p>
+<p>Steerforth, upon whom Dickens evidently prided himself, I must
+confess, never laid hold of me.&nbsp; He is a melodramatic young
+man.&nbsp; The worst I could have wished him would have been that
+he should marry Rose Dartle and live with his mother.&nbsp; It
+would have served him right for being so attractive.&nbsp; Old
+Peggotty and Ham are, of course, impossible.&nbsp; One must
+accept them also as types.&nbsp; These Brothers Cheeryble, these
+Kits, Joe Gargeries, Boffins, Garlands, John Peerybingles, we
+will accept as types of the goodness that is in men&mdash;though
+in real life the amount of virtue that Dickens often wastes upon
+a single individual would by more economically minded nature, be
+made to serve for fifty.</p>
+<p>To sum up, &ldquo;David Copperfield&rdquo; is a plain tale,
+simply told; and such are all books that live.&nbsp;
+Eccentricities of style, artistic trickery, may please the critic
+of a day, but literature is a story that interests us, boys and
+girls, men and women.&nbsp; It is a sad book; and that, again,
+gives it an added charm in these sad later days.&nbsp; Humanity
+is nearing its old age, and we have come to love sadness, as the
+friend who has been longest with us.&nbsp; In the young days of
+our vigour we were merry.&nbsp; With Ulysses&rsquo; boatmen, we
+took alike the sunshine and the thunder with frolic
+welcome.&nbsp; The red blood flowed in our veins, and we laughed,
+and our tales were of strength and hope.&nbsp; Now we sit like
+old men, watching faces in the fire; and the stories that we love
+are sad stories&mdash;like the stories we ourselves have
+lived.</p>
+<h2><a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+141</span>CREATURES THAT ONE DAY SHALL BE MEN.</h2>
+<p>I <span class="smcap">ought</span> to like Russia better than
+I do, if only for the sake of the many good friends I am proud to
+possess amongst the Russians.&nbsp; A large square photograph I
+keep always on my mantel-piece; it helps me to maintain my head
+at that degree of distention necessary for the performance of all
+literary work.&nbsp; It presents in the centre a neatly-written
+address in excellent English that I frankly confess I am never
+tired of reading, around which are ranged some hundreds of names
+I am quite unable to read, but which, in spite of their strange
+lettering, I know to be the names of good Russian men and women
+to whom, a year or two ago, occurred the kindly idea of sending
+me as a Christmas card this message of encouragement.&nbsp; The
+individual Russian is one of the most charming creatures
+living.&nbsp; If he like you he does not hesitate to let you know
+it; not only by every action possible, but, by what perhaps is
+just as useful in this grey old world, by generous, impulsive
+speech.</p>
+<p>We Anglo-Saxons are apt to pride ourselves upon being
+undemonstrative.&nbsp; Max Adeler tells the tale of a boy who was
+sent out by his father to fetch wood.&nbsp; The boy took the
+opportunity of disappearing and did not show his face again
+beneath the paternal roof for over twenty years.&nbsp; Then one
+evening, a smiling, well-dressed stranger entered to the old
+couple, and announced himself as their long-lost child, returned
+at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you haven&rsquo;t hurried yourself,&rdquo;
+grumbled the old man, &ldquo;and blarm me if now you
+haven&rsquo;t forgotten the wood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was lunching with an Englishman in a London restaurant one
+day.&nbsp; A man entered and took his seat at a table near
+by.&nbsp; Glancing round, and meeting my friend&rsquo;s eyes, he
+smiled and nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me a minute,&rdquo; said my friend, &ldquo;I
+must just speak to my brother&mdash;haven&rsquo;t seen him for
+over five years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He finished his soup and leisurely wiped his moustache before
+strolling across and shaking hands.&nbsp; They talked for a
+while.&nbsp; Then my friend returned to me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never thought to see him again,&rdquo; observed my
+friend, &ldquo;he was one of the garrison of that place in
+Africa&mdash;what&rsquo;s the name of it?&mdash;that the Mahdi
+attacked.&nbsp; Only three of them escaped.&nbsp; Always was a
+lucky beggar, Jim.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But wouldn&rsquo;t you like to talk to him some
+more?&rdquo; I suggested; &ldquo;I can see you any time about
+this little business of ours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; he answered,
+&ldquo;we have just fixed it up&mdash;shall be seeing him again
+to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I thought of this scene one evening while dining with some
+Russian friends in a St. Petersburg Hotel.&nbsp; One of the party
+had not seen his second cousin, a mining engineer, for nearly
+eighteen months.&nbsp; They sat opposite to one another, and a
+dozen times at least during the course of the dinner one of them
+would jump up from his chair, and run round to embrace the
+other.&nbsp; They would throw their arms about one another,
+kissing one another on both cheeks, and then sit down again, with
+moist eyes.&nbsp; Their behaviour among their fellow countrymen
+excited no astonishment whatever.</p>
+<p>But the Russians&rsquo;s anger is as quick and vehement as his
+love.&nbsp; On another occasion I was supping with friends in one
+of the chief restaurants on the Nevsky.&nbsp; Two gentlemen at an
+adjoining table, who up till the previous moment had been engaged
+in amicable conversation, suddenly sprang to their feet, and
+&ldquo;went for&rdquo; one another.&nbsp; One man secured the
+water-bottle, which he promptly broke over the other&rsquo;s
+head.&nbsp; His opponent chose for his weapon a heavy mahogany
+chair, and leaping back for the purpose of securing a good swing,
+lurched against my hostess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do please be careful,&rdquo; said the lady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A thousand pardons, madame,&rdquo; returned the
+stranger, from whom blood and water were streaming in equal
+copiousness; and taking the utmost care to avoid interfering with
+our comfort, he succeeded adroitly in flooring his antagonist by
+a well-directed blow.</p>
+<p>A policeman appeared upon the scene.&nbsp; He did not attempt
+to interfere, but running out into the street communicated the
+glad tidings to another policeman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is going to cost them a pretty penny,&rdquo;
+observed my host, who was calmly continuing his supper;
+&ldquo;why couldn&rsquo;t they wait?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It did cost them a pretty penny.&nbsp; Some half a dozen
+policemen were round about before as many minutes had elapsed,
+and each one claimed his bribe.&nbsp; Then they wished both
+combatants good-night, and trooped out evidently in great good
+humour and the two gentlemen, with wet napkins round their heads,
+sat down again, and laughter and amicable conversation flowed
+freely as before.</p>
+<p>They strike the stranger as a childlike people, but you are
+possessed with a haunting sense of ugly traits beneath.&nbsp; The
+workers&mdash;slaves it would be almost more correct to call
+them&mdash;allow themselves to be exploited with the
+uncomplaining patience of intelligent animals.&nbsp; Yet every
+educated Russian you talk to on the subject knows that revolution
+is coming.</p>
+<p>But he talks to you about it with the door shut, for no man in
+Russia can be sure that his own servants are not police
+spies.&nbsp; I was discussing politics with a Russian official
+one evening in his study when his old housekeeper entered the
+room&mdash;a soft-eyed grey-haired woman who had been in his
+service over eight years, and whose position in the household was
+almost that of a friend.&nbsp; He stopped abruptly and changed
+the conversation.&nbsp; So soon as the door was closed behind her
+again, he explained himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is better to chat upon such matters when one is
+quite alone,&rdquo; he laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But surely you can trust her,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;She
+appears to be devoted to you all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is safer to trust no one,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp;
+And then he continued from the point where we had been
+interrupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is gathering,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;there are times
+when I almost smell blood in the air.&nbsp; I am an old man and
+may escape it, but my children will have to suffer&mdash;suffer
+as children must for the sins of their fathers.&nbsp; We have
+made brute beasts of the people, and as brute beasts they will
+come upon us, cruel, and undiscriminating; right and wrong
+indifferently going down before them.&nbsp; But it has to
+be.&nbsp; It is needed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is a mistake to speak of the Russian classes opposing to
+all progress a dead wall of selfishness.&nbsp; The history of
+Russia will be the history of the French Revolution over again,
+but with this difference: that the educated classes, the
+thinkers, who are pushing forward the dumb masses are doing so
+with their eyes open.&nbsp; There will be no Maribeau, no Danton
+to be appalled at a people&rsquo;s ingratitude.&nbsp; The men who
+are to-day working for revolution in Russia number among their
+ranks statesmen, soldiers, delicately-nurtured women, rich
+landowners, prosperous tradesmen, students familiar with the
+lessons of history.&nbsp; They have no misconceptions concerning
+the blind Monster into which they are breathing life.&nbsp; He
+will crush them, they know it; but with them he will crush the
+injustice and stupidity they have grown to hate more than they
+love themselves.</p>
+<p>The Russian peasant, when he rises, will prove more terrible,
+more pitiless than were the men of 1790.&nbsp; He is less
+intelligent, more brutal.&nbsp; They sing a wild, sad song, these
+Russian cattle, the while they work.&nbsp; They sing it in chorus
+on the quays while hauling the cargo, they sing it in the
+factory, they chant on the weary, endless steppes, reaping the
+corn they may not eat.&nbsp; It is of the good time their masters
+are having, of the feastings and the merrymakings, of the
+laughter of the children, of the kisses of the lovers.</p>
+<p>But the last line of every verse is the same.&nbsp; When you
+ask a Russian to translate it for you he shrugs his
+shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it means,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;that their time
+will also come&mdash;some day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is a pathetic, haunting refrain.&nbsp; They sing it in the
+drawing-rooms of Moscow and St. Petersburg, and somehow the light
+talk and laughter die away, and a hush, like a chill breath,
+enters by the closed door and passes through.&nbsp; It is a
+curious song, like the wailing of a tired wind, and one day it
+will sweep over the land heralding terror.</p>
+<p>A Scotsman I met in Russia told me that when he first came out
+to act as manager of a large factory in St. Petersburg, belonging
+to his Scottish employers, he unwittingly made a mistake the
+first week when paying his workpeople.&nbsp; By a miscalculation
+of the Russian money he paid the men, each one, nearly a rouble
+short.&nbsp; He discovered his error before the following
+Saturday, and then put the matter right.&nbsp; The men accepted
+his explanation with perfect composure and without any comment
+whatever.&nbsp; The thing astonished him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you must have known I was paying you short,&rdquo;
+he said to one of them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you tell me
+of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; answered the man, &ldquo;we thought you were
+putting it in your own pocket and then if we had complained it
+would have meant dismissal for us.&nbsp; No one would have taken
+our word against yours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Corruption appears to be so general throughout the whole of
+Russia that all classes have come to accept it as part of the
+established order of things.&nbsp; A friend gave me a little dog
+to bring away with me.&nbsp; It was a valuable animal, and I
+wished to keep it with me.&nbsp; It is strictly forbidden to take
+dogs into railway carriages.&nbsp; The list of the pains and
+penalties for doing so frightened me considerably.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that will be all right,&rdquo; my friend assured
+me; &ldquo;have a few roubles loose in your pocket.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I tipped the station master and I tipped the guard, and
+started pleased with myself.&nbsp; But I had not anticipated what
+was in store for me.&nbsp; The news that an Englishman with a dog
+in a basket and roubles in his pocket was coming must have been
+telegraphed all down the line.&nbsp; At almost every
+stopping-place some enormous official, wearing generally a sword
+and a helmet, boarded the train.&nbsp; At first these fellows
+terrified me.&nbsp; I took them for field-marshals at least.</p>
+<p>Visions of Siberia crossed my mind.&nbsp; Anxious and
+trembling, I gave the first one a gold piece.&nbsp; He shook me
+warmly by the hand&mdash;I thought he was going to kiss me.&nbsp;
+If I had offered him my cheek I am sure he would have done
+so.&nbsp; With the next one I felt less apprehensive.&nbsp; For a
+couple of roubles he blessed me, so I gathered; and, commending
+me to the care of the Almighty, departed.&nbsp; Before I had
+reached the German frontier, I was giving away the equivalent of
+English sixpences to men with the dress and carriage of
+major-generals; and to see their faces brighten up and to receive
+their heartfelt benediction was well worth the money.</p>
+<p>But to the man without roubles in his pocket, Russian
+officialdom is not so gracious.&nbsp; By the expenditure of a few
+more coins I got my dog through the Customs without trouble, and
+had leisure to look about me.&nbsp; A miserable object was being
+badgered by half a dozen men in uniform, and he&mdash;his lean
+face puckered up into a snarl&mdash;was returning them snappish
+answers; the whole scene suggested some half-starved mongrel
+being worried by school-boys.&nbsp; A slight informality had been
+discovered in his passport, so a fellow traveller with whom I had
+made friends informed me.&nbsp; He had no roubles in his pocket,
+and in consequence they were sending him back to St.
+Petersburg&mdash;some eighteen hours&rsquo; journey&mdash;in a
+wagon that in England would not be employed for the transport of
+oxen.</p>
+<p>It seemed a good joke to Russian officialdom; they would drop
+in every now and then, look at him as he sat crouched in a corner
+of the waiting-room, and pass out again, laughing.&nbsp; The
+snarl had died from his face; a dull, listless indifference had
+taken its place&mdash;the look one sees on the face of a beaten
+dog, after the beating is over, when it is lying very still, its
+great eyes staring into nothingness, and one wonders whether it
+is thinking.</p>
+<p>The Russian worker reads no newspaper, has no club, yet all
+things seem to be known to him.&nbsp; There is a prison on the
+banks of the Neva, in St. Petersburg.&nbsp; They say such things
+are done with now, but up till very recently there existed a
+small cell therein, below the level of the ice, and prisoners
+placed there would be found missing a day or two afterwards,
+nothing ever again known of them, except, perhaps, to the fishes
+of the Baltic.&nbsp; They talk of such like things among
+themselves: the sleigh-drivers round their charcoal fire, the
+field-workers going and coming in the grey dawn, the factory
+workers, their whispers deadened by the rattle of the looms.</p>
+<p>I was searching for a house in Brussels some winters ago, and
+there was one I was sent to in a small street leading out of the
+Avenue Louise.&nbsp; It was poorly furnished, but rich in
+pictures, large and small.&nbsp; They covered the walls of every
+room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These pictures,&rdquo; explained to me the landlady, an
+old, haggard-looking woman, &ldquo;will not be left, I am taking
+them with me to London.&nbsp; They are all the work of my
+husband.&nbsp; He is arranging an exhibition.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The friend who had sent me had told me the woman was a widow,
+who had been living in Brussels eking out a precarious existence
+as a lodging-house keeper for the last ten years.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have married again?&rdquo; I questioned her.</p>
+<p>The woman smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not again.&nbsp; I was married eighteen years ago in
+Russia.&nbsp; My husband was transported to Siberia a few days
+after we were married, and I have never seen him
+since.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should have followed him,&rdquo; she added,
+&ldquo;only every year we thought he was going to be set
+free.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is really free now?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;They set him
+free last week.&nbsp; He will join me in London.&nbsp; We shall
+be able to finish our honeymoon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She smiled, revealing to me that once she had been a girl.</p>
+<p>I read in the English papers of the exhibition in
+London.&nbsp; It was said the artist showed much promise.&nbsp;
+So possibly a career may at last be opening out for him.</p>
+<p>Nature has made life hard to Russian rich and poor
+alike.&nbsp; To the banks of the Neva, with its ague and
+influenza-bestowing fogs and mists, one imagines that the Devil
+himself must have guided Peter the Great.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Show me in all my dominions the most hopelessly
+unattractive site on which to build a city,&rdquo; Peter must
+have prayed; and the Devil having discovered the site on which
+St. Petersburg now stands, must have returned to his master in
+high good feather.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think, my dear Peter, I have found you something
+really unique.&nbsp; It is a pestilent swamp to which a mighty
+river brings bitter blasts and marrow-chilling fogs, while during
+the brief summer time the wind will bring you sand.&nbsp; In this
+way you will combine the disadvantages of the North Pole with
+those of the desert of Sahara.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the winter time the Russians light their great stoves, and
+doubly barricade their doors and windows; and in this atmosphere,
+like to that of a greenhouse, many of their women will pass six
+months, never venturing out of doors.&nbsp; Even the men only go
+out at intervals.&nbsp; Every office, every shop is an
+oven.&nbsp; Men of forty have white hair and parchment faces; and
+the women are old at thirty.&nbsp; The farm labourers, during the
+few summer months, work almost entirely without sleep.&nbsp; They
+leave that for the winter, when they shut themselves up like
+dormice in their hovels, their store of food and vodka buried
+underneath the floor.&nbsp; For days together they sleep, then
+wake and dig, then sleep again.</p>
+<p>The Russian party lasts all night.&nbsp; In an adjoining room
+are beds and couches; half a dozen guests are always
+sleeping.&nbsp; An hour contents them, then they rejoin the
+company, and other guests take their places.&nbsp; The Russian
+eats when he feels so disposed; the table is always spread, the
+guests come and go.&nbsp; Once a year there is a great feast in
+Moscow.&nbsp; The Russian merchant and his friends sit down early
+in the day, and a sort of thick, sweet pancake is served up
+hot.&nbsp; The feast continues for many hours, and the ambition
+of the Russian merchant is to eat more than his neighbour.&nbsp;
+Fifty or sixty of these hot cakes a man will consume at a
+sitting, and a dozen funerals in Moscow is often the result.</p>
+<p>An uncivilised people, we call them in our lordly way, but
+they are young.&nbsp; Russian history is not yet three hundred
+years old.&nbsp; They will see us out, I am inclined to
+think.&nbsp; Their energy, their intelligence&mdash;when these
+show above the groundwork&mdash;are monstrous.&nbsp; I have known
+a Russian learn Chinese within six months.&nbsp; English! they
+learn it while you are talking to them.&nbsp; The children play
+at chess and study the violin for their own amusement.</p>
+<p>The world will be glad of Russia&mdash;when she has put her
+house in order.</p>
+<h2><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>HOW
+TO BE HAPPY THOUGH LITTLE.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Folks</span> suffering from Jingoism,
+Spreadeagleism, Chauvinism&mdash;all such like isms, to whatever
+country they belong&mdash;would be well advised to take a tour in
+Holland.&nbsp; It is the idea of the moment that size spells
+happiness.&nbsp; The bigger the country the better one is for
+living there.&nbsp; The happiest Frenchman cannot possibly be as
+happy as the most wretched Britisher, for the reason that Britain
+owns many more thousands of square miles than France
+possesses.&nbsp; The Swiss peasant, compared with the Russian
+serf, must, when he looks at the map of Europe and Asia, feel
+himself to be a miserable creature.&nbsp; The reason that
+everybody in America is happy and good is to be explained by the
+fact that America has an area equal to that of the entire
+moon.&nbsp; The American citizen who has backed the wrong horse,
+missed his train and lost his bag, remembers this and feels
+bucked up again.</p>
+<p>According to this argument, fishes should be the happiest of
+mortals, the sea consisting&mdash;at least, so says my atlas: I
+have not measured it myself&mdash;of a hundred and forty-four
+millions of square miles.&nbsp; But, maybe, the sea is also
+divided in ways we wot not of.&nbsp; Possibly the sardine who
+lives near the Brittainy coast is sad and discontented because
+the Norwegian sardine is the proud inhabitant of a larger
+sea.&nbsp; Perhaps that is why he has left the Brittainy
+coast.&nbsp; Ashamed of being a Brittainy sardine, he has
+emigrated to Norway, has become a naturalized Norwegian sardine,
+and is himself again.</p>
+<p>The happy Londoner on foggy days can warm himself with the
+reflection that the sun never sets on the British Empire.&nbsp;
+He does not often see the sun, but that is a mere detail.&nbsp;
+He regards himself as the owner of the sun; the sun begins his
+little day in the British Empire, ends his little day in the
+British Empire: for all practical purposes the sun is part of the
+British Empire.&nbsp; Foolish people in other countries sit
+underneath it and feel warm, but that is only their
+ignorance.&nbsp; They do not know it is a British possession; if
+they did they would feel cold.</p>
+<p>My views on this subject are, I know, heretical.&nbsp; I
+cannot get it into my unpatriotic head that size is the only
+thing worth worrying about.&nbsp; In England, when I venture to
+express my out-of-date opinions, I am called a Little
+Englander.&nbsp; It fretted me at first; I was becoming a mere
+shadow.&nbsp; But by now I have got used to it.&nbsp; It would be
+the same, I feel, wherever I went.&nbsp; In New York I should be
+a Little American; in Constantinople a Little Turk.&nbsp; But I
+wanted to talk about Holland.&nbsp; A holiday in Holland serves
+as a corrective to exaggerated Imperialistic notions.</p>
+<p>There are no poor in Holland.&nbsp; They may be an unhappy
+people, knowing what a little country it is they live in; but, if
+so, they hide the fact.&nbsp; To all seeming, the Dutch peasant,
+smoking his great pipe, is as much a man as the Whitechapel
+hawker or the moocher of the Paris boulevard.&nbsp; I saw a
+beggar once in Holland&mdash;in the townlet of Enkhuisen.&nbsp;
+Crowds were hurrying up from the side streets to have a look at
+him; the idea at first seemed to be that he was doing it for a
+bet.&nbsp; He turned out to be a Portuguese.&nbsp; They offered
+him work in the docks&mdash;until he could get something better
+to do&mdash;at wages equal in English money to about ten
+shillings a day.&nbsp; I inquired about him on my way back, and
+was told he had borrowed a couple of forms from the foreman and
+had left by the evening train.&nbsp; It is not the country for
+the loafer.</p>
+<p>In Holland work is easily found; this takes away the charm of
+looking for it.&nbsp; A farm labourer in Holland lives in a
+brick-built house of six rooms, which generally belongs to him,
+with an acre or so of ground, and only eats meat once a
+day.&nbsp; The rest of his time he fills up on eggs and chicken
+and cheese and beer.&nbsp; But you rarely hear him grumble.&nbsp;
+His wife and daughter may be seen on Sundays wearing gold and
+silver jewellery worth from fifty to one hundred pounds, and
+there is generally enough old delft and pewter in the house to
+start a local museum anywhere outside Holland.&nbsp; On high days
+and holidays, of which in Holland there are plenty, the average
+Dutch <i>vrouw</i> would be well worth running away with.&nbsp;
+The Dutch peasant girl has no need of an illustrated journal once
+a week to tell her what the fashion is; she has it in the
+portrait of her mother, or of her grandmother, hanging over the
+glittering chimney-piece.</p>
+<p>When the Dutchwoman builds a dress she builds it to last; it
+descends from mother to daughter, but it is made of sound
+material in the beginning.&nbsp; A lady friend of mine thought
+the Dutch costume would serve well for a fancy-dress ball, so set
+about buying one, but abandoned the notion on learning what it
+would cost her.&nbsp; A Dutch girl in her Sunday clothes must be
+worth fifty pounds before you come to ornaments.&nbsp; In certain
+provinces she wears a close-fitting helmet, made either of solid
+silver or of solid gold.&nbsp; The Dutch gallant, before making
+himself known, walks on tiptoe a little while behind the Loved
+One, and looks at himself in her head-dress just to make sure
+that his hat is on straight and his front curl just where it
+ought to be.</p>
+<p>In most other European countries national costume is dying
+out.&nbsp; The slop-shop is year by year extending its hideous
+trade.&nbsp; But the country of Rubens and Rembrandt, of Teniers
+and Gerard Dow, remains still true to art.&nbsp; The picture
+post-card does not exaggerate.&nbsp; The men in those wondrous
+baggy knickerbockers, from the pockets of which you sometimes see
+a couple of chicken&rsquo;s heads protruding; in gaudy coloured
+shirts, in worsted hose and mighty sabots, smoking their great
+pipes&mdash;the women in their petticoats of many hues, in
+gorgeously embroidered vest, in chemisette of dazzling white,
+crowned with a halo of many frills, glittering in gold and
+silver&mdash;are not the creatures of an artist&rsquo;s
+fancy.&nbsp; You meet them in their thousands on holiday
+afternoons, walking gravely arm in arm, flirting with sober Dutch
+stolidity.</p>
+<p>On colder days the women wear bright-coloured capes made of
+fine spun silk, from underneath the ample folds of which you
+sometimes hear a little cry; and sometimes a little hooded head
+peeps out, regards with preternatural thoughtfulness the toy-like
+world without, then dives back into shelter.&nbsp; As for the
+children&mdash;women in miniature, the single difference in dress
+being the gay pinafore&mdash;you can only say of them that they
+look like Dutch dolls.&nbsp; But such plump, contented, cheerful
+little dolls!&nbsp; You remember the hollow-eyed, pale-faced
+dolls you see swarming in the great, big and therefore should be
+happy countries, and wish that mere land surface were of less
+importance to our statesmen and our able editors, and the
+happiness and well-being of the mere human items worth a little
+more of their thought.</p>
+<p>The Dutch peasant lives surrounded by canals, and reaches his
+cottage across a drawbridge.&nbsp; I suppose it is in the blood
+of the Dutch child not to tumble into a canal, and the Dutch
+mother never appears to anticipate such possibility.&nbsp; One
+can imagine the average English mother trying to bring up a
+family in a house surrounded by canals.&nbsp; She would never
+have a minute&rsquo;s peace until the children were in bed.&nbsp;
+But then the mere sight of a canal to the English child suggests
+the delights of a sudden and unexpected bath.&nbsp; I put it to a
+Dutchman once.&nbsp; Did the Dutch child by any chance ever fall
+into a canal?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;cases have been
+known.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you do anything for it?&rdquo; I
+enquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;we haul them out
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what I mean is,&rdquo; I explained,
+&ldquo;don&rsquo;t you do anything to prevent their falling
+in&mdash;to save them from falling in again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;we spank
+&rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There is always a wind in Holland; it comes from over the
+sea.&nbsp; There is nothing to stay its progress.&nbsp; It leaps
+the low dykes and sweeps with a shriek across the sad, soft
+dunes, and thinks it is going to have a good time and play havoc
+in the land.&nbsp; But the Dutchman laughs behind his great pipe
+as it comes to him shouting and roaring.&nbsp; &ldquo;Welcome, my
+hearty, welcome,&rdquo; he chuckles, &ldquo;come blustering and
+bragging; the bigger you are the better I like you.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And when it is once in the land, behind the long, straight dykes,
+behind the waving line of sandy dunes, he seizes hold of it, and
+will not let it go till it has done its tale of work.</p>
+<p>The wind is the Dutchman&rsquo;s; servant before he lets it
+loose again it has turned ten thousand mills, has pumped the
+water and sawn the wood, has lighted the town and worked the
+loom, and forged the iron, and driven the great, slow, silent
+wherry, and played with the children in the garden.&nbsp; It is a
+sober wind when it gets back to sea, worn and weary, leaving the
+Dutchman laughing behind his everlasting pipe.&nbsp; There are
+canals in Holland down which you pass as though a field of
+wind-blown corn; a soft, low, rustling murmur ever in your
+ears.&nbsp; It is the ceaseless whirl of the great mill
+sails.&nbsp; Far out at sea the winds are as foolish savages,
+fighting, shrieking, tearing&mdash;purposeless.&nbsp; Here, in
+the street of mills, it is a civilized wind, crooning softly
+while it labours.</p>
+<p>What charms one in Holland is the neatness and cleanliness of
+all about one.&nbsp; Maybe to the Dutchman there are
+drawbacks.&nbsp; In a Dutch household life must be one long
+spring-cleaning.&nbsp; No milk-pail is considered fit that cannot
+just as well be used for a looking-glass.&nbsp; The great brass
+pans, hanging under the pent house roof outside the cottage door,
+flash like burnished gold.&nbsp; You could eat your dinner off
+the red-tiled floor, but that the deal table, scrubbed to the
+colour of cream cheese, is more convenient.&nbsp; By each
+threshold stands a row of empty sabots, and woe-betide the
+Dutchman who would dream of crossing it in anything but his
+stockinged feet.</p>
+<p>There is a fashion in sabots.&nbsp; Every spring they are
+freshly painted.&nbsp; One district fancies an orange yellow,
+another a red, a third white, suggesting purity and
+innocence.&nbsp; Members of the Smart Set indulge in
+ornamentation; a frieze in pink, a star upon the toe.&nbsp;
+Walking in sabots is not as easy as it looks.&nbsp; Attempting to
+run in sabots I do not recommend to the beginner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you run in sabots?&rdquo; I asked a Dutchman
+once.&nbsp; I had been experimenting, and had hurt myself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t run,&rdquo; answered the Dutchman.</p>
+<p>And observation has proved to me he was right.&nbsp; The Dutch
+boy, when he runs, puts them for preference on his hands, and
+hits other Dutch boys over the head with them as he passes.</p>
+<p>The roads in Holland, straight and level, and shaded all the
+way with trees, look, from the railway-carriage window, as if
+they would be good for cycling; but this is a delusion.&nbsp; I
+crossed in the boat from Harwich once, with a well-known black
+and white artist, and an equally well-known and highly respected
+humorist.&nbsp; They had their bicycles with them, intending to
+tour Holland.&nbsp; I met them a fortnight later in Delft, or,
+rather, I met their remains.&nbsp; I was horrified at
+first.&nbsp; I thought it was drink.&nbsp; They could not stand
+still, they could not sit still, they trembled and shook in every
+limb, their teeth chattered when they tried to talk.&nbsp; The
+humorist hadn&rsquo;t a joke left in him.&nbsp; The artist could
+not have drawn his own salary; he would have dropped it on the
+way to his pocket.&nbsp; The Dutch roads are paved their entire
+length with cobbles&mdash;big, round cobbles, over which your
+bicycle leaps and springs and plunges.</p>
+<p>If you would see Holland outside the big towns a smattering of
+Dutch is necessary.&nbsp; If you know German there is not much
+difficulty.&nbsp; Dutch&mdash;I speak as an amateur&mdash;appears
+to be very bad German mis-pronounced.&nbsp; Myself, I find my
+German goes well in Holland, even better than in Germany.&nbsp;
+The Anglo-Saxon should not attempt the Dutch G.&nbsp; It is
+hopeless to think of succeeding, and the attempt has been known
+to produce internal rupture.&nbsp; The Dutchman appears to keep
+his G in his stomach, and to haul it up when wanted.&nbsp;
+Myself, I find the ordinary G, preceded by a hiccough and
+followed by a sob, the nearest I can get to it.&nbsp; But they
+tell me it is not quite right, yet.</p>
+<p>One needs to save up beforehand if one desires to spend any
+length of time in Holland.&nbsp; One talks of dear old England,
+but the dearest land in all the world is little Holland.&nbsp;
+The florin there is equal to the franc in France and to the
+shilling in England.&nbsp; They tell you that cigars are cheap in
+Holland.&nbsp; A cheap Dutch cigar will last you a day.&nbsp; It
+is not until you have forgotten the taste of it that you feel you
+ever want to smoke again.&nbsp; I knew a man who reckoned that he
+had saved hundreds of pounds by smoking Dutch cigars for a month
+steadily.&nbsp; It was years before he again ventured on
+tobacco.</p>
+<p>Watching building operations in Holland brings home to you
+forcibly, what previously you have regarded as a meaningless
+formula&mdash;namely, that the country is built upon piles.&nbsp;
+A dozen feet below the level of the street one sees the labourers
+working in fishermen&rsquo;s boots up to their knees in water,
+driving the great wooden blocks into the mud.&nbsp; Many of the
+older houses slope forward at such an angle that you almost fear
+to pass beneath them.&nbsp; I should be as nervous as a kitten,
+living in one of the upper storeys.&nbsp; But the Dutchman leans
+out of a window that is hanging above the street six feet beyond
+the perpendicular, and smokes contentedly.</p>
+<p>They have a merry custom in Holland of keeping the railway
+time twenty minutes ahead of the town time&mdash;or is it twenty
+minutes behind?&nbsp; I never can remember when I&rsquo;m there,
+and I am not sure now.&nbsp; The Dutchman himself never
+knows.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve plenty of time,&rdquo; he says</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the train goes at ten,&rdquo; you say; &ldquo;the
+station is a mile away, and it is now half-past nine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but that means ten-twenty,&rdquo; he answers,
+&ldquo;you have nearly an hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Five minutes later he taps you on the shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My mistake, it&rsquo;s twenty to ten.&nbsp; I was
+thinking it was the other way about.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Another argues with him that his first idea was right.&nbsp;
+They work it out by scientific methods.&nbsp; Meanwhile you have
+dived into a cab.&nbsp; The result is always the same: you are
+either forty minutes too soon, or you have missed the train by
+twenty minutes.&nbsp; A Dutch platform is always crowded with
+women explaining volubly to their husbands either that there was
+not any need to have hurried, or else that the thing would have
+been to have started half an hour before they did, the man in
+both cases being, of course, to blame.&nbsp; The men walk up and
+down and swear.</p>
+<p>The idea has been suggested that the railway time and the town
+time should be made to conform.&nbsp; The argument against the
+idea is that if it were carried out there would be nothing left
+to put the Dutchman out and worry him.</p>
+<h2><a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+173</span>SHOULD WE SAY WHAT WE THINK, OR THINK WHAT WE SAY?</h2>
+<p>A <span class="smcap">mad</span> friend of mine will have it
+that the characteristic of the age is Make-Believe.&nbsp; He
+argues that all social intercourse is founded on
+make-believe.&nbsp; A servant enters to say that Mr. and Mrs.
+Bore are in the drawing-room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, damn!&rdquo; says the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; says the woman.&nbsp; &ldquo;Shut the
+door, Susan.&nbsp; How often am I to tell you never to leave the
+door open?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man creeps upstairs on tiptoe and shuts himself in his
+study.&nbsp; The woman does things before a looking-glass, waits
+till she feels she is sufficiently mistress of herself not to
+show her feelings, and then enters the drawing-room with
+outstretched hands and the look of one welcoming an angel&rsquo;s
+visit.&nbsp; She says how delighted she is to see the
+Bores&mdash;how good it was of them to come.&nbsp; Why did they
+not bring more Bores with them?&nbsp; Where is naughty Bore
+junior?&nbsp; Why does he never come to see her now?&nbsp; She
+will have to be really angry with him.&nbsp; And sweet little
+Flossie Bore?&nbsp; Too young to pay calls!&nbsp; Nonsense.&nbsp;
+An &ldquo;At Home&rdquo; day is not worth having where all the
+Bores are not.</p>
+<p>The Bores, who had hoped that she was out&mdash;who have only
+called because the etiquette book told them that they must call
+at least four times in the season, explain how they have been
+trying and trying to come.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This afternoon,&rdquo; recounts Mrs. Bore, &ldquo;we
+were determined to come.&nbsp; &lsquo;John, dear,&rsquo; I said
+this morning, &lsquo;I shall go and see dear Mrs. Bounder this
+afternoon, no matter what happens.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The idea conveyed is that the Prince of Wales, on calling at
+the Bores, was told that he could not come in.&nbsp; He might
+call again in the evening or come some other day.</p>
+<p>That afternoon the Bores were going to enjoy themselves in
+their own way; they were going to see Mrs. Bounder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And how is Mr. Bounder?&rdquo; demands Mrs. Bore.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bounder remains mute for a moment, straining her
+ears.&nbsp; She can hear him creeping past the door on his way
+downstairs.&nbsp; She hears the front door softly opened and
+closed-to.&nbsp; She wakes, as from a dream.&nbsp; She has been
+thinking of the sorrow that will fall on Bounder when he returns
+home later and learns what he has missed.</p>
+<p>And thus it is, not only with the Bores and Bounders, but even
+with us who are not Bores or Bounders.&nbsp; Society in all ranks
+is founded on the make-believe that everybody is charming; that
+we are delighted to see everybody; that everybody is delighted to
+see us; that it is so good of everybody to come; that we are
+desolate at the thought that they really must go now.</p>
+<p>Which would we rather do&mdash;stop and finish our cigar or
+hasten into the drawing-room to hear Miss Screecher sing?&nbsp;
+Can you ask us?&nbsp; We tumble over each other in our
+hurry.&nbsp; Miss Screecher would really rather not sing; but if
+we insist&mdash;We do insist.&nbsp; Miss Screecher, with pretty
+reluctance, consents.&nbsp; We are careful not to look at one
+another.&nbsp; We sit with our eyes fixed on the ceiling.&nbsp;
+Miss Screecher finishes, and rises.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it was so short,&rdquo; we say, so soon as we can
+be heard above the applause.&nbsp; Is Miss Screecher quite sure
+that was the whole of it?&nbsp; Or has she been playing tricks
+upon us, the naughty lady, defrauding us of a verse?&nbsp; Miss
+Screecher assures us that the fault is the
+composer&rsquo;s.&nbsp; But she knows another.&nbsp; At this
+hint, our faces lighten again with gladness.&nbsp; We clamour for
+more.</p>
+<p>Our host&rsquo;s wine is always the most extraordinary we have
+ever tasted.&nbsp; No, not another glass; we dare
+not&mdash;doctor&rsquo;s orders, very strict.&nbsp; Our
+host&rsquo;s cigar!&nbsp; We did not know they made such cigars
+in this workaday world.&nbsp; No, we really could not smoke
+another.&nbsp; Well, if he will be so pressing, may we put it in
+our pocket?&nbsp; The truth is, we are not used to high
+smoking.&nbsp; Our hostess&rsquo;s coffee!&nbsp; Would she
+confide to us her secret?&nbsp; The baby!&nbsp; We hardly trust
+ourselves to speak.&nbsp; The usual baby&mdash;we have seen
+it.&nbsp; As a rule, to be candid, we never could detect much
+beauty in babies&mdash;have always held the usual gush about them
+to be insincere.&nbsp; But this baby!&nbsp; We are almost on the
+point of asking them where they got it.&nbsp; It is just the kind
+we wanted for ourselves.&nbsp; Little Janet&rsquo;s recitation:
+&ldquo;A Visit to the Dentist!&rdquo;&nbsp; Hitherto the amateur
+reciter has not appealed to us.&nbsp; But this is genius,
+surely.&nbsp; She ought to be trained for the stage.&nbsp; Her
+mother does not altogether approve of the stage.&nbsp; We plead
+for the stage&mdash;that it may not be deprived of such
+talent.</p>
+<p>Every bride is beautiful.&nbsp; Every bride looks charming in
+a simple costume of&mdash;for further particulars see local
+papers.&nbsp; Every marriage is a cause for universal
+rejoicing.&nbsp; With our wine-glass in our hand we picture the
+ideal life we know to be in store for them.&nbsp; How can it be
+otherwise?&nbsp; She, the daughter of her mother.&nbsp;
+(Cheers.)&nbsp; He&mdash;well, we all know him.&nbsp; (More
+cheers.)&nbsp; Also involuntary guffaw from ill-regulated young
+man at end of table, promptly suppressed.</p>
+<p>We carry our make-believe even into our religion.&nbsp; We sit
+in church, and in voices swelling with pride, mention to the
+Almighty, at stated intervals, that we are miserable
+worms&mdash;that there is no good in us.&nbsp; This sort of
+thing, we gather, is expected of us; it does us no harm, and is
+supposed to please.</p>
+<p>We make-believe that every woman is good, that every man is
+honest&mdash;until they insist on forcing us, against our will,
+to observe that they are not.&nbsp; Then we become very angry
+with them, and explain to them that they, being sinners, are not
+folk fit to mix with us perfect people.&nbsp; Our grief, when our
+rich aunt dies, is hardly to be borne.&nbsp; Drapers make
+fortunes, helping us to express feebly our desolation.&nbsp; Our
+only consolation is that she has gone to a better world.</p>
+<p>Everybody goes to a better world when they have got all they
+can out of this one.</p>
+<p>We stand around the open grave and tell each other so.&nbsp;
+The clergyman is so assured of it that, to save time, they have
+written out the formula for him and had it printed in a little
+book.&nbsp; As a child it used to surprise me&mdash;this fact
+that everybody went to heaven.&nbsp; Thinking of all the people
+that had died, I pictured the place overcrowded.&nbsp; Almost I
+felt sorry for the Devil, nobody ever coming his way, so to
+speak.&nbsp; I saw him in imagination, a lonely old gentleman,
+sitting at his gate day after day, hoping against hope, muttering
+to himself maybe that it hardly seemed worth while, from his
+point of view, keeping the show open.&nbsp; An old nurse whom I
+once took into my confidence was sure, if I continued talking in
+this sort of way, that he would get me anyhow.&nbsp; I must have
+been an evil-hearted youngster.&nbsp; The thought of how he would
+welcome me, the only human being that he had seen for years, had
+a certain fascination for me; for once in my existence I should
+be made a fuss about.</p>
+<p>At every public meeting the chief speaker is always &ldquo;a
+jolly good fellow.&rdquo;&nbsp; The man from Mars, reading our
+newspapers, would be convinced that every Member of Parliament
+was a jovial, kindly, high-hearted, generous-souled saint, with
+just sufficient humanity in him to prevent the angels from
+carrying him off bodily.&nbsp; Do not the entire audience, moved
+by one common impulse, declare him three times running, and in
+stentorian voice, to be this &ldquo;jolly good
+fellow&rdquo;?&nbsp; So say all of them.&nbsp; We have always
+listened with the most intense pleasure to the brilliant speech
+of our friend who has just sat down.&nbsp; When you thought we
+were yawning, we were drinking in his eloquence,
+open-mouthed.</p>
+<p>The higher one ascends in the social scale, the wider becomes
+this necessary base of make-believe.&nbsp; When anything sad
+happens to a very big person, the lesser people round about him
+hardly care to go on living.&nbsp; Seeing that the world is
+somewhat overstocked with persons of importance, and that
+something or another generally is happening to them, one wonders
+sometimes how it is the world continues to exist.</p>
+<p>Once upon a time there occurred an illness to a certain good
+and great man.&nbsp; I read in my daily paper that the whole
+nation was plunged in grief.&nbsp; People dining in public
+restaurants, on being told the news by the waiter, dropped their
+heads upon the table and sobbed.&nbsp; Strangers, meeting in the
+street, flung their arms about one another and cried like little
+children.&nbsp; I was abroad at the time, but on the point of
+returning home.&nbsp; I almost felt ashamed to go.&nbsp; I looked
+at myself in the glass, and was shocked at my own appearance: it
+was that of a man who had not been in trouble for weeks.&nbsp; I
+felt that to burst upon this grief-stricken nation with a
+countenance such as mine would be to add to their sorrow.&nbsp;
+It was borne in upon me that I must have a shallow, egotistical
+nature.&nbsp; I had had luck with a play in America, and for the
+life of me I could not look grief-stricken.&nbsp; There were
+moments when, if I was not keeping a watch over myself, I found
+myself whistling.</p>
+<p>Had it been possible I would have remained abroad till some
+stroke of ill-fortune had rendered me more in tune with my
+fellow-countrymen.&nbsp; But business was pressing.&nbsp; The
+first man I talked to on Dover pier was a Customs House
+official.&nbsp; You might have thought sorrow would have made him
+indifferent to a mere matter of forty-eight cigars.&nbsp; Instead
+of which, he appeared quite pleased when he found them.&nbsp; He
+demanded three-and-fourpence, and chuckled when he got it.&nbsp;
+On Dover platform a little girl laughed because a lady dropped a
+handbox on a dog; but then children are always callous&mdash;or,
+perhaps, she had not heard the news.</p>
+<p>What astonished me most, however, was to find in the railway
+carriage a respectable looking man reading a comic journal.&nbsp;
+True, he did not laugh much: he had got decency enough for that;
+but what was a grief-stricken citizen doing with a comic journal,
+anyhow?&nbsp; Before I had been in London an hour I had come to
+the conclusion that we English must be a people of wonderful
+self-control.&nbsp; The day before, according to the newspapers,
+the whole country was in serious danger of pining away and dying
+of a broken heart.&nbsp; In one day the nation had pulled itself
+together.&nbsp; &ldquo;We have cried all day,&rdquo; they had
+said to themselves, &ldquo;we have cried all night.&nbsp; It does
+not seem to have done much good.&nbsp; Now let us once again take
+up the burden of life.&rdquo;&nbsp; Some of them&mdash;I noticed
+it in the hotel dining-room that evening&mdash;were taking quite
+kindly to their food again.</p>
+<p>We make believe about quite serious things.&nbsp; In war, each
+country&rsquo;s soldiers are always the most courageous in the
+world.&nbsp; The other country&rsquo;s soldiers are always
+treacherous and tricky; that is why they sometimes win.&nbsp;
+Literature is the art of make-believe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now all of you sit round and throw your pennies in the
+cap,&rdquo; says the author, &ldquo;and I will pretend that there
+lives in Bayswater a young lady named Angelina, who is the most
+beautiful young lady that ever existed.&nbsp; And in Notting
+Hill, we will pretend, there resides a young man named Edwin, who
+is in love with Angelina.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then, there being sufficient pennies in the cap, the
+author starts away, and pretends that Angelina thought this and
+said that, and that Edwin did all sorts of wonderful
+things.&nbsp; We know he is making it all up as he goes
+along.&nbsp; We know he is making up just what he thinks will
+please us.&nbsp; He, on the other hand, has to make-believe that
+he is doing it because he cannot help it, he being an
+artist.&nbsp; But we know well enough that, were we to stop
+throwing the pennies into the cap, he would find out precious
+soon that he could.</p>
+<p>The theatrical manager bangs his drum.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Walk up! walk up!&rdquo; he cries, &ldquo;we are going
+to pretend that Mrs. Johnson is a princess, and old man Johnson
+is going to pretend to be a pirate.&nbsp; Walk up, walk up, and
+be in time!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So Mrs. Johnson, pretending to be a princess, comes out of a
+wobbly thing that we agree to pretend is a castle; and old man
+Johnson, pretending to be a pirate, is pushed up and down on
+another wobbly thing that we agree to pretend is the ocean.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Johnson pretends to be in love with him, which we know she
+is not.&nbsp; And Johnson pretends to be a very terrible person;
+and Mrs. Johnson pretends, till eleven o&rsquo;clock, to believe
+it.&nbsp; And we pay prices, varying from a shilling to
+half-a-sovereign, to sit for two hours and listen to them.</p>
+<p>But as I explained at the beginning, my friend is a mad sort
+of person.</p>
+<h2><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 186</span>IS
+THE AMERICAN HUSBAND MADE ENTIRELY OF STAINED GLASS.</h2>
+<p>I <span class="smcap">am</span> glad I am not an American
+husband.&nbsp; At first sight this may appear a remark
+uncomplimentary to the American wife.&nbsp; It is nothing of the
+sort.&nbsp; It is the other way about.&nbsp; We, in Europe, have
+plenty of opportunity of judging the American wife.&nbsp; In
+America you hear of the American wife, you are told stories about
+the American wife, you see her portrait in the illustrated
+journals.&nbsp; By searching under the heading &ldquo;Foreign
+Intelligence,&rdquo; you can find out what she is doing.&nbsp;
+But here in Europe we know her, meet her face to face, talk to
+her, flirt with her.&nbsp; She is charming, delightful.&nbsp;
+That is why I say I am glad I am not an American husband.&nbsp;
+If the American husband only knew how nice was the American wife,
+he would sell his business and come over here, where now and then
+he could see her.</p>
+<p>Years ago, when I first began to travel about Europe, I argued
+to myself that America must be a deadly place to live in.&nbsp;
+How sad it is, I thought to myself, to meet thus, wherever one
+goes, American widows by the thousand.&nbsp; In one narrow
+by-street of Dresden I calculated fourteen American mothers,
+possessing nine-and-twenty American children, and not a father
+among them&mdash;not a single husband among the whole
+fourteen.&nbsp; I pictured fourteen lonely graves, scattered over
+the United States.&nbsp; I saw as in a vision those fourteen
+head-stones of best material, hand-carved, recording the virtues
+of those fourteen dead and buried husbands.</p>
+<p>Odd, thought I to myself, decidedly odd.&nbsp; These American
+husbands, they must be a delicate type of humanity.&nbsp; The
+wonder is their mothers ever reared them.&nbsp; They marry fine
+girls, the majority of them; two or three sweet children are born
+to them, and after that there appears to be no further use for
+them, as far as this world is concerned.&nbsp; Can nothing be
+done to strengthen their constitutions?&nbsp; Would a tonic be of
+any help to them?&nbsp; Not the customary tonic, I don&rsquo;t
+mean, the sort of tonic merely intended to make gouty old
+gentlemen feel they want to buy a hoop, but the sort of tonic for
+which it was claimed that three drops poured upon a ham sandwich
+and the thing would begin to squeak.</p>
+<p>It struck me as pathetic, the picture of these American widows
+leaving their native land, coming over in shiploads to spend the
+rest of their blighted lives in exile.&nbsp; The mere thought of
+America, I took it, had for ever become to them
+distasteful.&nbsp; The ground that once his feet had
+pressed!&nbsp; The old familiar places once lighted by his
+smile!&nbsp; Everything in America would remind them of
+him.&nbsp; Snatching their babes to their heaving bosoms they
+would leave the country where lay buried all the joy of their
+lives, seek in the retirement of Paris, Florence or Vienna,
+oblivion of the past.</p>
+<p>Also, it struck me as beautiful, the noble resignation with
+which they bore their grief, hiding their sorrow from the
+indifferent stranger.&nbsp; Some widows make a fuss, go about for
+weeks looking gloomy and depressed, making not the slightest
+effort to be merry.&nbsp; These fourteen widows&mdash;I knew them
+personally, all of them, I lived in the same street&mdash;what a
+brave show of cheerfulness they put on!&nbsp; What a lesson to
+the common or European widow, the humpy type of widow!&nbsp; One
+could spend whole days in their company&mdash;I had done
+it&mdash;commencing quite early in the morning with a sleighing
+excursion, finishing up quite late in the evening with a little
+supper party, followed by an impromptu dance; and never detect
+from their outward manner that they were not thoroughly enjoying
+themselves.</p>
+<p>From the mothers I turned my admiring eyes towards the
+children.&nbsp; This is the secret of American success, said I to
+myself; this high-spirited courage, this Spartan contempt for
+suffering.&nbsp; Look at them! the gallant little men and
+women.&nbsp; Who would think that they had lost a father?&nbsp;
+Why, I have seen a British child more upset at losing
+sixpence.</p>
+<p>Talking to a little girl one day, I enquired of her concerning
+the health of her father.&nbsp; The next moment I could have
+bitten my tongue out, remembering that there wasn&rsquo;t such a
+thing as a father&mdash;not an American father&mdash;in the whole
+street.&nbsp; She did not burst into tears as they do in the
+story-books.&nbsp; She said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is quite well, thank you,&rdquo; simply,
+pathetically, just like that.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure of it,&rdquo; I replied with fervour,
+&ldquo;well and happy as he deserves to be, and one day you will
+find him again; you will go to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, yes,&rdquo; she answered, a shining light, it
+seemed to me, upon her fair young face.&nbsp; &ldquo;Momma says
+she is getting just a bit tired of this one-horse sort of
+place.&nbsp; She is quite looking forward to seeing him
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It touched me very deeply: this weary woman, tired of her long
+bereavement, actually looking forward to the fearsome passage
+leading to where her loved one waited for her in a better
+land.</p>
+<p>For one bright breezy creature I grew to feel a real
+regard.&nbsp; All the months that I had known her, seen her
+almost daily, never once had I heard a single cry of pain escape
+her lips, never once had I heard her cursing fate.&nbsp; Of the
+many who called upon her in her charming flat, not one had ever,
+to my knowledge, offered her consolation or condolence.&nbsp; It
+seemed to me cruel, callous.&nbsp; The over-burdened heart,
+finding no outlet for its imprisoned grief, finding no
+sympathetic ear into which to pour its tale of woe, breaks, we
+are told; anyhow, it isn&rsquo;t good for it.&nbsp; I
+decided&mdash;no one else seeming keen&mdash;that I would supply
+that sympathetic ear.&nbsp; The very next time I found myself
+alone with her I introduced the subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have been living here in Dresden a long time, have
+you not?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About five years,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;on and
+off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And all alone,&rdquo; I commented, with a sigh intended
+to invite to confidence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, hardly alone,&rdquo; she corrected me, while a
+look of patient resignation added dignity to her piquant
+features.&nbsp; &ldquo;You see, there are the dear children
+always round about me, during the holidays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Besides,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;the people here are
+real kind to me; they hardly ever let me feel myself alone.&nbsp;
+We make up little parties, you know, picnics and
+excursions.&nbsp; And then, of course, there is the Opera and the
+Symphony Concerts, and the subscription dances.&nbsp; The dear
+old king has been doing a good deal this winter, too; and I must
+say the Embassy folks have been most thoughtful, so far as I am
+concerned.&nbsp; No, it would not be right for me to complain of
+loneliness, not now that I have got to know a few people, as it
+were.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But don&rsquo;t you miss your husband?&rdquo; I
+suggested.</p>
+<p>A cloud passed over her usually sunny face.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh,
+please don&rsquo;t talk of him,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;it makes
+me feel real sad, thinking about him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But having commenced, I was determined that my sympathy should
+not be left to waste.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did he die of?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>She gave me a look the pathos of which I shall never
+forget.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, young man,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;are you trying
+to break it to me gently?&nbsp; Because if so, I&rsquo;d rather
+you told me straight out.&nbsp; What did he die of?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then isn&rsquo;t he dead?&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;I mean
+so far as you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never heard a word about his being dead till you
+started the idea,&rdquo; she retorted.&nbsp; &ldquo;So far as I
+know he&rsquo;s alive and well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I said that I was sorry.&nbsp; I went on to explain that I did
+not mean I was sorry to hear that in all probability he was alive
+and well.&nbsp; What I meant was I was sorry I had introduced a
+painful subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s a painful subject?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, your husband,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why should you call him a painful
+subject?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I had an idea she was getting angry with me.&nbsp; She did not
+say so.&nbsp; I gathered it.&nbsp; But I had to explain myself
+somehow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;I take it, you
+didn&rsquo;t get on well together, and I am sure it must have
+been his fault.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look here,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t you
+breathe a word against my husband or we shall quarrel.&nbsp; A
+nicer, dearer fellow never lived.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then what did you divorce him for?&rdquo; I
+asked.&nbsp; It was impertinent, it was unjustifiable.&nbsp; My
+excuse is that the mystery surrounding the American husband had
+been worrying me for months.&nbsp; Here had I stumbled upon the
+opportunity of solving it.&nbsp; Instinctively I clung to my
+advantage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There hasn&rsquo;t been any divorce,&rdquo; she
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;There isn&rsquo;t going to be any
+divorce.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ll make me cross in another
+minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But I was becoming reckless.&nbsp; &ldquo;He is not
+dead.&nbsp; You are not divorced from him.&nbsp; Where is
+he?&rdquo; I demanded with some heat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo; she replied, astonished.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Where should he be?&nbsp; At home, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I looked around the luxuriously-furnished room with its air of
+cosy comfort, of substantial restfulness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What home?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What home!&nbsp; Why, our home, in Detroit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is he doing there?&rdquo;&nbsp; I had become so
+much in earnest that my voice had assumed unconsciously an
+authoritative tone.&nbsp; Presumably, it hypnotised her, for she
+answered my questions as though she had been in the
+witness-box.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do I know?&nbsp; How can I possibly tell you what
+he is doing?&nbsp; What do people usually do at home?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Answer the questions, madam, don&rsquo;t ask
+them.&nbsp; What are you doing here?&nbsp; Quite truthfully, if
+you please.&rdquo;&nbsp; My eyes were fixed upon her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Enjoying myself.&nbsp; He likes me to enjoy
+myself.&nbsp; Besides, I am educating the children.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean they are here at boarding-school while you are
+gadding about.&nbsp; What is wrong with American education?&nbsp;
+When did you see your husband last?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Last?&nbsp; Let me see.&nbsp; No, last Christmas I was
+in Berlin.&nbsp; It must have been the Christmas before, I
+think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he is the dear kind fellow you say he is, how is it
+you haven&rsquo;t seen him for two years?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because, as I tell you, he is at home, in
+Detroit.&nbsp; How can I see him when I am here in Dresden and he
+is in Detroit?&nbsp; You do ask foolish questions.&nbsp; He means
+to try and come over in the summer, if he can spare the time, and
+then, of course&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Answer my questions, please.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve spoken to
+you once about it.&nbsp; Do you think you are performing your
+duty as a wife, enjoying yourself in Dresden and Berlin while
+your husband is working hard in Detroit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was quite willing for me to come.&nbsp; The American
+husband is a good fellow who likes his wife to enjoy
+herself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not asking for your views on the American
+husband.&nbsp; I am asking your views on the American
+wife&mdash;on yourself.&nbsp; The American husband appears to be
+a sort of stained-glass saint, and you American wives are
+imposing upon him.&nbsp; It is doing you no good, and it
+won&rsquo;t go on for ever.&nbsp; There will come a day when the
+American husband will wake up to the fact he is making a fool of
+himself, and by over-indulgence, over-devotion, turning the
+American woman into a heartless, selfish creature.&nbsp; What
+sort of a home do you think it is in Detroit, with you and the
+children over here?&nbsp; Tell me, is the American husband made
+entirely of driven snow, with blood distilled from moonbeams, or
+is he composed of the ordinary ingredients?&nbsp; Because, if the
+latter, you take my advice and get back home.&nbsp; I take it
+that in America, proper, there are millions of real homes where
+the woman does her duty and plays the game.&nbsp; But also it is
+quite clear there are thousands of homes in America, mere echoing
+rooms, where the man walks by himself, his wife and children
+scattered over Europe.&nbsp; It isn&rsquo;t going to work, it
+isn&rsquo;t right that it should work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You take the advice of a sincere friend.&nbsp; Pack
+up&mdash;you and the children&mdash;and get home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I left.&nbsp; It was growing late.&nbsp; I felt it was time to
+leave.&nbsp; Whether she took my counsel I cannot say.&nbsp; I
+only know that there still remain in Europe a goodly number of
+American wives to whom it is applicable.</p>
+<h2><a name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 199</span>DOES
+THE YOUNG MAN KNOW EVERYTHING WORTH KNOWING?</h2>
+<p>I <span class="smcap">am</span> told that American professors
+are &ldquo;mourning the lack of ideals&rdquo; at Columbia
+University&mdash;possibly also at other universities scattered
+through the United States.&nbsp; If it be any consolation to
+these mourning American professors, I can assure them that they
+do not mourn alone.&nbsp; I live not far from Oxford, and enjoy
+the advantage of occasionally listening to the jeremiads of
+English University professors.&nbsp; More than once a German
+professor has done me the honour to employ me as an object on
+which to sharpen his English.&nbsp; He also has mourned similar
+lack of ideals at Heidelberg, at Bonn.&nbsp; Youth is youth all
+the world over; it has its own ideals; they are not those of the
+University professor.&nbsp; The explanation is tolerably
+simple.&nbsp; Youth is young, and the University professor,
+generally speaking, is middle-aged.</p>
+<p>I can sympathise with the mourning professor.&nbsp; I, in my
+time, have suffered like despair.&nbsp; I remember the day so
+well; it was my twelfth birthday.&nbsp; I recall the unholy joy
+with which I reflected that for the future my unfortunate parents
+would be called upon to pay for me full railway fare; it marked a
+decided step towards manhood.&nbsp; I was now in my teens.&nbsp;
+That very afternoon there came to visit us a relative of
+ours.&nbsp; She brought with her three small children: a girl,
+aged six; a precious, golden-haired thing in a lace collar that
+called itself a boy, aged five; and a third still smaller
+creature, it might have been male, it might have been female; I
+could not have told you at the time, I cannot tell you now.&nbsp;
+This collection of atoms was handed over to me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, show yourself a man,&rdquo; said my dear mother,
+&ldquo;remember you are in your teens.&nbsp; Take them out for a
+walk and amuse them; and mind nothing happens to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To the children themselves their own mother gave instructions
+that they were to do everything that I told them, and not to tear
+their clothes or make themselves untidy.&nbsp; These directions,
+even to myself, at the time, appeared contradictory.&nbsp; But I
+said nothing.&nbsp; And out into the wilds the four of us
+departed.</p>
+<p>I was an only child.&nbsp; My own infancy had passed from my
+memory.&nbsp; To me, at twelve, the ideas of six were as
+incomprehensible as are those of twenty to the University
+professor of forty.&nbsp; I wanted to be a pirate.&nbsp; Round
+the corner and across the road building operations were in
+progress.&nbsp; Planks and poles lay ready to one&rsquo;s
+hand.&nbsp; Nature, in the neighbourhood, had placed conveniently
+a shallow pond.&nbsp; It was Saturday afternoon.&nbsp; The
+nearest public-house was a mile away.&nbsp; Immunity from
+interference by the British workman was thus assured.&nbsp; It
+occurred to me that by placing my three depressed looking
+relatives on one raft, attacking them myself from another, taking
+the eldest girl&rsquo;s sixpence away from her, disabling their
+raft, and leaving them to drift without a rudder, innocent
+amusement would be provided for half an hour at least.</p>
+<p>They did not want to play at pirates.&nbsp; At first sight of
+the pond the thing that called itself a boy began to cry.&nbsp;
+The six-year-old lady said she did not like the smell of
+it.&nbsp; Not even after I had explained the game to them were
+they any the more enthusiastic for it.</p>
+<p>I proposed Red Indians.&nbsp; They could go to sleep in the
+unfinished building upon a sack of lime, I would creep up through
+the grass, set fire to the house, and dance round it, whooping
+and waving my tomahawk, watching with fiendish delight the
+frantic but futile efforts of the palefaces to escape their
+doom.</p>
+<p>It did not &ldquo;catch on&rdquo;&mdash;not even that.&nbsp;
+The precious thing in the lace collar began to cry again.&nbsp;
+The creature concerning whom I could not have told you whether it
+was male or female made no attempt at argument, but started to
+run; it seemed to have taken a dislike to this particular
+field.&nbsp; It stumbled over a scaffolding pole, and then it
+also began to cry.&nbsp; What could one do to amuse such
+people?&nbsp; I left it to them to propose something.&nbsp; They
+thought they would like to play at
+&ldquo;Mothers&rdquo;&mdash;not in this field, but in some other
+field.</p>
+<p>The eldest girl would be mother.&nbsp; The other two would
+represent her children.&nbsp; They had been taken suddenly
+ill.&nbsp; &ldquo;Waterworks,&rdquo; as I had christened him, was
+to hold his hands to his middle and groan.&nbsp; His face
+brightened up at the suggestion.&nbsp; The nondescript had the
+toothache.&nbsp; It took up its part without a moment&rsquo;s
+hesitation, and set to work to scream.&nbsp; I could be the
+doctor and look at their tongues.</p>
+<p>That was their &ldquo;ideal&rdquo; game.&nbsp; As I have said,
+remembering that afternoon, I can sympathise with the University
+professor mourning the absence of University ideals in
+youth.&nbsp; Possibly at six my own ideal game may have been
+&ldquo;Mothers.&rdquo;&nbsp; Looking back from the pile of
+birthdays upon which I now stand, it occurs to me that very
+probably it was.&nbsp; But from the perspective of twelve, the
+reflection that there were beings in the world who could find
+recreation in such fooling saddened me.</p>
+<p>Eight years later, his father not being able to afford the
+time, I conducted Master &ldquo;Waterworks,&rdquo; now a healthy,
+uninteresting, gawky lad, to a school in Switzerland.&nbsp; It
+was my first Continental trip.&nbsp; I should have enjoyed it
+better had he not been with me.&nbsp; He thought Paris a
+&ldquo;beastly hole.&rdquo;&nbsp; He did not share my admiration
+for the Frenchwoman; he even thought her badly dressed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why she&rsquo;s so tied up, she can&rsquo;t walk
+straight,&rdquo; was the only impression she left upon him.</p>
+<p>We changed the subject; it irritated me to hear him
+talk.&nbsp; The beautiful Juno-like creatures we came across
+further on in Germany, he said were too fat.&nbsp; He wanted to
+see them run.&nbsp; I found him utterly soulless.</p>
+<p>To expect a boy to love learning and culture is like expecting
+him to prefer old vintage claret to gooseberry wine.&nbsp;
+Culture for the majority is an acquired taste.&nbsp; Speaking
+personally, I am entirely in agreement with the University
+professor.&nbsp; I find knowledge, prompting to observation and
+leading to reflection, the most satisfactory luggage with which a
+traveller through life can provide himself.&nbsp; I would that I
+had more of it.&nbsp; To be able to enjoy a picture is of more
+advantage than to be able to buy it.</p>
+<p>All that the University professor can urge in favour of
+idealism I am prepared to endorse.&nbsp; But then I am&mdash;let
+us say, thirty-nine.&nbsp; At fourteen my candid opinion was that
+he was talking &ldquo;rot.&rdquo;&nbsp; I looked at the old
+gentleman himself&mdash;a narrow-chested, spectacled old
+gentleman, who lived up a by street.&nbsp; He did not seem to
+have much fun of any sort.&nbsp; It was not my ideal.&nbsp; He
+told me things had been written in a language called Greek that I
+should enjoy reading, but I had not even read all Captain
+Marryat.&nbsp; There were tales by Sir Walter Scott and
+&ldquo;Jack Harkaway&rsquo;s Schooldays!&rdquo;&nbsp; I felt I
+could wait a while.&nbsp; There was a chap called Aristophanes
+who had written comedies, satirising the political institutions
+of a country that had disappeared two thousand years ago.&nbsp; I
+say, without shame, Drury Lane pantomime and Barnum&rsquo;s
+Circus called to me more strongly.</p>
+<p>Wishing to give the old gentleman a chance, I dipped into
+translations.&nbsp; Some of these old fellows were not as bad as
+I had imagined them.&nbsp; A party named Homer had written some
+really interesting stuff.&nbsp; Here and there, maybe, he was a
+bit long-winded, but, taking him as a whole, there was
+&ldquo;go&rdquo; in him.&nbsp; There was another of
+them&mdash;Ovid was his name.&nbsp; He could tell a story, Ovid
+could.&nbsp; He had imagination.&nbsp; He was almost as good as
+&ldquo;Robinson Crusoe.&rdquo;&nbsp; I thought it would please my
+professor, telling him that I was reading these, his favourite
+authors.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Reading them!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;but you
+don&rsquo;t know Greek or Latin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I know English,&rdquo; I answered; &ldquo;they have
+all been translated into English.&nbsp; You never told me
+that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It appeared it was not the same thing.&nbsp; There were subtle
+delicacies of diction bound to escape even the best
+translator.&nbsp; These subtle delicacies of diction I could
+enjoy only by devoting the next seven or eight years of my life
+to the study of Greek and Latin.&nbsp; It will grieve the
+University professor to hear it, but the enjoyment of those
+subtle delicacies of diction did not appear to me&mdash;I was
+only fourteen at the time, please remember&mdash;to be worth the
+time and trouble.</p>
+<p>The boy is materially inclined&mdash;the mourning American
+professor has discovered it.&nbsp; I did not want to be an
+idealist living up a back street.&nbsp; I wanted to live in the
+biggest house in the best street of the town.&nbsp; I wanted to
+ride a horse, wear a fur coat, and have as much to eat and drink
+as ever I liked.&nbsp; I wanted to marry the most beautiful woman
+in the world, to have my name in the newspaper, and to know that
+everybody was envying me.</p>
+<p>Mourn over it, my dear professor, as you will&mdash;that is
+the ideal of youth; and, so long as human nature remains what it
+is, will continue to be so.&nbsp; It is a materialistic
+ideal&mdash;a sordid ideal.&nbsp; Maybe it is necessary.&nbsp;
+Maybe the world would not move much if the young men started
+thinking too early.&nbsp; They want to be rich, so they fling
+themselves frenziedly into the struggle.&nbsp; They build the
+towns, and make the railway tracks, hew down the forests, dig the
+ore out of the ground.&nbsp; There comes a day when it is borne
+in upon them that trying to get rich is a poor sort of
+game&mdash;that there is only one thing more tiresome than being
+a millionaire, and that is trying to be a millionaire.&nbsp; But,
+meanwhile, the world has got its work done.</p>
+<p>The American professor fears that the artistic development of
+America leaves much to be desired.&nbsp; I fear the artistic
+development of most countries leaves much to be desired.&nbsp;
+Why the Athenians themselves sandwiched their drama between
+wrestling competitions and boxing bouts.&nbsp; The plays of
+Sophocles, or Euripides, were given as &ldquo;side
+shows.&rdquo;&nbsp; The chief items of the fair were the games
+and races.&nbsp; Besides, America is still a young man.&nbsp; It
+has been busy &ldquo;getting on in the world.&rdquo;&nbsp; It has
+not yet quite finished.&nbsp; Yet there are signs that young
+America is approaching the thirty-nines.&nbsp; He is finding a
+little time, a little money to spare for art.&nbsp; One can
+almost hear young America&mdash;not quite so young as he
+was&mdash;saying to Mrs. Europe as he enters and closes the shop
+door:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, ma&rsquo;am, here I am, and maybe you&rsquo;ll be
+glad to hear I&rsquo;ve a little money to spend.&nbsp; Yes,
+ma&rsquo;am, I&rsquo;ve fixed things all right across the water;
+we shan&rsquo;t starve.&nbsp; So now, ma&rsquo;am, you and I can
+have a chat concerning this art I&rsquo;ve been hearing so much
+about.&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s have a look at it, ma&rsquo;am, trot it
+out, and don&rsquo;t you be afraid of putting a fair price upon
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I am inclined to think that Mrs. Europe has not hesitated to
+put a good price upon the art she has sold to Uncle Sam.&nbsp; I
+am afraid Mrs. Europe has occasionally &ldquo;unloaded&rdquo; on
+Uncle Sam.&nbsp; I talked to a certain dealer one afternoon, now
+many years ago, at the Uwantit Club.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is the next picture likely to be missing?&rdquo; I
+asked him in the course of general conversation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thome little thing of Hoppner&rsquo;th, if it mutht
+be,&rdquo; he replied with confidence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hoppner,&rdquo; I murmured, &ldquo;I seem to have heard
+the name.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yeth; you&rsquo;ll hear it a bit oftener during the
+next eighteen month or tho.&nbsp; You take care you don&rsquo;t
+get tired of hearing it, thath all,&rdquo; he laughed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yeth,&rdquo; he continued, thoughtfully, &ldquo;Reynoldth
+ith played out.&nbsp; Nothing much to be made of Gainthborough,
+either.&nbsp; Dealing in that lot now, why, it&rsquo;th like
+keeping a potht offith.&nbsp; Hoppner&rsquo;th the coming
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been buying Hoppners up cheap,&rdquo; I
+suggested.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Between uth,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;yeth, I think
+we&rsquo;ve got them all.&nbsp; Maybe a few more.&nbsp; I
+don&rsquo;t think we&rsquo;ve mithed any.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will sell them for more than you gave for
+them,&rdquo; I hinted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re thmart,&rdquo; he answered, regarding me
+admiringly, &ldquo;you thee through everything you do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you work it?&rdquo; I asked him.&nbsp; There is
+a time in the day when he is confidential.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here is
+this man, Hoppner.&nbsp; I take it that you have bought him up at
+an average of a hundred pounds a picture, and that at that price
+most owners were fairly glad to sell.&nbsp; Few folks outside the
+art schools have ever heard of him.&nbsp; I bet that at the
+present moment there isn&rsquo;t one art critic who could spell
+his name without reference to a dictionary.&nbsp; In eighteen
+months you will be selling him for anything from one thousand to
+ten thousand pounds.&nbsp; How is it done?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How ith everything done that&rsquo;th done well?&rdquo;
+he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;By earnetht effort.&rdquo;&nbsp; He
+hitched his chair nearer to me, &ldquo;I get a chap&mdash;one of
+your thort of chapth&mdash;he writ&rsquo;th an article about
+Hoppner.&nbsp; I get another to anthwer him.&nbsp; Before
+I&rsquo;ve done there&rsquo;ll be a hundred articleth about
+Hoppner&mdash;hith life, hith early thruggie, anecdo&rsquo;th
+about hith wife.&nbsp; Then a Hoppner will be thold at public
+auchtion for a thouthand guineath.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how can you be certain it will fetch a thousand
+guineas?&rdquo; I interrupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I happen to know the man whoth going to buy
+it.&rdquo;&nbsp; He winked, and I understood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A fortnight later there will be a thale of
+half-a-dothen, and the prithe will be gone up by that
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And after that?&rdquo; I said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After that,&rdquo; he replied, rising, &ldquo;the
+American millionaire!&nbsp; He&rsquo;ll jutht be waiting on the
+door-thtep for the thale-room to open.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If by any chance I come across a Hoppner?&rdquo; I
+said, laughing, as I turned to go.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you hold on to it too long, that&rsquo;th
+all,&rdquo; was his advice.</p>
+<h2><a name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 213</span>HOW
+MANY CHARMS HATH MUSIC, WOULD YOU SAY?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> argument of the late Herr
+Wagner was that grand opera&mdash;the music drama, as he called
+it&mdash;included, and therefore did away with the necessity
+for&mdash;all other arts.&nbsp; Music in all its branches, of
+course, it provides: so much I will concede to the late Herr
+Wagner.&nbsp; There are times, I confess, when my musical
+yearnings might shock the late Herr Wagner&mdash;times when I
+feel unequal to following three distinct themes at one and the
+same instant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; whispers the Wagnerian enthusiast to me,
+&ldquo;the cornet has now the Brunnhilda motive.&rdquo;&nbsp; It
+seems to me, in my then state of depravity, as if the cornet had
+even more than this the matter with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The second violins,&rdquo; continues the Wagnerian
+enthusiast, &ldquo;are carrying on the Wotan theme.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+That they are carrying on goes without saying: the players&rsquo;
+faces are streaming with perspiration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The brass,&rdquo; explains my friend&mdash;his object
+is to cultivate my ear&mdash;&ldquo;is accompanying the
+singers.&rdquo;&nbsp; I should have said drowning them.&nbsp;
+There are occasions when I can rave about Wagner with the best of
+them.&nbsp; High class moods come to all of us.&nbsp; The
+difference between the really high-class man and us commonplace,
+workaday men is the difference between, say, the eagle and the
+barnyard chicken.&nbsp; I am the barnyard chicken.&nbsp; I have
+my wings.&nbsp; There are ecstatic moments when I feel I want to
+spurn the sordid earth and soar into the realms of art.&nbsp; I
+do fly a little, but my body is heavy, and I only get as far as
+the fence.&nbsp; After a while I find it lonesome on the fence,
+and I hop down again among my fellows.</p>
+<p>Listening to Wagner, during such temporary Philistinic mood,
+my sense of fair play is outraged.&nbsp; A lone, lorn woman
+stands upon the stage trying to make herself heard.&nbsp; She has
+to do this sort of thing for her living; maybe an invalid mother,
+younger brothers and sisters are dependent upon her.&nbsp; One
+hundred and forty men, all armed with powerful instruments,
+well-organised, and most of them looking well-fed, combine to
+make it impossible for a single note of that poor woman&rsquo;s
+voice to be heard above their din.&nbsp; I see her standing
+there, opening and shutting her mouth, getting redder and redder
+in the face.&nbsp; She is singing, one feels sure of it; one
+could hear her if only those one hundred and forty men would ease
+up for a minute.&nbsp; She makes one mighty, supreme effort;
+above the banging of the drums, the blare of the trumpets, the
+shrieking of the strings, that last despairing note is distinctly
+heard.</p>
+<p>She has won, but the victory has cost her dear.&nbsp; She
+sinks down fainting on the stage and is carried off by
+supers.&nbsp; Chivalrous indignation has made it difficult for me
+to keep my seat watching the unequal contest.&nbsp; My instinct
+was to leap the barrier, hurl the bald-headed chief of her
+enemies from his high chair, and lay about me with the trombone
+or the clarionet&mdash;whichever might have come the easier to my
+snatch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You cowardly lot of bullies,&rdquo; I have wanted to
+cry, &ldquo;are you not ashamed of yourselves?&nbsp; A hundred
+and forty of you against one, and that one a still beautiful and,
+comparatively speaking, young lady.&nbsp; Be quiet for a
+minute&mdash;can&rsquo;t you?&nbsp; Give the poor girl a
+chance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A lady of my acquaintance says that sitting out a Wagnerian
+opera seems to her like listening to a singer accompanied by four
+orchestras playing different tunes at the same time.&nbsp; As I
+have said, there are times when Wagner carries me along with him,
+when I exult in the crash and whirl of his contending
+harmonies.&nbsp; But, alas! there are those other
+moods&mdash;those after dinner moods&mdash;when my desire is for
+something distinctly resembling a tune.&nbsp; Still, there are
+other composers of grand opera besides Wagner.&nbsp; I grant to
+the late Herr Wagner, that, in so far as music is concerned,
+opera can supply us with all we can need.</p>
+<p>But it was also Wagner&rsquo;s argument that grand opera could
+supply us with acting, and there I am compelled to disagree with
+him.&nbsp; Wagner thought that the arts of acting and singing
+could be combined.&nbsp; I have seen artists the great man has
+trained himself.&nbsp; As singers they left nothing to be
+desired, but the acting in grand opera has never yet impressed
+me.&nbsp; Wagner never succeeded in avoiding the operatic
+convention and nobody else ever will.&nbsp; When the operatic
+lover meets his sweetheart he puts her in a corner and, turning
+his back upon her, comes down to the footlights and tells the
+audience how he adores her.&nbsp; When he has finished, he, in
+his turn, retires into the corner, and she comes down and tells
+the audience that she is simply mad about him.</p>
+<p>Overcome with joy at finding she really cares for him, he
+comes down right and says that this is the happiest moment of his
+life; and she stands left, twelve feet away from him, and has the
+presentiment that all this sort of thing is much too good to
+last.&nbsp; They go off together, backwards, side by side.&nbsp;
+If there is any love-making, such as I understand by the term, it
+is done &ldquo;off.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is not my idea of
+acting.&nbsp; But I do not see how you are going to substitute
+for it anything more natural.&nbsp; When you are singing at the
+top of your voice, you don&rsquo;t want a heavy woman hanging
+round your neck.&nbsp; When you are killing a man and warbling
+about it at the same time, you don&rsquo;t want him fooling
+around you defending himself.&nbsp; You want him to have a little
+reasonable patience, and to wait in his proper place till you
+have finished, telling him, or rather telling the crowd, how much
+you hate and despise him.</p>
+<p>When the proper time comes, and if he is where you expect to
+find him while thinking of your upper C, you will hit him lightly
+on the shoulder with your sword, and then he can die to his own
+particular tune.&nbsp; If you have been severely wounded in
+battle, or in any other sort of row, and have got to sing a long
+ballad before you finally expire, you don&rsquo;t want to have to
+think how a man would really behave who knew he had only got a
+few minutes to live and was feeling bad about it.&nbsp; The
+chances are that he would not want to sing at all.&nbsp; The
+woman who really loved him would not encourage him to sing.&nbsp;
+She would want him to keep quiet while she moved herself about a
+bit, in case there was anything that could be done for him.</p>
+<p>If a mob is climbing the stairs thirsting for your blood, you
+do not want to stand upright with your arms stretched out, a good
+eighteen inches from the door, while you go over at some length
+the varied incidents leading up to the annoyance.&nbsp; If your
+desire were to act naturally you would push against that door for
+all you were worth, and yell for somebody to bring you a chest of
+drawers and a bedstead, and things like that, to pile up against
+it.&nbsp; If you were a king, and were giving a party, you would
+not want your guests to fix you up at the other end of the room
+and leave you there, with nobody to talk to but your own wife,
+while they turned their backs upon you, and had a long and
+complicated dance all to themselves.&nbsp; You would want to be
+in it; you would want to let them know that you were king.</p>
+<p>In acting, all these little points have to be
+considered.&nbsp; In opera, everything is rightly sacrificed to
+musical necessity.&nbsp; I have seen the young, enthusiastic
+opera-singer who thought that he or she could act and sing at the
+same time.&nbsp; The experienced artist takes the centre of the
+stage and husbands his resources.&nbsp; Whether he is supposed to
+be indignant because somebody has killed his mother, or cheerful
+because he is going out to fight his country&rsquo;s foes, who
+are only waiting until he has finished singing to attack the
+town, he leaves it to the composer to make clear.</p>
+<p>Also it was Herr Wagner&rsquo;s idea that the back cloth would
+leave the opera-goer indifferent to the picture gallery.&nbsp;
+The castle on the rock, accessible only by balloon, in which
+every window lights up simultaneously and instantaneously, one
+minute after sunset, while the full moon is rushing up the sky at
+the pace of a champion comet&mdash;that wonderful sea that
+suddenly opens and swallows up the ship&mdash;those snow-clad
+mountains, over which the shadow of the hero passes like a
+threatening cloud&mdash;the grand old chateau, trembling in the
+wind&mdash;what need, will ask the opera-goer of the future, of
+your Turners and your Corots, when, for prices ranging from a
+shilling upwards, we can have a dozen pictures such as these
+rolled up and down before us every evening?</p>
+<p>But perhaps the most daring hope of all was the dream that
+came to Herr Wagner that his opera singers, his grouped choruses,
+would eventually satisfy the craving of the public for high class
+statuary.&nbsp; I am not quite sure the general public does care
+for statuary.&nbsp; I do not know whether the idea has ever
+occurred to the Anarchist, but, were I myself organising secret
+committee meetings for unholy purposes, I should invite my
+comrades to meet in that section of the local museum devoted to
+statuary.&nbsp; I can conceive of no place where we should be
+freer from prying eyes and listening ears.&nbsp; A select few,
+however, do appreciate statuary; and such, I am inclined to
+think, will not be weaned from their passion by the contemplation
+of the opera singer in his or her various quaint costumes.</p>
+<p>And even if the tenor always satisfied our ideal of Apollo,
+and the soprano were always as sylph-like as she is described in
+the libretto, even then I should doubt the average operatic
+chorus being regarded by the <i>connoisseur</i> as a cheap and
+pleasant substitute for a bas relief from the Elgin
+marbles.&nbsp; The great thing required of that operatic chorus
+is experience.&nbsp; The young and giddy-pated the chorus master
+has no use for.&nbsp; The sober, honest, industrious lady or
+gentleman, with a knowledge of music is very properly his
+ideal.</p>
+<p>What I admire about the chorus chiefly is its unity.&nbsp; The
+whole village dresses exactly alike.&nbsp; In wicked, worldly
+villages there is rivalry, leading to heartburn and
+jealously.&nbsp; One lady comes out suddenly, on, say, a Bank
+Holiday, in a fetching blue that conquers every male heart.&nbsp;
+Next holiday her rival cuts her out with a green hat.&nbsp; In
+the operatic village it must be that the girls gather together
+beforehand to arrange this thing.&nbsp; There is probably a
+meeting called.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The dear Count&rsquo;s wedding,&rdquo; announces the
+chairwoman, &ldquo;you will all be pleased to hear, has been
+fixed for the fourteenth, at eleven o&rsquo;clock in the
+morning.&nbsp; The entire village will be assembled at ten-thirty
+to await the return of the bridal <i>cort&egrave;ge</i> from the
+church, and offer its felicitations.&nbsp; Married ladies, will,
+of course, come accompanied by their husbands.&nbsp; Unmarried
+ladies must each bring a male partner as near their own height as
+possible.&nbsp; Fortunately, in this village the number of males
+is exactly equal to that of females, so that the picture need not
+be spoiled.&nbsp; The children will organise themselves into an
+independent body and will group themselves picturesquely.&nbsp;
+It has been thought advisable,&rdquo; continues the chairwoman,
+&ldquo;that the village should meet the dear Count and his bride
+at some spot not too far removed from the local alehouse.&nbsp;
+The costume to be worn by the ladies will consist of a short pink
+skirt terminating at the knees and ornamented with festoons of
+flowers; above will be worn a bolero in mauve silk without
+sleeves and cut <i>d&eacute;collet&eacute;</i>.&nbsp; The shoes
+should be of yellow satin over flesh-coloured stockings.&nbsp;
+Ladies who are &lsquo;out&rsquo; will wear pearl necklaces, and a
+simple device in emeralds to decorate the hair.&nbsp; Thank God,
+we can all of us afford it, and provided the weather holds up and
+nothing unexpected happens&mdash;he is not what I call a lucky
+man, our Count, and it is always as well to be prepared for
+possibilities&mdash;well, I think we may look forward to a really
+pleasant day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It cannot be done, Herr Wagner, believe me.&nbsp; You cannot
+substitute the music drama for all the arts combined.&nbsp; The
+object to be aimed at by the wise composer should be to make us,
+while listening to his music, forgetful of all remaining artistic
+considerations.</p>
+<h2><a name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 225</span>THE
+WHITE MAN&rsquo;S BURDEN!&nbsp; NEED IT BE SO HEAVY?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is a delightful stroll on a
+sunny summer morning from the Hague to the Huis ten Bosch, the
+little &ldquo;house in the wood,&rdquo; built for Princess
+Amalia, widow of Stadtholter Frederick Henry, under whom Holland
+escaped finally from the bondage of her foes and entered into the
+promised land of Liberty.&nbsp; Leaving the quiet streets, the
+tree-bordered canals, with their creeping barges, you pass
+through a pleasant park, where the soft-eyed deer press round
+you, hurt and indignant if you have brought nothing in your
+pocket&mdash;not even a piece of sugar&mdash;to offer them.&nbsp;
+It is not that they are grasping&mdash;it is the want of
+attention that wounds them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought he was a gentleman,&rdquo; they seem to be
+saying to one another, if you glance back, &ldquo;he looked like
+a gentleman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Their mild eyes haunt you; on the next occasion you do not
+forget.&nbsp; The Park merges into the forest; you go by winding
+ways till you reach the trim Dutch garden, moat-encircled, in the
+centre of which stands the prim old-fashioned villa, which, to
+the simple Dutchman, appears a palace.&nbsp; The
+<i>concierge</i>, an old soldier, bows low to you and introduces
+you to his wife&mdash;a stately, white-haired dame, who talks
+most languages a little, so far as relates to all things within
+and appertaining to this tiny palace of the wood.&nbsp; To things
+without, beyond the wood, her powers of conversation do not
+extend: apparently such matters do not interest her.</p>
+<p>She conducts you to the Chinese Room; the sun streams through
+the windows, illuminating the wondrous golden dragons standing
+out in bold relief from the burnished lacquer work, decorating
+still further with light and shade the delicate silk embroideries
+thin taper hands have woven with infinite pains.&nbsp; The walls
+are hung with rice paper, depicting the conventional scenes of
+the conventional Chinese life.</p>
+<p>You find your thoughts wandering.&nbsp; These grotesque
+figures, these caricatures of humanity!&nbsp; A comical creature,
+surely, this Chinaman, the pantaloon of civilization.&nbsp; How
+useful he has been to us for our farces, our comic operas!&nbsp;
+This yellow baby, in his ample pinafore, who lived thousands of
+years ago, who has now passed into this strange second
+childhood.</p>
+<p>But is he dying&mdash;or does the life of a nation wake again,
+as after sleep?&nbsp; Is he this droll, harmless thing he here
+depicts himself?&nbsp; And if not?&nbsp; Suppose fresh sap be
+stirring through his three hundred millions?&nbsp; We thought he
+was so very dead; we thought the time had come to cut him up and
+divide him, the only danger being lest we should quarrel over his
+carcase among ourselves.</p>
+<p>Suppose it turns out as the fable of the woodcutter and the
+bear?&nbsp; The woodcutter found the bear lying in the
+forest.&nbsp; At first he was much frightened, but the bear lay
+remarkably still.&nbsp; So the woodman crept nearer, ventured to
+kick the bear&mdash;very gently, ready to run if need be.&nbsp;
+Surely the bear was dead!&nbsp; And parts of a bear are good to
+eat, and bearskin to poor woodfolk on cold winter nights is
+grateful.&nbsp; So the woodman drew his knife and commenced the
+necessary preliminaries.&nbsp; But the bear was not dead.</p>
+<p>If the Chinaman be not dead?&nbsp; If the cutting-up process
+has only served to waken him?&nbsp; In a little time from now we
+shall know.</p>
+<p>From the Chinese Room the white-haired dame leads us to the
+Japanese Room.&nbsp; Had gentle-looking Princess Amalia some
+vague foreshadowing of the future in her mind when she planned
+these two rooms leading into one another?&nbsp; The Japanese
+decorations are more grotesque, the designs less cheerfully
+comical than those of cousin Chinaman.&nbsp; These monstrous,
+mis-shapen wrestlers, these patient-looking gods, with their
+inscrutable eyes!&nbsp; Was it always there, or is it only by the
+light of present events that one reads into the fantastic fancies
+of the artist working long ago in the doorway of his paper house,
+a meaning that has hitherto escaped us?</p>
+<p>But the chief attraction of the Huis ten Bosch is the gorgeous
+Orange Saloon, lighted by a cupola, fifty feet above the floor,
+the walls one blaze of pictures, chiefly of the gorgeous Jordaen
+school&mdash;&ldquo;The Defeat of the Vices,&rdquo; &ldquo;Time
+Vanquishing Slander&rdquo;&mdash;mostly allegorical, in praise of
+all the virtues, in praise of enlightenment and progress.&nbsp;
+Aptly enough in a room so decorated, here was held the famous
+Peace Congress that closed the last century.&nbsp; One can hardly
+avoid smiling as one thinks of the solemn conclave of grandees
+assembled to proclaim the popularity of Peace.</p>
+<p>It was in the autumn of the same year that Europe decided upon
+the dividing-up of China, that soldiers were instructed by
+Christian monarchs to massacre men, women and children, the idea
+being to impress upon the Heathen Chinee the superior
+civilization of the white man.&nbsp; The Boer war followed almost
+immediately.&nbsp; Since when the white man has been pretty busy
+all over the world with his &ldquo;expeditions&rdquo; and his
+&ldquo;missions.&rdquo;&nbsp; The world is undoubtedly growing
+more refined.&nbsp; We do not care for ugly words.&nbsp; Even the
+burglar refers airily to the &ldquo;little job&rdquo; he has on
+hand.&nbsp; You would think he had found work in the
+country.&nbsp; I should not be surprised to learn that he says a
+prayer before starting, telegraphs home to his anxious wife the
+next morning that his task has been crowned with blessing.</p>
+<p>Until the far-off date of Universal Brotherhood war will
+continue.&nbsp; Matters considered unimportant by both parties
+will&mdash;with a mighty flourish of trumpets&mdash;be referred
+to arbitration.&nbsp; I was talking of a famous financier a while
+ago with a man who had been his secretary.&nbsp; Amongst other
+anecdotes, he told me of a certain agreement about which dispute
+had arisen.&nbsp; The famous financier took the paper into his
+own hands and made a few swift calculations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let it go,&rdquo; he concluded, &ldquo;it is only a
+thousand pounds at the outside.&nbsp; May as well be
+honest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Concerning a dead fisherman or two, concerning boundaries
+through unproductive mountain ranges we shall arbitrate and feel
+virtuous.&nbsp; For gold mines and good pasture lands, mixed up
+with a little honour to give respectability to the business, we
+shall fight it out, as previously.&nbsp; War being thus
+inevitable, the humane man will rejoice that by one of those
+brilliant discoveries, so simple when they are explained, war in
+the future is going to be rendered equally satisfactory to victor
+and to vanquished.</p>
+<p>In by-elections, as a witty writer has pointed out, there are
+no defeats&mdash;only victories and moral victories.&nbsp; The
+idea seems to have caught on.&nbsp; War in the future is
+evidently going to be conducted on the same understanding.&nbsp;
+Once upon a time, from a far-off land, a certain general
+telegraphed home congratulating his Government that the enemy had
+shown no inclination whatever to prevent his running away.&nbsp;
+The whole country rejoiced.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, they never even tried to stop him,&rdquo;
+citizens, meeting other citizens in the street, told each
+other.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah, they&rsquo;ve had enough of him.&nbsp; I
+bet they are only too glad to get rid of him.&nbsp; Why, they say
+he ran for miles without seeing a trace of the foe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The enemy&rsquo;s general, on the other hand, also wrote home
+congratulating his Government.&nbsp; In this way the same battle
+can be mafficked over by both parties.&nbsp; Contentment is the
+great secret of happiness.&nbsp; Everything happens for the best,
+if only you look at it the right way.&nbsp; That is going to be
+the argument.&nbsp; The general of the future will telegraph to
+headquarters that he is pleased to be able to inform His Majesty
+that the enemy, having broken down all opposition, has succeeded
+in crossing the frontier and is now well on his way to His
+Majesty&rsquo;s capital.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am luring him on,&rdquo; he will add, &ldquo;as fast
+as I can.&nbsp; At our present rate of progress, I am in hopes of
+bringing him home by the tenth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lest foolish civilian sort of people should wonder whereabouts
+lies the cause for rejoicing, the military man will condescend to
+explain.&nbsp; The enemy is being enticed farther and farther
+from his base.&nbsp; The defeated general&mdash;who is not really
+defeated, who is only artful, and who appears to be running away,
+is not really running away at all.&nbsp; On the contrary, he is
+running home&mdash;bringing, as he explains, the enemy with
+him.</p>
+<p>If I remember rightly&mdash;it is long since I played
+it&mdash;there is a parlour game entitled &ldquo;Puss in the
+Corner.&rdquo;&nbsp; You beckon another player to you with your
+finger.&nbsp; &ldquo;Puss, puss!&rdquo; you cry.&nbsp; Thereupon
+he has to leave his chair&mdash;his &ldquo;base,&rdquo; as the
+military man would term it&mdash;and try to get to you without
+anything happening to him.</p>
+<p>War in the future is going to be Puss in the Corner on a
+bigger scale.&nbsp; You lure your enemy away from his base.&nbsp;
+If all goes well&mdash;if he does not see the trap that is being
+laid for him&mdash;why, then, almost before he knows it, he finds
+himself in your capital.&nbsp; That finishes the game.&nbsp; You
+find out what it is he really wants.&nbsp; Provided it is
+something within reason, and you happen to have it handy, you
+give it to him.&nbsp; He goes home crowing, and you, on your
+side, laugh when you think how cleverly you succeeded in luring
+him away from his base.</p>
+<p>There is a bright side to all things.&nbsp; The gentleman
+charged with the defence of a fortress will meet the other
+gentleman who has captured it and shake hands with him mid the
+ruins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So here you are at last!&rdquo; he will explain.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you come before?&nbsp; We have been
+waiting for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he will send off dispatches felicitating his chief on
+having got that fortress off their hands, together with all the
+worry and expense it has been to them.&nbsp; When prisoners are
+taken you will console yourself with the reflection that the cost
+of feeding them for the future will have to be borne by the
+enemy.&nbsp; Captured cannon you will watch being trailed away
+with a sigh of relief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Confounded heavy things!&rdquo; you will say to
+yourself.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thank goodness I&rsquo;ve got rid of
+them.&nbsp; Let him have the fun of dragging them about these
+ghastly roads.&nbsp; See how he likes the job!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>War is a ridiculous method of settling disputes.&nbsp;
+Anything that can tend to make its ridiculous aspect more
+apparent is to be welcomed.&nbsp; The new school of military
+dispatch-writers may succeed in turning even the laughter of the
+mob against it.</p>
+<p>The present trouble in the East would never have occurred but
+for the white man&rsquo;s enthusiasm for bearing other
+people&rsquo;s burdens.&nbsp; What we call the yellow danger is
+the fear that the yellow man may before long request us, so far
+as he is concerned, to put his particular burden down.&nbsp; It
+may occur to him that, seeing it is his property, he would just
+as soon carry it himself.&nbsp; A London policeman told me a
+story the other day that struck him as an example of Cockney
+humour under trying circumstances.&nbsp; But it may also serve as
+a fable.&nbsp; From a lonely street in the neighbourhood of
+Covent Garden, early one morning, the constable heard cries of
+&ldquo;Stop thief!&rdquo; shouted in a childish treble.&nbsp; He
+arrived on the scene just in time to collar a young hooligan,
+who, having snatched a basket of fruit from a small lad&mdash;a
+greengrocer&rsquo;s errand boy, as it turned out&mdash;was, with
+it, making tracks.&nbsp; The greengrocer&rsquo;s boy, between
+panting and tears, delivered his accusation.&nbsp; The hooligan
+regarded him with an expression of amazed indignation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;yer mean, stealing it?&rdquo; exclaimed
+Mr. Hooligan.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why, I was carrying it for
+yer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The white man has got into the way of &ldquo;carrying&rdquo;
+other people&rsquo;s burdens, and now it looks as if the yellow
+man were going to object to our carrying his any further.&nbsp;
+Maybe he is going to get nasty, and insist on carrying it
+himself.&nbsp; We call this &ldquo;the yellow danger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A friend of mine&mdash;he is a man who in the street walks
+into lamp-posts, and apologises&mdash;sees rising from the East
+the dawn of a new day in the world&rsquo;s history.&nbsp; The
+yellow danger is to him a golden hope.&nbsp; He sees a race long
+stagnant, stretching its giant limbs with the first vague
+movements of returning life.&nbsp; He is a poor sort of patriot;
+he calls himself, I suppose, a white man, yet he shamelessly
+confesses he would rather see Asia&rsquo;s millions rise from the
+ruins of their ancient civilization to take their part in the
+future of humanity, than that half the population of the globe
+should remain bound in savagery for the pleasure and the profit
+of his own particular species.</p>
+<p>He even goes so far as to think that the white man may have
+something to learn.&nbsp; The world has belonged to him now for
+some thousands of years.&nbsp; Has he done all with it that could
+have been done?&nbsp; Are his ideals the last word?</p>
+<p>Not what the yellow man has absorbed from Europe, but what he
+is going to give Europe it is that interests my friend.&nbsp; He
+is watching the birth of a new force&mdash;an influence as yet
+unknown.&nbsp; He clings to the fond belief that new ideas, new
+formul&aelig;, to replace the old worn shibboleths, may, during
+these thousands of years, have been developing in those keen
+brains that behind the impressive yellow mask have been working
+so long in silence and in mystery.</p>
+<h2><a name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 238</span>WHY
+DIDN&rsquo;T HE MARRY THE GIRL?</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">What</span> is wrong with marriage,
+anyhow?&nbsp; I find myself pondering this question so often,
+when reading high-class literature.&nbsp; I put it to myself
+again the other evening, during a performance of Faust.&nbsp; Why
+could not Faust have married the girl?&nbsp; I would not have
+married her myself for any consideration whatsoever; but that is
+not the argument.&nbsp; Faust, apparently, could not see anything
+amiss with her.&nbsp; Both of them were mad about each
+other.&nbsp; Yet the idea of a quiet, unostentatious marriage
+with a week&rsquo;s honeymoon, say, in Vienna, followed by a neat
+little cottage <i>orn&eacute;</i>, not too far from
+N&uuml;rnberg, so that their friends could have come out to them,
+never seems to have occurred to either of them.</p>
+<p>There could have been a garden.&nbsp; Marguerite might have
+kept chickens and a cow.&nbsp; That sort of girl, brought up to
+hard work and by no means too well educated, is all the better
+for having something to do.&nbsp; Later, with the gradual arrival
+of the family, a good, all-round woman might have been hired in
+to assist.&nbsp; Faust, of course, would have had his study and
+got to work again; that would have kept him out of further
+mischief.&nbsp; The idea that a brainy man, his age, was going to
+be happy with nothing to do all day but fool round a petticoat
+was ridiculous from the beginning.&nbsp; Valentine&mdash;a good
+fellow, Valentine, with nice ideas&mdash;would have spent his
+Saturdays to Monday with them.&nbsp; Over a pipe and a glass of
+wine, he and Faust would have discussed the local politics.</p>
+<p>He would have danced the children on his knee, have told them
+tales about the war&mdash;taught the eldest boy to shoot.&nbsp;
+Faust, with a practical man like Valentine to help him, would
+probably have invented a new gun.&nbsp; Valentine would have got
+it taken up.</p>
+<p>Things might have come of it.&nbsp; Sybil, in course of time,
+would have married and settled down&mdash;perhaps have taken a
+little house near to them.&nbsp; He and Marguerite would have
+joked&mdash;when Mrs. Sybil was not around&mdash;about his early
+infatuation.&nbsp; The old mother would have toddled over from
+N&uuml;rnberg&mdash;not too often, just for the day.</p>
+<p>The picture grows upon one the more one thinks of it.&nbsp;
+Why did it never occur to them?&nbsp; There would have been a bit
+of a bother with the Old Man.&nbsp; I can imagine Mephistopheles
+being upset about it, thinking himself swindled.&nbsp; Of course,
+if that was the reason&mdash;if Faust said to himself:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like to marry the girl, but I won&rsquo;t do
+it; it would not be fair to the Old Man; he has been to a lot of
+trouble working this thing up; in common gratitude I cannot turn
+round now and behave like a decent, sensible man; it would not be
+playing the game&rdquo;&mdash;if this was the way Faust looked at
+the matter there is nothing more to be said.&nbsp; Indeed, it
+shows him in rather a fine light&mdash;noble, if quixotic.</p>
+<p>If, on the other hand, he looked at the question from the
+point of view of himself and the girl, I think the thing might
+have been managed.&nbsp; All one had to do in those days when one
+wanted to get rid of the Devil was to show him a sword
+hilt.&nbsp; Faust and Marguerite could have slipped into a church
+one morning, and have kept him out of the way with a sword hilt
+till the ceremony was through.&nbsp; They might have hired a
+small boy:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see the gentleman in red?&nbsp; Well, he wants us
+and we don&rsquo;t want him.&nbsp; That is the only difference
+between us.&nbsp; Now, you take this sword, and when you see him
+coming show him the hilt.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t hurt him; just show
+him the sword and shake your head.&nbsp; He will
+understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old gentleman&rsquo;s expression, when subsequently Faust
+presented him to Marguerite, would have been interesting:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Allow me, my wife.&nbsp; My dear, a&mdash;a friend of
+mine.&nbsp; You may remember meeting him that night at your
+aunt&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As I have said, there would have been ructions; but I do not
+myself see what could have been done.&nbsp; There was nothing in
+the bond to the effect that Faust should not marry, so far as we
+are told.&nbsp; The Old Man had a sense of humour.&nbsp; My own
+opinion is that, after getting over the first annoyance, he
+himself would have seen the joke.&nbsp; I can even picture him
+looking in now and again on Mr. and Mrs. Faust.&nbsp; The
+children would be hurried off to bed.&nbsp; There would be, for a
+while, an atmosphere of constraint.</p>
+<p>But the Old Man had a way with him.&nbsp; He would have told
+one or two stories at which Marguerite would have blushed, at
+which Faust would have grinned.&nbsp; I can see the old fellow
+occasionally joining the homely social board.&nbsp; The children,
+awed at first, would have sat silent, with staring eyes.&nbsp;
+But, as I have said, the Old Man had a way with him.&nbsp; Why
+should he not have reformed?&nbsp; The good woman&rsquo;s
+unconsciously exerted influence&mdash;the sweet childish
+prattle!&nbsp; One hears of such things.&nbsp; Might he not have
+come to be known as &ldquo;Nunkie&rdquo;?</p>
+<p>Myself&mdash;I believe I have already mentioned it&mdash;I
+would not have married Marguerite.&nbsp; She is not my ideal of a
+good girl.&nbsp; I never liked the way she deceived her
+mother.&nbsp; And that aunt of hers!&nbsp; Well, a nice girl
+would not have been friends with such a woman.&nbsp; She did not
+behave at all too well to Sybil, either.&nbsp; It is clear to me
+that she led the boy on.&nbsp; And what was she doing with that
+box of jewels, anyhow?&nbsp; She was not a fool.&nbsp; She could
+not have gone every day to that fountain, chatted with those girl
+friends of hers, and learnt nothing.&nbsp; She must have known
+that people don&rsquo;t go leaving twenty thousand pounds&rsquo;
+worth of jewels about on doorsteps as part of a round game.&nbsp;
+Her own instinct, if she had been a good girl, would have told
+her to leave the thing alone.</p>
+<p>I don&rsquo;t believe in these innocent people who do not know
+what they are doing half their time.&nbsp; Ask any London
+magistrate what he thinks of the lady who explains that she
+picked up the diamond brooch:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not meaning, of course, your Worship, to take it.&nbsp;
+I would not do such a thing.&nbsp; It just happened this way,
+your Worship.&nbsp; I was standing as you might say here, and not
+seeing anyone about in the shop I opened the case and took it
+out, thinking as perhaps it might belong to someone; and then
+this gentleman here, as I had not noticed before, comes up quite
+suddenly and says; &lsquo;You come along with me,&rsquo; he
+says.&nbsp; &lsquo;What for,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;when I
+don&rsquo;t even know you?&rsquo; I says.&nbsp; &lsquo;For
+stealing,&rsquo; he says.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well, that&rsquo;s a hard
+word to use to a lady,&rsquo; I says; &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t know
+what you mean, I&rsquo;m sure.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And if she had put them all on, not thinking, what would a
+really nice girl have done when the gentleman came up and assured
+her they were hers?&nbsp; She would have been thirty seconds
+taking them off and flinging them back into the box.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; she would have said,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll trouble you to leave this garden as quickly as
+you entered it and take them with you.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m not that
+sort of girl.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Marguerite clings to the jewels, and accepts the young
+man&rsquo;s arm for a moonlight promenade.&nbsp; And when it does
+enter into her innocent head that he and she have walked that
+shady garden long enough, what does she do when she has said
+good-bye and shut the door?&nbsp; She opens the ground-floor
+window and begins to sing!</p>
+<p>Maybe I am not poetical, but I do like justice.&nbsp; When
+other girls do these sort of things they get called names.&nbsp;
+I cannot see why this particular girl should be held up as an
+ideal.&nbsp; She kills her mother.&nbsp; According to her own
+account this was an accident.&nbsp; It is not an original line of
+defence, and we are not allowed to hear the evidence for the
+prosecution.&nbsp; She also kills her baby.&nbsp; You are not to
+blame her for that, because at the time she was feeling
+poorly.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t see why this girl should have a
+special line of angels to take her up to heaven.&nbsp; There must
+have been decent, hard-working women in N&uuml;rnburg more
+entitled to the ticket.</p>
+<p>Why is it that all these years we have been content to accept
+Marguerite as a type of innocence and virtue?&nbsp; The
+explanation is, I suppose, that Goethe wrote at a time when it
+was the convention to regard all women as good.&nbsp; Anything in
+petticoats was virtuous.&nbsp; If she did wrong it was always
+somebody else&rsquo;s fault.&nbsp; <i>Cherchez la femme</i> was a
+later notion.&nbsp; In the days of Goethe it was always
+<i>Cherchez l&rsquo;homme</i>.&nbsp; It was the man&rsquo;s
+fault.&nbsp; It was the devil&rsquo;s fault.&nbsp; It was
+anybody&rsquo;s fault you liked, but not her&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>The convention has not yet died out.&nbsp; I was reading the
+other day a most interesting book by a brilliant American
+authoress.&nbsp; Seeing I live far away from the lady&rsquo;s
+haunts, I venture to mention names.&nbsp; I am speaking of
+&ldquo;Patience Sparhawk,&rdquo; by Gertrude Atherton.&nbsp; I
+take this book because it is typical of a large body of
+fiction.&nbsp; Miss Sparhawk lives a troubled life: it puzzles
+her.&nbsp; She asks herself what is wrong.&nbsp; Her own idea is
+that it is civilisation.</p>
+<p>If it is not civilisation, then it is the American man or
+Nature&mdash;or Democracy.&nbsp; Miss Sparhawk marries the wrong
+man.&nbsp; Later on she gets engaged to another wrong man.&nbsp;
+In the end we are left to believe she is about to be married to
+the right man.&nbsp; I should be better satisfied if I could hear
+Miss Sparhawk talking six months after that last marriage.&nbsp;
+But if a mistake has again been made I am confident that, in Miss
+Sparhawk&rsquo;s opinion, the fault will not be Miss
+Sparhawk&rsquo;s.&nbsp; The argument is always the same: Miss
+Sparhawk, being a lady, can do no wrong.</p>
+<p>If Miss Sparhawk cared to listen to me for five minutes, I
+feel I could put her right on this point.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is quite true, my dear girl,&rdquo; I should say to
+her, &ldquo;something is wrong&mdash;very wrong.&nbsp; But it is
+not the American man.&nbsp; Never you mind the American man: you
+leave him to worry out his own salvation.&nbsp; You are not the
+girl to put him right, even where he is wrong.&nbsp; And it is
+not civilisation.&nbsp; Civilisation has a deal to answer for, I
+admit: don&rsquo;t you load it up with this additional
+trouble.&nbsp; The thing that is wrong in this case of
+yours&mdash;if you will forgive my saying so&mdash;is you.&nbsp;
+You make a fool of yourself; you marry a man who is a mere animal
+because he appeals to your animal instincts.&nbsp; Then, like the
+lady who cried out &lsquo;Alack, I&rsquo;ve married a
+black,&rsquo; you appeal to heaven against the injustice of being
+mated with a clown.&nbsp; You are not a nice girl, either in your
+ideas or in your behaviour.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t blame you for it;
+you did not make yourself.&nbsp; But when you set to work to
+attract all that is lowest in man, why be so astonished at your
+own success?&nbsp; There are plenty of shocking American men, I
+agree.&nbsp; One meets the class even outside America.&nbsp; But
+nice American girls will tell you that there are also nice
+American men.&nbsp; There is an old proverb about birds of a
+feather.&nbsp; Next time you find yourself in the company of a
+shocking American man, you just ask yourself how he got there,
+and how it is he seems to be feeling at home.&nbsp; You learn
+self-control.&nbsp; Get it out of your head that you are the
+centre of the universe, and grasp the idea that a petticoat is
+not a halo, and you will find civilisation not half as wrong as
+you thought it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I know what Miss Sparhawk&rsquo;s reply would be.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say all this to me&mdash;to me, a lady?&nbsp; Great
+Heavens!&nbsp; What has become of chivalry?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A Frenchman was once put on trial for murdering his father and
+mother.&nbsp; He confessed his guilt, but begged for mercy on the
+plea that he was an orphan.&nbsp; Chivalry was founded on the
+assumption that woman was worthy to be worshipped.&nbsp; The
+modern woman&rsquo;s notion is that when she does wrong she ought
+to be excused by chivalrous man because she is a lady.</p>
+<p>I like the naughty heroine; we all of us do.&nbsp; The early
+Victorian heroine&mdash;the angel in a white frock, was a
+bore.&nbsp; We knew exactly what she was going to do&mdash;the
+right thing.&nbsp; We did not even have to ask ourselves,
+&ldquo;What will she think is the right thing to do under the
+circumstances?&rdquo;&nbsp; It was always the conventional right
+thing.&nbsp; You could have put it to a Sunday school and have
+got the answer every time.&nbsp; The heroine with passions,
+instincts, emotions, is to be welcomed.&nbsp; But I want her to
+grasp the fact that after all she is only one of us.&nbsp; I
+should like her better if, instead of demanding:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is wrong in civilisation?&nbsp; What is the world
+coming to?&rdquo; and so forth, she would occasionally say to
+herself:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Guess I&rsquo;ve made a fool of myself this time.&nbsp;
+I do feel that &rsquo;shamed of myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She would not lose by it.&nbsp; We should respect her all the
+more.</p>
+<h2><a name="page251"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 251</span>WHAT
+MRS. WILKINS THOUGHT ABOUT IT.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Last</span> year, travelling on the
+Underground Railway, I met a man; he was one of the
+saddest-looking men I had seen for years.&nbsp; I used to know
+him well in the old days when we were journalists together.&nbsp;
+I asked him, in a sympathetic tone, how things were going with
+him.&nbsp; I expected his response would be a flood of tears, and
+that in the end I should have to fork out a fiver.&nbsp; To my
+astonishment, his answer was that things were going exceedingly
+well with him.&nbsp; I did not want to say to him bluntly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then what has happened to you to make you look like a
+mute at a temperance funeral?&rdquo; I said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And how are all at home?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I thought that if the trouble lay there he would take the
+opportunity.&nbsp; It brightened him somewhat, the necessity of
+replying to the question.&nbsp; It appeared that his wife was in
+the best of health.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remember her,&rdquo; he continued with a smile;
+&ldquo;wonderful spirits, always cheerful, nothing seems to put
+her out, not even&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He ended the sentence abruptly with a sigh.</p>
+<p>His mother-in-law, I learned from further talk with him, had
+died since I had last met him, and had left them a comfortable
+addition to their income.&nbsp; His eldest daughter was engaged
+to be married.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is entirely a love match,&rdquo; he explained,
+&ldquo;and he is such a dear, good fellow, that I should not have
+made any objection even had he been poor.&nbsp; But, of course,
+as it is, I am naturally all the more content.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His eldest boy, having won the Mottle Scholarship, was going
+up to Cambridge in the Autumn.&nbsp; His own health, he told me,
+had greatly improved; and a novel he had written in his leisure
+time promised to be one of the successes of the season.&nbsp;
+Then it was that I spoke plainly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I am opening a wound too painful to be
+touched,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;tell me.&nbsp; If, on the
+contrary, it is an ordinary sort of trouble upon which the
+sympathy of a fellow worker may fall as balm, let me hear
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So far as I am concerned,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;I
+should be glad to tell you.&nbsp; Speaking about it does me good,
+and may lead&mdash;so I am always in hopes&mdash;to an
+idea.&nbsp; But, for your own sake, if you take my advice, you
+will not press me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can it affect me?&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;it is
+nothing to do with me, is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It need have nothing to do with you,&rdquo; he
+answered, &ldquo;if you are sensible enough to keep out of
+it.&nbsp; If I tell you: from this time onward it will be your
+trouble also.&nbsp; Anyhow, that is what has happened in four
+other separate cases.&nbsp; If you like to be the fifth and
+complete the half dozen of us, you are welcome.&nbsp; But
+remember I have warned you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What has it done to the other five?&rdquo; I
+demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has changed them from cheerful, companionable
+persons into gloomy one-idead bores,&rdquo; he told me.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;They think of but one thing, they talk of but one thing,
+they dream of but one thing.&nbsp; Instead of getting over it, as
+time goes on, it takes possession of them more and more.&nbsp;
+There are men, of course, who would be unaffected by it&mdash;who
+could shake it off.&nbsp; I warn you in particular against it,
+because, in spite of all that is said, I am convinced you have a
+sense of humour; and that being so, it will lay hold of
+you.&nbsp; It will plague you night and day.&nbsp; You see what
+it has made of me!&nbsp; Three months ago a lady interviewer
+described me as of a sunny temperament.&nbsp; If you know your
+own business you will get out at the next station.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I wish now I had followed his advice.&nbsp; As it was, I
+allowed my curiosity to take possession of me, and begged him to
+explain.&nbsp; And he did so.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was just about Christmas time,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;We were discussing the Drury Lane Pantomime&mdash;some
+three or four of us&mdash;in the smoking room of the Devonshire
+Club, and young Gold said he thought it would prove a mistake,
+the introduction of a subject like the Fiscal question into the
+story of Humpty Dumpty.&nbsp; The two things, so far as he could
+see, had nothing to do with one another.&nbsp; He added that he
+entertained a real regard for Mr. Dan Leno, whom he had once met
+on a steamboat, but that there were other topics upon which he
+would prefer to seek that gentleman&rsquo;s guidance.&nbsp;
+Nettleship, on the other hand, declared that he had no sympathy
+with the argument that artists should never intrude upon public
+affairs.&nbsp; The actor was a fellow citizen with the rest of
+us.&nbsp; He said that, whether one agreed with their conclusions
+or not, one must admit that the nation owed a debt of gratitude
+to Mrs. Brown Potter and to Miss Olga Nethersole for giving to it
+the benefit of their convictions.&nbsp; He had talked to both
+ladies in private on the subject and was convinced they knew as
+much about it as did most people.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Burnside, who was one of the party, contended that if
+sides were to be taken, a pantomime should surely advocate the
+Free-Food Cause, seeing it was a form of entertainment supposed
+to appeal primarily to the tastes of the Little Englander.&nbsp;
+Then I came into the discussion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The Fiscal question,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;is on
+everybody&rsquo;s tongue.&nbsp; Such being the case, it is fit
+and proper it should be referred to in our annual pantomime,
+which has come to be regarded as a review of the year&rsquo;s
+doings.&nbsp; But it should not have been dealt with from the
+political standpoint.&nbsp; The proper attitude to have assumed
+towards it was that of innocent raillery, free from all trace of
+partisanship.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Old Johnson had strolled up and was standing behind
+us.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The very thing I have been trying to get hold of
+for weeks,&rsquo; he said&mdash;&lsquo;a bright, amusing
+<i>resum&eacute;</i> of the whole problem that should give
+offence to neither side.&nbsp; You know our paper,&rsquo; he
+continued; &lsquo;we steer clear of politics, but, at the same
+time, try to be up-to-date; it is not always easy.&nbsp; The
+treatment of the subject, on the lines you suggest, is just what
+we require.&nbsp; I do wish you would write me
+something.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is a good old sort, Johnson; it seemed an easy
+thing.&nbsp; I said I would.&nbsp; Since that time I have been
+thinking how to do it.&nbsp; As a matter of fact, I have not
+thought of much else.&nbsp; Maybe you can suggest
+something.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I was feeling in a good working mood the next morning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pilson,&rdquo; said I to myself, &ldquo;shall have the
+benefit of this.&nbsp; He does not need anything boisterously
+funny.&nbsp; A few playfully witty remarks on the subject will be
+the ideal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I lit a pipe and sat down to think.&nbsp; At half-past twelve,
+having to write some letters before going out to lunch, I
+dismissed the Fiscal question from my mind.</p>
+<p>But not for long.&nbsp; It worried me all the afternoon.&nbsp;
+I thought, maybe, something would come to me in the
+evening.&nbsp; I wasted all that evening, and I wasted all the
+following morning.&nbsp; Everything has its amusing side, I told
+myself.&nbsp; One turns out comic stories about funerals, about
+weddings.&nbsp; Hardly a misfortune that can happen to mankind
+but has produced its comic literature.&nbsp; An American friend
+of mine once took a contract from the Editor of an Insurance
+Journal to write four humorous stories; one was to deal with an
+earthquake, the second with a cyclone, the third with a flood,
+and the fourth with a thunderstorm.&nbsp; And more amusing
+stories I have never read.&nbsp; What is the matter with the
+Fiscal question?</p>
+<p>I myself have written lightly on Bime-metallism.&nbsp; Home
+Rule we used to be merry over in the eighties.&nbsp; I remember
+one delightful evening at the Codgers&rsquo; Hall.&nbsp; It would
+have been more delightful still, but for a raw-boned Irishman,
+who rose towards eleven o&rsquo;clock and requested to be
+informed if any other speaker was wishful to make any more jokes
+on the subject of Ould Ireland; because, if so, the raw-boned
+gentleman was prepared to save time by waiting and dealing with
+them altogether.&nbsp; But if not, then&mdash;so the raw-boned
+gentleman announced&mdash;his intention was to go for the last
+speaker and the last speaker but two at once and without further
+warning.</p>
+<p>No other humourist rising, the raw-boned gentleman proceeded
+to make good his threat, with the result that the fun degenerated
+somewhat.&nbsp; Even on the Boer War we used to whisper jokes to
+one another in quiet places.&nbsp; In this Fiscal question there
+must be fun.&nbsp; Where is it?</p>
+<p>For days I thought of little else.&nbsp; My laundress&mdash;as
+we call them in the Temple&mdash;noticed my trouble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I confessed, &ldquo;I am trying to
+think of something innocently amusing to say on the Fiscal
+question.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve &rsquo;eard about it,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t &rsquo;ave much time to read the
+papers.&nbsp; They want to make us pay more for our food,
+don&rsquo;t they?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For some of it,&rdquo; I explained.&nbsp; &ldquo;But,
+then, we shall pay less for other things, so that really we
+shan&rsquo;t be paying more at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There don&rsquo;t seem much in it, either way,&rdquo;
+was Mrs. Wilkins&rsquo; opinion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; I agreed, &ldquo;that is the advantage
+of the system.&nbsp; It will cost nobody anything, and will
+result in everybody being better off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The pity is,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins &ldquo;that pity
+nobody ever thought of it before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The whole trouble hitherto,&rdquo; I explained,
+&ldquo;has been the foreigner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;I never
+&rsquo;eard much good of &rsquo;em, though they do say the
+Almighty &rsquo;as a use for almost everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These foreigners,&rdquo; I continued, &ldquo;these
+Germans and Americans, they dump things on us, you
+know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; demanded Mrs. Wilkins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s dump?&nbsp; Well, it&rsquo;s dumping, you
+know.&nbsp; You take things, and you dump them down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what things?&nbsp; &rsquo;Ow do they do it?&rdquo;
+asked Mrs. Wilkins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, all sorts of things: pig iron, bacon,
+door-mats&mdash;everything.&nbsp; They bring them over
+here&mdash;in ships, you understand&mdash;and then, if you
+please, just dump them down upon our shores.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean surely to tell me that they just
+throw them out and leave them there?&rdquo; queried Mrs.
+Wilkins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course not,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;when I say they
+dump these things upon our shores, that is a figure of
+speech.&nbsp; What I mean is they sell them to us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why do we buy them if we don&rsquo;t want
+them?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Wilkins; &ldquo;we&rsquo;re not bound to
+buy them, are we?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is their artfulness,&rdquo; I explained,
+&ldquo;these Germans and Americans, and the others; they are all
+just as bad as one another&mdash;they insist on selling us these
+things at less price than they cost to make.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems a bit silly of them, don&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+thought Mrs. Wilkins.&nbsp; &ldquo;I suppose being foreigners,
+poor things, they ain&rsquo;t naturally got much
+sense.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does seem silly of them, if you look at it that
+way,&rdquo; I admitted, &ldquo;but what we have got to consider
+is, the injury it is doing us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t see &rsquo;ow it can do us much
+&rsquo;arm,&rdquo; argued Mrs. Wilkins; &ldquo;seems a bit of
+luck so far as we are concerned.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s a few more
+things they&rsquo;d be welcome to dump round my way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t seem to be putting this thing quite in
+the right light to you, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I confessed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It is a long argument, and you might not be able to follow
+it; but you must take it as a fact now generally admitted that
+the cheaper you buy things the sooner your money goes.&nbsp; By
+allowing the foreigner to sell us all these things at about half
+the cost price, he is getting richer every day, and we are
+getting poorer.&nbsp; Unless we, as a country, insist on paying
+at least twenty per cent. more for everything we want, it is
+calculated that in a very few years England won&rsquo;t have a
+penny left.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sounds a bit topsy turvy,&rdquo; suggested Mrs.
+Wilkins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may sound so,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;but I fear
+there can be no doubt of it.&nbsp; The Board of Trade Returns
+would seem to prove it conclusively.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, God be praised, we&rsquo;ve found it out in
+time,&rdquo; ejaculated Mrs. Wilkins piously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a matter of congratulation,&rdquo; I agreed;
+&ldquo;the difficulty is that a good many other people say that
+far from being ruined, we are doing very well indeed, and are
+growing richer every year.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But &rsquo;ow can they say that,&rdquo; argued Mrs.
+Wilkins, &ldquo;when, as you tell me, those Trade Returns prove
+just the opposite?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, they say the same, Mrs. Wilkins, that the Board
+of Trade Returns prove just the opposite.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, they can&rsquo;t both be right,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Wilkins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You would be surprised, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I said,
+&ldquo;how many things can be proved from Board of Trade
+Returns!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But I have not yet thought of that article for Pilson.</p>
+<h2><a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+264</span>SHALL WE BE RUINED BY CHINESE CHEAP LABOUR?</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">What</span> is all this talk I
+&rsquo;ear about the Chinese?&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins to me the
+other morning.&nbsp; We generally indulge in a little chat while
+Mrs. Wilkins is laying the breakfast-table.&nbsp; Letters and
+newspapers do not arrive in my part of the Temple much before
+nine.&nbsp; From half-past eight to nine I am rather glad of Mrs.
+Wilkins.&nbsp; &ldquo;They &rsquo;ave been up to some of their
+tricks again, &rsquo;aven&rsquo;t they?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The foreigner, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I replied,
+&ldquo;whether he be Chinee or any other he, is always up to
+tricks.&nbsp; Was not England specially prepared by an all-wise
+Providence to frustrate these knavish tricks?&nbsp; Which of such
+particular tricks may you be referring to at the moment, Mrs.
+Wilkins?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, &rsquo;e&rsquo;s comin&rsquo; over
+&rsquo;ere&mdash;isn&rsquo;t he, sir? to take the work out of our
+mouths, as it were.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, not exactly over here, to England, Mrs.
+Wilkins,&rdquo; I explained.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has been introduced
+into Africa to work in the mines there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a funny thing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins,
+&ldquo;but to &rsquo;ear the way some of them talk in our block,
+you might run away with the notion&mdash;that is, if you
+didn&rsquo;t know &rsquo;em&mdash;that work was their only
+joy.&nbsp; I said to one of &rsquo;em, the other evening&mdash;a
+man as calls &rsquo;isself a brass finisher, though, Lord knows,
+the only brass &rsquo;e ever finishes is what &rsquo;is poor wife
+earns and isn&rsquo;t quick enough to &rsquo;ide away from
+&rsquo;im&mdash;well, whatever &rsquo;appens, I says, it will be
+clever of &rsquo;em if they take away much work from you.&nbsp;
+It made them all laugh, that did,&rdquo; added Mrs. Wilkins, with
+a touch of pardonable pride.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; continued the good lady, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+surprising &rsquo;ow contented they can be with a little, some of
+&rsquo;em.&nbsp; Give &rsquo;em a &rsquo;ard-working woman to
+look after them, and a day out once a week with a procession of
+the unemployed, they don&rsquo;t ask for nothing more.&nbsp;
+There&rsquo;s that beauty my poor sister Jane was fool enough to
+marry.&nbsp; Serves &rsquo;er right, as I used to tell &rsquo;er
+at first, till there didn&rsquo;t seem any more need to rub it
+into &rsquo;er.&nbsp; She&rsquo;d &rsquo;ad one good
+&rsquo;usband.&nbsp; It wouldn&rsquo;t &rsquo;ave been fair for
+&rsquo;er to &rsquo;ave &rsquo;ad another, even if there&rsquo;d
+been a chance of it, seeing the few of &rsquo;em there is to go
+round among so many.&nbsp; But it&rsquo;s always the same with us
+widows: if we &rsquo;appen to &rsquo;ave been lucky the first
+time, we put it down to our own judgment&mdash;think we
+can&rsquo;t ever make a mistake; and if we draw a wrong
+&rsquo;un, as the saying is, we argue as if it was the duty of
+Providence to make it up to us the second time.&nbsp; Why,
+I&rsquo;d a been making a fool of myself three years ago if
+&rsquo;e &rsquo;adn&rsquo;t been good-natured enough to call one
+afternoon when I was out, and &rsquo;ook it off with two pounds
+eight in the best teapot that I &rsquo;ad been soft enough to
+talk to &rsquo;im about: and never let me set eyes on &rsquo;im
+again.&nbsp; God bless &rsquo;im!&nbsp; &rsquo;E&rsquo;s one of
+the born-tireds, &rsquo;e is, as poor Jane might &rsquo;ave seen
+for &rsquo;erself, if she &rsquo;ad only looked at &rsquo;im,
+instead of listening to &rsquo;im.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But that&rsquo;s courtship all the world over&mdash;old
+and young alike, so far as I&rsquo;ve been able to see it,&rdquo;
+was the opinion of Mrs. Wilkins.&nbsp; &ldquo;The man&rsquo;s all
+eyes and the woman all ears.&nbsp; They don&rsquo;t seem to
+&rsquo;ave any other senses left &rsquo;em.&nbsp; I ran against
+&rsquo;im the other night, on my way &rsquo;ome, at the corner of
+Gray&rsquo;s Inn Road.&nbsp; There was the usual crowd watching a
+pack of them Italians laying down the asphalt in &rsquo;Olborn,
+and &rsquo;e was among &rsquo;em.&nbsp; &rsquo;E &rsquo;ad
+secured the only lamp-post, and was leaning agen it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Ullo,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;glad to see you
+&rsquo;aven&rsquo;t lost your job.&nbsp; Nothin&rsquo; like
+stickin&rsquo; to it, when you&rsquo;ve dropped into
+somethin&rsquo; that really suits you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;What do you mean, Martha?&rsquo; &rsquo;e
+says.&nbsp; &rsquo;E&rsquo;s not one of what I call your smart
+sort.&nbsp; It takes a bit of sarcasm to get through &rsquo;is
+&rsquo;ead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;you&rsquo;re still
+on the old track, I see, looking for work.&nbsp; Take care you
+don&rsquo;t &rsquo;ave an accident one of these days and run up
+agen it before you&rsquo;ve got time to get out of its
+way.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;It&rsquo;s these miserable foreigners,&rsquo;
+&rsquo;e says.&nbsp; &lsquo;Look at &rsquo;em,&rsquo; &rsquo;e
+says.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;There&rsquo;s enough of you doing that,&rsquo; I
+says.&nbsp; &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve got my room to put straight and
+three hours needlework to do before I can get to bed.&nbsp; But
+don&rsquo;t let me &rsquo;inder you.&nbsp; You might forget what
+work was like, if you didn&rsquo;t take an opportunity of
+watching it now and then.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;They come over &rsquo;ere,&rsquo; &rsquo;e says,
+&lsquo;and take the work away from us chaps.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ah,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;poor things, perhaps
+they ain&rsquo;t married.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Lazy devils! &rsquo;e says.&nbsp; &lsquo;Look at
+&rsquo;em, smoking cigarettes.&nbsp; I could do that sort of
+work.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s nothing in it.&nbsp; It don&rsquo;t
+take &rsquo;eathen foreigners to dab a bit of tar about a
+road.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;you always could do
+anybody else&rsquo;s work but your own.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I can&rsquo;t find it, Martha,&rsquo; &rsquo;e
+says.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;No,&rsquo; I says, &lsquo;and you never will in
+the sort of places you go looking for it.&nbsp; They don&rsquo;t
+&rsquo;ang it out on lamp-posts, and they don&rsquo;t leave it
+about at the street corners.&nbsp; Go &rsquo;ome,&rsquo; I says,
+&lsquo;and turn the mangle for your poor wife.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s
+big enough for you to find, even in the dark.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looking for work!&rdquo; snorted Mrs. Wilkins with
+contempt; &ldquo;we women never &rsquo;ave much difficulty in
+finding it, I&rsquo;ve noticed.&nbsp; There are times when I feel
+I could do with losing it for a day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what did he reply, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I asked;
+&ldquo;your brass-finishing friend, who was holding forth on the
+subject of Chinese cheap labour.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mrs. Wilkins as a
+conversationalist is not easily kept to the point.&nbsp; I was
+curious to know what the working classes were thinking on the
+subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that,&rdquo; replied Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;&rsquo;e
+did not say nothing.&nbsp; &rsquo;E ain&rsquo;t the sort
+that&rsquo;s got much to say in an argument.&nbsp; &rsquo;E
+belongs to the crowd that &rsquo;angs about at the back, and does
+the shouting.&nbsp; But there was another of &rsquo;em, a young
+fellow as I feels sorry for, with a wife and three small
+children, who &rsquo;asn&rsquo;t &rsquo;ad much luck for the last
+six months; and that through no fault of &rsquo;is own, I should
+say, from the look of &rsquo;im.&nbsp; &lsquo;I was a
+fool,&rsquo; says &rsquo;e, &lsquo;when I chucked a good
+situation and went out to the war.&nbsp; They told me I was going
+to fight for equal rights for all white men.&nbsp; I thought they
+meant that all of us were going to &rsquo;ave a better chance,
+and it seemed worth making a bit of sacrifice for, that
+did.&nbsp; I should be glad if they would give me a job in their
+mines that would enable me to feed my wife and children.&nbsp;
+That&rsquo;s all I ask them for!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a difficult problem, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I
+said.&nbsp; &ldquo;According to the mine owners&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins.&nbsp; &ldquo;They
+don&rsquo;t seem to be exactly what you&rsquo;d call popular,
+them mine owners, do they?&nbsp; Daresay they&rsquo;re not as bad
+as they&rsquo;re painted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some people, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;paint
+them very black.&nbsp; There are those who hold that the South
+African mine-owner is not a man at all, but a kind of pantomime
+demon.&nbsp; You take Goliath, the whale that swallowed Jonah, a
+selection from the least respectable citizens of Sodom and
+Gomorrah at their worst, Bluebeard, Bloody Queen Mary, Guy
+Fawkes, and the sea-serpent&mdash;or, rather, you take the most
+objectionable attributes of all these various personages, and mix
+them up together.&nbsp; The result is the South African
+mine-owner, a monster who would willingly promote a company for
+the putting on the market of a new meat extract, prepared
+exclusively from new-born infants, provided the scheme promised a
+fair and reasonable opportunity of fleecing the widow and
+orphan.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve &rsquo;eard they&rsquo;re a bad lot,&rdquo;
+said Mrs. Wilkins.&nbsp; &ldquo;But we&rsquo;re most of us that,
+if we listen to what other people say about us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I agreed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;One never arrives at the truth by listening to one side
+only.&nbsp; On the other hand, for example, there are those who
+stoutly maintain that the South African mine-owner is a kind of
+spiritual creature, all heart and sentiment, who, against his own
+will, has been, so to speak, dumped down upon this earth as the
+result of over-production up above of the higher class of
+archangel.&nbsp; The stock of archangels of superior finish
+exceeds the heavenly demand; the surplus has been dropped down
+into South Africa and has taken to mine owning.&nbsp; It is not
+that these celestial visitors of German sounding nomenclature
+care themselves about the gold.&nbsp; Their only desire is,
+during this earthly pilgrimage of theirs, to benefit the human
+race.&nbsp; Nothing can be obtained in this world without
+money&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s true,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, with a
+sigh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For gold, everything can be obtained.&nbsp; The aim of
+the mine-owning archangel is to provide the world with
+gold.&nbsp; Why should the world trouble to grow things and make
+things?&nbsp; &lsquo;Let us,&rsquo; say these archangels,
+temporarily dwelling in South Africa, &lsquo;dig up and
+distribute to the world plenty of gold, then the world can buy
+whatever it wants, and be happy.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There may be a flaw in the argument, Mrs.
+Wilkins,&rdquo; I allowed.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am not presenting it to
+you as the last word upon the subject.&nbsp; I am merely quoting
+the view of the South African mine-owner, feeling himself a much
+misunderstood benefactor of mankind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I expect,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;they are
+just the ordinary sort of Christian, like the rest of us, anxious
+to do the best they can for themselves, and not too particular as
+to doing other people in the process.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am inclined to think, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I said,
+&ldquo;that you are not very far from the truth.&nbsp; A friend
+of mine, a year ago, was very bitter on this subject of Chinese
+cheap labour.&nbsp; A little later there died a distant relative
+of his who left him twenty thousand South African mining
+shares.&nbsp; He thinks now that to object to the Chinese is
+narrow-minded, illiberal, and against all religious
+teaching.&nbsp; He has bought an abridged edition of Confucius,
+and tells me that there is much that is ennobling in Chinese
+morality.&nbsp; Indeed, I gather from him that the introduction
+of the Chinese into South Africa will be the saving of that
+country.&nbsp; The noble Chinese will afford an object lesson to
+the poor white man, displaying to him the virtues of sobriety,
+thrift, and humility.&nbsp; I also gather that it will be of
+inestimable benefit to the noble Chinee himself.&nbsp; The
+Christian missionary will get hold of him in bulk, so to speak,
+and imbue him with the higher theology.&nbsp; It appears to be
+one of those rare cases where everybody is benefited at the
+expense of nobody.&nbsp; It is always a pity to let these rare
+opportunities slip by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+nothin&rsquo; to say agen the Chinaman, as a Chinaman.&nbsp; As
+to &rsquo;is being a &rsquo;eathen, well, throwin&rsquo; stones
+at a church, as the sayin&rsquo; is, don&rsquo;t make a Christian
+of you.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s Christians I&rsquo;ve met as
+couldn&rsquo;t do themselves much &rsquo;arm by changing their
+religion; and as to cleanliness, well, I&rsquo;ve never met but
+one, and &rsquo;e was a washerwoman, and I&rsquo;d rather
+&rsquo;ave sat next to &rsquo;im in a third-class carriage on a
+Bank &rsquo;Oliday than next to some of &rsquo;em.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seems to me,&rdquo; continued Mrs. Wilkins,
+&ldquo;we&rsquo;ve got into the &rsquo;abit of talkin&rsquo; a
+bit too much about other people&rsquo;s dirt.&nbsp; The London
+atmosphere ain&rsquo;t nat&rsquo;rally a dry-cleanin&rsquo;
+process in itself, but there&rsquo;s a goodish few as seem to
+think it is.&nbsp; One comes across Freeborn Britons &rsquo;ere
+and there as I&rsquo;d be sorry to scrub clean for a
+shillin&rsquo; and find my own soap.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a universal failing, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I
+explained.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you talk to a travelled Frenchman, he
+contrasts to his own satisfaction the Paris <i>ouvrier</i> in his
+blue blouse with the appearance of the London
+labourer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I daresay they&rsquo;re all right according to their
+lights,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;but it does seem a bit
+wrong that if our own chaps are willin&rsquo; and anxious to
+work, after all they&rsquo;ve done, too, in the way of getting
+the mines for us, they shouldn&rsquo;t be allowed the
+job.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Again, Mrs. Wilkins, it is difficult to arrive at a
+just conclusion,&rdquo; I said.&nbsp; &ldquo;The mine-owner,
+according to his enemies, hates the British workman with the
+natural instinct that evil creatures feel towards the noble and
+virtuous.&nbsp; He will go to trouble and expense merely to spite
+the British workman, to keep him out of South Africa.&nbsp;
+According to his friends, the mine-owner sets his face against
+the idea of white labour for two reasons.&nbsp; First and
+foremost, it is not nice work; the mine-owner hates the thought
+of his beloved white brother toiling in the mines.&nbsp; It is
+not right that the noble white man should demean himself by such
+work.&nbsp; Secondly, white labour is too expensive.&nbsp; If for
+digging gold men had to be paid anything like the same prices
+they are paid for digging coal, the mines could not be
+worked.&nbsp; The world would lose the gold that the mine-owner
+is anxious to bestow upon it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The mine-owner, following his own inclinations, would
+take a little farm, grow potatoes, and live a beautiful
+life&mdash;perhaps write a little poetry.&nbsp; A slave to sense
+of duty, he is chained to the philanthropic work of
+gold-mining.&nbsp; If we hamper him and worry him the danger is
+that he will get angry with us&mdash;possibly he will order his
+fiery chariot and return to where he came from.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, &rsquo;e can&rsquo;t take the gold with him,
+wherever &rsquo;e goes to?&rdquo; argued Mrs. Wilkins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You talk, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;as if the
+gold were of more value to the world than is the
+mine-owner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; demanded Mrs. Wilkins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a new idea, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I answered;
+&ldquo;it wants thinking out.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page278"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 278</span>HOW
+TO SOLVE THE SERVANT PROBLEM.</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;I <span class="smcap">am</span> glad to see, Mrs.
+Wilkins,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that the Women&rsquo;s Domestic
+Guild of America has succeeded in solving the servant girl
+problem&mdash;none too soon, one might almost say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, as she took the cover off
+the bacon and gave an extra polish to the mustard-pot with her
+apron, &ldquo;they are clever people over there; leastways, so
+I&rsquo;ve always &rsquo;eard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This, their latest, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I said,
+&ldquo;I am inclined to regard as their greatest triumph.&nbsp;
+My hope is that the Women&rsquo;s Domestic Guild of America, when
+it has finished with the United States and Canada, will, perhaps,
+see its way to establishing a branch in England.&nbsp; There are
+ladies of my acquaintance who would welcome, I feel sure, any
+really satisfactory solution of the problem.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, good luck to it, is all I say,&rdquo; responded
+Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;and if it makes all the gals contented with
+their places, and all the mistresses satisfied with what
+they&rsquo;ve got and &rsquo;appy in their minds, why, God bless
+it, say I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The mistake hitherto,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;from what I
+read, appears to have been that the right servant was not sent to
+the right place.&nbsp; What the Women&rsquo;s Domestic Guild of
+America proposes to do is to find the right servant for the right
+place.&nbsp; You see the difference, don&rsquo;t you, Mrs.
+Wilkins?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the secret,&rdquo; agreed Mrs.
+Wilkins.&nbsp; &ldquo;They don&rsquo;t anticipate any difficulty
+in getting the right sort of gal, I take it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I gather not, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I replied.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Wilkins is of a pessimistic turn of mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not so sure about it,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;the
+Almighty don&rsquo;t seem to &rsquo;ave made too many of that
+sort.&nbsp; Unless these American ladies that you speak of are
+going to start a factory of their own.&nbsp; I am afraid there is
+disappointment in store for them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t throw cold water on the idea before it is
+fairly started, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I pleaded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;I
+&rsquo;ave been a gal myself in service; and in my time
+I&lsquo;ve &rsquo;ad a few mistresses of my own, and I&rsquo;ve
+&rsquo;eard a good deal about others.&nbsp; There are ladies and
+ladies, as you may know, sir, and some of them, if they
+aren&rsquo;t exactly angels, are about as near to it as can be
+looked for in this climate, and they are not the ones that do
+most of the complaining.&nbsp; But, as for the average
+mistress&mdash;well it ain&rsquo;t a gal she wants, it&rsquo;s a
+plaster image, without any natural innards&mdash;a sort of thing
+as ain&rsquo;t &rsquo;uman, and ain&rsquo;t to be found in
+&rsquo;uman nature.&nbsp; And then she&rsquo;d grumble at it, if
+it didn&rsquo;t &rsquo;appen to be able to be in two places at
+once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You fear that the standard for that &lsquo;right
+girl&rsquo; is likely to be set a trifle too high Mrs.
+Wilkins,&rdquo; I suggested.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That &lsquo;right gal,&rsquo; according to the notions
+of some of &rsquo;em,&rdquo; retorted Mrs. Wilkins,
+&ldquo;&rsquo;er place ain&rsquo;t down &rsquo;ere among us mere
+mortals; &rsquo;er place is up in &rsquo;eaven with a &rsquo;arp
+and a golden crown.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s my niece, Emma, I
+don&rsquo;t say she is a saint, but a better &rsquo;earted,
+&rsquo;arder working gal, at twenty pounds a year, you
+don&rsquo;t expect to find, unless maybe you&rsquo;re a natural
+born fool that can&rsquo;t &rsquo;elp yourself.&nbsp; She wanted
+a place.&nbsp; She &rsquo;ad been &rsquo;ome for nearly six
+months, nursing &rsquo;er old father, as &rsquo;ad been down all
+the winter with rheumatic fever; and &rsquo;ard-put to it she was
+for a few clothes.&nbsp; You &rsquo;ear &rsquo;em talk about gals
+as insists on an hour a day for practising the piano, and the
+right to invite their young man to spend the evening with them in
+the drawing-room.&nbsp; Perhaps it is meant to be funny; I
+ain&rsquo;t come across that type of gal myself, outside the
+pictures in the comic papers; and I&rsquo;ll never believe, till
+I see &rsquo;er myself, that anybody else &rsquo;as.&nbsp; They
+sent &rsquo;er from the registry office to a lady at Clapton.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I &rsquo;ope you are good at getting up early in
+the morning?&rsquo; says the lady, &lsquo;I like a gal as rises
+cheerfully to &rsquo;er work.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well, ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo; says Emma, &lsquo;I
+can&rsquo;t say as I&rsquo;ve got a passion for it.&nbsp; But
+it&rsquo;s one of those things that &rsquo;as to be done, and I
+guess I&rsquo;ve learnt the trick.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I&rsquo;m a great believer in early
+rising,&rsquo; says my lady; &lsquo;in the morning, one is always
+fresher for one&rsquo;s work; my &rsquo;usband and the younger
+children breakfast at &rsquo;arf past seven; myself and my eldest
+daughter &rsquo;ave our breakfest in bed at eight.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That&rsquo;ll be all right, ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo;
+says Emma.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;And I &rsquo;ope,&rsquo; says the lady,
+&lsquo;you are of an amiable disposition.&nbsp; Some gals when
+you ring the bell come up looking so disagreeable, one almost
+wishes one didn&rsquo;t want them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well, it ain&rsquo;t a thing,&rsquo; explains
+Emma, &lsquo;as makes you want to burst out laughing,
+&rsquo;earing the bell go off for the twentieth time, and
+&rsquo;aving suddenly to put down your work at, perhaps, a
+critical moment.&nbsp; Some ladies don&rsquo;t seem able to reach
+down their &rsquo;at for themselves.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I &rsquo;ope you are not impertinent,&rsquo;
+says the lady; &lsquo;if there&rsquo;s one thing that I object to
+in a servant it is impertinence.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;We none of us like being answered back,&rsquo;
+says Emma, &lsquo;more particularly when we are in the
+wrong.&nbsp; But I know my place ma&rsquo;am, and I shan&rsquo;t
+give you no lip.&nbsp; It always leads to less trouble, I find,
+keeping your mouth shut, rather than opening it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Are you fond of children,&rsquo; asks my
+lady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;It depends upon the children,&rsquo; says Emma;
+&lsquo;there are some I &rsquo;ave &rsquo;ad to do with as made
+the day seem pleasanter, and I&rsquo;ve come across others as I
+could &rsquo;ave parted from at any moment without
+tears.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I like a gal,&rsquo; says the lady, &lsquo;who
+is naturally fond of children, it shows a good
+character.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;How many of them are there?&rsquo; says
+Emma.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Four of them,&rsquo; answers my lady, &lsquo;but
+you won&rsquo;t &rsquo;ave much to do except with the two
+youngest.&nbsp; The great thing with young children is to
+surround them with good examples.&nbsp; Are you a
+Christian?&rsquo; asks my lady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m generally
+called,&rsquo; says Emma.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Every other Sunday evening out is my
+rule,&rsquo; says the lady, &lsquo;but of course I shall expect
+you to go to church.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Do you mean in my time, ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo; says
+Emma, &lsquo;or in yours.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I mean on your evening of course,&rsquo; says my
+lady.&nbsp; &lsquo;&rsquo;Ow else could you go?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well, ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo; says Emma, &lsquo;I
+like to see my people now and then.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;There are better things,&rsquo; says my lady,
+&lsquo;than seeing what you call your people, and I should not
+care to take a girl into my &rsquo;ouse as put &rsquo;er pleasure
+before &rsquo;er religion.&nbsp; You are not engaged, I
+&rsquo;ope?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Walking out, ma&rsquo;am, do you mean?&rsquo;
+says Emma.&nbsp; &lsquo;No, ma&rsquo;am, there is nobody
+I&rsquo;ve got in my mind&mdash;not just at present.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I never will take a gal,&rsquo; explains my
+lady, &lsquo;who is engaged.&nbsp; I find it distracts &rsquo;er
+attention from &rsquo;er work.&nbsp; And I must insist if you
+come to me,&rsquo; continues my lady, &lsquo;that you get
+yourself another &rsquo;at and jacket.&nbsp; If there is one
+thing I object to in a servant it is a disposition to cheap
+finery.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Er own daughter was sitting there beside
+&rsquo;er with &rsquo;alf a dozen silver bangles on &rsquo;er
+wrist, and a sort of thing &rsquo;anging around &rsquo;er neck,
+as, &rsquo;ad it been real, would &rsquo;ave been worth perhaps a
+thousand pounds.&nbsp; But Emma wanted a job, so she kept
+&rsquo;er thoughts to &rsquo;erself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I can put these things by and get myself
+something else,&rsquo; she says, &lsquo;if you don&rsquo;t mind,
+ma&rsquo;am, advancing me something out of my first three
+months&rsquo; wages.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m afraid my account at the
+bank is a bit overdrawn.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The lady whispered something to &rsquo;er
+daughter.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am afraid, on thinking it over,&rsquo;
+she says, &lsquo;that you won&rsquo;t suit, after all.&nbsp; You
+don&rsquo;t look serious enough.&nbsp; I feel sure, from the way
+you do your &rsquo;air,&rsquo; says my lady, &lsquo;there&rsquo;s
+a frivolous side to your nature.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So Emma came away, and was not, on the whole, too
+sorry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But do they get servants to come to them, this type of
+mistress, do you think, Mrs. Wilkins?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They get them all right,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins,
+&ldquo;and if it&rsquo;s a decent gal, it makes a bad gal of
+&rsquo;er, that ever afterwards looks upon every mistress as
+&rsquo;er enemy, and acts accordingly.&nbsp; And if she
+ain&rsquo;t a naturally good gal, it makes &rsquo;er worse, and
+then you &rsquo;ear what awful things gals are.&nbsp; I
+don&rsquo;t say it&rsquo;s an easy problem,&rdquo; continued Mrs.
+Wilkins, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s just like marriages.&nbsp; The good
+mistress gets &rsquo;old of the bad servant, and the bad
+mistress, as often as not is lucky.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how is it,&rdquo; I argued, &ldquo;that in hotels,
+for instance, the service is excellent, and the girls, generally
+speaking, seem contented?&nbsp; The work is hard, and the wages
+not much better, if as good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;you &rsquo;ave
+&rsquo;it the right nail on the &rsquo;ead, there, sir.&nbsp;
+They go into the &rsquo;otels and work like niggers, knowing that
+if a single thing goes wrong they will be bully-ragged and sworn
+at till they don&rsquo;t know whether they are standing on their
+&rsquo;ead or their &rsquo;eels.&nbsp; But they &rsquo;ave their
+hours; the gal knows when &rsquo;er work is done, and when the
+clock strikes she is a &rsquo;uman being once again.&nbsp; She
+&rsquo;as got that moment to look forward to all day, and it
+keeps &rsquo;er going.&nbsp; In private service there&rsquo;s no
+moment in the day to &rsquo;ope for.&nbsp; If the lady is
+reasonable she ain&rsquo;t overworked; but no &rsquo;ow can she
+ever feel she is her own mistress, free to come and go, to wear
+&rsquo;er bit of finery, to &rsquo;ave &rsquo;er bit of
+fun.&nbsp; She works from six in the morning till eleven or
+twelve at night, and then she only goes to bed provided she
+ain&rsquo;t wanted.&nbsp; She don&rsquo;t belong to &rsquo;erself
+at all; it&rsquo;s that that irritates them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see your point, Mrs. Wilkins,&rdquo; I said,
+&ldquo;and, of course, in a house where two or three servants
+were kept some such plan might easily be arranged.&nbsp; The girl
+who commenced work at six o&rsquo;clock in the morning might
+consider herself free at six o&rsquo;clock in the evening.&nbsp;
+What she did with herself, how she dressed herself in her own
+time, would be her affair.&nbsp; What church the clerk or the
+workman belongs to, what company he keeps, is no concern of the
+firm.&nbsp; In such matters, mistresses, I am inclined to think,
+saddle themselves with a responsibility for which there is no
+need.&nbsp; If the girl behaves herself while in the house, and
+does her work, there the contract ends.&nbsp; The mistress who
+thinks it her duty to combine the <i>r&ocirc;les</i> of employer
+and of maiden aunt is naturally resented.&nbsp; The next month
+the girl might change her hours from twelve to twelve, and her
+fellow-servant could enjoy the six a.m. to six p.m. shift.&nbsp;
+But how do you propose to deal, Mrs. Wilkins, with the smaller
+<i>menage</i>, that employs only one servant?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins, &ldquo;it seems to
+me simple enough.&nbsp; Ladies talk pretty about the dignity of
+labour, and are never tired of pointing out why gals should
+prefer domestic service to all other kinds of work.&nbsp; Suppose
+they practise what they preach.&nbsp; In the &rsquo;ouse, where
+there&rsquo;s only the master and the mistress, and, say a couple
+of small children, let the lady take her turn.&nbsp; After all,
+it&rsquo;s only her duty, same as the office or the shop is the
+man&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Where, on the other &rsquo;and, there are
+biggish boys and gals about the place, well it wouldn&rsquo;t do
+them any &rsquo;arm to be taught to play a little less, and to
+look after themselves a little more.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s just
+arranging things&mdash;that&rsquo;s all that&rsquo;s
+wanted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remind me of a family I once knew, Mrs.
+Wilkins,&rdquo; I said; &ldquo;it consisted of the usual father
+and mother, and of five sad, healthy girls.&nbsp; They kept two
+servants&mdash;or, rather, they never kept any servants; they
+lived always looking for servants, breaking their hearts over
+servants, packing servants off at a moment&rsquo;s notice,
+standing disconsolately looking after servants who had packed
+themselves off at a moment&rsquo;s notice, wondering generally
+what the world was coming too.&nbsp; It occurred to me at the
+time, that without much trouble, they could have lived a peaceful
+life without servants.&nbsp; The eldest girl was learning
+painting&mdash;and seemed unable to learn anything else.&nbsp; It
+was poor sort of painting; she noticed it herself.&nbsp; But she
+seemed to think that, if she talked a lot about it, and thought
+of nothing else, that somehow it would all come right.&nbsp; The
+second girl played the violin.&nbsp; She played it from early
+morning till late evening, and friends fell away from them.&nbsp;
+There wasn&rsquo;t a spark of talent in the family, but they all
+had a notion that a vague longing to be admired was just the same
+as genius.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Another daughter fancied she would like to be an
+actress, and screamed all day in the attic.&nbsp; The fourth
+wrote poetry on a typewriter, and wondered why nobody seemed to
+want it; while the fifth one suffered from a weird belief that
+smearing wood with a red-hot sort of poker was a thing worth
+doing for its own sake.&nbsp; All of them seemed willing enough
+to work, provided only that it was work of no use to any living
+soul.&nbsp; With a little sense, and the occasional assistance of
+a charwoman, they could have led a merrier life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I was giving away secrets,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wilkins,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d say to the mistresses: &lsquo;Show yourselves
+able to be independent.&rsquo;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s because the gals
+know that the mistresses can&rsquo;t do without them that they
+sometimes gives themselves airs.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page292"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 292</span>WHY
+WE HATE THE FOREIGNER.</h2>
+<p>The advantage that the foreigner possesses over the Englishman
+is that he is born good.&nbsp; He does not have to try to be
+good, as we do.&nbsp; He does not have to start the New Year with
+the resolution to be good, and succeed, bar accidents, in being
+so till the middle of January.&nbsp; He is just good all the year
+round.&nbsp; When a foreigner is told to mount or descend from a
+tram on the near side, it does not occur to him that it would be
+humanly possible to secure egress from or ingress to that tram
+from the off side.</p>
+<p>In Brussels once I witnessed a daring attempt by a lawless
+foreigner to enter a tram from the wrong side.&nbsp; The gate was
+open: he was standing close beside it.&nbsp; A line of traffic
+was in his way: to have got round to the right side of that tram
+would have meant missing it.&nbsp; He entered when the conductor
+was not looking, and took his seat.&nbsp; The astonishment of the
+conductor on finding him there was immense.&nbsp; How did he get
+there?&nbsp; The conductor had been watching the proper entrance,
+and the man had not passed him.&nbsp; Later, the true explanation
+suggested itself to the conductor, but for a while he hesitated
+to accuse a fellow human being of such crime.</p>
+<p>He appealed to the passenger himself.&nbsp; Was his presence
+to be accounted for by miracle or by sin?&nbsp; The passenger
+confessed.&nbsp; It was more in sorrow than in anger that the
+conductor requested him at once to leave.&nbsp; This tram was
+going to be kept respectable.&nbsp; The passenger proved
+refractory, a halt was called, and the gendarmerie appealed
+to.&nbsp; After the manner of policemen, they sprang, as it were,
+from the ground, and formed up behind an imposing officer, whom I
+took to be the sergeant.&nbsp; At first the sergeant could hardly
+believe the conductor&rsquo;s statement.&nbsp; Even then, had the
+passenger asserted that he had entered by the proper entrance,
+his word would have been taken.&nbsp; Much easier to the foreign
+official mind would it have been to believe that the conductor
+had been stricken with temporary blindness, than that man born of
+woman would have deliberately done anything expressly forbidden
+by a printed notice.</p>
+<p>Myself, in his case, I should have lied and got the trouble
+over.&nbsp; But he was a proud man, or had not much
+sense&mdash;one of the two, and so held fast to the truth.&nbsp;
+It was pointed out to him that he must descend immediately and
+wait for the next tram.&nbsp; Other gendarmes were arriving from
+every quarter: resistance in the circumstances seemed
+hopeless.&nbsp; He said he would get down.&nbsp; He made to
+descend this time by the proper gate, but that was not
+justice.&nbsp; He had mounted the wrong side, he must alight on
+the wrong side.&nbsp; Accordingly, he was put out amongst the
+traffic, after which the conductor preached a sermon from the
+centre of the tram on the danger of ascents and descents
+conducted from the wrong quarter.</p>
+<p>There is a law throughout Germany&mdash;an excellent law it
+is: I would we had it in England&mdash;that nobody may scatter
+paper about the street.&nbsp; An English military friend told me
+that, one day in Dresden, unacquainted with this rule, he tore a
+long letter he had been reading into some fifty fragments and
+threw them behind him.&nbsp; A policeman stopped him and
+explained to him quite politely the law upon the subject.&nbsp;
+My military friend agreed that it was a very good law, thanked
+the man for his information, and said that for the future he
+would bear it in mind.&nbsp; That, as the policeman pointed out,
+would make things right enough for the future, but meanwhile it
+was necessary to deal with the past&mdash;with the fifty or so
+pieces of paper lying scattered about the road and pavement.</p>
+<p>My military friend, with a pleasant laugh, confessed he did
+not see what was to be done.&nbsp; The policeman, more
+imaginative, saw a way out.&nbsp; It was that my military friend
+should set to work and pick up those fifty scraps of paper.&nbsp;
+He is an English General on the Retired List, and of imposing
+appearance: his manner on occasion is haughty.&nbsp; He did not
+see himself on his hands and knees in the chief street of
+Dresden, in the middle of the afternoon, picking up paper.</p>
+<p>The German policeman himself admitted that the situation was
+awkward.&nbsp; If the English General could not accept it there
+happened to be an alternative.&nbsp; It was that the English
+General should accompany the policeman through the streets,
+followed by the usual crowd, to the nearest prison, some three
+miles off.&nbsp; It being now four o&rsquo;clock in the
+afternoon, they would probably find the judge departed.&nbsp; But
+the most comfortable thing possible in prison cells should be
+allotted to him, and the policeman had little doubt that the
+General, having paid his fine of forty marks, would find himself
+a free man again in time for lunch the following day.&nbsp; The
+general suggested hiring a boy to pick up the paper.&nbsp; The
+policeman referred to the wording of the law, and found that this
+would not be permitted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought the matter out,&rdquo; my friend told me,
+&ldquo;imagining all the possible alternatives, including that of
+knocking the fellow down and making a bolt, and came to the
+conclusion that his first suggestion would, on the whole, result
+in the least discomfort.&nbsp; But I had no idea that picking up
+small scraps of thin paper off greasy stones was the business
+that I found it!&nbsp; It took me nearly ten minutes, and
+afforded amusement, I calculate, to over a thousand people.&nbsp;
+But it is a good law, mind you: all I wish is that I had known it
+beforehand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On one occasion I accompanied an American lady to a German
+Opera House.&nbsp; The taking-off of hats in the German
+Schausspielhaus is obligatory, and again I would it were so in
+England.&nbsp; But the American lady is accustomed to disregard
+rules made by mere man.&nbsp; She explained to the doorkeeper
+that she was going to wear her hat.&nbsp; He, on his side,
+explained to her that she was not: they were both a bit short
+with one another.&nbsp; I took the opportunity to turn aside and
+buy a programme: the fewer people there are mixed up in an
+argument, I always think, the better.</p>
+<p>My companion explained quite frankly to the doorkeeper that it
+did not matter what he said, she was not going to take any notice
+of him.&nbsp; He did not look a talkative man at any time, and,
+maybe, this announcement further discouraged him.&nbsp; In any
+case, he made no attempt to answer.&nbsp; All he did was to stand
+in the centre of the doorway with a far-away look in his
+eyes.&nbsp; The doorway was some four feet wide: he was about
+three feet six across, and weighed about twenty stone.&nbsp; As I
+explained, I was busy buying a programme, and when I returned my
+friend had her hat in her hand, and was digging pins into it: I
+think she was trying to make believe it was the heart of the
+doorkeeper.&nbsp; She did not want to listen to the opera, she
+wanted to talk all the time about that doorkeeper, but the people
+round us would not even let her do that.</p>
+<p>She has spent three winters in Germany since then.&nbsp; Now
+when she feels like passing through a door that is standing wide
+open just in front of her, and which leads to just the place she
+wants to get to, and an official shakes his head at her, and
+explains that she must not, but must go up two flights of stairs
+and along a corridor and down another flight of stairs, and so
+get to her place that way, she apologises for her error and trots
+off looking ashamed of herself.</p>
+<p>Continental Governments have trained their citizens to
+perfection.&nbsp; Obedience is the Continent&rsquo;s first
+law.&nbsp; The story that is told of a Spanish king who was
+nearly drowned because the particular official whose duty it was
+to dive in after Spanish kings when they tumbled out of boats
+happened to be dead, and his successor had not yet been
+appointed, I can quite believe.&nbsp; On the Continental railways
+if you ride second class with a first-class ticket you render
+yourself liable to imprisonment.&nbsp; What the penalty is for
+riding first with a second-class ticket I cannot
+say&mdash;probably death, though a friend of mine came very near
+on one occasion to finding out.</p>
+<p>All would have gone well with him if he had not been so darned
+honest.&nbsp; He is one of those men who pride themselves on
+being honest.&nbsp; I believe he takes a positive pleasure in
+being honest.&nbsp; He had purchased a second-class ticket for a
+station up a mountain, but meeting, by chance on the platform, a
+lady acquaintance, had gone with her into a first-class
+apartment.&nbsp; On arriving at the journey&rsquo;s end he
+explained to the collector what he had done, and, with his purse
+in his hand, demanded to know the difference.&nbsp; They took him
+into a room and locked the door.&nbsp; They wrote out his
+confession and read it over to him, and made him sign it, and
+then they sent for a policeman.</p>
+<p>The policeman cross-examined him for about a quarter of an
+hour.&nbsp; They did not believe the story about the lady.&nbsp;
+Where was the lady?&nbsp; He did not know.&nbsp; They searched
+the neighbourhood for her, but could not find her.&nbsp; He
+suggested&mdash;what turned out to be the truth&mdash;that, tired
+of loitering about the station, she had gone up the
+mountain.&nbsp; An Anarchist outrage had occurred in the
+neighbouring town some months before.&nbsp; The policeman
+suggested searching for bombs.&nbsp; Fortunately, a Cook&rsquo;s
+agent, returning with a party of tourists, arrived upon the
+scene, and took it upon himself to explain in delicate language
+that my friend was a bit of an ass and could not tell first class
+from second.&nbsp; It was the red cushions that had deceived my
+friend: he thought it was first class, as a matter of fact it was
+second class.</p>
+<p>Everybody breathed again.&nbsp; The confession was torn up
+amid universal joy: and then the fool of a ticket collector
+wanted to know about the lady&mdash;who must have travelled in a
+second-class compartment with a first-class ticket.&nbsp; It
+looked as if a bad time were in store for her on her return to
+the station.</p>
+<p>But the admirable representative of Cook was again equal to
+the occasion.&nbsp; He explained that my friend was also a bit of
+a liar.&nbsp; When he said he had travelled with this lady he was
+merely boasting.&nbsp; He would like to have travelled with her,
+that was all he meant, only his German was shaky.&nbsp; Joy once
+more entered upon the scene.&nbsp; My friend&rsquo;s character
+appeared to be re-established.&nbsp; He was not the abandoned
+wretch for whom they had taken him&mdash;only, apparently, a
+wandering idiot.&nbsp; Such an one the German official could
+respect.&nbsp; At the expense of such an one the German official
+even consented to drink beer.</p>
+<p>Not only the foreign man, woman and child, but the foreign dog
+is born good.&nbsp; In England, if you happen to be the possessor
+of a dog, much of your time is taken up dragging him out of
+fights, quarrelling with the possessor of the other dog as to
+which began it, explaining to irate elderly ladies that he did
+not kill the cat, that the cat must have died of heart disease
+while running across the road, assuring disbelieving game-keepers
+that he is not your dog, that you have not the faintest notion
+whose dog he is.&nbsp; With the foreign dog, life is a peaceful
+proceeding.&nbsp; When the foreign dog sees a row, tears spring
+to his eyes: he hastens on and tries to find a policeman.&nbsp;
+When the foreign dog sees a cat in a hurry, he stands aside to
+allow her to pass.&nbsp; They dress the foreign dog&mdash;some of
+them&mdash;in a little coat, with a pocket for his handkerchief,
+and put shoes on his feet.&nbsp; They have not given him a
+hat&mdash;not yet.&nbsp; When they do, he will contrive by some
+means or another to raise it politely when he meets a cat he
+thinks he knows.</p>
+<p>One morning, in a Continental city, I came across a
+disturbance&mdash;it might be more correct to say the disturbance
+came across me: it swept down upon me, enveloped me before I knew
+that I was in it.&nbsp; A fox-terrier it was, belonging to a very
+young lady&mdash;it was when the disturbance was to a certain
+extent over that we discovered he belonged to this young
+lady.&nbsp; She arrived towards the end of the disturbance, very
+much out of breath: she had been running for a mile, poor girl,
+and shouting most of the way.&nbsp; When she looked round and saw
+all the things that had happened, and had had other things that
+she had missed explained to her, she burst into tears.&nbsp; An
+English owner of that fox-terrier would have given one look round
+and then have jumped upon the nearest tram going anywhere.&nbsp;
+But, as I have said, the foreigner is born good.&nbsp; I left her
+giving her name and address to seven different people.</p>
+<p>But it was about the dog I wished to speak more
+particularly.&nbsp; He had commenced innocently enough, trying to
+catch a sparrow.&nbsp; Nothing delights a sparrow more than being
+chased by a dog.&nbsp; A dozen times he thought he had the
+sparrow.&nbsp; Then another dog had got in his way.&nbsp; I
+don&rsquo;t know what they call this breed of dog, but abroad it
+is popular: it has no tail and looks like a pig&mdash;when things
+are going well with it.&nbsp; This particular specimen, when I
+saw him, looked more like part of a doormat.&nbsp; The
+fox-terrier had seized it by the scruff of the neck and had
+rolled it over into the gutter just in front of a motor
+cycle.&nbsp; Its owner, a large lady, had darted out to save it,
+and had collided with the motor cyclist.&nbsp; The large lady had
+been thrown some half a dozen yards against an Italian boy
+carrying a tray load of plaster images.</p>
+<p>I have seen a good deal of trouble in my life, but never one
+yet that did not have an Italian image-vendor somehow or other
+mixed up in it.&nbsp; Where these boys hide in times of peace is
+a mystery.&nbsp; The chance of being upset brings them out as
+sunshine brings out flies.&nbsp; The motor cycle had dashed into
+a little milk-cart and had spread it out neatly in the middle of
+the tram lines.&nbsp; The tram traffic looked like being stopped
+for a quarter of an hour; but the idea of every approaching tram
+driver appeared to be that if he rang his bell with sufficient
+vigor this seeming obstruction would fade away and disappear.</p>
+<p>In an English town all this would not have attracted much
+attention.&nbsp; Somebody would have explained that a dog was the
+original cause, and the whole series of events would have
+appeared ordinary and natural.&nbsp; Upon these foreigners the
+fear descended that the Almighty, for some reason, was angry with
+them.&nbsp; A policeman ran to catch the dog.</p>
+<p>The delighted dog rushed backwards, barking furiously, and
+tried to throw up paving stones with its hind legs.&nbsp; That
+frightened a nursemaid who was wheeling a perambulator, and then
+it was that I entered into the proceedings.&nbsp; Seated on the
+edge of the pavement, with a perambulator on one side of me and a
+howling baby on the other, I told that dog what I thought of
+him.</p>
+<p>Forgetful that I was in a foreign land&mdash;that he might not
+understand me&mdash;I told it him in English, I told it him at
+length, I told it very loud and clear.&nbsp; He stood a yard in
+front of me, listening to me with an expression of ecstatic joy I
+have never before or since seen equalled on any face, human or
+canine.&nbsp; He drank it in as though it had been music from
+Paradise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where have I heard that song before?&rdquo; he seemed
+to be saying to himself, &ldquo;the old familiar language they
+used to talk to me when I was young?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He approached nearer to me; there were almost tears in his
+eyes when I had finished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say it again!&rdquo; he seemed to be asking of
+me.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh! say it all over again, the dear old English
+oaths and curses that in this God-forsaken land I never hoped to
+hear again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I learnt from the young lady that he was an English-born
+fox-terrier.&nbsp; That explained everything.&nbsp; The foreign
+dog does not do this sort of thing.&nbsp; The foreigner is born
+good: that is why we hate him.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IDLE IDEAS IN 1905***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
+***** This file should be named 3140-h.htm or 3140-h.zip******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/1/4/3140
+
+
+
+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. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+ www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
+North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
+contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
+Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/3140-h/images/tpb.jpg b/3140-h/images/tpb.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a1a2be5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/3140-h/images/tpb.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/3140-h/images/tps.jpg b/3140-h/images/tps.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5c6d4b2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/3140-h/images/tps.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..afa4253
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #3140 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3140)
diff --git a/old/idlid10.txt b/old/idlid10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f7bf423
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/idlid10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6046 @@
+Project Gutenberg's of Idle Ideas in 1905, by Jerome K. Jerome
+#27 in our series by Jerome K. Jerome
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
+the laws for your country before redistributing these files!!!
+
+Please take a look at the important information in this header.
+We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
+electronic path open for the next readers.
+
+Please do not remove this.
+
+This should be the first thing seen when anyone opens the book.
+Do not change or edit it without written permission. The words
+are carefully chosen to provide users with the information they
+need about what they can legally do with the texts.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
+further information is included below. We need your donations.
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a 501(c)(3)
+organization with EIN [Employee Identification Number] 64-6221541
+
+As of 12/12/00 contributions are only being solicited from people in:
+Colorado, Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa,
+Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Montana,
+Nevada, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota,
+Texas, Vermont, and Wyoming.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met,
+additions to this list will be made and fund raising
+will begin in the additional states. Please feel
+free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+These donations should be made to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+
+Title: Idle Ideas in 1905
+
+Author: Jerome K. Jerome
+
+Release Date: March, 2002 [Etext #3140]
+[Yes, we are about one year ahead of schedule]
+[The actual date this file first posted = 12/30/00]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Project Gutenberg's of Idle Ideas in 1905, by Jerome K. Jerome
+*****This file should be named idlid10.txt or idlid10.zip*****
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, idlid11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, idlid10a.txt
+
+This etext was produced from the 1905 Hurst and Blackett edition by
+David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+Project Gutenberg Etexts are usually created from multiple editions,
+all of which are in the Public Domain in the United States, unless a
+copyright notice is included. Therefore, we usually do NOT keep any
+of these books in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our books one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to send us error messages even years after
+the official publication date.
+
+Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any Etext before announcement
+can surf to them as follows, and just download by date; this is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext02
+or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext02
+
+Or /etext01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour this year as we release fifty new Etext
+files per month, or 500 more Etexts in 2000 for a total of 3000+
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+should reach over 300 billion Etexts given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000 = 1 Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+At our revised rates of production, we will reach only one-third
+of that goal by the end of 2001, or about 3,333 Etexts unless we
+manage to get some real funding.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+Presently, contributions are only being solicited from people in:
+Colorado, Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa,
+Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nevada,
+Montana, Nevada, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
+South Dakota, Texas, Vermont, and Wyoming.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met,
+additions to this list will be made and fund raising
+will begin in the additional states.
+
+These donations should be made to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation,
+EIN [Employee Identification Number] 64-6221541,
+has been approved as a 501(c)(3) organization by the US Internal
+Revenue Service (IRS). Donations are tax-deductible to the extent
+permitted by law. As the requirements for other states are met,
+additions to this list will be made and fund raising will begin in the
+additional states.
+
+All donations should be made to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation. Mail to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Avenue
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109 [USA]
+
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+hart@pobox.com forwards to hart@prairienet.org and archive.org
+if your mail bounces from archive.org, I will still see it, if
+it bounces from prairienet.org, better resend later on. . . .
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+***
+
+
+Example command-line FTP session:
+
+ftp ftp.ibiblio.org
+login: anonymous
+password: your@login
+cd pub/docs/books/gutenberg
+cd etext90 through etext99 or etext00 through etext02, etc.
+dir [to see files]
+get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
+GET GUTINDEX.?? [to get a year's listing of books, e.g., GUTINDEX.99]
+GET GUTINDEX.ALL [to get a listing of ALL books]
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etexts,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this etext,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the etext,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+
+
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.12.12.00*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+This etext was produced from the 1905 Hurst and Blackett edition by
+David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+
+IDLE IDEAS IN 1905
+
+by Jerome K. Jerome
+
+
+
+
+Contents:
+
+Are We As Interesting As We Think We Are?
+Should Women Be Beautiful?
+When Is The Best Time To Be Merry?
+Do We Lie A-Bed Too Late?
+Should Married Men Play Golf?
+Are Early Marriages A Mistake?
+Do Writers Write Too Much?
+Should Soldiers Be Polite?
+Ought Stories To Be True?
+Creatures That One Day Shall Be Men
+How To Be Happy Though Little
+Should We Say What We Think, Or Think What We Say?
+Is The American Husband Made Entirely Of Stained Glass
+Does The Young Man Know Everything Worth Knowing?
+How Many Charms Hath Music, Would You Say?
+The white man's burden! Need it be so heavy?
+Why Didn't He Marry The Girl?
+What Mrs. Wilkins thought about it
+Shall We Be Ruined By Chinese Cheap Labour?
+How To Solve The Servant Problem
+Why We Hate The Foreigner
+
+
+
+
+ARE WE AS INTERESTING AS WE THINK WE ARE?
+
+
+
+"Charmed. Very hot weather we've been having of late--I mean cold.
+Let me see, I did not quite catch your name just now. Thank you so
+much. Yes, it is a bit close." And a silence falls, neither of us
+being able to think what next to say.
+
+What has happened is this: My host has met me in the doorway, and
+shaken me heartily by the hand.
+
+"So glad you were able to come," he has said. "Some friends of mine
+here, very anxious to meet you." He has bustled me across the room.
+"Delightful people. You'll like them--have read all your books."
+
+He has brought me up to a stately lady, and has presented me. We
+have exchanged the customary commonplaces, and she, I feel, is
+waiting for me to say something clever, original and tactful. And I
+don't know whether she is Presbyterian or Mormon; a Protectionist or
+a Free Trader; whether she is engaged to be married or has lately
+been divorced!
+
+A friend of mine adopts the sensible plan of always providing you
+with a short history of the person to whom he is about to lead you.
+
+"I want to introduce you to a Mrs. Jones," he whispers. "Clever
+woman. Wrote a book two years ago. Forget the name of it.
+Something about twins. Keep away from sausages. Father ran a pork
+shop in the Borough. Husband on the Stock Exchange. Keep off coke.
+Unpleasantness about a company. You'll get on best by sticking to
+the book. Lot in it about platonic friendship. Don't seem to be
+looking too closely at her. Has a slight squint she tries to hide."
+
+By this time we have reached the lady, and he introduces me as a
+friend of his who is simply dying to know her.
+
+"Wants to talk about your book," he explains. "Disagrees with you
+entirely on the subject of platonic friendship. Sure you'll be able
+to convince him."
+
+It saves us both a deal of trouble. I start at once on platonic
+friendship, and ask her questions about twins, avoiding sausages and
+coke. She thinks me an unusually interesting man, and I am less
+bored than otherwise I might be.
+
+I have sometimes thought it would be a serviceable device if, in
+Society, we all of us wore a neat card--pinned, say, upon our back--
+setting forth such information as was necessary; our name legibly
+written, and how to be pronounced; our age (not necessarily in good
+faith, but for purposes of conversation. Once I seriously hurt a
+German lady by demanding of her information about the Franco-German
+war. She looked to me as if she could not object to being taken for
+forty. It turned out she was thirty-seven. Had I not been an
+Englishman I might have had to fight a duel); our religious and
+political beliefs; together with a list of the subjects we were most
+at home upon; and a few facts concerning our career--sufficient to
+save the stranger from, what is vulgarly termed "putting his foot in
+it." Before making jokes about "Dumping," or discussing the question
+of Chinese Cheap Labour, one would glance behind and note whether
+one's companion was ticketed "Whole-hogger," or "Pro-Boer." Guests
+desirous of agreeable partners--an "agreeable person," according to
+the late Lord Beaconsfield's definition, being "a person who agrees
+with you"--could make their own selection.
+
+"Excuse me. Would you mind turning round a minute? Ah, 'Wagnerian
+Crank!' I am afraid we should not get on together. I prefer the
+Italian school."
+
+Or, "How delightful. I see you don't believe in vaccination. May I
+take you into supper?"
+
+Those, on the other hand, fond of argument would choose a suitable
+opponent. A master of ceremonies might be provided who would stand
+in the centre of the room and call for partners: "Lady with strong
+views in favour of female franchise wishes to meet gentleman holding
+the opinions of St. Paul. With view to argument."
+
+An American lady, a year or two ago, wrote me a letter that did me
+real good: she appreciated my work with so much understanding,
+criticised it with such sympathetic interest. She added that, when
+in England the summer before, she had been on the point of accepting
+an invitation to meet me; but at the last moment she had changed her
+mind; she felt so sure--she put it pleasantly, but this is what it
+came to--that in my own proper person I should fall short of her
+expectations. For my own sake I felt sorry she had cried off; it
+would have been worth something to have met so sensible a woman. An
+author introduced to people who have read--or who say that they have
+read--his books, feels always like a man taken for the first time to
+be shown to his future wife's relations. They are very pleasant.
+They try to put him at his ease. But he knows instinctively they are
+disappointed with him. I remember, when a very young man, attending
+a party at which a famous American humorist was the chief guest. I
+was standing close behind a lady who was talking to her husband.
+
+"He doesn't look a bit funny," said the lady.
+
+"Great Scott!" answered her husband. "How did you expect him to
+look? Did you think he would have a red nose and a patch over one
+eye?"
+
+"Oh, well, he might look funnier than that, anyhow," retorted the
+lady, highly dissatisfied. "It isn't worth coming for."
+
+We all know the story of the hostess who, leaning across the table
+during the dessert, requested of the funny man that he would kindly
+say something amusing soon, because the dear children were waiting to
+go to bed. Children, I suppose, have no use for funny people who
+don't choose to be funny. I once invited a friend down to my house
+for a Saturday to Monday. He is an entertaining man, and before he
+came I dilated on his powers of humour--somewhat foolishly perhaps--
+in the presence of a certain youthful person who resides with me, and
+who listens when she oughtn't to, and never when she ought. He
+happened not to be in a humorous mood that evening. My young
+relation, after dinner, climbed upon my knee. For quite five minutes
+she sat silent. Then she whispered:
+
+"Has he said anything funny?"
+
+"Hush. No, not yet; don't be silly."
+
+Five minutes later: "Was that funny?"
+
+"No, of course not."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because--can't you hear? We are talking about Old Age Pensions."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"Oh, it's--oh, never mind now. It isn't a subject on which one can
+be funny."
+
+"Then what's he want to talk about it for?"
+
+She waited for another quarter of an hour. Then, evidently bored,
+and much to my relief, suggested herself that she might as well go to
+bed. She ran to me the next morning in the garden with an air of
+triumph.
+
+"He said something so funny last night," she told me.
+
+"Oh, what was it?" I inquired. It seemed to me I must have missed
+it.
+
+"Well, I can't exactly 'member it," she explained, "not just at the
+moment. But it was so funny. I dreamed it, you know."
+
+For folks not Lions, but closely related to Lions, introductions must
+be trying ordeals. You tell them that for years you have been
+yearning to meet them. You assure them, in a voice trembling with
+emotion, that this is indeed a privilege. You go on to add that when
+a boy -
+
+At this point they have to interrupt you to explain that they are not
+the Mr. So-and-So, but only his cousin or his grandfather; and all
+you can think of to say is: "Oh, I'm so sorry."
+
+I had a nephew who was once the amateur long-distance bicycle
+champion. I have him still, but he is stouter and has come down to a
+motor car. In sporting circles I was always introduced as
+"Shorland's Uncle." Close-cropped young men would gaze at me with
+rapture; and then inquire: "And do you do anything yourself, Mr.
+Jerome?"
+
+But my case was not so bad as that of a friend of mine, a doctor. He
+married a leading actress, and was known ever afterwards as "Miss B-
+'s husband."
+
+At public dinners, where one takes one's seat for the evening next to
+someone that one possibly has never met before, and is never likely
+to meet again, conversation is difficult and dangerous. I remember
+talking to a lady at a Vagabond Club dinner. She asked me during the
+entree--with a light laugh, as I afterwards recalled--what I thought,
+candidly, of the last book of a certain celebrated authoress. I told
+her, and a coldness sprang up between us. She happened to be the
+certain celebrated authoress; she had changed her place at the last
+moment so as to avoid sitting next to another lady novelist, whom she
+hated.
+
+One has to shift oneself, sometimes, on these occasions. A newspaper
+man came up to me last Ninth of November at the Mansion House.
+
+"Would you mind changing seats with me?" he asked. "It's a bit
+awkward. They've put me next to my first wife."
+
+I had a troubled evening myself once long ago. I accompanied a young
+widow lady to a musical At Home, given by a lady who had more
+acquaintances than she knew. We met the butler at the top of the
+stairs. My friend spoke first:
+
+"Say Mrs. Dash and--"
+
+The butler did not wait for more--he was a youngish man--but shouted
+out:
+
+"Mr. and Mrs. Dash."
+
+"My dear! how very quiet you have kept!" cried our hostess delighted.
+"Do let me congratulate you."
+
+The crush was too great and our hostess too distracted at the moment
+for any explanations. We were swept away, and both of us spent the
+remainder of the evening feebly protesting our singleness.
+
+If it had happened on the stage it would have taken us the whole play
+to get out of it. Stage people are not allowed to put things right
+when mistakes are made with their identity. If the light comedian is
+expecting a plumber, the first man that comes into the drawing-room
+has got to be a plumber. He is not allowed to point out that he
+never was a plumber; that he doesn't look like a plumber; that no one
+not an idiot would mistake him for a plumber. He has got to be shut
+up in the bath-room and have water poured over him, just as if he
+were a plumber--a stage plumber, that is. Not till right away at the
+end of the last act is he permitted to remark that he happens to be
+the new curate.
+
+I sat out a play once at which most people laughed. It made me sad.
+A dear old lady entered towards the end of the first act. We knew
+she was the aunt. Nobody can possibly mistake the stage aunt--except
+the people on the stage. They, of course, mistook her for a circus
+rider, and shut her up in a cupboard. It is what cupboards seem to
+be reserved for on the stage. Nothing is ever put in them excepting
+the hero's relations. When she wasn't in the cupboard she was in a
+clothes basket, or tied up in a curtain. All she need have done was
+to hold on to something while remarking to the hero:
+
+"If you'll stop shouting and jumping about for just ten seconds, and
+give me a chance to observe that I am your maiden aunt from
+Devonshire, all this tomfoolery can be avoided."
+
+That would have ended it. As a matter of fact that did end it five
+minutes past eleven. It hadn't occurred to her to say it before.
+
+In real life I never knew but of one case where a man suffered in
+silence unpleasantness he could have ended with a word; and that was
+the case of the late Corney Grain. He had been engaged to give his
+entertainment at a country house. The lady was a nouvelle riche of
+snobbish instincts. She left instructions that Corney Grain when he
+arrived was to dine with the servants. The butler, who knew better,
+apologised; but Corney was a man not easily disconcerted. He dined
+well, and after dinner rose and addressed the assembled company.
+
+"Well, now, my good friends," said Corney, "if we have all finished,
+and if you are all agreeable, I shall be pleased to present to you my
+little show."
+
+The servants cheered. The piano was dispensed with. Corney
+contrived to amuse his audience very well for half-an-hour without
+it. At ten o'clock came down a message: Would Mr. Corney Grain come
+up into the drawing-room. Corney went. The company in the drawing-
+room were waiting, seated.
+
+"We are ready, Mr. Grain," remarked the hostess.
+
+"Ready for what?" demanded Corney.
+
+"For your entertainment," answered the hostess.
+
+"But I have given it already," explained Corney; "and my engagement
+was for one performance only."
+
+"Given it! Where? When?"
+
+"An hour ago, downstairs."
+
+"But this is nonsense," exclaimed the hostess.
+
+"It seemed to me somewhat unusual," Corney replied; "but it has
+always been my privilege to dine with the company I am asked to
+entertain. I took it you had arranged a little treat for the
+servants."
+
+And Corney left to catch his train.
+
+Another entertainer told me the following story, although a joke
+against himself. He and Corney Grain were sharing a cottage on the
+river. A man called early one morning to discuss affairs, and was
+talking to Corney in the parlour, which was on the ground floor. The
+window was open. The other entertainer--the man who told me the
+story--was dressing in the room above. Thinking he recognised the
+voice of the visitor below, he leant out of his bedroom window to
+hear better. He leant too far, and dived head foremost into a bed of
+flowers, his bare legs--and only his bare legs--showing through the
+open window of the parlour.
+
+"Good gracious!" exclaimed the visitor, turning at the moment and
+seeing a pair of wriggling legs above the window sill; "who's that?"
+
+Corney fixed his eyeglass and strolled to the window.
+
+"Oh, it's only What's-his-name," he explained. "Wonderful spirits.
+Can be funny in the morning."
+
+
+
+SHOULD WOMEN BE BEAUTIFUL?
+
+
+
+Pretty women are going to have a hard time of it later on. Hitherto,
+they have had things far too much their own way. In the future there
+are going to be no pretty girls, for the simple reason there will be
+no plain girls against which to contrast them. Of late I have done
+some systematic reading of ladies' papers. The plain girl submits to
+a course of "treatment." In eighteen months she bursts upon Society
+an acknowledged beauty. And it is all done by kindness. One girl
+writes:
+
+"Only a little while ago I used to look at myself in the glass and
+cry. Now I look at myself and laugh."
+
+The letter is accompanied by two photographs of the young lady. I
+should have cried myself had I seen her as she was at first. She was
+a stumpy, flat-headed, squat-nosed, cross-eyed thing. She did not
+even look good. One virtue she appears to have had, however. It was
+faith. She believed what the label said, she did what the label told
+her. She is now a tall, ravishing young person, her only trouble
+being, I should say, to know what to do with her hair--it reaches to
+her knees and must be a nuisance to her. She would do better to give
+some of it away. Taking this young lady as a text, it means that the
+girl who declines to be a dream of loveliness does so out of
+obstinacy. What the raw material may be does not appear to matter.
+Provided no feature is absolutely missing, the result is one and the
+same.
+
+Arrived at years of discretion, the maiden proceeds to choose the
+style of beauty she prefers. Will she be a Juno, a Venus, or a
+Helen? Will she have a Grecian nose, or one tip-tilted like the
+petal of a rose? Let her try the tip-tilted style first. The
+professor has an idea it is going to be fashionable. If afterwards
+she does not like it, there will be time to try the Grecian. It is
+difficult to decide these points without experiment.
+
+Would the lady like a high or a low forehead? Some ladies like to
+look intelligent. It is purely a matter of taste. With the Grecian
+nose, the low broad forehead perhaps goes better. It is more
+according to precedent. On the other hand, the high brainy forehead
+would be more original. It is for the lady herself to select.
+
+We come to the question of eyes. The lady fancies a delicate blue,
+not too pronounced a colour--one of those useful shades that go with
+almost everything. At the same time there should be depth and
+passion. The professor understands exactly the sort of eye the lady
+means. But it will be expensive. There is a cheap quality; the
+professor does not recommend it. True that it passes muster by
+gaslight, but the sunlight shows it up. It lacks tenderness, and at
+the price you can hardly expect it to contain much hidden meaning.
+The professor advises the melting, Oh-George-take-me-in-your-arms-
+and-still-my-foolish-fears brand. It costs a little more, but it
+pays for itself in the end.
+
+Perhaps it will be best, now the eye has been fixed upon, to discuss
+the question of the hair. The professor opens his book of patterns.
+Maybe the lady is of a wilful disposition. She loves to run laughing
+through the woods during exceptionally rainy weather; or to gallop
+across the downs without a hat, her fair ringlets streaming in the
+wind, the old family coachman panting and expostulating in the rear.
+If one may trust the popular novel, extremely satisfactory husbands
+have often been secured in this way. You naturally look at a girl
+who is walking through a wood, laughing heartily apparently for no
+other reason than because it is raining--who rides at stretch gallop
+without a hat. If you have nothing else to do, you follow her. It
+is always on the cards that such a girl may do something really
+amusing before she gets home. Thus things begin.
+
+To a girl of this kind, naturally curly hair is essential. It must
+be the sort of hair that looks better when it is soaking wet. The
+bottle of stuff that makes this particular hair to grow may be
+considered dear, if you think merely of the price. But that is not
+the way to look at it. "What is it going to do for me?" That is
+what the girl has got to ask herself. It does not do to spoil the
+ship for a ha'porth of tar, as the saying is. If you are going to be
+a dashing, wilful beauty, you must have the hair for it, or the whole
+scheme falls to the ground.
+
+Eyebrows and eyelashes, the professor assumes, the lady would like to
+match the hair. Too much eccentricity the professor does not agree
+with. Nature, after all, is the best guide; neatness combined with
+taste, that is the ideal to be aimed at. The eyebrows should be
+almost straight, the professor thinks; the eyelashes long and silky,
+with just the suspicion of a curl. The professor would also suggest
+a little less cheekbone. Cheekbones are being worn low this season.
+
+Will the lady have a dimpled chin, or does she fancy the square-cut
+jaw? Maybe the square-cut jaw and the firm, sweet mouth are more
+suitable for the married woman. They go well enough with the baby
+and the tea-urn, and the strong, proud man in the background. For
+the unmarried girl the dimpled chin and the rosebud mouth are,
+perhaps, on the whole safer. Some gentlemen are so nervous of that
+firm, square jaw. For the present, at all events, let us keep to the
+rosebud and the dimple.
+
+Complexion! Well, there is only one complexion worth considering--a
+creamy white, relieved by delicate peach pink. It goes with
+everything, and is always effective. Rich olives, striking pallors--
+yes, you hear of these things doing well. The professor's
+experience, however, is that for all-round work you will never
+improve upon the plain white and pink. It is less liable to get out
+of order, and is the easiest at all times to renew.
+
+For the figure, the professor recommends something lithe and supple.
+Five foot four is a good height, but that is a point that should be
+discussed first with the dressmaker. For trains, five foot six is,
+perhaps, preferable. But for the sporting girl, who has to wear
+short frocks, that height would, of course, be impossible.
+
+The bust and the waist are also points on which the dressmaker should
+be consulted. Nothing should be done in a hurry. What is the
+fashion going to be for the next two or three seasons? There are
+styles demanding that beginning at the neck you should curve out,
+like a pouter pigeon. There is apparently no difficulty whatever in
+obtaining this result. But if crinolines, for instance, are likely
+to come in again! The lady has only to imagine it for herself: the
+effect might be grotesque, suggestive of a walking hour-glass. So,
+too, with the waist. For some fashions it is better to have it just
+a foot from the neck. At other times it is more useful lower down.
+The lady will kindly think over these details and let the professor
+know. While one is about it, one may as well make a sound job.
+
+It is all so simple, and, when you come to think of it, really not
+expensive. Age, apparently, makes no difference. A woman is as old
+as she looks. In future, I take it, there will be no ladies over
+five-and-twenty. Wrinkles! Why any lady should still persist in
+wearing them is a mystery to me. With a moderate amount of care any
+middle-class woman could save enough out of the housekeeping money in
+a month to get rid of every one of them. Grey hair! Well, of
+course, if you cling to grey hair, there is no more to be said. But
+to ladies who would just as soon have rich wavy-brown or a delicate
+shade of gold, I would point out that there are one hundred and
+forty-seven inexpensive lotions on the market, any one of which,
+rubbed gently into the head with a tooth-brush (not too hard) just
+before going to bed will, to use a colloquialism, do the trick.
+
+Are you too stout, or are you too thin? All you have to do is to say
+which, and enclose stamps. But do not make a mistake and send for
+the wrong recipe. If you are already too thin, you might in
+consequence suddenly disappear before you found out your mistake.
+One very stout lady I knew worked at herself for eighteen months and
+got stouter every day. This discouraged her so much that she gave up
+trying. No doubt she had made a muddle and had sent for the wrong
+bottle, but she would not listen to further advice. She said she was
+tired of the whole thing.
+
+In future years there will be no need for a young man to look about
+him for a wife; he will take the nearest girl, tell her his ideal,
+and, if she really care for him, she will go to the shop and have
+herself fixed up to his pattern. In certain Eastern countries, I
+believe, something of this kind is done. A gentleman desirous of
+adding to his family sends round the neighbourhood the weight and
+size of his favourite wife, hinting that if another can be found of
+the same proportions, there is room for her. Fathers walk round
+among their daughters, choose the most likely specimen, and have her
+fattened up. That is their brutal Eastern way. Out West we shall be
+more delicate. Match-making mothers will probably revive the old
+confession book. Eligible bachelors will be invited to fill in a
+page: "Your favourite height in women," "Your favourite measurement
+round the waist," "Do you like brunettes or blondes?"
+
+The choice will be left to the girls.
+
+"I do think Henry William just too sweet for words," the maiden of
+the future will murmur to herself. Gently, coyly, she will draw from
+him his ideal of what a woman should be. In from six months to a
+year she will burst upon him, the perfect She; height, size, weight,
+right to a T. He will clasp her in his arms.
+
+"At last," he will cry, "I have found her, the woman of my dreams."
+
+And if he does not change his mind, and the bottles do not begin to
+lose their effect, there will be every chance that they will be happy
+ever afterwards.
+
+Might not Science go even further? Why rest satisfied with making a
+world of merely beautiful women? Cannot Science, while she is about
+it, make them all good at the same time. I do not apologise for the
+suggestion. I used to think all women beautiful and good. It is
+their own papers that have disillusioned me. I used to look at this
+lady or at that--shyly, when nobody seemed to be noticing me--and
+think how fair she was, how stately. Now I only wonder who is her
+chemist.
+
+They used to tell me, when I was a little boy, that girls were made
+of sugar and spice. I know better now. I have read the recipes in
+the Answers to Correspondents.
+
+When I was quite a young man I used to sit in dark corners and
+listen, with swelling heart, while people at the piano told me where
+little girl babies got their wonderful eyes from, of the things they
+did to them in heaven that gave them dimples. Ah me! I wish now I
+had never come across those ladies' papers. I know the stuff that
+causes those bewitching eyes. I know the shop where they make those
+dimples; I have passed it and looked in. I thought they were
+produced by angels' kisses, but there was not an angel about the
+place, that I could see. Perhaps I have also been deceived as
+regards their goodness. Maybe all women are not so perfect as in the
+popular short story they appear to be. That is why I suggest that
+Science should proceed still further, and make them all as beautiful
+in mind as she is now able to make them in body. May we not live to
+see in the advertisement columns of the ladies' paper of the future
+the portrait of a young girl sulking in a corner--"Before taking the
+lotion!" The same girl dancing among her little brothers and
+sisters, shedding sunlight through the home--"After the three first
+bottles!" May we not have the Caudle Mixture: One tablespoonful at
+bed-time guaranteed to make the lady murmur, "Good-night, dear; hope
+you'll sleep well," and at once to fall asleep, her lips parted in a
+smile? Maybe some specialist of the future will advertise Mind
+Massage: "Warranted to remove from the most obstinate subject all
+traces of hatred, envy, and malice."
+
+And, when Science has done everything possible for women, there might
+be no harm in her turning her attention to us men. Her idea at
+present seems to be that we men are too beautiful, physically and
+morally, to need improvement. Personally, there are one or two
+points about which I should like to consult her.
+
+
+
+WHEN IS THE BEST TIME TO BE MERRY?
+
+
+
+There is so much I could do to improve things generally in and about
+Europe, if only I had a free hand. I should not propose any great
+fundamental changes. These poor people have got used to their own
+ways; it would be unwise to reform them all at once. But there are
+many little odds and ends that I could do for them, so many of their
+mistakes I could correct for them. They do not know this. If they
+only knew there was a man living in their midst willing to take them
+in hand and arrange things for them, how glad they would be. But the
+story is always the same. One reads it in the advertisements of the
+matrimonial column:
+
+"A lady, young, said to be good-looking"--she herself is not sure on
+the point; she feels that possibly she may be prejudiced; she puts
+before you merely the current gossip of the neighbourhood; people say
+she is beautiful; they may be right, they may be wrong: it is not
+for her to decide--"well-educated, of affectionate disposition,
+possessed of means, desires to meet gentleman with a view to
+matrimony."
+
+Immediately underneath one reads of a gentleman of twenty-eight,
+"tall, fair, considered agreeable." Really the modesty of the
+matrimonial advertiser teaches to us ordinary mortals quite a
+beautiful lesson. I know instinctively that were anybody to ask me
+suddenly:
+
+"Do you call yourself an agreeable man?" I should answer promptly:
+
+"An agreeable man! Of course I'm an agreeable man. What silly
+questions you do ask!" If he persisted in arguing the matter,
+saying:
+
+"But there are people who do not consider you an agreeable man." I
+should get angry with him.
+
+"Oh, they think that, do they?" I should say. "Well, you tell them
+from me, with my compliments, that they are a set of blithering
+idiots. Not agreeable! You show me the man who says I'm not
+agreeable. I'll soon let him know whether I'm agreeable or not."
+
+These young men seeking a wife are silent on the subject of their own
+virtues. Such are for others to discover. The matrimonial
+advertiser confines himself to a simple statement of fact: he is
+considered agreeable."
+
+He is domestically inclined, and in receipt of a good income. He is
+desirous of meeting a lady of serious disposition, with view to
+matrimony. If possessed of means--well, it is a trifle hardly worth
+considering one way or the other. He does not insist upon it; on the
+other hand he does not exclude ladies of means; the main idea is
+matrimony.
+
+It is sad to reflect upon a young lady, said to be good-looking (let
+us say good-looking and be done with it: a neighbourhood does not
+rise up and declare a girl good-looking if she is not good-looking,
+that is only her modest way of putting it), let us say a young lady,
+good-looking, well-educated, of affectionate disposition--it is
+undeniably sad to reflect that such an one, matrimonially inclined,
+should be compelled to have recourse to the columns of a matrimonial
+journal. What are the young men in the neighbourhood thinking of?
+What more do they want? Is it Venus come to life again with ten
+thousand a year that they are waiting for! It makes me angry with my
+own sex reading these advertisements. And when one thinks of the
+girls that do get married!
+
+But life is a mystery. The fact remains: here is the ideal wife
+seeking in vain for a husband. And here, immediately underneath--I
+will not say the ideal husband, he may have faults; none of us are
+perfect, but as men go a decided acquisition to any domestic hearth,
+an agreeable gentleman, fond of home life, none of your gad-abouts--
+calls aloud to the four winds for a wife--any sort of a wife,
+provided she be of a serious disposition. In his despair, he has
+grown indifferent to all other considerations. "Is there in this
+world," he has said to himself, "one unmarried woman, willing to
+marry me, an agreeable man, in receipt of a good income." Possibly
+enough this twain have passed one another in the street, have sat
+side by side in the same tram-car, never guessing, each one, that the
+other was the very article of which they were in want to make life
+beautiful.
+
+Mistresses in search of a servant, not so much with the idea of
+getting work out of her, rather with the object of making her happy,
+advertise on one page. On the opposite page, domestic treasures--
+disciples of Carlyle, apparently, with a passionate love of work for
+its own sake--are seeking situations, not so much with the desire of
+gain as with the hope of finding openings where they may enjoy the
+luxury of feeling they are leading useful lives. These philanthropic
+mistresses, these toil-loving hand-maidens, have lived side by side
+in the same town for years, never knowing one another.
+
+So it is with these poor European peoples. They pass me in the
+street. They do not guess that I am ready and willing to take them
+under my care, to teach them common sense with a smattering of
+intelligence--to be, as one might say, a father to them. They look
+at me. There is nothing about me to tell them that I know what is
+good for them better than they do themselves. In the fairy tales the
+wise man wore a conical hat and a long robe with twiddly things all
+round the edge. You knew he was a clever man. It avoided the
+necessity of explanation. Unfortunately, the fashion has gone out.
+We wise men have to wear just ordinary clothes. Nobody knows we are
+wise men. Even when we tell them so, they don't believe it. This it
+is that makes our task the more difficult.
+
+One of the first things I should take in hand, were European affairs
+handed over to my control, would be the rearrangement of the
+Carnival. As matters are, the Carnival takes place all over Europe
+in February. At Nice, in Spain, or in Italy, it may be occasionally
+possible to feel you want to dance about the streets in thin costume
+during February. But in more northern countries during Carnival time
+I have seen only one sensible masker; he was a man who had got
+himself up as a diver. It was in Antwerp. The rain was pouring down
+in torrents; a cheery, boisterous John Bull sort of an east wind was
+blustering through the streets at the rate of fifteen miles an hour.
+Pierrots, with frozen hands, were blowing blue noses. An elderly
+Cupid had borrowed an umbrella from a cafe and was waiting for a
+tram. A very little devil was crying with the cold, and wiping his
+eyes with the end of his own tail. Every doorway was crowded with
+shivering maskers. The diver alone walked erect, the water streaming
+from him.
+
+February is not the month for open air masquerading. The "confetti,"
+which has come to be nothing but coloured paper cut into small discs,
+is a sodden mass. When a lump of it strikes you in the eye, your
+instinct is not to laugh gaily, but to find out the man who threw it
+and to hit him back. This is not the true spirit of Carnival. The
+marvel is that, in spite of the almost invariably adverse weather,
+these Carnivals still continue. In Belgium, where Romanism still
+remains the dominant religion, Carnival maintains itself stronger
+than elsewhere in Northern Europe.
+
+At one small town, Binche, near the French border, it holds
+uninterrupted sway for three days and two nights, during which time
+the whole of the population, swelled by visitors from twenty miles
+round, shouts, romps, eats and drinks and dances. After which the
+visitors are packed like sardines into railway trains. They pin
+their tickets to their coats and promptly go to sleep. At every
+station the railway officials stumble up and down the trains with
+lanterns. The last feeble effort of the more wakeful reveller,
+before he adds himself to the heap of snoring humanity on the floor
+of the railway carriage, is to change the tickets of a couple of his
+unconscious companions. In this way gentlemen for the east are
+dragged out by the legs at junctions, and packed into trains going
+west; while southern fathers are shot out in the chill dawn at lonely
+northern stations, to find themselves greeted with enthusiasm by
+other people's families.
+
+At Binche, they say--I have not counted them myself--that thirty
+thousand maskers can be seen dancing at the same time. When they are
+not dancing they are throwing oranges at one another. The houses
+board up their windows. The restaurants take down their mirrors and
+hide away the glasses. If I went masquerading at Binche I should go
+as a man in armour, period Henry the Seventh.
+
+"Doesn't it hurt," I asked a lady who had been there, "having oranges
+thrown at you? Which sort do they use, speaking generally, those
+fine juicy ones--Javas I think you call them--or the little hard
+brand with skins like a nutmeg-grater? And if both sorts are used
+indiscriminately, which do you personally prefer?"
+
+"The smart people," she answered, "they are the same everywhere--they
+must be extravagant--they use the Java orange. If it hits you in the
+back I prefer the Java orange. It is more messy than the other, but
+it does not leave you with that curious sensation of having been
+temporarily stunned. Most people, of course, make use of the small
+hard orange. If you duck in time, and so catch it on the top of your
+head, it does not hurt so much as you would think. If, however, it
+hits you on a tender place--well, myself, I always find that a little
+sal volatile, with old cognac--half and half, you understand--is
+about the best thing. But it only happens once a year," she added.
+
+Nearly every town gives prizes for the best group of maskers. In
+some cases the first prize amounts to as much as two hundred pounds.
+The butchers, the bakers, the candlestick makers, join together and
+compete. They arrive in wagons, each group with its band. Free
+trade is encouraged. Each neighbouring town and village "dumps" its
+load of picturesque merry-makers.
+
+It is in these smaller towns that the spirit of King Carnival finds
+happiest expression. Almost every third inhabitant takes part in the
+fun. In Brussels and the larger towns the thing appears ridiculous.
+A few hundred maskers force their way with difficulty through
+thousands of dull-clad spectators, looking like a Spanish river in
+the summer time, a feeble stream, dribbling through acres of muddy
+bank. At Charleroi, the centre of the Belgian Black Country, the
+chief feature of the Carnival is the dancing of the children. A
+space is specially roped off for them.
+
+If by chance the sun is kind enough to shine, the sight is a pretty
+one. How they love the dressing up and the acting, these small
+mites! One young hussy--she could hardly have been more than ten--
+was gotten up as a haughty young lady. Maybe some elder sister had
+served as a model. She wore a tremendous wig of flaxen hair, a hat
+that I guarantee would have made its mark even at Ascot on the Cup
+Day, a skirt that trailed two yards behind her, a pair of what had
+once been white kid gloves, and a blue silk parasol. Dignity! I
+have seen the offended barmaid, I have met the chorus girl--not by
+appointment, please don't misunderstand me, merely as a spectator--up
+the river on Sunday. But never have I witnessed in any human being
+so much hauteur to the pound avoir-dupois as was carried through the
+streets of Charleroi by that small brat. Companions of other days,
+mere vulgar boys and girls, claimed acquaintance with her. She
+passed them with a stare of such utter disdain that it sent them
+tumbling over one another backwards. By the time they had recovered
+themselves sufficiently to think of an old tin kettle lying handy in
+the gutter she had turned the corner.
+
+Two miserably clad urchins, unable to scrape together the few sous
+necessary for the hire of a rag or two, had nevertheless determined
+not to be altogether out of it. They had managed to borrow a couple
+of white blouses--not what you would understand by a white blouse,
+dear Madame, a dainty thing of frills and laces, but the coarse white
+sack the street sweeper wears over his clothes. They had also
+borrowed a couple of brooms. Ridiculous little objects they looked,
+the tiny head of each showing above the great white shroud as gravely
+they walked, the one behind the other, sweeping the mud into the
+gutter. They also were of the Carnival, playing at being scavengers.
+
+Another quaint sight I witnessed. The "serpentin" is a feature of
+the Belgian Carnival. It is a strip of coloured paper, some dozen
+yards long, perhaps. You fling it as you would a lassoo, entangling
+the head of some passer-by. Naturally, the object most aimed at by
+the Belgian youth is the Belgian maiden. And, naturally also, the
+maiden who finds herself most entangled is the maiden who--to use
+again the language of the matrimonial advertiser--"is considered
+good-looking." The serpentin about her head is the "feather in her
+cap" of the Belgian maiden on Carnival Day. Coming suddenly round
+the corner I almost ran into a girl. Her back was towards me. It
+was a quiet street. She had half a dozen of these serpentins.
+Hurriedly, with trembling hands, she was twisting them round and
+round her own head. I looked at her as I passed. She flushed
+scarlet. Poor little snub-nosed pasty-faced woman! I wish she had
+not seen me. I could have bought sixpenny-worth, followed her, and
+tormented her with them; while she would have pretended indignation--
+sought, discreetly, to escape from me.
+
+Down South, where the blood flows quicker, King Carnival is, indeed,
+a jolly old soul. In Munich he reigns for six weeks, the end coming
+with a mad two days revel in the streets. During the whole of the
+period, folks in ordinary, every-day costume are regarded as
+curiosities; people wonder what they are up to. From the Grafin to
+the Dienstmadchen, from the Herr Professor to the "Piccolo," as they
+term the small artist that answers to our page boy, the business of
+Munich is dancing, somewhere, somehow, in a fancy costume. Every
+theatre clears away the stage, every cafe crowds its chairs and
+tables into corners, the very streets are cleared for dancing.
+Munich goes mad.
+
+Munich is always a little mad. The maddest ball I ever danced at was
+in Munich. I went there with a Harvard University professor. He had
+been told what these balls were like. Ever seeking knowledge of all
+things, he determined to take the matter up for himself and examine
+it. The writer also must ever be learning. I agreed to accompany
+him. We had not intended to dance. Our idea was that we could be
+indulgent spectators, regarding from some coign of vantage the antics
+of the foolish crowd. The professor was clad as became a professor.
+Myself, I wore a simply-cut frock-coat, with trousering in French
+grey. The doorkeeper explained to us that this was a costume ball;
+he was sorry, but gentlemen could only be admitted in evening dress
+or in masquerade.
+
+It was half past one in the morning. We had sat up late on purpose;
+we had gone without our dinner; we had walked two miles. The
+professor suggested pinning up the tails of his clerically-cut coat
+and turning in his waistcoat. The doorkeeper feared it would not be
+quite the same thing. Besides, my French grey trousers refused to
+adapt themselves. The doorkeeper proposed our hiring a costume--a
+little speculation of his own; gentlemen found it simpler sometimes,
+especially married gentlemen, to hire a costume in this manner,
+changing back into sober garments before returning home. It reduced
+the volume of necessary explanation.
+
+"Have you anything, my good man," said the professor, "anything that
+would effect a complete disguise?"
+
+The doorkeeper had the very thing--a Chinese arrangement, with
+combined mask and wig. It fitted neatly over the head, and was
+provided with a simple but ingenious piece of mechanism by means of
+which much could be done with the pigtail. Myself the doorkeeper hid
+from view under the cowl of a Carmelite monk.
+
+"I do hope nobody recognises us," whispered my friend the professor
+as we entered.
+
+I can only hope sincerely that they did not. I do not wish to talk
+about myself. That would be egotism. But the mystery of the
+professor troubles me to this day. A grave, earnest gentleman, the
+father of a family, I saw him with my own eyes put that ridiculous
+pasteboard mask over his head. Later on--a good deal later on--I
+found myself walking again with him through silent star-lit streets.
+Where he had been in the interval, and who then was the strange
+creature under the Chinaman's mask, will always remain to me an
+unsolved problem.
+
+
+
+DO WE LIE A-BED TOO LATE?
+
+
+
+It was in Paris, many years ago, that I fell by chance into this
+habit of early rising. My night--by reasons that I need not enter
+into--had been a troubled one. Tired of the hot bed that gave no
+sleep, I rose and dressed myself, crept down the creaking stairs,
+experiencing the sensations of a burglar new to his profession,
+unbolted the great door of the hotel, and passed out into an unknown,
+silent city, bathed in a mysterious soft light. Since then, this
+strange sweet city of the dawn has never ceased to call to me. It
+may be in London, in Paris again, in Brussels, Berlin, Vienna, that I
+have gone to sleep, but if perchance I wake before the returning tide
+of human life has dimmed its glories with the mists and vapours of
+the noisy day, I know that beyond my window blind the fairy city, as
+I saw it first so many years ago--this city that knows no tears, no
+sorrow, through which there creeps no evil thing; this city of quiet
+vistas, fading into hope; this city of far-off voices whispering
+peace; this city of the dawn that still is young--invites me to talk
+with it awhile before the waking hours drive it before them, and with
+a sigh it passes whence it came.
+
+It is the great city's one hour of purity, of dignity. The very rag-
+picker, groping with her filthy hands among the ashes, instead of an
+object of contempt, moves from door to door an accusing Figure, her
+thin soiled garments, her bent body, her scarred face, hideous with
+the wounds of poverty, an eloquent indictment of smug Injustice,
+sleeping behind its deaf shutters. Yet even into her dim brain has
+sunk the peace that fills for this brief hour the city. This, too,
+shall have its end, my sister! Men and women were not born to live
+on the husks that fill the pails outside the rich man's door.
+Courage a little while longer, you and yours. Your rheumy eyes once
+were bright, your thin locks once soft and wavy, your poor bent back
+once straight; and maybe, as they tell you in their gilded churches,
+this bulging sack shall be lifted from your weary shoulders, your
+misshapen limbs be straight again. You pass not altogether unheeded
+through these empty streets. Not all the eyes of the universe are
+sleeping.
+
+The little seamstress, hurrying to her early work! A little later
+she will be one of the foolish crowd, joining in the foolish
+laughter, in the coarse jests of the work-room: but as yet the hot
+day has not claimed her. The work-room is far beyond, the home of
+mean cares and sordid struggles far behind. To her, also, in this
+moment are the sweet thoughts of womanhood. She puts down her bag,
+rests herself upon a seat. If all the day were dawn, this city of
+the morning always with us! A neighbouring clock chimes forth the
+hour. She starts up from her dream and hurries on--to the noisy
+work-room.
+
+A pair of lovers cross the park, holding each other's hands. They
+will return later in the day, but there will be another expression in
+their eyes, another meaning in the pressure of their hands. Now the
+purity of the morning is with them.
+
+Some fat, middle-aged clerk comes puffing into view: his ridiculous
+little figure very podgy. He stops to take off his hat and mop his
+bald head with his handkerchief: even to him the morning lends
+romance. His fleshy face changes almost as one looks at him. One
+sees again the lad with his vague hopes, his absurd ambitions.
+
+There is a statue of Aphrodite in one of the smaller Paris parks.
+Twice in the same week, without particularly meaning it, I found
+myself early in the morning standing in front of this statue gazing
+listlessly at it, as one does when in dreamy mood; and on both
+occasions, turning to go, I encountered the same man, also gazing at
+it with, apparently, listless eyes. He was an uninteresting looking
+man--possibly he thought the same of me. From his dress he might
+have been a well-to-do tradesman, a minor Government official,
+doctor, or lawyer. Quite ten years later I paid my third visit to
+the same statue at about the same hour. This time he was there
+before me. I was hidden from him by some bushes. He glanced round
+but did not see me; and then he did a curious thing. Placing his
+hands on the top of the pedestal, which may have been some seven feet
+in height, he drew himself up, and kissed very gently, almost
+reverentially, the foot of the statue, begrimed though it was with
+the city's dirt. Had he been some long-haired student of the Latin
+Quarter one would not have been so astonished. But he was such a
+very commonplace, quite respectable looking man. Afterwards he drew
+a pipe from his pocket, carefully filled and lighted it, took his
+umbrella from the seat where it had been lying, and walked away.
+
+Had it been their meeting-place long ago? Had he been wont to tell
+her, gazing at her with lover's eyes, how like she was to the statue?
+The French sculptor has not to consider Mrs. Grundy. Maybe, the
+lady, raising her eyes, had been confused; perhaps for a moment
+angry--some little milliner or governess, one supposes. In France
+the jeune fille of good family does not meet her lover unattended.
+What had happened? Or was it but the vagrant fancy of a middle-aged
+bourgeois seeking in imagination the romance that reality so rarely
+gives us, weaving his love dream round his changeless statue?
+
+In one of Ibsen's bitter comedies the lovers agree to part while they
+are still young, never to see each other in the flesh again. Into
+the future each will bear away the image of the other, godlike,
+radiant with the glory of youth and love; each will cherish the
+memory of a loved one who shall be beautiful always. That their
+parting may not appear such wild nonsense as at first it strikes us,
+Ibsen shows us other lovers who have married in the orthodox fashion.
+She was all that a mistress should be. They speak of her as they
+first knew her fifteen years ago, when every man was at her feet. He
+then was a young student, burning with fine ideals, with enthusiasm
+for all the humanities.
+
+They enter.
+
+What did you expect? Fifteen years have passed--fifteen years of
+struggle with the grim realities. He is fat and bald. Eleven
+children have to be provided for. High ideals will not even pay the
+bootmaker. To exist you have to fight for mean ends with mean
+weapons. And the sweet girl heroine! Now the worried mother of
+eleven brats! One rings down the curtain amid Satanic laughter.
+
+That is why, for one reason among so many, I love this mystic morning
+light. It has a strange power of revealing the beauty that is hidden
+from us by the coarser beams of the full day. These worn men and
+women, grown so foolish looking, so unromantic; these artisans and
+petty clerks plodding to their monotonous day's work; these dull-eyed
+women of the people on their way to market to haggle over sous, to
+argue and contend over paltry handfuls of food. In this magic
+morning light the disguising body becomes transparent. They have
+grown beautiful, not ugly, with the years of toil and hardship; these
+lives, lived so patiently, are consecrated to the service of the
+world. Joy, hope, pleasure--they have done with all such, life for
+them is over. Yet they labour, ceaselessly, uncomplainingly. It is
+for the children.
+
+One morning, near Brussels, I encountered a cart of faggots, drawn by
+a hound so lean that stroking him might have hurt a dainty hand. I
+was shocked--angry, till I noticed his fellow beast of burden pushing
+the cart from behind. Such a scarecrow of an old woman! There was
+little to choose between them. I walked with them a little way. She
+lived near Waterloo. All day she gathered wood in the great forest,
+and starting at three o'clock each morning, the two lean creatures
+between them dragged the cart nine miles to Brussels, returning when
+they had sold their load. With luck she might reckon on a couple of
+francs. I asked her if she could not find something else to do.
+
+Yes, it was possible, but for the little one, her grandchild. Folks
+will not employ old women burdened with grandchildren.
+
+You fair, dainty ladies, who would never know it was morning if
+somebody did not enter to pull up the blind and tell you so! You do
+well not to venture out in this magic morning light. You would look
+so plain--almost ugly, by the side of these beautiful women.
+
+It is curious the attraction the Church has always possessed for the
+marketing classes. Christ drove them from the Temple, but still, in
+every continental city, they cluster round its outer walls. It makes
+a charming picture on a sunny morning, the great cathedral with its
+massive shadow forming the background; splashed about its feet, like
+a parterre of gay flowers around the trunk of some old tree, the
+women, young girls in their many coloured costumes, sitting before
+their piled-up baskets of green vegetables, of shining fruits.
+
+In Brussels the chief market is held on the Grande Place. The great
+gilded houses have looked down upon much the same scene every morning
+these four hundred years. In summer time it commences about half-
+past four; by five o'clock it is a roaring hive, the great city round
+about still sleeping.
+
+Here comes the thrifty housewife of the poor, to whom the difference
+of a tenth of a penny in the price of a cabbage is all-important, and
+the much harassed keeper of the petty pension. There are houses in
+Brussels where they will feed you, light you, sleep you, wait on you,
+for two francs a day. Withered old ladies, ancient governesses, who
+will teach you for forty centimes an hour, gather round these
+ricketty tables, wolf up the thin soup, grumble at the watery coffee,
+help themselves with unladylike greediness to the potato pie. It
+must need careful housewifery to keep these poor creatures on two
+francs a day and make a profit for yourself. So "Madame," the much-
+grumbled-at, who has gone to bed about twelve, rises a little before
+five, makes her way down with her basket. Thus a few sous may be
+saved upon the day's economies.
+
+Sometimes it is a mere child who is the little housekeeper. One
+thinks that perhaps this early training in the art of haggling may
+not be good for her. Already there is a hard expression in the
+childish eyes, mean lines about the little mouth. The finer
+qualities of humanity are expensive luxuries, not to be afforded by
+the poor.
+
+They overwork their patient dogs, and underfeed them. During the two
+hours' market the poor beasts, still fastened to their little
+"chariots," rest in the open space about the neighbouring Bourse.
+They snatch at what you throw them; they do not even thank you with a
+wag of the tail. Gratitude! Politeness! What mean you? We have
+not heard of such. We only work. Some of them amid all the din lie
+sleeping between their shafts. Some are licking one another's sores.
+One would they were better treated; alas! their owners, likewise, are
+overworked and underfed, housed in kennels no better. But if the
+majority in every society were not overworked and underfed and meanly
+housed, why, then the minority could not be underworked and overfed
+and housed luxuriously. But this is talk to which no respectable
+reader can be expected to listen.
+
+They are one babel of bargaining, these markets. The purchaser
+selects a cauliflower. Fortunately, cauliflowers have no feelings,
+or probably it would burst into tears at the expression with which it
+is regarded. It is impossible that any lady should desire such a
+cauliflower. Still, out of mere curiosity, she would know the price-
+-that is, if the owner of the cauliflower is not too much ashamed of
+it to name a price.
+
+The owner of the cauliflower suggests six sous. The thing is too
+ridiculous for argument. The purchaser breaks into a laugh.
+
+The owner of the cauliflower is stung. She points out the beauties
+of that cauliflower. Apparently it is the cauliflower out of all her
+stock she loves the best; a better cauliflower never lived; if there
+were more cauliflowers in the world like this particular cauliflower
+things might be different. She gives a sketch of the cauliflower's
+career, from its youth upwards. Hard enough it will be for her when
+the hour for parting from it comes. If the other lady has not
+sufficient knowledge of cauliflowers to appreciate it, will she
+kindly not paw it about, but put it down and go away, and never let
+the owner of the cauliflower see her again.
+
+The other lady, more as a friend than as a purchaser, points out the
+cauliflower's defects. She wishes well to the owner of the
+cauliflower, and would like to teach her something about her
+business. A lady who thinks such a cauliflower worth six sous can
+never hope to succeed as a cauliflower vendor. Has she really taken
+the trouble to examine the cauliflower for herself, or has love made
+her blind to its shortcomings?
+
+The owner of the cauliflower is too indignant to reply. She snatches
+it away, appears to be comforting it, replaces it in the basket. The
+other lady is grieved at human obstinacy and stupidity in general.
+If the owner of the cauliflower had had any sense she would have
+asked four sous. Eventually business is done at five.
+
+It is the custom everywhere abroad--asking the price of a thing is
+simply opening conversation. A lady told me that, the first day she
+began housekeeping in Florence, she handed over to a poulterer for a
+chicken the price he had demanded--with protestations that he was
+losing on the transaction, but wanted, for family reasons,
+apparently, to get rid of the chicken. He stood for half a minute
+staring at her, and then, being an honest sort of man, threw in a
+pigeon.
+
+Foreign housekeepers starting business in London appear hurt when our
+tradesmen decline to accept half-a-crown for articles marked three-
+and-six.
+
+"Then why mark it only three-and-sixpence?" is the foreign
+housekeeper's argument.
+
+
+
+SHOULD MARRIED MEN PLAY GOLF?
+
+
+
+That we Englishmen attach too much importance to sport goes without
+saying--or, rather, it has been said so often as to have become a
+commonplace. One of these days some reforming English novelist will
+write a book, showing the evil effects of over-indulgence in sport:
+the neglected business, the ruined home, the slow but sure sapping of
+the brain--what there may have been of it in the beginning--leading
+to semi-imbecility and yearly increasing obesity.
+
+A young couple, I once heard of, went for their honeymoon to
+Scotland. The poor girl did not know he was a golfer (he had wooed
+and won her during a period of idleness enforced by a sprained
+shoulder), or maybe she would have avoided Scotland. The idea they
+started with was that of a tour. The second day the man went out for
+a stroll by himself. At dinner-time he observed, with a far-away
+look in his eyes, that it seemed a pretty spot they had struck, and
+suggested their staying there another day. The next morning after
+breakfast he borrowed a club from the hotel porter, and remarked that
+he would take a walk while she finished doing her hair. He said it
+amused him, swinging a club while he walked. He returned in time for
+lunch and seemed moody all the afternoon. He said the air suited
+him, and urged that they should linger yet another day.
+
+She was young and inexperienced, and thought, maybe, it was liver.
+She had heard much about liver from her father. The next morning he
+borrowed more clubs, and went out, this time before breakfast,
+returning to a late and not over sociable dinner. That was the end
+of their honeymoon so far as she was concerned. He meant well, but
+the thing had gone too far. The vice had entered into his blood, and
+the smell of the links drove out all other considerations.
+
+We are most of us familiar, I take it, with the story of the golfing
+parson, who could not keep from swearing when the balls went wrong.
+
+"Golf and the ministry don't seem to go together," his friend told
+him. "Take my advice before it's too late, and give it up, Tammas."
+
+A few months later Tammas met his friend again.
+
+"You were right, Jamie," cried the parson cheerily, "they didna run
+well in harness; golf and the meenistry, I hae followed your advice:
+I hae gi'en it oop."
+
+"Then what are ye doing with that sack of clubs?" inquired Jamie.
+
+"What am I doing with them?" repeated the puzzled Tammas. "Why I am
+going to play golf with them." A light broke upon him. "Great
+Heavens, man!" he continued, "ye didna' think 'twas the golf I'd
+gi'en oop?"
+
+The Englishman does not understand play. He makes a life-long labour
+of his sport, and to it sacrifices mind and body. The health resorts
+of Europe--to paraphrase a famous saying that nobody appears to have
+said--draw half their profits from the playing fields of Eton and
+elsewhere. In Swiss and German kurhausen enormously fat men bear
+down upon you and explain to you that once they were the champion
+sprinters or the high-jump representatives of their university--men
+who now hold on to the bannisters and groan as they haul themselves
+upstairs. Consumptive men, between paroxysms of coughing, tell you
+of the goals they scored when they were half-backs or forwards of
+extraordinary ability. Ex-light-weight amateur pugilists, with the
+figure now of an American roll-top desk, butt you into a corner of
+the billiard-room, and, surprised they cannot get as near you as they
+would desire, whisper to you the secret of avoiding the undercut by
+the swiftness of the backward leap. Broken-down tennis players, one-
+legged skaters, dropsical gentlemen-riders, are to be met with
+hobbling on crutches along every highway of the Engadine.
+
+They are pitiable objects. Never having learnt to read anything but
+the sporting papers, books are of no use to them. They never wasted
+much of their youth on thought, and, apparently, have lost the knack
+of it. They don't care for art, and Nature only suggests to them the
+things they can no longer do. The snow-clad mountain reminds them
+that once they were daring tobogannists; the undulating common makes
+them sad because they can no longer handle a golf-club; by the
+riverside they sit down and tell you of the salmon they caught before
+they caught rheumatic fever; birds only make them long for guns;
+music raises visions of the local cricket-match of long ago,
+enlivened by the local band; a picturesque estaminet, with little
+tables spread out under the vines, recalls bitter memories of ping-
+pong. One is sorry for them, but their conversation is not
+exhilarating. The man who has other interests in life beyond sport
+is apt to find their reminiscences monotonous; while to one another
+they do not care to talk. One gathers that they do not altogether
+believe one another.
+
+The foreigner is taking kindly to our sports; one hopes he will be
+forewarned by our example and not overdo the thing. At present, one
+is bound to admit, he shows no sign of taking sport too seriously.
+Football is gaining favour more and more throughout Europe. But yet
+the Frenchman has not got it out of his head that the coup to
+practise is kicking the ball high into the air and catching it upon
+his head. He would rather catch the ball upon his head than score a
+goal. If he can manoeuvre the ball away into a corner, kick it up
+into the air twice running, and each time catch it on his head, he
+does not seem to care what happens after that. Anybody can have the
+ball; he has had his game and is happy.
+
+They talk of introducing cricket into Belgium; I shall certainly try
+to be present at the opening game. I am afraid that, until he learns
+from experience, the Belgian fielder will stop cricket balls with his
+head. That the head is the proper thing with which to play ball
+appears to be in his blood. My head is round, he argues, and hard,
+just like the ball itself; what part of the human frame more fit and
+proper with which to meet and stop a ball.
+
+Golf has not yet caught on, but tennis is firmly established from St.
+Petersburg to Bordeaux. The German, with the thoroughness
+characteristic of him, is working hard. University professors, stout
+majors, rising early in the morning, hire boys and practise back-
+handers and half-volleys. But to the Frenchman, as yet, it is a
+game. He plays it in a happy, merry fashion, that is shocking to
+English eyes.
+
+Your partner's service rather astonishes you. An occasional yard or
+so beyond the line happens to anyone, but this man's object appears
+to be to break windows. You feel you really must remonstrate, when
+the joyous laughter and tumultuous applause of the spectators explain
+the puzzle to you. He has not been trying to serve; he has been
+trying to hit a man in the next court who is stooping down to tie up
+his shoe-lace. With his last ball he has succeeded. He has hit the
+man in the small of the back, and has bowled him over. The unanimous
+opinion of the surrounding critics is that the ball could not
+possibly have been better placed. A Doherty has never won greater
+applause from the crowd. Even the man who has been hit appears
+pleased; it shows what a Frenchman can do when he does take up a
+game.
+
+But French honour demands revenge. He forgets his shoe, he forgets
+his game. He gathers together all the balls that he can find; his
+balls, your balls, anybody's balls that happen to be handy. And then
+commences the return match. At this point it is best to crouch down
+under shelter of the net. Most of the players round about adopt this
+plan; the more timid make for the club-house, and, finding themselves
+there, order coffee and light up cigarettes. After a while both
+players appear to be satisfied. The other players then gather round
+to claim their balls. This makes a good game by itself. The object
+is to get as many balls as you can, your own and other people's--for
+preference other people's--and run off with them round the courts,
+followed by whooping claimants.
+
+In the course of half-an-hour or so, when everybody is dead beat, the
+game--the original game--is resumed. You demand the score; your
+partner promptly says it is "forty-fifteen." Both your opponents
+rush up to the net, and apparently there is going to be a duel. It
+is only a friendly altercation; they very much doubt its being
+"forty-fifteen." "Fifteen-forty" they could believe; they suggest it
+as a compromise. The discussion is concluded by calling it deuce.
+As it is rare for a game to proceed without some such incident
+occurring in the middle of it, the score generally is deuce. This
+avoids heart-burning; nobody wins a set and nobody loses. The one
+game generally suffices for the afternoon.
+
+To the earnest player, it is also confusing to miss your partner
+occasionally--to turn round and find that he is talking to a man.
+Nobody but yourself takes the slightest objection to his absence.
+The other side appear to regard it as a good opportunity to score.
+Five minutes later he resumes the game. His friend comes with him,
+also the dog of his friend. The dog is welcomed with enthusiasm; all
+balls are returned to the dog. Until the dog is tired you do not get
+a look in. But all this will no doubt soon be changed. There are
+some excellent French and Belgian players; from them their
+compatriots will gradually learn higher ideals. The Frenchman is
+young in the game. As the right conception of the game grows upon
+him, he will also learn to keep the balls lower.
+
+I suppose it is the continental sky. It is so blue, so beautiful; it
+naturally attracts one. Anyhow, the fact remains that most tennis
+players on the Continent, whether English or foreign, have a tendency
+to aim the ball direct at Heaven. At an English club in Switzerland
+there existed in my days a young Englishman who was really a
+wonderful player. To get the ball past him was almost an
+impossibility. It was his return that was weak. He only had one
+stroke; the ball went a hundred feet or so into the air and descended
+in his opponent's court. The other man would stand watching it, a
+little speck in the Heavens, growing gradually bigger and bigger as
+it neared the earth. Newcomers would chatter to him, thinking he had
+detected a balloon or an eagle. He would wave them aside, explain to
+them that he would talk to them later, after the arrival of the ball.
+It would fall with a thud at his feet, rise another twenty yards or
+so and again descend. When it was at the proper height he would hit
+it back over the net, and the next moment it would be mounting the
+sky again. At tournaments I have seen that young man, with tears in
+his eyes, pleading to be given an umpire. Every umpire had fled.
+They hid behind trees, borrowed silk hats and umbrellas and pretended
+they were visitors--any device, however mean, to avoid the task of
+umpiring for that young man. Provided his opponent did not go to
+sleep or get cramp, one game might last all day. Anyone could return
+his balls; but, as I have said, to get a ball past him was almost an
+impossibility. He invariably won; the other man, after an hour or
+so, would get mad and try to lose. It was his only chance of dinner.
+
+It is a pretty sight, generally speaking, a tennis ground abroad.
+The women pay more attention to their costumes than do our lady
+players. The men are usually in spotless white. The ground is often
+charmingly situated, the club-house picturesque; there is always
+laughter and merriment. The play may not be so good to watch, but
+the picture is delightful. I accompanied a man a little while ago to
+his club on the outskirts of Brussels. The ground was bordered by a
+wood on one side, and surrounded on the other three by petites
+fermes--allotments, as we should call them in England, worked by the
+peasants themselves.
+
+It was a glorious spring afternoon. The courts were crowded. The
+red earth and the green grass formed a background against which the
+women, in their new Parisian toilets, under their bright parasols,
+stood out like wondrous bouquets of moving flowers. The whole
+atmosphere was a delightful mingling of idle gaiety, flirtation, and
+graceful sensuousness. A modern Watteau would have seized upon the
+scene with avidity.
+
+Just beyond--separated by the almost invisible wire fencing--a group
+of peasants were working in the field. An old woman and a young
+girl, with ropes about their shoulders, were drawing a harrow, guided
+by a withered old scarecrow of a man. They paused for a moment at
+the wire fencing, and looked through. It was an odd contrast; the
+two worlds divided by that wire fencing--so slight, almost invisible.
+The girl swept the sweat from her face with her hand; the woman
+pushed back her grey locks underneath the handkerchief knotted about
+her head; the old man straightened himself with some difficulty. So
+they stood, for perhaps a minute, gazing with quiet, passionless
+faces through that slight fencing, that a push from their work-
+hardened hands might have levelled.
+
+Was there any thought, I wonder, passing through their brains? The
+young girl--she was a handsome creature in spite of her disfiguring
+garments. The woman--it was a wonderfully fine face: clear, calm
+eyes, deep-set under a square broad brow. The withered old
+scarecrow--ever sowing the seed in the spring of the fruit that
+others shall eat.
+
+The old man bent again over the guiding ropes: gave the word. The
+team moved forward up the hill. It is Anatole France, I think, who
+says: Society is based upon the patience of the poor.
+
+
+
+ARE EARLY MARRIAGES A MISTAKE?
+
+
+
+I am chary nowadays of offering counsel in connection with subjects
+concerning which I am not and cannot be an authority. Long ago I
+once took upon myself to write a paper about babies. It did not aim
+to be a textbook on the subject. It did not even claim to exhaust
+the topic. I was willing that others, coming after me, should
+continue the argument--that is if, upon reflection, they were still
+of opinion there was anything more to be said. I was pleased with
+the article. I went out of my way to obtain an early copy of the
+magazine in which it appeared, on purpose to show it to a lady friend
+of mine. She was the possessor of one or two babies of her own,
+specimens in no way remarkable, though she herself, as was natural
+enough, did her best to boom them. I thought it might be helpful to
+her: the views and observations, not of a rival fancier, who would
+be prejudiced, but of an intelligent amateur. I put the magazine
+into her hands, opened at the proper place.
+
+"Read it through carefully and quietly," I said; "don't let anything
+distract you. Have a pencil and a bit of paper ready at your side,
+and note down any points upon which you would like further
+information. If there is anything you think I have missed out let me
+know. It may be that here and there you will be disagreeing with me.
+If so, do not hesitate to mention it, I shall not be angry. If a
+demand arises I shall very likely issue an enlarged and improved
+edition of this paper in the form of a pamphlet, in which case hints
+and suggestions that to you may appear almost impertinent will be of
+distinct help to me."
+
+"I haven't got a pencil," she said; "what's it all about?"
+
+"It's about babies," I explained, and I lent her a pencil.
+
+That is another thing I have learnt. Never lend a pencil to a woman
+if you ever want to see it again. She has three answers to your
+request for its return. The first, that she gave it back to you and
+that you put it in your pocket, and that it's there now, and that if
+it isn't it ought to be. The second, that you never lent it to her.
+The third, that she wishes people would not lend her pencils and then
+clamour for them back, just when she has something else far more
+important to think about.
+
+"What do you know about babies?" she demanded.
+
+"If you will read the paper," I replied, "you will see for yourself.
+It's all there."
+
+She flicked over the pages contemptuously.
+
+"There doesn't seem much of it?" she retorted.
+
+"It is condensed," I pointed out to her.
+
+"I am glad it is short. All right, I'll read it," she agreed.
+
+I thought my presence might disturb her, so went out into the garden.
+I wanted her to get the full benefit of it. I crept back now and
+again to peep through the open window. She did not seem to be making
+many notes. But I heard her making little noises to herself. When I
+saw she had reached the last page, I re-entered the room.
+
+"Well?" I said.
+
+"Is it meant to be funny," she demanded, "or is it intended to be
+taken seriously?"
+
+"There may be flashes of humour here and there--"
+
+She did not wait for me to finish.
+
+"Because if it's meant to be funny," she said, "I don't think it is
+at all funny. And if it is intended to be serious, there's one thing
+very clear, and that is that you are not a mother."
+
+With the unerring instinct of the born critic she had divined my one
+weak point. Other objections raised against me I could have met.
+But that one stinging reproach was unanswerable. It has made me, as
+I have explained, chary of tendering advice on matters outside my own
+department of life. Otherwise, every year, about Valentine's day,
+there is much that I should like to say to my good friends the birds.
+I want to put it to them seriously. Is not the month of February
+just a little too early? Of course, their answer would be the same
+as in the case of my motherly friend.
+
+"Oh, what do you know about it? you are not a bird."
+
+I know I am not a bird, but that is the very reason why they should
+listen to me. I bring a fresh mind to bear upon the subject. I am
+not tied down by bird convention. February, my dear friends--in
+these northern climes of ours at all events--is much too early. You
+have to build in a high wind, and nothing, believe me, tries a lady's
+temper more than being blown about. Nature is nature, and womenfolk,
+my dear sirs, are the same all the world over, whether they be birds
+or whether they be human. I am an older person than most of you, and
+I speak with the weight of experience.
+
+If I were going to build a house with my wife, I should not choose a
+season of the year when the bricks and planks and things were liable
+to be torn out of her hand, her skirts blown over her head, and she
+left clinging for dear life to a scaffolding pole. I know the
+feminine biped and, you take it from me, that is not her notion of a
+honeymoon. In April or May, the sun shining, the air balmy--when,
+after carrying up to her a load or two of bricks, and a hod or two of
+mortar, we could knock off work for a few minutes without fear of the
+whole house being swept away into the next street--could sit side by
+side on the top of a wall, our legs dangling down, and peck and
+morsel together; after which I could whistle a bit to her--then
+housebuilding might be a pleasure.
+
+The swallows are wisest; June is their idea, and a very good idea,
+too. In a mountain village in the Tyrol, early one summer, I had the
+opportunity of watching very closely the building of a swallow's
+nest. After coffee, the first morning, I stepped out from the great,
+cool, dark passage of the wirtschaft into the blazing sunlight, and,
+for no particular reason, pulled-to the massive door behind me.
+While filling my pipe, a swallow almost brushed by me, then wheeled
+round again, and took up a position on the fence only a few yards
+from me. He was carrying what to him was an exceptionally large and
+heavy brick. He put it down beside him on the fence, and called out
+something which I could not understand. I did not move. He got
+quite excited and said some more. It was undoubtable he was
+addressing me--nobody else was by. I judged from his tone that he
+was getting cross with me. At this point my travelling companion,
+his toilet unfinished, put his head out of the window just above me.
+
+"Such an odd thing," he called down to me. "I never noticed it last
+night. A pair of swallows are building a nest here in the hall.
+You've got to be careful you don't mistake it for a hat-peg. The old
+lady says they have built there regularly for the last three years."
+
+Then it came to me what it was the gentleman had been saying to me:
+"I say, sir, you with the bit of wood in your mouth, you have been
+and shut the door and I can't get in."
+
+Now, with the key in my possession, it was so clear and
+understandable, I really forgot for the moment he was only a bird.
+
+"I beg your pardon," I replied, "I had no idea. Such an
+extraordinary place to build a nest."
+
+I opened the door for him, and, taking up his brick again, he
+entered, and I followed him in. There was a deal of talk.
+
+"He shut the door," I heard him say, "Chap there, sucking the bit of
+wood. Thought I was never going to get in."
+
+"I know," was the answer; "it has been so dark in here, if you'll
+believe me, I've hardly been able to see what I've been doing."
+
+"Fine brick, isn't it? Where will you have it?"
+
+Observing me sitting there, they lowered their voices. Evidently she
+wanted him to put the brick down and leave her to think. She was not
+quite sure where she would have it. He, on the other hand, was sure
+he had found the right place for it. He pointed it out to her and
+explained his views. Other birds quarrel a good deal during nest
+building, but swallows are the gentlest of little people. She let
+him put it where he wanted to, and he kissed her and ran out. She
+cocked her eye after him, watched till he was out of sight, then
+deftly and quickly slipped it out and fixed it the other side of the
+door.
+
+"Poor dears" (I could see it in the toss of her head); "they will
+think they know best; it is just as well not to argue with them."
+
+Every summer I suffer much from indignation. I love to watch the
+swallows building. They build beneath the eaves outside my study
+window. Such cheerful little chatter-boxes they are. Long after
+sunset, when all the other birds are sleeping, the swallows still are
+chattering softly. It sounds as if they were telling one another
+some pretty story, and often I am sure there must be humour in it,
+for every now and then one hears a little twittering laugh. I
+delight in having them there, so close to me. The fancy comes to me
+that one day, when my brain has grown more cunning, I, too, listening
+in the twilight, shall hear the stories that they tell.
+
+One or two phrases already I have come to understand: "Once upon a
+time"--"Long, long ago"--"In a strange, far-off land." I hear these
+words so constantly, I am sure I have them right. I call it "Swallow
+Street," this row of six or seven nests. Two or three, like villas
+in their own grounds, stand alone, and others are semi-detached. It
+makes me angry that the sparrows will come and steal them. The
+sparrows will hang about deliberately waiting for a pair of swallows
+to finish their nest, and then, with a brutal laugh that makes my
+blood boil, drive the swallows away and take possession of it. And
+the swallows are so wonderfully patient.
+
+"Never mind, old girl," says Tommy Swallow, after the first big cry
+is over, to Jenny Swallow, "let's try again."
+
+And half an hour later, full of fresh plans, they are choosing
+another likely site, chattering cheerfully once more. I watched the
+building of a particular nest for nearly a fortnight one year; and
+when, after two or three days' absence, I returned and found a pair
+of sparrows comfortably encsonced therein, I just felt mad. I saw
+Mrs. Sparrow looking out. Maybe my anger was working upon my
+imagination, but it seemed to me that she nodded to me:
+
+"Nice little house, ain't it? What I call well built."
+
+Mr. Sparrow then flew up with a gaudy feather, dyed blue, which
+belonged to me. I recognised it. It had come out of the brush with
+which the girl breaks the china ornaments in our drawing-room. At
+any other time I should have been glad to see him flying off with the
+whole thing, handle included. But now I felt the theft of that one
+feather as an added injury. Mrs. Sparrow chirped with delight at
+sight of the gaudy monstrosity. Having got the house cheap, they
+were going to spend their small amount of energy upon internal
+decoration. That was their idea clearly, a "Liberty interior." She
+looked more like a Cockney sparrow than a country one--had been born
+and bred in Regent Street, no doubt.
+
+"There is not much justice in this world," said I to myself; "but
+there's going to be some introduced into this business--that is, if I
+can find a ladder."
+
+I did find a ladder, and fortunately it was long enough. Mr. and
+Mrs. Sparrow were out when I arrived, possibly on the hunt for cheap
+photo frames and Japanese fans. I did not want to make a mess. I
+removed the house neatly into a dust-pan, and wiped the street clear
+of every trace of it. I had just put back the ladder when Mrs.
+Sparrow returned with a piece of pink cotton-wool in her mouth. That
+was her idea of a colour scheme: apple-blossom pink and Reckitt's
+blue side by side. She dropped her wool and sat on the waterspout,
+and tried to understand things.
+
+"Number one, number two, number four; where the blazes"--sparrows are
+essentially common, and the women are as bad as the men--"is number
+three?"
+
+Mr. Sparrow came up from behind, over the roof. He was carrying a
+piece of yellow-fluff, part of a lamp-shade, as far as I could judge.
+
+"Move yourself," he said, "what's the sense of sitting there in the
+rain?"
+
+"I went out just for a moment," replied Mrs. Sparrow; "I could not
+have been gone, no, not a couple of minutes. When I came back--"
+
+"Oh, get indoors," said Mr. Sparrow, "talk about it there."
+
+"It's what I'm telling you," continued Mrs. Sparrow, "if you would
+only listen. There isn't any door, there isn't any house--"
+
+"Isn't any--" Mr. Sparrow, holding on to the rim of the spout, turned
+himself topsy-turvy and surveyed the street. From where I was
+standing behind the laurel bushes I could see nothing but his back.
+
+He stood up again, looking angry and flushed.
+
+"What have you done with the house? Can't I turn my back a minute--"
+
+"I ain't done nothing with it. As I keep on telling you, I had only
+just gone--"
+
+"Oh, bother where you had gone. Where's the darned house gone?
+that's what I want to know."
+
+They looked at one another. If ever astonishment was expressed in
+the attitude of a bird it was told by the tails of those two
+sparrows. They whispered wickedly together. The idea occurred to
+them that by force or cunning they might perhaps obtain possession of
+one of the other nests. But all the other nests were occupied, and
+even gentle Jenny Swallow, once in her own home with the children
+round about her, is not to be trifled with. Mr. Sparrow called at
+number two, put his head in at the door, and then returned to the
+waterspout.
+
+"Lady says we don't live there," he explained to Mrs. Sparrow. There
+was silence for a while.
+
+"Not what I call a classy street," commented Mrs. Sparrow.
+
+"If it were not for that terrible tired feeling of mine," said Mr.
+Sparrow, "blame if I wouldn't build a house of my own."
+
+"Perhaps," said Mrs. Sparrow, "--I have heard it said that a little
+bit of work, now and then, does you good."
+
+"All sorts of wild ideas about in the air nowadays," said Mr.
+Sparrow, "it don't do to listen to everybody."
+
+"And it don't do to sit still and do nothing neither," snapped Mrs.
+Sparrow. "I don't want to have to forget I'm a lady, but--well, any
+man who was a man would see things for himself."
+
+"Why did I every marry?" retorted Mr. Sparrow.
+
+They flew away together, quarrelling.
+
+
+
+DO WRITERS WRITE TOO MUCH?
+
+
+
+On a newspaper placard, the other day, I saw announced a new novel by
+a celebrated author. I bought a copy of the paper, and turned
+eagerly to the last page. I was disappointed to find that I had
+missed the first six chapters. The story had commenced the previous
+Saturday; this was Friday. I say I was disappointed and so I was, at
+first. But my disappointment did not last long. The bright and
+intelligent sub-editor, according to the custom now in vogue, had
+provided me with a short synopsis of those first six chapters, so
+that without the trouble of reading them I knew what they were all
+about.
+
+"The first instalment," I learned, "introduces the reader to a
+brilliant and distinguished company, assembled in the drawing-room of
+Lady Mary's maisonette in Park Street. Much smart talk is indulged
+in."
+
+I know that "smart talk" so well. Had I not been lucky enough to
+miss that first chapter I should have had to listen to it once again.
+Possibly, here and there, it might have been new to me, but it would
+have read, I know, so very like the old. A dear, sweet white-haired
+lady of my acquaintance is never surprised at anything that happens.
+
+"Something very much of the same kind occurred," she will remember,
+"one winter when we were staying in Brighton. Only on that occasion
+the man's name, I think, was Robinson."
+
+We do not live new stories--nor write them either. The man's name in
+the old story was Robinson, we alter it to Jones. It happened, in
+the old forgotten tale, at Brighton, in the winter time; we change it
+to Eastbourne, in the spring. It is new and original--to those who
+have not heard "something very like it" once before.
+
+"Much smart talk is indulged in," so the sub-editor has explained.
+There is absolutely no need to ask for more than that. There is a
+Duchess who says improper things. Once she used to shock me. But I
+know her now. She is really a nice woman; she doesn't mean them.
+And when the heroine is in trouble, towards the middle of the book,
+she is just as amusing on the side of virtue. Then there is a
+younger lady whose speciality is proverbs. Apparently whenever she
+hears a proverb she writes it down and studies it with the idea of
+seeing into how many different forms it can be twisted. It looks
+clever; as a matter of fact, it is extremely easy.
+
+Be virtuous and you will be happy.
+
+She jots down all the possible variations: Be virtuous and you will
+be unhappy.
+
+"Too simple that one," she tells herself. Be virtuous and your
+friends will be happy if you are not.
+
+"Better, but not wicked enough. Let us think again. Be happy and
+people will jump to the conclusion that you are virtuous.
+
+"That's good, I'll try that one at to-morrow's party."
+
+She is a painstaking lady. One feels that, better advised, she might
+have been of use in the world.
+
+There is likewise a disgraceful old Peer who tells naughty stories,
+but who is good at heart; and one person so very rude that the wonder
+is who invited him.
+
+Occasionally a slangy girl is included, and a clergyman, who takes
+the heroine aside and talks sense to her, flavoured with epigram.
+All these people chatter a mixture of Lord Chesterfield and Oliver
+Wendell Holmes, of Heine, Voltaire, Madame de Stael, and the late
+lamented H. J. Byron. "How they do it beats me," as I once overheard
+at a music hall a stout lady confess to her friend while witnessing
+the performance of a clever troup, styling themselves "The Boneless
+Wonders of the Universe."
+
+The synopsis added that: "Ursula Bart, a charming and
+unsophisticated young American girl possessed of an elusive
+expression makes her first acquaintance with London society."
+
+Here you have a week's unnecessary work on the part of the author
+boiled down to its essentials. She was young. One hardly expects an
+elderly heroine. The "young" might have been dispensed with,
+especially seeing it is told us that she was a girl. But maybe this
+is carping. There are young girls and old girls. Perhaps it is as
+well to have it in black and white; she was young. She was an
+American young girl. There is but one American young girl in English
+fiction. We know by heart the unconventional things that she will
+do, the startlingly original things that she will say, the fresh
+illuminating thoughts that will come to her as, clad in a loose robe
+of some soft clinging stuff, she sits before the fire, in the
+solitude of her own room.
+
+To complete her she had an "elusive expression." The days when we
+used to catalogue the heroine's "points" are past. Formerly it was
+possible. A man wrote perhaps some half-a-dozen novels during the
+whole course of his career. He could have a dark girl for the first,
+a light girl for the second, sketch a merry little wench for the
+third, and draw you something stately for the fourth. For the
+remaining two he could go abroad. Nowadays, when a man turns out a
+novel and six short stories once a year, description has to be
+dispensed with. It is not the writer's fault. There is not
+sufficient variety in the sex. We used to introduce her thus:
+
+"Imagine to yourself, dear reader, an exquisite and gracious creature
+of five feet three. Her golden hair of that peculiar shade"--here
+would follow directions enabling the reader to work it out for
+himself. He was to pour some particular wine into some particular
+sort of glass, and wave it about before some particular sort of a
+light. Or he was to get up at five o'clock on a March morning and go
+into a wood. In this way he could satisfy himself as to the
+particular shade of gold the heroine's hair might happen to be. If
+he were a careless or lazy reader he could save himself time and
+trouble by taking the author's word for it. Many of them did.
+
+"Her eyes!" They were invariably deep and liquid. They had to be
+pretty deep to hold all the odds and ends that were hidden in them;
+sunlight and shadow, mischief, unsuspected possibilities, assorted
+emotions, strange wild yearnings. Anything we didn't know where else
+to put we said was hidden in her eyes.
+
+"Her nose!" You could have made it for yourself out of a pen'orth of
+putty after reading our description of it.
+
+"Her forehead!" It was always "low and broad." I don't know why it
+was always low. Maybe because the intellectual heroine was not then
+popular. For the matter of that I doubt if she be really popular
+now. The brainless doll, one fears, will continue for many years to
+come to be man's ideal woman--and woman's ideal of herself for
+precisely the same period, one may be sure.
+
+"Her chin!" A less degree of variety was permissible in her chin.
+It had to be at an angle suggestive of piquancy, and it had to
+contain at least the suspicion of a dimple.
+
+To properly understand her complexion you were expected to provide
+yourself with a collection of assorted fruits and flowers. There are
+seasons in the year when it must have been difficult for the
+conscientious reader to have made sure of her complexion. Possibly
+it was for this purpose that wax flowers and fruit, carefully kept
+from the dust under glass cases, were common objects in former times
+upon the tables of the cultured.
+
+Nowadays we content ourselves--and our readers also, I am inclined to
+think--with dashing her off in a few bold strokes. We say that
+whenever she entered a room there came to one dreams of an old world
+garden, the sound of far-off bells. Or that her presence brought
+with it the scent of hollyhocks and thyme. As a matter of fact I
+don't think hollyhocks do smell. It is a small point; about such we
+do not trouble ourselves. In the case of the homely type of girl I
+don't see why we should not borrow Mr. Pickwick's expression, and
+define her by saying that in some subtle way she always contrived to
+suggest an odour of chops and tomato sauce.
+
+If we desire to be exact we mention, as this particular author seems
+to have done, that she had an "elusive expression," or a penetrating
+fragrance. Or we say that she moved, the centre of an indefinable
+nuance.
+
+But it is not policy to bind oneself too closely to detail. A wise
+friend of mine, who knows his business, describes his hero invariably
+in the vaguest terms. He will not even tell you whether the man is
+tall or short, clean shaven or bearded.
+
+"Make the fellow nice," is his advice. "Let every woman reader
+picture him to herself as her particular man. Then everything he
+says and does becomes of importance to her. She is careful not to
+miss a word."
+
+For the same reason he sees to it that his heroine has a bit of every
+girl in her. Generally speaking, she is a cross between Romola and
+Dora Copperfield. His novels command enormous sales. The women say
+he draws a man to the life, but does not seem to know much about
+women. The men like his women, but think his men stupid.
+
+Of another famous author no woman of my acquaintance is able to speak
+too highly. They tell me his knowledge of their sex is simply
+marvellous, his insight, his understanding of them almost uncanny.
+Thinking it might prove useful, I made an exhaustive study of his
+books. I noticed that his women were without exception brilliant
+charming creatures possessed of the wit of a Lady Wortlay Montagu,
+combined with the wisdom of a George Eliot. They were not all of
+them good women, but all of them were clever and all of them were
+fascinating. I came to the conclusion that his lady critics were
+correct: he did understand women. But to return to our synopsis.
+
+The second chapter, it appeared, transported us to Yorkshire where:
+"Basil Longleat, a typical young Englishman, lately home from
+college, resides with his widowed mother and two sisters. They are a
+delightful family."
+
+What a world of trouble to both writer and to reader is here saved.
+"A typical young Englishman!" The author probably wrote five pages,
+elaborating. The five words of the sub-editor present him to me more
+vividly. I see him positively glistening from the effects of soap
+and water. I see his clear blue eye; his fair crisp locks, the
+natural curliness of which annoys him personally, though alluring to
+everybody else; his frank winning smile. He is "lately home from
+college." That tells me that he is a first-class cricketer; a first-
+class oar; that as a half-back he is incomparable; that he swims like
+Captain Webb; is in the first rank of tennis players; that his half-
+volley at ping-pong has never been stopped. It doesn't tell me much
+about his brain power. The description of him as a "typical young
+Englishman" suggests more information on this particular point. One
+assumes that the American girl with the elusive expression is going
+to have sufficient for both.
+
+"They are a delightful family." The sub-editor does not say so, but
+I imagine the two sisters are likewise typical young Englishwomen.
+They ride and shoot and cook and make their own dresses, have common
+sense and love a joke.
+
+The third chapter is "taken up with the humours of a local cricket
+match."
+
+Thank you, Mr. Sub-editor. I feel I owe you gratitude.
+
+In the fourth, Ursula Bart (I was beginning to get anxious about her)
+turns up again. She is staying at the useful Lady Mary's place in
+Yorkshire. She meets Basil by accident one morning while riding
+alone. That is the advantage of having an American girl for your
+heroine. Like the British army: it goes anywhere and does anything.
+
+In chapter five Basil and Ursula meet again; this time at a picnic.
+The sub-editor does not wish to repeat himself, otherwise he possibly
+would have summed up chapter five by saying it was "taken up with the
+humours of the usual picnic."
+
+In chapter six something happens:
+
+"Basil, returning home in the twilight, comes across Ursula Bart, in
+a lonely point of the moor, talking earnestly to a rough-looking
+stranger. His approach over the soft turf being unnoticed, he cannot
+help overhearing Ursula's parting words to the forbidding-looking
+stranger: 'I must see you again! To-morrow night at half-past nine!
+In the gateway of the ruined abbey!' Who is he? And why must Ursula
+see him again at such an hour, in such a spot?"
+
+So here, at cost of reading twenty lines, I am landed, so to speak,
+at the beginning of the seventh chapter. Why don't I set to work to
+read it? The sub-editor has spoiled me.
+
+"You read it," I want to say to him. "Tell me to-morrow morning what
+it is all about. Who was this bounder? Why should Ursula want to
+see him again? Why choose a draughty place? Why half-past nine
+o'clock at night, which must have been an awkward time for both of
+them--likely to lead to talk? Why should I wade though this seventh
+chapter of three columns and a half? It's your work. What are you
+paid for?"
+
+My fear is lest this sort of thing shall lead to a demand on the part
+of the public for condensed novels. What busy man is going to spend
+a week of evenings reading a book when a nice kind sub-editor is
+prepared in five minutes to tell him what it is all about!
+
+Then there will come a day--I feel it--when the business-like Editor
+will say to himself: "What in thunder is the sense of my paying one
+man to write a story of sixty thousand words and another man to read
+it and tell it again in sixteen hundred!"
+
+We shall be expected to write our novels in chapters not exceeding
+twenty words. Our short stories will be reduced to the formula:
+"Little boy. Pair of skates. Broken ice, Heaven's gates." Formerly
+an author, commissioned to supply a child's tragedy of this genre for
+a Christmas number, would have spun it out into five thousand words.
+Personally, I should have commenced the previous spring--given the
+reader the summer and autumn to get accustomed to the boy. He would
+have been a good boy; the sort of boy that makes a bee-line for the
+thinnest ice. He would have lived in a cottage. I could have spread
+that cottage over two pages; the things that grew in the garden, the
+view from the front door. You would have known that boy before I had
+done with him--felt you had known him all your life. His quaint
+sayings, his childish thoughts, his great longings would have been
+impressed upon you. The father might have had a dash of humour in
+him, the mother's early girlhood would have lent itself to pretty
+writing. For the ice we would have had a mysterious lake in the
+wood, said to be haunted. The boy would have loved o' twilights to
+stand upon its margin. He would have heard strange voices calling to
+him. You would have felt the thing was coming.
+
+So much might have been done. When I think of that plot wasted in
+nine words it makes me positively angry.
+
+And what is to become of us writers if this is to be the new fashion
+in literature? We are paid by the length of our manuscript at rates
+from half-a-crown a thousand words, and upwards. In the case of
+fellows like Doyle and Kipling I am told it runs into pounds. How
+are we to live on novels the serial rights of which to most of us
+will work out at four and nine-pence.
+
+It can't be done. It is no good telling me you can see no reason why
+we should live. That is no answer. I'm talking plain business.
+
+And what about book-rights? Who is going to buy novels of three
+pages? They will have to be printed as leaflets and sold at a penny
+a dozen. Marie Corelli and Hall Caine--if all I hear about them is
+true--will possibly make their ten or twelve shillings a week. But
+what about the rest of us? This thing is worrying me.
+
+
+
+SHOULD SOLDIERS BE POLITE?
+
+
+
+My desire was once to pass a peaceful and pleasant winter in
+Brussels, attending to my work, improving my mind. Brussels is a
+bright and cheerful town, and I think I could have succeeded had it
+not been for the Belgian Army. The Belgian Army would follow me
+about and worry me. Judging of it from my own experience, I should
+say it was a good army. Napoleon laid it down as an axiom that your
+enemy never ought to be permitted to get away from you--never ought
+to be allowed to feel, even for a moment, that he had shaken you off.
+What tactics the Belgian Army might adopt under other conditions I am
+unable to say, but against me personally that was the plan of
+campaign it determined upon and carried out with a success that was
+astonishing, even to myself.
+
+I found it utterly impossible to escape from the Belgian Army. I
+made a point of choosing the quietest and most unlikely streets, I
+chose all hours--early in the morning, in the afternoon, late in the
+evening. There were moments of wild exaltation when I imagined I had
+given it the slip. I could not see it anywhere, I could not hear it.
+
+"Now," said I to myself, "now for five minutes' peace and quiet."
+
+I had been doing it injustice: it had been working round me.
+Approaching the next corner, I would hear the tattoo of its drum.
+Before I had gone another quarter of a mile it would be in full
+pursuit of me. I would jump upon a tram, and travel for miles.
+Then, thinking I had shaken it off, I would alight and proceed upon
+my walk. Five minutes later another detachment would be upon my
+heels. I would slink home, the Belgian Army pursuing me with its
+exultant tattoo. Vanquished, shamed, my insular pride for ever
+vanished, I would creep up into my room and close the door. The
+victorious Belgian Army would then march back to barracks.
+
+If only it had followed me with a band: I like a band. I can loaf
+against a post, listening to a band with anyone. I should not have
+minded so much had it come after me with a band. But the Belgian
+Army, apparently, doesn't run to a band. It has nothing but this
+drum. It has not even a real drum--not what I call a drum. It is a
+little boy's drum, the sort of thing I used to play myself at one
+time, until people took it away from me, and threatened that if they
+heard it once again that day they would break it over my own head.
+It is cowardly going up and down, playing a drum of this sort, when
+there is nobody to stop you. The man would not dare to do it if his
+mother was about. He does not even play it. He walks along tapping
+it with a little stick. There's no tune, there's no sense in it. He
+does not even keep time. I used to think at first, hearing it in the
+distance, that it was the work of some young gamin who ought to be at
+school, or making himself useful taking the baby out in the
+perambulator: and I would draw back into dark doorways, determined,
+as he came by, to dart out and pull his ear for him. To my
+astonishment--for the first week--I learnt it was the Belgian Army,
+getting itself accustomed, one supposes, to the horrors of war. It
+had the effect of making me a peace-at-any-price man.
+
+They tell me these armies are necessary to preserve the tranquility
+of Europe. For myself, I should be willing to run the risk of an
+occasional row. Cannot someone tell them they are out of date, with
+their bits of feathers and their odds and ends of ironmongery--grown
+men that cannot be sent out for a walk unless accompanied by a couple
+of nursemen, blowing a tin whistle and tapping a drum out of a toy
+shop to keep them in order and prevent their running about: one
+might think they were chickens. A herd of soldiers with their pots
+and pans and parcels, and all their deadly things tied on to them,
+prancing about in time to a tune, makes me think always of the White
+Knight that Alice met in Wonderland. I take it that for practical
+purposes--to fight for your country, or to fight for somebody else's
+country, which is, generally speaking, more popular--the thing
+essential is that a certain proportion of the populace should be able
+to shoot straight with a gun. How standing in a line and turning out
+your toes is going to assist you, under modern conditions of warfare,
+is one of the many things my intellect is incapable of grasping.
+
+In mediaeval days, when men fought hand to hand, there must have been
+advantage in combined and precise movement. When armies were mere
+iron machines, the simple endeavour of each being to push the other
+off the earth, then the striking simultaneously with a thousand arms
+was part of the game. Now, when we shoot from behind cover with
+smokeless powder, brain not brute force--individual sense not
+combined solidity is surely the result to be aimed at. Cannot
+somebody, as I have suggested, explain to the military man that the
+proper place for the drill sergeant nowadays is under a glass case in
+some museum of antiquities?
+
+I lived once near the Hyde Park barracks, and saw much of the drill
+sergeant's method. Generally speaking, he is a stout man with the
+walk of an egotistical pigeon. His voice is one of the most
+extraordinary things in nature: if you can distinguish it from the
+bark of a dog, you are clever. They tell me that the privates, after
+a little practice, can--which gives one a higher opinion of their
+intelligence than otherwise one might form. But myself I doubt even
+this statement. I was the owner of a fine retriever dog about the
+time of which I am speaking, and sometimes he and I would amuse
+ourselves by watching Mr. Sergeant exercising his squad. One morning
+he had been shouting out the usual "Whough, whough, whough!" for
+about ten minutes, and all had hitherto gone well. Suddenly, and
+evidently to his intense astonishment, the squad turned their backs
+upon him and commenced to walk towards the Serpentine.
+
+"Halt!" yelled the sergeant, the instant his amazed indignation
+permitted him to speak, which fortunately happened in time to save
+the detachment from a watery grave.
+
+The squad halted.
+
+"Who the thunder, and the blazes, and other things told you to do
+that?"
+
+The squad looked bewildered, but said nothing, and were brought back
+to the place where they were before. A minute later precisely the
+same thing occurred again. I really thought the sergeant would
+burst. I was preparing to hasten to the barracks for medical aid.
+But the paroxysm passed. Calling upon the combined forces of heaven
+and hell to sustain him in his trouble, he requested his squad, as
+man to man, to inform him of the reason why to all appearance they
+were dispensing with his services and drilling themselves.
+
+At this moment "Columbus" barked again, and the explanation came to
+him.
+
+"Please go away, sir," he requested me. "How can I exercise my men
+with that dog of yours interfering every five minutes?"
+
+It was not only on that occasion. It happened at other times. The
+dog seemed to understand and take a pleasure in it. Sometimes
+meeting a soldier, walking with his sweetheart, Columbus, from behind
+my legs, would bark suddenly. Immediately the man would let go the
+girl and proceed, involuntarily, to perform military tricks.
+
+The War Office authorities accused me of having trained the dog. I
+had not trained him: that was his natural voice. I suggested to the
+War Office authorities that instead of quarrelling with my dog for
+talking his own language, they should train their sergeants to use
+English.
+
+They would not see it. Unpleasantness was in the air, and, living
+where I did at the time, I thought it best to part with Columbus. I
+could see what the War Office was driving at, and I did not desire
+that responsibility for the inefficiency of the British Army should
+be laid at my door.
+
+Some twenty years ago we, in London, were passing through a riotous
+period, and a call was made to law-abiding citizens to enrol
+themselves as special constables. I was young, and the hope of
+trouble appealed to me more than it does now. In company with some
+five or six hundred other more or less respectable citizens, I found
+myself one Sunday morning in the drill yard of the Albany Barracks.
+It was the opinion of the authorities that we could guard our homes
+and protect our wives and children better if first of all we learned
+to roll our "eyes right" or left at the given word of command, and to
+walk with our thumbs stuck out. Accordingly a drill sergeant was
+appointed to instruct us on these points. He came out of the
+canteen, wiping his mouth and flicking his leg, according to rule,
+with the regulation cane. But, as he approached us, his expression
+changed. We were stout, pompous-looking gentlemen, the majority of
+us, in frock coats and silk hats. The sergeant was a man with a
+sense of the fitness of things. The idea of shouting and swearing at
+us fell from him: and that gone there seemed to be no happy medium
+left to him. The stiffness departed from his back. He met us with a
+defferential attitude, and spoke to us in the language of social
+intercourse.
+
+"Good morning, gentlemen," said the sergeant.
+
+"Good morning," we replied: and there was a pause.
+
+The sergeant fidgetted upon his feet. We waited.
+
+"Well, now, gentlemen," said the sergeant, with a pleasant smile,
+"what do you say to falling in?"
+
+We agreed to fall in. He showed us how to do it. He cast a critical
+eye along the back of our rear line.
+
+"A little further forward, number three, if you don't mind, sir," he
+suggested.
+
+Number three, who was an important-looking gentleman, stepped
+forward.
+
+The sergeant cast his critical eye along the front of the first line.
+
+"A little further back, if you don't mind, sir," he suggested,
+addressing the third gentleman from the end.
+
+"Can't," explained the third gentleman, "much as I can do to keep
+where I am."
+
+The sergeant cast his critical eye between the lines.
+
+"Ah," said the sergeant, "a little full-chested, some of us. We will
+make the distance another foot, if you please, gentlemen."
+
+In pleasant manner, like to this, the drill proceeded.
+
+"Now then, gentlemen, shall we try a little walk? Quick march!
+Thank you, gentlemen. Sorry to trouble you, but it may be necessary
+to run--forward I mean, of course.. So if you really do not mind, we
+will now do the double quick. Halt! And if next time you can keep a
+little more in line--it has a more imposing appearance, if you
+understand me. The breathing comes with practice."
+
+If the thing must be done at all, why should it not be done in this
+way? Why should not the sergeant address the new recruits politely:
+
+"Now then, you young chaps, are you all ready? Don't hurry
+yourselves: no need to make hard work of what should be a pleasure
+to all of us. That's right, that's very good indeed--considering you
+are only novices. But there is still something to be desired in your
+attitude, Private Bully-boy. You will excuse my being personal, but
+are you knock-kneed naturally? Or could you, with an effort, do you
+think, contrive to give yourself less the appearance of a marionette
+whose strings have become loose? Thank you, that is better. These
+little things appear trivial, I know, but, after all, we may as well
+try and look our best -
+
+"Don't you like your boots, Private Montmorency? Oh, I beg your
+pardon. I thought from the way you were bending down and looking at
+them that perhaps their appearance was dissatisfying to you. My
+mistake.
+
+"Are you suffering from indigestion, my poor fellow? Shall I get you
+a little brandy? It isn't indigestion. Then what's the matter with
+it? Why are you trying to hide it? It's nothing to be ashamed of.
+We've all got one. Let it come forward man. Let's see it."
+
+Having succeeded, with a few such kindly words, in getting his line
+into order, he would proceed to recommend healthy exercise.
+
+"Shoulder arms! Good, gentlemen, very good for a beginning. Yet
+still, if I may be critical, not perfect. There is more in this
+thing than you might imagine, gentlemen. May I point out to Private
+Henry Thompson that a musket carried across the shoulder at right
+angles is apt to inconvenience the gentleman behind. Even from the
+point of view of his own comfort, I feel sure that Private Thompson
+would do better to follow the usual custom in this matter.
+
+"I would also suggest to Private St. Leonard that we are not here to
+practice the art of balancing a heavy musket on the outstretched palm
+of the hand. Private St. Leonard's performance with the musket is
+decidedly clever. But it is not war.
+
+"Believe me, gentlemen, this thing has been carefully worked out, and
+no improvement is likely to result from individual effort. Let our
+idea be uniformity. It is monotonous, but it is safe. Now, then,
+gentlemen, once again."
+
+The drill yard would be converted into a source of innocent delight
+to thousands. "Officer and gentleman" would become a phrase of
+meaning. I present the idea, for what it may be worth, with my
+compliments, to Pall Mall.
+
+The fault of the military man is that he studies too much, reads too
+much history, is over reflective. If, instead, he would look about
+him more he would notice that things are changing. Someone has told
+the British military man that Waterloo was won upon the playing
+fields of Eton. So he goes to Eton and plays. One of these days he
+will be called upon to fight another Waterloo: and afterwards--when
+it is too late--they will explain to him that it was won not upon the
+play field but in the class room.
+
+From the mound on the old Waterloo plain one can form a notion of
+what battles, under former conditions, must have been. The other
+battlefields of Europe are rapidly disappearing: useful Dutch
+cabbages, as Carlyle would have pointed out with justifiable
+satisfaction, hiding the theatre of man's childish folly. You find,
+generally speaking, cobblers happily employed in cobbling shoes,
+women gossipping cheerfully over the washtub on the spot where a
+hundred years ago, according to the guide-book, a thousand men
+dressed in blue and a thousand men dressed in red rushed together
+like quarrelsome fox-terriers, and worried each other to death.
+
+But the field of Waterloo is little changed. The guide, whose
+grandfather was present at the battle--quite an extraordinary number
+of grandfathers must have fought at Waterloo: there must have been
+whole regiments composed of grandfathers--can point out to you the
+ground across which every charge was delivered, can show you every
+ridge, still existing, behind which the infantry crouched. The whole
+business was began and finished within a space little larger than a
+square mile. One can understand the advantage then to be derived
+from the perfect moving of the military machine; the uses of the
+echelon, the purposes of the linked battalion, the manipulation of
+centre, left wing and right wing. Then it may have been worth while-
+-if war be ever worth the while--which grown men of sense are
+beginning to doubt--to waste two years of a soldier's training,
+teaching him the goose-step. In the twentieth century, teaching
+soldiers the evolutions of the Thirty Years' War is about as sensible
+as it would be loading our iron-clads with canvas.
+
+I followed once a company of Volunteers across Blackfriars Bridge on
+their way from Southwark to the Temple. At the bottom of Ludgate
+Hill the commanding officer, a young but conscientious gentleman,
+ordered "Left wheel!" At once the vanguard turned down a narrow
+alley--I forget its name--which would have led the troop into the
+purlieus of Whitefriars, where, in all probability, they would have
+been lost for ever. The whole company had to be halted, right-about-
+faced, and retired a hundred yards. Then the order "Quick march!"
+was given. The vanguard shot across Ludgate Circus, and were making
+for the Meat Market.
+
+At this point that young commanding officer gave up being a military
+man and talked sense.
+
+"Not that way," he shouted: "up Fleet Street and through Middle
+Temple Lane."
+
+Then without further trouble the army of the future went upon its
+way.
+
+
+
+OUGHT STORIES TO BE TRUE?
+
+
+
+There was once upon a time a charming young lady, possessed of much
+taste, who was asked by her anxious parent, the years passing and
+family expenditure not decreasing, which of the numerous and eligible
+young men then paying court to her she liked the best. She replied,
+that was her difficulty; she could not make up her mind which she
+liked the best. They were all so nice. She could not possibly
+select one to the exclusion of all the others. What she would have
+liked would have been to marry the lot; but that, she presumed, was
+impracticable.
+
+I feel I resemble that young lady, not so much in charm and beauty as
+in indecision of mind, when the question is that of my favourite
+author or my favourite book. It is as if one were asked one's
+favourite food. There are times when one fancies an egg with one's
+tea. On other occasions one dreams of a kipper. To-day one clamours
+for lobsters. To-morrow one feels one never wishes to see a lobster
+again. One determines to settle down, for a time, to a diet of bread
+and milk and rice pudding. Asked suddenly to say whether I preferred
+ices to soup, or beef-steak to caviare, I should be completely
+nonplussed.
+
+There may be readers who care for only one literary diet. I am a
+person of gross appetites, requiring many authors to satisfy me.
+There are moods when the savage strength of the Bronte sisters is
+companionable to me. One rejoices in the unrelieved gloom of
+"Wuthering Heights," as in the lowering skies of a stormy autumn.
+Perhaps part of the marvel of the book comes from the knowledge that
+the authoress was a slight, delicate young girl. One wonders what
+her future work would have been, had she lived to gain a wider
+experience of life; or was it well for her fame that nature took the
+pen so soon from her hand? Her suppressed vehemence may have been
+better suited to those tangled Yorkshire byways than to the more
+open, cultivated fields of life.
+
+There is not much similarity between the two books, yet when
+recalling Emily Bronte my thoughts always run on to Olive Schreiner.
+Here, again, was a young girl with the voice of a strong man. Olive
+Schreiner, more fortunate, has lived; but I doubt if she will ever
+write a book that will remind us of her first. "The Story of an
+African Farm" is not a work to be repeated. We have advanced in
+literature of late. I can well remember the storm of indignation
+with which the "African Farm" was received by Mrs. Grundy and her
+then numerous, but now happily diminishing, school. It was a book
+that was to be kept from the hands of every young man and woman. But
+the hands of the young men and women stretched out and grasped it, to
+their help. It is a curious idea, this of Mrs. Grundy's, that the
+young man and woman must never think--that all literature that does
+anything more than echo the conventions must be hidden away.
+
+Then there are times when I love to gallop through history on Sir
+Walter's broomstick. At other hours it is pleasant to sit in
+converse with wise George Eliot. From her garden terrace I look down
+on Loamshire and its commonplace people; while in her quiet, deep
+voice she tells me of the hidden hearts that beat and throb beneath
+these velveteen jackets and lace falls.
+
+Who can help loving Thackeray, wittiest, gentlest of men, in spite of
+the faint suspicion of snobbishness that clings to him? There is
+something pathetic in the good man's horror of this snobbishness, to
+which he himself was a victim. May it not have been an affectation,
+born unconsciously of self-consciousness? His heroes and heroines
+must needs be all fine folk, fit company for lady and gentlemen
+readers. To him the livery was too often the man. Under his stuffed
+calves even Jeames de la Pluche himself stood upon the legs of a man,
+but Thackeray could never see deeper than the silk stockings.
+Thackeray lived and died in Clubland. One feels that the world was
+bounded for him by Temple Bar on the east and Park Lane on the west;
+but what there was good in Clubland he showed us, and for the sake of
+the great gentlemen and sweet ladies that his kindly eyes found in
+that narrow region, not too overpeopled with great gentlemen and
+sweet women, let us honour him.
+
+"Tom Jones," "Peregrine Pickle," and "Tristram Shandy" are books a
+man is the better for reading, if he read them wisely. They teach
+him that literature, to be a living force, must deal with all sides
+of life, and that little help comes to us from that silly pretence of
+ours that we are perfect in all things, leading perfect lives, that
+only the villain of the story ever deviates from the path of
+rectitude.
+
+This is a point that needs to be considered by both the makers and
+the buyers of stories. If literature is to be regarded solely as the
+amusement of an idle hour, then the less relationship it has to life
+the better. Looking into a truthful mirror of nature we are
+compelled to think; and when thought comes in at the window self-
+satisfaction goes out by the door. Should a novel or play call us to
+ponder upon the problems of existence, or lure us from the dusty high
+road of the world, for a while, into the pleasant meadows of
+dreamland? If only the latter, then let our heroes and our heroines
+be not what men and women are, but what they should be. Let Angelina
+be always spotless and Edwin always true. Let virtue ever triumph
+over villainy in the last chapter; and let us assume that the
+marriage service answers all the questions of the Sphinx.
+
+Very pleasant are these fairy tales where the prince is always brave
+and handsome; where the princess is always the best and most
+beautiful princess that ever lived; where one knows the wicked people
+at a glance by their ugliness and ill-temper, mistakes being thus
+rendered impossible; where the good fairies are, by nature, more
+powerful than the bad; where gloomy paths lead ever to fair palaces;
+where the dragon is ever vanquished; and where well-behaved husbands
+and wives can rely upon living happily ever afterwards. "The world
+is too much with us, late and soon." It is wise to slip away from it
+at times to fairyland. But, alas, we cannot live in fairyland, and
+knowledge of its geography is of little help to us on our return to
+the rugged country of reality.
+
+Are not both branches of literature needful? By all means let us
+dream, on midsummer nights, of fond lovers led through devious paths
+to happiness by Puck; of virtuous dukes--one finds such in fairyland;
+of fate subdued by faith and gentleness. But may we not also, in our
+more serious humours, find satisfaction in thinking with Hamlet or
+Coriolanus? May not both Dickens and Zola have their booths in
+Vanity Fair? If literature is to be a help to us, as well as a
+pastime, it must deal with the ugly as well as with the beautiful; it
+must show us ourselves, not as we wish to appear, but as we know
+ourselves to be. Man has been described as a animal with aspirations
+reaching up to Heaven and instincts rooted--elsewhere. Is literature
+to flatter him, or reveal him to himself?
+
+Of living writers it is not safe, I suppose, to speak except,
+perhaps, of those who have been with us so long that we have come to
+forget they are not of the past. Has justice ever been done to
+Ouida's undoubted genius by our shallow school of criticism, always
+very clever in discovering faults as obvious as pimples on a fine
+face? Her guardsmen "toy" with their food. Her horses win the Derby
+three years running. Her wicked women throw guinea peaches from the
+windows of the Star and Garter into the Thames at Richmond. The
+distance being about three hundred and fifty yards, it is a good
+throw. Well, well, books are not made worth reading by the absence
+of absurdities. Ouida possesses strength, tenderness, truth,
+passion; and these be qualities in a writer capable of carrying many
+more faults than Ouida is burdened with. But that is the method of
+our little criticism. It views an artist as Gulliver saw the
+Brobdingnag ladies. It is too small to see them in their entirety:
+a mole or a wart absorbs all its vision.
+
+Why was not George Gissing more widely read? If faithfulness to life
+were the key to literary success, Gissing's sales would have been
+counted by the million instead of by the hundred.
+
+Have Mark Twain's literary qualities, apart altogether from his
+humour, been recognised in literary circles as they ought to have
+been? "Huck Finn" would be a great work were there not a laugh in it
+from cover to cover. Among the Indians and some other savage tribes
+the fact that a member of the community has lost one of his senses
+makes greatly to his advantage; he is then regarded as a superior
+person. So among a school of Anglo-Saxon readers, it is necessary to
+a man, if he would gain literary credit, that he should lack the
+sense of humour. One or two curious modern examples occur to me of
+literary success secured chiefly by this failing.
+
+All these authors are my favourites; but such catholic taste is held
+nowadays to be no taste. One is told that if one loves Shakespeare,
+one must of necessity hate Ibsen; that one cannot appreciate Wagner
+and tolerate Beethoven; that if we admit any merit in Dore, we are
+incapable of understanding Whistler. How can I say which is my
+favourite novel? I can only ask myself which lives clearest in my
+memory, which is the book I run to more often than to another in that
+pleasant half hour before the dinner-bell, when, with all apologies
+to good Mr. Smiles, it is useless to think of work.
+
+I find, on examination, that my "David Copperfield" is more
+dilapidated than any other novel upon my shelves. As I turn its dog-
+eared pages, reading the familiar headlines "Mr. Micawber in
+difficulties," "Mr. Micawber in prison," "I fall in love with Dora,"
+"Mr. Barkis goes out with the tide," "My child wife," "Traddles in a
+nest of roses"--pages of my own life recur to me; so many of my
+sorrows, so many of my joys are woven in my mind with this chapter or
+the other. That day--how well I remember it when I read of "David's"
+wooing, but Dora's death I was careful to skip. Poor, pretty little
+Mrs. Copperfield at the gate, holding up her baby in her arms, is
+always associated in my memory with a child's cry, long listened for.
+I found the book, face downwards on a chair, weeks afterwards, not
+moved from where I had hastily laid it.
+
+Old friends, all of you, how many times have I not slipped away from
+my worries into your pleasant company! Peggotty, you dear soul, the
+sight of your kind eyes is so good to me. Our mutual friend, Mr.
+Charles Dickens, is prone, we know, just ever so slightly to gush.
+Good fellow that he is, he can see no flaw in those he loves, but
+you, dear lady, if you will permit me to call you by a name much
+abused, he has drawn in true colours. I know you well, with your big
+heart, your quick temper, your homely, human ways of thought. You
+yourself will never guess your worth--how much the world is better
+for such as you! You think of yourself as of a commonplace person,
+useful only for the making of pastry, the darning of stockings, and
+if a man--not a young man, with only dim half-opened eyes, but a man
+whom life had made keen to see the beauty that lies hidden beneath
+plain faces--were to kneel and kiss your red, coarse hand, you would
+be much astonished. But he would be a wise man, Peggotty, knowing
+what things a man should take carelessly, and for what things he
+should thank God, who has fashioned fairness in many forms.
+
+Mr. Wilkins Micawber, and you, most excellent of faithful wives, Mrs.
+Emma Micawber, to you I also raise my hat. How often has the example
+of your philosophy saved me, when I, likewise, have suffered under
+the temporary pressure of pecuniary liabilities; when the sun of my
+prosperity, too, has sunk beneath the dark horizon of the world--in
+short, when I, also, have found myself in a tight corner. I have
+asked myself what would the Micawbers have done in my place. And I
+have answered myself. They would have sat down to a dish of lamb's
+fry, cooked and breaded by the deft hands of Emma, followed by a brew
+of punch, concocted by the beaming Wilkins, and have forgotten all
+their troubles, for the time being. Whereupon, seeing first that
+sufficient small change was in my pocket, I have entered the nearest
+restaurant, and have treated myself to a repast of such sumptuousness
+as the aforesaid small change would command, emerging from that
+restaurant stronger and more fit for battle. And lo! the sun of my
+prosperity has peeped at me from over the clouds with a sly wink, as
+if to say "Cheer up; I am only round the corner."
+
+Cheery, elastic Mr. and Mrs. Micawber, how would half the world face
+their fate but by the help of a kindly, shallow nature such as yours?
+I love to think that your sorrows can be drowned in nothing more
+harmful than a bowl of punch. Here's to you, Emma, and to you,
+Wilkins, and to the twins!
+
+May you and such childlike folk trip lightly over the stones upon
+your path! May something ever turn up for you, my dears! May the
+rain of life ever fall as April showers upon your simple bald head,
+Micawber!
+
+And you, sweet Dora, let me confess I love you, though sensible
+friends deem you foolish. Ah, silly Dora, fashioned by wise Mother
+Nature who knows that weakness and helplessness are as a talisman
+calling forth strength and tenderness in man, trouble yourself not
+unduly about the oysters and the underdone mutton, little woman.
+Good plain cooks at twenty pounds a year will see to these things for
+us. Your work is to teach us gentleness and kindness. Lay your
+foolish curls just here, child. It is from such as you we learn
+wisdom. Foolish wise folk sneer at you. Foolish wise folk would
+pull up the laughing lilies, the needless roses from the garden,
+would plant in their places only useful, wholesome cabbage. But the
+gardener, knowing better, plants the silly, short-lived flowers,
+foolish wise folk asking for what purpose.
+
+Gallant Traddles, of the strong heart and the unruly hair; Sophy,
+dearest of girls; Betsy Trotwood, with your gentlemanly manners and
+your woman's heart, you have come to me in shabby rooms, making the
+dismal place seem bright. In dark hours your kindly faces have
+looked out at me from the shadows, your kindly voices have cheered
+me.
+
+Little Em'ly and Agnes, it may be my bad taste, but I cannot share my
+friend Dickens' enthusiasm for them. Dickens' good women are all too
+good for human nature's daily food. Esther Summerson, Florence
+Dombey, Little Nell--you have no faults to love you by.
+
+Scott's women were likewise mere illuminated texts. Scott only drew
+one live heroine--Catherine Seton. His other women were merely the
+prizes the hero had to win in the end, like the sucking pig or the
+leg of mutton for which the yokel climbs the greasy pole. That
+Dickens could draw a woman to some likeness he proved by Bella
+Wilfer, and Estella in "Great Expectations." But real women have
+never been popular in fiction. Men readers prefer the false, and
+women readers object to the truth.
+
+From an artistic point of view, "David Copperfield" is undoubtedly
+Dickens' best work. Its humour is less boisterous; its pathos less
+highly coloured.
+
+One of Leech's pictures represents a cab-man calmly sleeping in the
+gutter.
+
+"Oh, poor dear, he's ill," says a tender-hearted lady in the crowd.
+"Ill!" retorts a male bystander indignantly, "Ill! 'E's 'ad too much
+of what I ain't 'ad enough of."
+
+Dickens suffered from too little of what some of us have too much of-
+-criticism. His work met with too little resistance to call forth
+his powers. Too often his pathos sinks to bathos, and this not from
+want of skill, but from want of care. It is difficult to believe
+that the popular writer who allowed his sentimentality--or rather the
+public's sentimentality--to run away with him in such scenes as the
+death of Paul Dombey and Little Nell was the artist who painted the
+death of Sidney Carton and of Barkis, the willing. The death of
+Barkis, next to the passing of Colonel Newcome, is, to my thinking,
+one of the most perfect pieces of pathos in English literature. No
+very deep emotion is concerned. He is a commonplace old man,
+clinging foolishly to a commonplace box. His simple wife and the old
+boatmen stand by, waiting calmly for the end. There is no straining
+after effect. One feels death enter, dignifying all things; and
+touched by that hand, foolish old Barkis grows great.
+
+In Uriah Heap and Mrs. Gummidge, Dickens draws types rather than
+characters. Pecksniff, Podsnap, Dolly Varden, Mr. Bumble, Mrs. Gamp,
+Mark Tapley, Turveydrop, Mrs. Jellyby--these are not characters; they
+are human characteristics personified.
+
+We have to go back to Shakespeare to find a writer who, through
+fiction, has so enriched the thought of the people. Admit all
+Dickens' faults twice over, we still have one of the greatest writers
+of modern times. Such people as these creations of Dickens never
+lived, says your little critic. Nor was Prometheus, type of the
+spirit of man, nor was Niobe, mother of all mothers, a truthful
+picture of the citizen one was likely to meet often during a
+morning's stroll through Athens. Nor grew there ever a wood like to
+the Forest of Arden, though every Rosalind and Orlando knows the path
+to glades having much resemblance thereto.
+
+Steerforth, upon whom Dickens evidently prided himself, I must
+confess, never laid hold of me. He is a melodramatic young man. The
+worst I could have wished him would have been that he should marry
+Rose Dartle and live with his mother. It would have served him right
+for being so attractive. Old Peggotty and Ham are, of course,
+impossible. One must accept them also as types. These Brothers
+Cheeryble, these Kits, Joe Gargeries, Boffins, Garlands, John
+Peerybingles, we will accept as types of the goodness that is in men-
+-though in real life the amount of virtue that Dickens often wastes
+upon a single individual would by more economically minded nature, be
+made to serve for fifty.
+
+To sum up, "David Copperfield" is a plain tale, simply told; and such
+are all books that live. Eccentricities of style, artistic trickery,
+may please the critic of a day, but literature is a story that
+interests us, boys and girls, men and women. It is a sad book; and
+that, again, gives it an added charm in these sad later days.
+Humanity is nearing its old age, and we have come to love sadness, as
+the friend who has been longest with us. In the young days of our
+vigour we were merry. With Ulysses' boatmen, we took alike the
+sunshine and the thunder with frolic welcome. The red blood flowed
+in our veins, and we laughed, and our tales were of strength and
+hope. Now we sit like old men, watching faces in the fire; and the
+stories that we love are sad stories--like the stories we ourselves
+have lived.
+
+
+
+CREATURES THAT ONE DAY SHALL BE MEN.
+
+
+
+I ought to like Russia better than I do, if only for the sake of the
+many good friends I am proud to possess amongst the Russians. A
+large square photograph I keep always on my mantel-piece; it helps me
+to maintain my head at that degree of distention necessary for the
+performance of all literary work. It presents in the centre a
+neatly-written address in excellent English that I frankly confess I
+am never tired of reading, around which are ranged some hundreds of
+names I am quite unable to read, but which, in spite of their strange
+lettering, I know to be the names of good Russian men and women to
+whom, a year or two ago, occurred the kindly idea of sending me as a
+Christmas card this message of encouragement. The individual Russian
+is one of the most charming creatures living. If he like you he does
+not hesitate to let you know it; not only by every action possible,
+but, by what perhaps is just as useful in this grey old world, by
+generous, impulsive speech.
+
+We Anglo-Saxons are apt to pride ourselves upon being
+undemonstrative. Max Adeler tells the tale of a boy who was sent out
+by his father to fetch wood. The boy took the opportunity of
+disappearing and did not show his face again beneath the paternal
+roof for over twenty years. Then one evening, a smiling, well-
+dressed stranger entered to the old couple, and announced himself as
+their long-lost child, returned at last.
+
+"Well, you haven't hurried yourself," grumbled the old man, "and
+blarm me if now you haven't forgotten the wood."
+
+I was lunching with an Englishman in a London restaurant one day. A
+man entered and took his seat at a table near by. Glancing round,
+and meeting my friend's eyes, he smiled and nodded.
+
+"Excuse me a minute," said my friend, "I must just speak to my
+brother--haven't seen him for over five years."
+
+He finished his soup and leisurely wiped his moustache before
+strolling across and shaking hands. They talked for a while. Then
+my friend returned to me.
+
+"Never thought to see him again," observed my friend, "he was one of
+the garrison of that place in Africa--what's the name of it?--that
+the Mahdi attacked. Only three of them escaped. Always was a lucky
+beggar, Jim."
+
+"But wouldn't you like to talk to him some more?" I suggested; "I can
+see you any time about this little business of ours."
+
+"Oh, that's all right," he answered, "we have just fixed it up--shall
+be seeing him again to-morrow."
+
+I thought of this scene one evening while dining with some Russian
+friends in a St. Petersburg Hotel. One of the party had not seen his
+second cousin, a mining engineer, for nearly eighteen months. They
+sat opposite to one another, and a dozen times at least during the
+course of the dinner one of them would jump up from his chair, and
+run round to embrace the other. They would throw their arms about
+one another, kissing one another on both cheeks, and then sit down
+again, with moist eyes. Their behaviour among their fellow
+countrymen excited no astonishment whatever.
+
+But the Russians's anger is as quick and vehement as his love. On
+another occasion I was supping with friends in one of the chief
+restaurants on the Nevsky. Two gentlemen at an adjoining table, who
+up till the previous moment had been engaged in amicable
+conversation, suddenly sprang to their feet, and "went for" one
+another. One man secured the water-bottle, which he promptly broke
+over the other's head. His opponent chose for his weapon a heavy
+mahogany chair, and leaping back for the purpose of securing a good
+swing, lurched against my hostess.
+
+"Do please be careful," said the lady.
+
+"A thousand pardons, madame," returned the stranger, from whom blood
+and water were streaming in equal copiousness; and taking the utmost
+care to avoid interfering with our comfort, he succeeded adroitly in
+flooring his antagonist by a well-directed blow.
+
+A policeman appeared upon the scene. He did not attempt to
+interfere, but running out into the street communicated the glad
+tidings to another policeman.
+
+"This is going to cost them a pretty penny," observed my host, who
+was calmly continuing his supper; "why couldn't they wait?"
+
+It did cost them a pretty penny. Some half a dozen policemen were
+round about before as many minutes had elapsed, and each one claimed
+his bribe. Then they wished both combatants good-night, and trooped
+out evidently in great good humour and the two gentlemen, with wet
+napkins round their heads, sat down again, and laughter and amicable
+conversation flowed freely as before.
+
+They strike the stranger as a childlike people, but you are possessed
+with a haunting sense of ugly traits beneath. The workers--slaves it
+would be almost more correct to call them--allow themselves to be
+exploited with the uncomplaining patience of intelligent animals.
+Yet every educated Russian you talk to on the subject knows that
+revolution is coming.
+
+But he talks to you about it with the door shut, for no man in Russia
+can be sure that his own servants are not police spies. I was
+discussing politics with a Russian official one evening in his study
+when his old housekeeper entered the room--a soft-eyed grey-haired
+woman who had been in his service over eight years, and whose
+position in the household was almost that of a friend. He stopped
+abruptly and changed the conversation. So soon as the door was
+closed behind her again, he explained himself.
+
+"It is better to chat upon such matters when one is quite alone," he
+laughed.
+
+"But surely you can trust her," I said, "She appears to be devoted to
+you all."
+
+"It is safer to trust no one," he answered. And then he continued
+from the point where we had been interrupted.
+
+"It is gathering," he said; "there are times when I almost smell
+blood in the air. I am an old man and may escape it, but my children
+will have to suffer--suffer as children must for the sins of their
+fathers. We have made brute beasts of the people, and as brute
+beasts they will come upon us, cruel, and undiscriminating; right and
+wrong indifferently going down before them. But it has to be. It is
+needed."
+
+It is a mistake to speak of the Russian classes opposing to all
+progress a dead wall of selfishness. The history of Russia will be
+the history of the French Revolution over again, but with this
+difference: that the educated classes, the thinkers, who are pushing
+forward the dumb masses are doing so with their eyes open. There
+will be no Maribeau, no Danton to be appalled at a people's
+ingratitude. The men who are to-day working for revolution in Russia
+number among their ranks statesmen, soldiers, delicately-nurtured
+women, rich landowners, prosperous tradesmen, students familiar with
+the lessons of history. They have no misconceptions concerning the
+blind Monster into which they are breathing life. He will crush
+them, they know it; but with them he will crush the injustice and
+stupidity they have grown to hate more than they love themselves.
+
+The Russian peasant, when he rises, will prove more terrible, more
+pitiless than were the men of 1790. He is less intelligent, more
+brutal. They sing a wild, sad song, these Russian cattle, the while
+they work. They sing it in chorus on the quays while hauling the
+cargo, they sing it in the factory, they chant on the weary, endless
+steppes, reaping the corn they may not eat. It is of the good time
+their masters are having, of the feastings and the merrymakings, of
+the laughter of the children, of the kisses of the lovers.
+
+But the last line of every verse is the same. When you ask a Russian
+to translate it for you he shrugs his shoulders.
+
+"Oh, it means," he says, "that their time will also come--some day."
+
+It is a pathetic, haunting refrain. They sing it in the drawing-
+rooms of Moscow and St. Petersburg, and somehow the light talk and
+laughter die away, and a hush, like a chill breath, enters by the
+closed door and passes through. It is a curious song, like the
+wailing of a tired wind, and one day it will sweep over the land
+heralding terror.
+
+A Scotsman I met in Russia told me that when he first came out to act
+as manager of a large factory in St. Petersburg, belonging to his
+Scottish employers, he unwittingly made a mistake the first week when
+paying his workpeople. By a miscalculation of the Russian money he
+paid the men, each one, nearly a rouble short. He discovered his
+error before the following Saturday, and then put the matter right.
+The men accepted his explanation with perfect composure and without
+any comment whatever. The thing astonished him.
+
+"But you must have known I was paying you short," he said to one of
+them. "Why didn't you tell me of it?"
+
+"Oh," answered the man, "we thought you were putting it in your own
+pocket and then if we had complained it would have meant dismissal
+for us. No one would have taken our word against yours."
+
+Corruption appears to be so general throughout the whole of Russia
+that all classes have come to accept it as part of the established
+order of things. A friend gave me a little dog to bring away with
+me. It was a valuable animal, and I wished to keep it with me. It
+is strictly forbidden to take dogs into railway carriages. The list
+of the pains and penalties for doing so frightened me considerably.
+
+"Oh, that will be all right," my friend assured me; "have a few
+roubles loose in your pocket."
+
+I tipped the station master and I tipped the guard, and started
+pleased with myself. But I had not anticipated what was in store for
+me. The news that an Englishman with a dog in a basket and roubles
+in his pocket was coming must have been telegraphed all down the
+line. At almost every stopping-place some enormous official, wearing
+generally a sword and a helmet, boarded the train. At first these
+fellows terrified me. I took them for field-marshals at least.
+
+Visions of Siberia crossed my mind. Anxious and trembling, I gave
+the first one a gold piece. He shook me warmly by the hand--I
+thought he was going to kiss me. If I had offered him my cheek I am
+sure he would have done so. With the next one I felt less
+apprehensive. For a couple of roubles he blessed me, so I gathered;
+and, commending me to the care of the Almighty, departed. Before I
+had reached the German frontier, I was giving away the equivalent of
+English sixpences to men with the dress and carriage of major-
+generals; and to see their faces brighten up and to receive their
+heartfelt benediction was well worth the money.
+
+But to the man without roubles in his pocket, Russian officialdom is
+not so gracious. By the expenditure of a few more coins I got my dog
+through the Customs without trouble, and had leisure to look about
+me. A miserable object was being badgered by half a dozen men in
+uniform, and he--his lean face puckered up into a snarl--was
+returning them snappish answers; the whole scene suggested some half-
+starved mongrel being worried by school-boys. A slight informality
+had been discovered in his passport, so a fellow traveller with whom
+I had made friends informed me. He had no roubles in his pocket, and
+in consequence they were sending him back to St. Petersburg--some
+eighteen hours' journey--in a wagon that in England would not be
+employed for the transport of oxen.
+
+It seemed a good joke to Russian officialdom; they would drop in
+every now and then, look at him as he sat crouched in a corner of the
+waiting-room, and pass out again, laughing. The snarl had died from
+his face; a dull, listless indifference had taken its place--the look
+one sees on the face of a beaten dog, after the beating is over, when
+it is lying very still, its great eyes staring into nothingness, and
+one wonders whether it is thinking.
+
+The Russian worker reads no newspaper, has no club, yet all things
+seem to be known to him. There is a prison on the banks of the Neva,
+in St. Petersburg. They say such things are done with now, but up
+till very recently there existed a small cell therein, below the
+level of the ice, and prisoners placed there would be found missing a
+day or two afterwards, nothing ever again known of them, except,
+perhaps, to the fishes of the Baltic. They talk of such like things
+among themselves: the sleigh-drivers round their charcoal fire, the
+field-workers going and coming in the grey dawn, the factory workers,
+their whispers deadened by the rattle of the looms.
+
+I was searching for a house in Brussels some winters ago, and there
+was one I was sent to in a small street leading out of the Avenue
+Louise. It was poorly furnished, but rich in pictures, large and
+small. They covered the walls of every room.
+
+"These pictures," explained to me the landlady, an old, haggard-
+looking woman, "will not be left, I am taking them with me to London.
+They are all the work of my husband. He is arranging an exhibition."
+
+The friend who had sent me had told me the woman was a widow, who had
+been living in Brussels eking out a precarious existence as a
+lodging-house keeper for the last ten years.
+
+"You have married again?" I questioned her.
+
+The woman smiled.
+
+"Not again. I was married eighteen years ago in Russia. My husband
+was transported to Siberia a few days after we were married, and I
+have never seen him since."
+
+"I should have followed him," she added, "only every year we thought
+he was going to be set free."
+
+"He is really free now?" I asked.
+
+"Yes," she answered. "They set him free last week. He will join me
+in London. We shall be able to finish our honeymoon."
+
+She smiled, revealing to me that once she had been a girl.
+
+I read in the English papers of the exhibition in London. It was
+said the artist showed much promise. So possibly a career may at
+last be opening out for him.
+
+Nature has made life hard to Russian rich and poor alike. To the
+banks of the Neva, with its ague and influenza-bestowing fogs and
+mists, one imagines that the Devil himself must have guided Peter the
+Great.
+
+"Show me in all my dominions the most hopelessly unattractive site on
+which to build a city," Peter must have prayed; and the Devil having
+discovered the site on which St. Petersburg now stands, must have
+returned to his master in high good feather.
+
+"I think, my dear Peter, I have found you something really unique.
+It is a pestilent swamp to which a mighty river brings bitter blasts
+and marrow-chilling fogs, while during the brief summer time the wind
+will bring you sand. In this way you will combine the disadvantages
+of the North Pole with those of the desert of Sahara."
+
+In the winter time the Russians light their great stoves, and doubly
+barricade their doors and windows; and in this atmosphere, like to
+that of a greenhouse, many of their women will pass six months, never
+venturing out of doors. Even the men only go out at intervals.
+Every office, every shop is an oven. Men of forty have white hair
+and parchment faces; and the women are old at thirty. The farm
+labourers, during the few summer months, work almost entirely without
+sleep. They leave that for the winter, when they shut themselves up
+like dormice in their hovels, their store of food and vodka buried
+underneath the floor. For days together they sleep, then wake and
+dig, then sleep again.
+
+The Russian party lasts all night. In an adjoining room are beds and
+couches; half a dozen guests are always sleeping. An hour contents
+them, then they rejoin the company, and other guests take their
+places. The Russian eats when he feels so disposed; the table is
+always spread, the guests come and go. Once a year there is a great
+feast in Moscow. The Russian merchant and his friends sit down early
+in the day, and a sort of thick, sweet pancake is served up hot. The
+feast continues for many hours, and the ambition of the Russian
+merchant is to eat more than his neighbour. Fifty or sixty of these
+hot cakes a man will consume at a sitting, and a dozen funerals in
+Moscow is often the result.
+
+An uncivilised people, we call them in our lordly way, but they are
+young. Russian history is not yet three hundred years old. They
+will see us out, I am inclined to think. Their energy, their
+intelligence--when these show above the groundwork--are monstrous. I
+have known a Russian learn Chinese within six months. English! they
+learn it while you are talking to them. The children play at chess
+and study the violin for their own amusement.
+
+The world will be glad of Russia--when she has put her house in
+order.
+
+
+
+HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH LITTLE.
+
+
+
+Folks suffering from Jingoism, Spreadeagleism, Chauvinism--all such
+like isms, to whatever country they belong--would be well advised to
+take a tour in Holland. It is the idea of the moment that size
+spells happiness. The bigger the country the better one is for
+living there. The happiest Frenchman cannot possibly be as happy as
+the most wretched Britisher, for the reason that Britain owns many
+more thousands of square miles than France possesses. The Swiss
+peasant, compared with the Russian serf, must, when he looks at the
+map of Europe and Asia, feel himself to be a miserable creature. The
+reason that everybody in America is happy and good is to be explained
+by the fact that America has an area equal to that of the entire
+moon. The American citizen who has backed the wrong horse, missed
+his train and lost his bag, remembers this and feels bucked up again.
+
+According to this argument, fishes should be the happiest of mortals,
+the sea consisting--at least, so says my atlas: I have not measured
+it myself--of a hundred and forty-four millions of square miles.
+But, maybe, the sea is also divided in ways we wot not of. Possibly
+the sardine who lives near the Brittainy coast is sad and
+discontented because the Norwegian sardine is the proud inhabitant of
+a larger sea. Perhaps that is why he has left the Brittainy coast.
+Ashamed of being a Brittainy sardine, he has emigrated to Norway, has
+become a naturalized Norwegian sardine, and is himself again.
+
+The happy Londoner on foggy days can warm himself with the reflection
+that the sun never sets on the British Empire. He does not often see
+the sun, but that is a mere detail. He regards himself as the owner
+of the sun; the sun begins his little day in the British Empire, ends
+his little day in the British Empire: for all practical purposes the
+sun is part of the British Empire. Foolish people in other countries
+sit underneath it and feel warm, but that is only their ignorance.
+They do not know it is a British possession; if they did they would
+feel cold.
+
+My views on this subject are, I know, heretical. I cannot get it
+into my unpatriotic head that size is the only thing worth worrying
+about. In England, when I venture to express my out-of-date
+opinions, I am called a Little Englander. It fretted me at first; I
+was becoming a mere shadow. But by now I have got used to it. It
+would be the same, I feel, wherever I went. In New York I should be
+a Little American; in Constantinople a Little Turk. But I wanted to
+talk about Holland. A holiday in Holland serves as a corrective to
+exaggerated Imperialistic notions.
+
+There are no poor in Holland. They may be an unhappy people, knowing
+what a little country it is they live in; but, if so, they hide the
+fact. To all seeming, the Dutch peasant, smoking his great pipe, is
+as much a man as the Whitechapel hawker or the moocher of the Paris
+boulevard. I saw a beggar once in Holland--in the townlet of
+Enkhuisen. Crowds were hurrying up from the side streets to have a
+look at him; the idea at first seemed to be that he was doing it for
+a bet. He turned out to be a Portuguese. They offered him work in
+the docks--until he could get something better to do--at wages equal
+in English money to about ten shillings a day. I inquired about him
+on my way back, and was told he had borrowed a couple of forms from
+the foreman and had left by the evening train. It is not the country
+for the loafer.
+
+In Holland work is easily found; this takes away the charm of looking
+for it. A farm labourer in Holland lives in a brick-built house of
+six rooms, which generally belongs to him, with an acre or so of
+ground, and only eats meat once a day. The rest of his time he fills
+up on eggs and chicken and cheese and beer. But you rarely hear him
+grumble. His wife and daughter may be seen on Sundays wearing gold
+and silver jewellery worth from fifty to one hundred pounds, and
+there is generally enough old delft and pewter in the house to start
+a local museum anywhere outside Holland. On high days and holidays,
+of which in Holland there are plenty, the average Dutch vrouw would
+be well worth running away with. The Dutch peasant girl has no need
+of an illustrated journal once a week to tell her what the fashion
+is; she has it in the portrait of her mother, or of her grandmother,
+hanging over the glittering chimney-piece.
+
+When the Dutchwoman builds a dress she builds it to last; it descends
+from mother to daughter, but it is made of sound material in the
+beginning. A lady friend of mine thought the Dutch costume would
+serve well for a fancy-dress ball, so set about buying one, but
+abandoned the notion on learning what it would cost her. A Dutch
+girl in her Sunday clothes must be worth fifty pounds before you come
+to ornaments. In certain provinces she wears a close-fitting helmet,
+made either of solid silver or of solid gold. The Dutch gallant,
+before making himself known, walks on tiptoe a little while behind
+the Loved One, and looks at himself in her head-dress just to make
+sure that his hat is on straight and his front curl just where it
+ought to be.
+
+In most other European countries national costume is dying out. The
+slop-shop is year by year extending its hideous trade. But the
+country of Rubens and Rembrandt, of Teniers and Gerard Dow, remains
+still true to art. The picture post-card does not exaggerate. The
+men in those wondrous baggy knickerbockers, from the pockets of which
+you sometimes see a couple of chicken's heads protruding; in gaudy
+coloured shirts, in worsted hose and mighty sabots, smoking their
+great pipes--the women in their petticoats of many hues, in
+gorgeously embroidered vest, in chemisette of dazzling white, crowned
+with a halo of many frills, glittering in gold and silver--are not
+the creatures of an artist's fancy. You meet them in their thousands
+on holiday afternoons, walking gravely arm in arm, flirting with
+sober Dutch stolidity.
+
+On colder days the women wear bright-coloured capes made of fine spun
+silk, from underneath the ample folds of which you sometimes hear a
+little cry; and sometimes a little hooded head peeps out, regards
+with preternatural thoughtfulness the toy-like world without, then
+dives back into shelter. As for the children--women in miniature,
+the single difference in dress being the gay pinafore--you can only
+say of them that they look like Dutch dolls. But such plump,
+contented, cheerful little dolls! You remember the hollow-eyed,
+pale-faced dolls you see swarming in the great, big and therefore
+should be happy countries, and wish that mere land surface were of
+less importance to our statesmen and our able editors, and the
+happiness and well-being of the mere human items worth a little more
+of their thought.
+
+The Dutch peasant lives surrounded by canals, and reaches his cottage
+across a drawbridge. I suppose it is in the blood of the Dutch child
+not to tumble into a canal, and the Dutch mother never appears to
+anticipate such possibility. One can imagine the average English
+mother trying to bring up a family in a house surrounded by canals.
+She would never have a minute's peace until the children were in bed.
+But then the mere sight of a canal to the English child suggests the
+delights of a sudden and unexpected bath. I put it to a Dutchman
+once. Did the Dutch child by any chance ever fall into a canal?
+
+"Yes," he replied, "cases have been known."
+
+"Don't you do anything for it?" I enquired.
+
+"Oh, yes," he answered, "we haul them out again."
+
+"But what I mean is," I explained, "don't you do anything to prevent
+their falling in--to save them from falling in again?"
+
+"Yes," he answered, "we spank 'em."
+
+There is always a wind in Holland; it comes from over the sea. There
+is nothing to stay its progress. It leaps the low dykes and sweeps
+with a shriek across the sad, soft dunes, and thinks it is going to
+have a good time and play havoc in the land. But the Dutchman laughs
+behind his great pipe as it comes to him shouting and roaring.
+"Welcome, my hearty, welcome," he chuckles, "come blustering and
+bragging; the bigger you are the better I like you." And when it is
+once in the land, behind the long, straight dykes, behind the waving
+line of sandy dunes, he seizes hold of it, and will not let it go
+till it has done its tale of work.
+
+The wind is the Dutchman's; servant before he lets it loose again it
+has turned ten thousand mills, has pumped the water and sawn the
+wood, has lighted the town and worked the loom, and forged the iron,
+and driven the great, slow, silent wherry, and played with the
+children in the garden. It is a sober wind when it gets back to sea,
+worn and weary, leaving the Dutchman laughing behind his everlasting
+pipe. There are canals in Holland down which you pass as though a
+field of wind-blown corn; a soft, low, rustling murmur ever in your
+ears. It is the ceaseless whirl of the great mill sails. Far out at
+sea the winds are as foolish savages, fighting, shrieking, tearing--
+purposeless. Here, in the street of mills, it is a civilized wind,
+crooning softly while it labours.
+
+What charms one in Holland is the neatness and cleanliness of all
+about one. Maybe to the Dutchman there are drawbacks. In a Dutch
+household life must be one long spring-cleaning. No milk-pail is
+considered fit that cannot just as well be used for a looking-glass.
+The great brass pans, hanging under the pent house roof outside the
+cottage door, flash like burnished gold. You could eat your dinner
+off the red-tiled floor, but that the deal table, scrubbed to the
+colour of cream cheese, is more convenient. By each threshold stands
+a row of empty sabots, and woe-betide the Dutchman who would dream of
+crossing it in anything but his stockinged feet.
+
+There is a fashion in sabots. Every spring they are freshly painted.
+One district fancies an orange yellow, another a red, a third white,
+suggesting purity and innocence. Members of the Smart Set indulge in
+ornamentation; a frieze in pink, a star upon the toe. Walking in
+sabots is not as easy as it looks. Attempting to run in sabots I do
+not recommend to the beginner.
+
+"How do you run in sabots?" I asked a Dutchman once. I had been
+experimenting, and had hurt myself.
+
+"We don't run," answered the Dutchman.
+
+And observation has proved to me he was right. The Dutch boy, when
+he runs, puts them for preference on his hands, and hits other Dutch
+boys over the head with them as he passes.
+
+The roads in Holland, straight and level, and shaded all the way with
+trees, look, from the railway-carriage window, as if they would be
+good for cycling; but this is a delusion. I crossed in the boat from
+Harwich once, with a well-known black and white artist, and an
+equally well-known and highly respected humorist. They had their
+bicycles with them, intending to tour Holland. I met them a
+fortnight later in Delft, or, rather, I met their remains. I was
+horrified at first. I thought it was drink. They could not stand
+still, they could not sit still, they trembled and shook in every
+limb, their teeth chattered when they tried to talk. The humorist
+hadn't a joke left in him. The artist could not have drawn his own
+salary; he would have dropped it on the way to his pocket. The Dutch
+roads are paved their entire length with cobbles--big, round cobbles,
+over which your bicycle leaps and springs and plunges.
+
+If you would see Holland outside the big towns a smattering of Dutch
+is necessary. If you know German there is not much difficulty.
+Dutch--I speak as an amateur--appears to be very bad German mis-
+pronounced. Myself, I find my German goes well in Holland, even
+better than in Germany. The Anglo-Saxon should not attempt the Dutch
+G. It is hopeless to think of succeeding, and the attempt has been
+known to produce internal rupture. The Dutchman appears to keep his
+G in his stomach, and to haul it up when wanted. Myself, I find the
+ordinary G, preceded by a hiccough and followed by a sob, the nearest
+I can get to it. But they tell me it is not quite right, yet.
+
+One needs to save up beforehand if one desires to spend any length of
+time in Holland. One talks of dear old England, but the dearest land
+in all the world is little Holland. The florin there is equal to the
+franc in France and to the shilling in England. They tell you that
+cigars are cheap in Holland. A cheap Dutch cigar will last you a
+day. It is not until you have forgotten the taste of it that you
+feel you ever want to smoke again. I knew a man who reckoned that he
+had saved hundreds of pounds by smoking Dutch cigars for a month
+steadily. It was years before he again ventured on tobacco.
+
+Watching building operations in Holland brings home to you forcibly,
+what previously you have regarded as a meaningless formula--namely,
+that the country is built upon piles. A dozen feet below the level
+of the street one sees the labourers working in fishermen's boots up
+to their knees in water, driving the great wooden blocks into the
+mud. Many of the older houses slope forward at such an angle that
+you almost fear to pass beneath them. I should be as nervous as a
+kitten, living in one of the upper storeys. But the Dutchman leans
+out of a window that is hanging above the street six feet beyond the
+perpendicular, and smokes contentedly.
+
+They have a merry custom in Holland of keeping the railway time
+twenty minutes ahead of the town time--or is it twenty minutes
+behind? I never can remember when I'm there, and I am not sure now.
+The Dutchman himself never knows.
+
+"You've plenty of time," he says
+
+"But the train goes at ten," you say; "the station is a mile away,
+and it is now half-past nine."
+
+"Yes, but that means ten-twenty," he answers, "you have nearly an
+hour."
+
+Five minutes later he taps you on the shoulder.
+
+"My mistake, it's twenty to ten. I was thinking it was the other way
+about."
+
+Another argues with him that his first idea was right. They work it
+out by scientific methods. Meanwhile you have dived into a cab. The
+result is always the same: you are either forty minutes too soon, or
+you have missed the train by twenty minutes. A Dutch platform is
+always crowded with women explaining volubly to their husbands either
+that there was not any need to have hurried, or else that the thing
+would have been to have started half an hour before they did, the man
+in both cases being, of course, to blame. The men walk up and down
+and swear.
+
+The idea has been suggested that the railway time and the town time
+should be made to conform. The argument against the idea is that if
+it were carried out there would be nothing left to put the Dutchman
+out and worry him.
+
+
+
+SHOULD WE SAY WHAT WE THINK, OR THINK WHAT WE SAY?
+
+
+
+A mad friend of mine will have it that the characteristic of the age
+is Make-Believe. He argues that all social intercourse is founded on
+make-believe. A servant enters to say that Mr. and Mrs. Bore are in
+the drawing-room.
+
+"Oh, damn!" says the man.
+
+"Hush!" says the woman. "Shut the door, Susan. How often am I to
+tell you never to leave the door open?"
+
+The man creeps upstairs on tiptoe and shuts himself in his study.
+The woman does things before a looking-glass, waits till she feels
+she is sufficiently mistress of herself not to show her feelings, and
+then enters the drawing-room with outstretched hands and the look of
+one welcoming an angel's visit. She says how delighted she is to see
+the Bores--how good it was of them to come. Why did they not bring
+more Bores with them? Where is naughty Bore junior? Why does he
+never come to see her now? She will have to be really angry with
+him. And sweet little Flossie Bore? Too young to pay calls!
+Nonsense. An "At Home" day is not worth having where all the Bores
+are not.
+
+The Bores, who had hoped that she was out--who have only called
+because the etiquette book told them that they must call at least
+four times in the season, explain how they have been trying and
+trying to come.
+
+"This afternoon," recounts Mrs. Bore, "we were determined to come.
+'John, dear,' I said this morning, 'I shall go and see dear Mrs.
+Bounder this afternoon, no matter what happens.'"
+
+The idea conveyed is that the Prince of Wales, on calling at the
+Bores, was told that he could not come in. He might call again in
+the evening or come some other day.
+
+That afternoon the Bores were going to enjoy themselves in their own
+way; they were going to see Mrs. Bounder.
+
+"And how is Mr. Bounder?" demands Mrs. Bore.
+
+Mrs. Bounder remains mute for a moment, straining her ears. She can
+hear him creeping past the door on his way downstairs. She hears the
+front door softly opened and closed-to. She wakes, as from a dream.
+She has been thinking of the sorrow that will fall on Bounder when he
+returns home later and learns what he has missed.
+
+And thus it is, not only with the Bores and Bounders, but even with
+us who are not Bores or Bounders. Society in all ranks is founded on
+the make-believe that everybody is charming; that we are delighted to
+see everybody; that everybody is delighted to see us; that it is so
+good of everybody to come; that we are desolate at the thought that
+they really must go now.
+
+Which would we rather do--stop and finish our cigar or hasten into
+the drawing-room to hear Miss Screecher sing? Can you ask us? We
+tumble over each other in our hurry. Miss Screecher would really
+rather not sing; but if we insist--We do insist. Miss Screecher,
+with pretty reluctance, consents. We are careful not to look at one
+another. We sit with our eyes fixed on the ceiling. Miss Screecher
+finishes, and rises.
+
+"But it was so short," we say, so soon as we can be heard above the
+applause. Is Miss Screecher quite sure that was the whole of it? Or
+has she been playing tricks upon us, the naughty lady, defrauding us
+of a verse? Miss Screecher assures us that the fault is the
+composer's. But she knows another. At this hint, our faces lighten
+again with gladness. We clamour for more.
+
+Our host's wine is always the most extraordinary we have ever tasted.
+No, not another glass; we dare not--doctor's orders, very strict.
+Our host's cigar! We did not know they made such cigars in this
+workaday world. No, we really could not smoke another. Well, if he
+will be so pressing, may we put it in our pocket? The truth is, we
+are not used to high smoking. Our hostess's coffee! Would she
+confide to us her secret? The baby! We hardly trust ourselves to
+speak. The usual baby--we have seen it. As a rule, to be candid, we
+never could detect much beauty in babies--have always held the usual
+gush about them to be insincere. But this baby! We are almost on
+the point of asking them where they got it. It is just the kind we
+wanted for ourselves. Little Janet's recitation: "A Visit to the
+Dentist!" Hitherto the amateur reciter has not appealed to us. But
+this is genius, surely. She ought to be trained for the stage. Her
+mother does not altogether approve of the stage. We plead for the
+stage--that it may not be deprived of such talent.
+
+Every bride is beautiful. Every bride looks charming in a simple
+costume of--for further particulars see local papers. Every marriage
+is a cause for universal rejoicing. With our wine-glass in our hand
+we picture the ideal life we know to be in store for them. How can
+it be otherwise? She, the daughter of her mother. (Cheers.) He--
+well, we all know him. (More cheers.) Also involuntary guffaw from
+ill-regulated young man at end of table, promptly suppressed.
+
+We carry our make-believe even into our religion. We sit in church,
+and in voices swelling with pride, mention to the Almighty, at stated
+intervals, that we are miserable worms--that there is no good in us.
+This sort of thing, we gather, is expected of us; it does us no harm,
+and is supposed to please.
+
+We make-believe that every woman is good, that every man is honest--
+until they insist on forcing us, against our will, to observe that
+they are not. Then we become very angry with them, and explain to
+them that they, being sinners, are not folk fit to mix with us
+perfect people. Our grief, when our rich aunt dies, is hardly to be
+borne. Drapers make fortunes, helping us to express feebly our
+desolation. Our only consolation is that she has gone to a better
+world.
+
+Everybody goes to a better world when they have got all they can out
+of this one.
+
+We stand around the open grave and tell each other so. The clergyman
+is so assured of it that, to save time, they have written out the
+formula for him and had it printed in a little book. As a child it
+used to surprise me--this fact that everybody went to heaven.
+Thinking of all the people that had died, I pictured the place
+overcrowded. Almost I felt sorry for the Devil, nobody ever coming
+his way, so to speak. I saw him in imagination, a lonely old
+gentleman, sitting at his gate day after day, hoping against hope,
+muttering to himself maybe that it hardly seemed worth while, from
+his point of view, keeping the show open. An old nurse whom I once
+took into my confidence was sure, if I continued talking in this sort
+of way, that he would get me anyhow. I must have been an evil-
+hearted youngster. The thought of how he would welcome me, the only
+human being that he had seen for years, had a certain fascination for
+me; for once in my existence I should be made a fuss about.
+
+At every public meeting the chief speaker is always "a jolly good
+fellow." The man from Mars, reading our newspapers, would be
+convinced that every Member of Parliament was a jovial, kindly, high-
+hearted, generous-souled saint, with just sufficient humanity in him
+to prevent the angels from carrying him off bodily. Do not the
+entire audience, moved by one common impulse, declare him three times
+running, and in stentorian voice, to be this "jolly good fellow"? So
+say all of them. We have always listened with the most intense
+pleasure to the brilliant speech of our friend who has just sat down.
+When you thought we were yawning, we were drinking in his eloquence,
+open-mouthed.
+
+The higher one ascends in the social scale, the wider becomes this
+necessary base of make-believe. When anything sad happens to a very
+big person, the lesser people round about him hardly care to go on
+living. Seeing that the world is somewhat overstocked with persons
+of importance, and that something or another generally is happening
+to them, one wonders sometimes how it is the world continues to
+exist.
+
+Once upon a time there occurred an illness to a certain good and
+great man. I read in my daily paper that the whole nation was
+plunged in grief. People dining in public restaurants, on being told
+the news by the waiter, dropped their heads upon the table and
+sobbed. Strangers, meeting in the street, flung their arms about one
+another and cried like little children. I was abroad at the time,
+but on the point of returning home. I almost felt ashamed to go. I
+looked at myself in the glass, and was shocked at my own appearance:
+it was that of a man who had not been in trouble for weeks. I felt
+that to burst upon this grief-stricken nation with a countenance such
+as mine would be to add to their sorrow. It was borne in upon me
+that I must have a shallow, egotistical nature. I had had luck with
+a play in America, and for the life of me I could not look grief-
+stricken. There were moments when, if I was not keeping a watch over
+myself, I found myself whistling.
+
+Had it been possible I would have remained abroad till some stroke of
+ill-fortune had rendered me more in tune with my fellow-countrymen.
+But business was pressing. The first man I talked to on Dover pier
+was a Customs House official. You might have thought sorrow would
+have made him indifferent to a mere matter of forty-eight cigars.
+Instead of which, he appeared quite pleased when he found them. He
+demanded three-and-fourpence, and chuckled when he got it. On Dover
+platform a little girl laughed because a lady dropped a handbox on a
+dog; but then children are always callous--or, perhaps, she had not
+heard the news.
+
+What astonished me most, however, was to find in the railway carriage
+a respectable looking man reading a comic journal. True, he did not
+laugh much: he had got decency enough for that; but what was a
+grief-stricken citizen doing with a comic journal, anyhow? Before I
+had been in London an hour I had come to the conclusion that we
+English must be a people of wonderful self-control. The day before,
+according to the newspapers, the whole country was in serious danger
+of pining away and dying of a broken heart. In one day the nation
+had pulled itself together. "We have cried all day," they had said
+to themselves, "we have cried all night. It does not seem to have
+done much good. Now let us once again take up the burden of life."
+Some of them--I noticed it in the hotel dining-room that evening--
+were taking quite kindly to their food again.
+
+We make believe about quite serious things. In war, each country's
+soldiers are always the most courageous in the world. The other
+country's soldiers are always treacherous and tricky; that is why
+they sometimes win. Literature is the art of make-believe.
+
+"Now all of you sit round and throw your pennies in the cap," says
+the author, "and I will pretend that there lives in Bayswater a young
+lady named Angelina, who is the most beautiful young lady that ever
+existed. And in Notting Hill, we will pretend, there resides a young
+man named Edwin, who is in love with Angelina."
+
+And then, there being sufficient pennies in the cap, the author
+starts away, and pretends that Angelina thought this and said that,
+and that Edwin did all sorts of wonderful things. We know he is
+making it all up as he goes along. We know he is making up just what
+he thinks will please us. He, on the other hand, has to make-believe
+that he is doing it because he cannot help it, he being an artist.
+But we know well enough that, were we to stop throwing the pennies
+into the cap, he would find out precious soon that he could.
+
+The theatrical manager bangs his drum.
+
+"Walk up! walk up!" he cries, "we are going to pretend that Mrs.
+Johnson is a princess, and old man Johnson is going to pretend to be
+a pirate. Walk up, walk up, and be in time!"
+
+So Mrs. Johnson, pretending to be a princess, comes out of a wobbly
+thing that we agree to pretend is a castle; and old man Johnson,
+pretending to be a pirate, is pushed up and down on another wobbly
+thing that we agree to pretend is the ocean. Mrs. Johnson pretends
+to be in love with him, which we know she is not. And Johnson
+pretends to be a very terrible person; and Mrs. Johnson pretends,
+till eleven o'clock, to believe it. And we pay prices, varying from
+a shilling to half-a-sovereign, to sit for two hours and listen to
+them.
+
+But as I explained at the beginning, my friend is a mad sort of
+person.
+
+
+
+IS THE AMERICAN HUSBAND MADE ENTIRELY OF STAINED GLASS.
+
+
+
+I am glad I am not an American husband. At first sight this may
+appear a remark uncomplimentary to the American wife. It is nothing
+of the sort. It is the other way about. We, in Europe, have plenty
+of opportunity of judging the American wife. In America you hear of
+the American wife, you are told stories about the American wife, you
+see her portrait in the illustrated journals. By searching under the
+heading "Foreign Intelligence," you can find out what she is doing.
+But here in Europe we know her, meet her face to face, talk to her,
+flirt with her. She is charming, delightful. That is why I say I am
+glad I am not an American husband. If the American husband only knew
+how nice was the American wife, he would sell his business and come
+over here, where now and then he could see her.
+
+Years ago, when I first began to travel about Europe, I argued to
+myself that America must be a deadly place to live in. How sad it
+is, I thought to myself, to meet thus, wherever one goes, American
+widows by the thousand. In one narrow by-street of Dresden I
+calculated fourteen American mothers, possessing nine-and-twenty
+American children, and not a father among them--not a single husband
+among the whole fourteen. I pictured fourteen lonely graves,
+scattered over the United States. I saw as in a vision those
+fourteen head-stones of best material, hand-carved, recording the
+virtues of those fourteen dead and buried husbands.
+
+Odd, thought I to myself, decidedly odd. These American husbands,
+they must be a delicate type of humanity. The wonder is their
+mothers ever reared them. They marry fine girls, the majority of
+them; two or three sweet children are born to them, and after that
+there appears to be no further use for them, as far as this world is
+concerned. Can nothing be done to strengthen their constitutions?
+Would a tonic be of any help to them? Not the customary tonic, I
+don't mean, the sort of tonic merely intended to make gouty old
+gentlemen feel they want to buy a hoop, but the sort of tonic for
+which it was claimed that three drops poured upon a ham sandwich and
+the thing would begin to squeak.
+
+It struck me as pathetic, the picture of these American widows
+leaving their native land, coming over in shiploads to spend the rest
+of their blighted lives in exile. The mere thought of America, I
+took it, had for ever become to them distasteful. The ground that
+once his feet had pressed! The old familiar places once lighted by
+his smile! Everything in America would remind them of him.
+Snatching their babes to their heaving bosoms they would leave the
+country where lay buried all the joy of their lives, seek in the
+retirement of Paris, Florence or Vienna, oblivion of the past.
+
+Also, it struck me as beautiful, the noble resignation with which
+they bore their grief, hiding their sorrow from the indifferent
+stranger. Some widows make a fuss, go about for weeks looking gloomy
+and depressed, making not the slightest effort to be merry. These
+fourteen widows--I knew them personally, all of them, I lived in the
+same street--what a brave show of cheerfulness they put on! What a
+lesson to the common or European widow, the humpy type of widow! One
+could spend whole days in their company--I had done it--commencing
+quite early in the morning with a sleighing excursion, finishing up
+quite late in the evening with a little supper party, followed by an
+impromptu dance; and never detect from their outward manner that they
+were not thoroughly enjoying themselves.
+
+From the mothers I turned my admiring eyes towards the children.
+This is the secret of American success, said I to myself; this high-
+spirited courage, this Spartan contempt for suffering. Look at them!
+the gallant little men and women. Who would think that they had lost
+a father? Why, I have seen a British child more upset at losing
+sixpence.
+
+Talking to a little girl one day, I enquired of her concerning the
+health of her father. The next moment I could have bitten my tongue
+out, remembering that there wasn't such a thing as a father--not an
+American father--in the whole street. She did not burst into tears
+as they do in the story-books. She said:
+
+"He is quite well, thank you," simply, pathetically, just like that.
+
+"I am sure of it," I replied with fervour, "well and happy as he
+deserves to be, and one day you will find him again; you will go to
+him."
+
+"Ah, yes," she answered, a shining light, it seemed to me, upon her
+fair young face. "Momma says she is getting just a bit tired of this
+one-horse sort of place. She is quite looking forward to seeing him
+again."
+
+It touched me very deeply: this weary woman, tired of her long
+bereavement, actually looking forward to the fearsome passage leading
+to where her loved one waited for her in a better land.
+
+For one bright breezy creature I grew to feel a real regard. All the
+months that I had known her, seen her almost daily, never once had I
+heard a single cry of pain escape her lips, never once had I heard
+her cursing fate. Of the many who called upon her in her charming
+flat, not one had ever, to my knowledge, offered her consolation or
+condolence. It seemed to me cruel, callous. The over-burdened
+heart, finding no outlet for its imprisoned grief, finding no
+sympathetic ear into which to pour its tale of woe, breaks, we are
+told; anyhow, it isn't good for it. I decided--no one else seeming
+keen--that I would supply that sympathetic ear. The very next time I
+found myself alone with her I introduced the subject.
+
+"You have been living here in Dresden a long time, have you not?" I
+asked.
+
+"About five years," she answered, "on and off."
+
+"And all alone," I commented, with a sigh intended to invite to
+confidence.
+
+"Well, hardly alone," she corrected me, while a look of patient
+resignation added dignity to her piquant features. "You see, there
+are the dear children always round about me, during the holidays."
+
+"Besides," she added, "the people here are real kind to me; they
+hardly ever let me feel myself alone. We make up little parties, you
+know, picnics and excursions. And then, of course, there is the
+Opera and the Symphony Concerts, and the subscription dances. The
+dear old king has been doing a good deal this winter, too; and I must
+say the Embassy folks have been most thoughtful, so far as I am
+concerned. No, it would not be right for me to complain of
+loneliness, not now that I have got to know a few people, as it
+were."
+
+"But don't you miss your husband?" I suggested.
+
+A cloud passed over her usually sunny face. "Oh, please don't talk
+of him," she said, "it makes me feel real sad, thinking about him."
+
+But having commenced, I was determined that my sympathy should not be
+left to waste.
+
+"What did he die of?" I asked.
+
+She gave me a look the pathos of which I shall never forget.
+
+"Say, young man," she cried, "are you trying to break it to me
+gently? Because if so, I'd rather you told me straight out. What
+did he die of?"
+
+"Then isn't he dead?" I asked, "I mean so far as you know."
+
+"Never heard a word about his being dead till you started the idea,"
+she retorted. "So far as I know he's alive and well."
+
+I said that I was sorry. I went on to explain that I did not mean I
+was sorry to hear that in all probability he was alive and well.
+What I meant was I was sorry I had introduced a painful subject.
+
+"What's a painful subject?"
+
+"Why, your husband," I replied.
+
+"But why should you call him a painful subject?"
+
+I had an idea she was getting angry with me. She did not say so. I
+gathered it. But I had to explain myself somehow.
+
+"Well," I answered, "I take it, you didn't get on well together, and
+I am sure it must have been his fault."
+
+"Now look here," she said, "don't you breathe a word against my
+husband or we shall quarrel. A nicer, dearer fellow never lived."
+
+"Then what did you divorce him for?" I asked. It was impertinent, it
+was unjustifiable. My excuse is that the mystery surrounding the
+American husband had been worrying me for months. Here had I
+stumbled upon the opportunity of solving it. Instinctively I clung
+to my advantage.
+
+"There hasn't been any divorce," she said. "There isn't going to be
+any divorce. You'll make me cross in another minute."
+
+But I was becoming reckless. "He is not dead. You are not divorced
+from him. Where is he?" I demanded with some heat.
+
+"Where is he?" she replied, astonished. Where should he be? At
+home, of course." I looked around the luxuriously-furnished room
+with its air of cosy comfort, of substantial restfulness.
+
+"What home?" I asked.
+
+"What home! Why, our home, in Detroit."
+
+"What is he doing there?" I had become so much in earnest that my
+voice had assumed unconsciously an authoritative tone. Presumably,
+it hypnotised her, for she answered my questions as though she had
+been in the witness-box.
+
+"How do I know? How can I possibly tell you what he is doing? What
+do people usually do at home?"
+
+"Answer the questions, madam, don't ask them. What are you doing
+here? Quite truthfully, if you please." My eyes were fixed upon
+her.
+
+"Enjoying myself. He likes me to enjoy myself. Besides, I am
+educating the children."
+
+"You mean they are here at boarding-school while you are gadding
+about. What is wrong with American education? When did you see your
+husband last?"
+
+"Last? Let me see. No, last Christmas I was in Berlin. It must
+have been the Christmas before, I think."
+
+"If he is the dear kind fellow you say he is, how is it you haven't
+seen him for two years?"
+
+"Because, as I tell you, he is at home, in Detroit. How can I see
+him when I am here in Dresden and he is in Detroit? You do ask
+foolish questions. He means to try and come over in the summer, if
+he can spare the time, and then, of course -
+
+"Answer my questions, please. I've spoken to you once about it. Do
+you think you are performing your duty as a wife, enjoying yourself
+in Dresden and Berlin while your husband is working hard in Detroit?"
+
+"He was quite willing for me to come. The American husband is a good
+fellow who likes his wife to enjoy herself."
+
+"I am not asking for your views on the American husband. I am asking
+your views on the American wife--on yourself. The American husband
+appears to be a sort of stained-glass saint, and you American wives
+are imposing upon him. It is doing you no good, and it won't go on
+for ever. There will come a day when the American husband will wake
+up to the fact he is making a fool of himself, and by over-
+indulgence, over-devotion, turning the American woman into a
+heartless, selfish creature. What sort of a home do you think it is
+in Detroit, with you and the children over here? Tell me, is the
+American husband made entirely of driven snow, with blood distilled
+from moonbeams, or is he composed of the ordinary ingredients?
+Because, if the latter, you take my advice and get back home. I take
+it that in America, proper, there are millions of real homes where
+the woman does her duty and plays the game. But also it is quite
+clear there are thousands of homes in America, mere echoing rooms,
+where the man walks by himself, his wife and children scattered over
+Europe. It isn't going to work, it isn't right that it should work."
+
+"You take the advice of a sincere friend. Pack up--you and the
+children--and get home."
+
+I left. It was growing late. I felt it was time to leave. Whether
+she took my counsel I cannot say. I only know that there still
+remain in Europe a goodly number of American wives to whom it is
+applicable.
+
+
+
+DOES THE YOUNG MAN KNOW EVERYTHING WORTH KNOWING?
+
+
+
+I am told that American professors are "mourning the lack of ideals"
+at Columbia University--possibly also at other universities scattered
+through the United States. If it be any consolation to these
+mourning American professors, I can assure them that they do not
+mourn alone. I live not far from Oxford, and enjoy the advantage of
+occasionally listening to the jeremiads of English University
+professors. More than once a German professor has done me the honour
+to employ me as an object on which to sharpen his English. He also
+has mourned similar lack of ideals at Heidelberg, at Bonn. Youth is
+youth all the world over; it has its own ideals; they are not those
+of the University professor. The explanation is tolerably simple.
+Youth is young, and the University professor, generally speaking, is
+middle-aged.
+
+I can sympathise with the mourning professor. I, in my time, have
+suffered like despair. I remember the day so well; it was my twelfth
+birthday. I recall the unholy joy with which I reflected that for
+the future my unfortunate parents would be called upon to pay for me
+full railway fare; it marked a decided step towards manhood. I was
+now in my teens. That very afternoon there came to visit us a
+relative of ours. She brought with her three small children: a
+girl, aged six; a precious, golden-haired thing in a lace collar that
+called itself a boy, aged five; and a third still smaller creature,
+it might have been male, it might have been female; I could not have
+told you at the time, I cannot tell you now. This collection of
+atoms was handed over to me.
+
+"Now, show yourself a man," said my dear mother, "remember you are in
+your teens. Take them out for a walk and amuse them; and mind
+nothing happens to them."
+
+To the children themselves their own mother gave instructions that
+they were to do everything that I told them, and not to tear their
+clothes or make themselves untidy. These directions, even to myself,
+at the time, appeared contradictory. But I said nothing. And out
+into the wilds the four of us departed.
+
+I was an only child. My own infancy had passed from my memory. To
+me, at twelve, the ideas of six were as incomprehensible as are those
+of twenty to the University professor of forty. I wanted to be a
+pirate. Round the corner and across the road building operations
+were in progress. Planks and poles lay ready to one's hand. Nature,
+in the neighbourhood, had placed conveniently a shallow pond. It was
+Saturday afternoon. The nearest public-house was a mile away.
+Immunity from interference by the British workman was thus assured.
+It occurred to me that by placing my three depressed looking
+relatives on one raft, attacking them myself from another, taking the
+eldest girl's sixpence away from her, disabling their raft, and
+leaving them to drift without a rudder, innocent amusement would be
+provided for half an hour at least.
+
+They did not want to play at pirates. At first sight of the pond the
+thing that called itself a boy began to cry. The six-year-old lady
+said she did not like the smell of it. Not even after I had
+explained the game to them were they any the more enthusiastic for
+it.
+
+I proposed Red Indians. They could go to sleep in the unfinished
+building upon a sack of lime, I would creep up through the grass, set
+fire to the house, and dance round it, whooping and waving my
+tomahawk, watching with fiendish delight the frantic but futile
+efforts of the palefaces to escape their doom.
+
+It did not "catch on"--not even that. The precious thing in the lace
+collar began to cry again. The creature concerning whom I could not
+have told you whether it was male or female made no attempt at
+argument, but started to run; it seemed to have taken a dislike to
+this particular field. It stumbled over a scaffolding pole, and then
+it also began to cry. What could one do to amuse such people? I
+left it to them to propose something. They thought they would like
+to play at "Mothers"--not in this field, but in some other field.
+
+The eldest girl would be mother. The other two would represent her
+children. They had been taken suddenly ill. "Waterworks," as I had
+christened him, was to hold his hands to his middle and groan. His
+face brightened up at the suggestion. The nondescript had the
+toothache. It took up its part without a moment's hesitation, and
+set to work to scream. I could be the doctor and look at their
+tongues.
+
+That was their "ideal" game. As I have said, remembering that
+afternoon, I can sympathise with the University professor mourning
+the absence of University ideals in youth. Possibly at six my own
+ideal game may have been "Mothers." Looking back from the pile of
+birthdays upon which I now stand, it occurs to me that very probably
+it was. But from the perspective of twelve, the reflection that
+there were beings in the world who could find recreation in such
+fooling saddened me.
+
+Eight years later, his father not being able to afford the time, I
+conducted Master "Waterworks," now a healthy, uninteresting, gawky
+lad, to a school in Switzerland. It was my first Continental trip.
+I should have enjoyed it better had he not been with me. He thought
+Paris a "beastly hole." He did not share my admiration for the
+Frenchwoman; he even thought her badly dressed.
+
+"Why she's so tied up, she can't walk straight," was the only
+impression she left upon him.
+
+We changed the subject; it irritated me to hear him talk. The
+beautiful Juno-like creatures we came across further on in Germany,
+he said were too fat. He wanted to see them run. I found him
+utterly soulless.
+
+To expect a boy to love learning and culture is like expecting him to
+prefer old vintage claret to gooseberry wine. Culture for the
+majority is an acquired taste. Speaking personally, I am entirely in
+agreement with the University professor. I find knowledge, prompting
+to observation and leading to reflection, the most satisfactory
+luggage with which a traveller through life can provide himself. I
+would that I had more of it. To be able to enjoy a picture is of
+more advantage than to be able to buy it.
+
+All that the University professor can urge in favour of idealism I am
+prepared to endorse. But then I am--let us say, thirty-nine. At
+fourteen my candid opinion was that he was talking "rot." I looked
+at the old gentleman himself--a narrow-chested, spectacled old
+gentleman, who lived up a by street. He did not seem to have much
+fun of any sort. It was not my ideal. He told me things had been
+written in a language called Greek that I should enjoy reading, but I
+had not even read all Captain Marryat. There were tales by Sir
+Walter Scott and "Jack Harkaway's Schooldays!" I felt I could wait a
+while. There was a chap called Aristophanes who had written
+comedies, satirising the political institutions of a country that had
+disappeared two thousand years ago. I say, without shame, Drury Lane
+pantomime and Barnum's Circus called to me more strongly.
+
+Wishing to give the old gentleman a chance, I dipped into
+translations. Some of these old fellows were not as bad as I had
+imagined them. A party named Homer had written some really
+interesting stuff. Here and there, maybe, he was a bit long-winded,
+but, taking him as a whole, there was "go" in him. There was another
+of them--Ovid was his name. He could tell a story, Ovid could. He
+had imagination. He was almost as good as "Robinson Crusoe." I
+thought it would please my professor, telling him that I was reading
+these, his favourite authors.
+
+"Reading them!" he cried, "but you don't know Greek or Latin."
+
+"But I know English," I answered; "they have all been translated into
+English. You never told me that!"
+
+It appeared it was not the same thing. There were subtle delicacies
+of diction bound to escape even the best translator. These subtle
+delicacies of diction I could enjoy only by devoting the next seven
+or eight years of my life to the study of Greek and Latin. It will
+grieve the University professor to hear it, but the enjoyment of
+those subtle delicacies of diction did not appear to me--I was only
+fourteen at the time, please remember--to be worth the time and
+trouble.
+
+The boy is materially inclined--the mourning American professor has
+discovered it. I did not want to be an idealist living up a back
+street. I wanted to live in the biggest house in the best street of
+the town. I wanted to ride a horse, wear a fur coat, and have as
+much to eat and drink as ever I liked. I wanted to marry the most
+beautiful woman in the world, to have my name in the newspaper, and
+to know that everybody was envying me.
+
+Mourn over it, my dear professor, as you will--that is the ideal of
+youth; and, so long as human nature remains what it is, will continue
+to be so. It is a materialistic ideal--a sordid ideal. Maybe it is
+necessary. Maybe the world would not move much if the young men
+started thinking too early. They want to be rich, so they fling
+themselves frenziedly into the struggle. They build the towns, and
+make the railway tracks, hew down the forests, dig the ore out of the
+ground. There comes a day when it is borne in upon them that trying
+to get rich is a poor sort of game--that there is only one thing more
+tiresome than being a millionaire, and that is trying to be a
+millionaire. But, meanwhile, the world has got its work done.
+
+The American professor fears that the artistic development of America
+leaves much to be desired. I fear the artistic development of most
+countries leaves much to be desired. Why the Athenians themselves
+sandwiched their drama between wrestling competitions and boxing
+bouts. The plays of Sophocles, or Euripides, were given as "side
+shows." The chief items of the fair were the games and races.
+Besides, America is still a young man. It has been busy "getting on
+in the world." It has not yet quite finished. Yet there are signs
+that young America is approaching the thirty-nines. He is finding a
+little time, a little money to spare for art. One can almost hear
+young America--not quite so young as he was--saying to Mrs. Europe as
+he enters and closes the shop door:
+
+"Well, ma'am, here I am, and maybe you'll be glad to hear I've a
+little money to spend. Yes, ma'am, I've fixed things all right
+across the water; we shan't starve. So now, ma'am, you and I can
+have a chat concerning this art I've been hearing so much about.
+Let's have a look at it, ma'am, trot it out, and don't you be afraid
+of putting a fair price upon it."
+
+I am inclined to think that Mrs. Europe has not hesitated to put a
+good price upon the art she has sold to Uncle Sam. I am afraid Mrs.
+Europe has occasionally "unloaded" on Uncle Sam. I talked to a
+certain dealer one afternoon, now many years ago, at the Uwantit
+Club.
+
+"What is the next picture likely to be missing?" I asked him in the
+course of general conversation.
+
+"Thome little thing of Hoppner'th, if it mutht be," he replied with
+confidence.
+
+"Hoppner," I murmured, "I seem to have heard the name."
+
+"Yeth; you'll hear it a bit oftener during the next eighteen month or
+tho. You take care you don't get tired of hearing it, thath all," he
+laughed. "Yeth," he continued, thoughtfully, "Reynoldth ith played
+out. Nothing much to be made of Gainthborough, either. Dealing in
+that lot now, why, it'th like keeping a potht offith. Hoppner'th the
+coming man."
+
+"You've been buying Hoppners up cheap," I suggested.
+
+"Between uth," he answered, "yeth, I think we've got them all. Maybe
+a few more. I don't think we've mithed any."
+
+"You will sell them for more than you gave for them," I hinted.
+
+"You're thmart," he answered, regarding me admiringly, "you thee
+through everything you do."
+
+"How do you work it?" I asked him. There is a time in the day when
+he is confidential. "Here is this man, Hoppner. I take it that you
+have bought him up at an average of a hundred pounds a picture, and
+that at that price most owners were fairly glad to sell. Few folks
+outside the art schools have ever heard of him. I bet that at the
+present moment there isn't one art critic who could spell his name
+without reference to a dictionary. In eighteen months you will be
+selling him for anything from one thousand to ten thousand pounds.
+How is it done?"
+
+"How ith everything done that'th done well?" he answered. "By
+earnetht effort." He hitched his chair nearer to me, "I get a chap--
+one of your thort of chapth--he writ'th an article about Hoppner. I
+get another to anthwer him. Before I've done there'll be a hundred
+articleth about Hoppner--hith life, hith early thruggie, anecdo'th
+about hith wife. Then a Hoppner will be thold at public auchtion for
+a thouthand guineath."
+
+"But how can you be certain it will fetch a thousand guineas?" I
+interrupted.
+
+"I happen to know the man whoth going to buy it." He winked, and I
+understood.
+
+"A fortnight later there will be a thale of half-a-dothen, and the
+prithe will be gone up by that time."
+
+"And after that?" I said.
+
+"After that," he replied, rising, "the American millionaire! He'll
+jutht be waiting on the door-thtep for the thale-room to open."
+
+"If by any chance I come across a Hoppner?" I said, laughing, as I
+turned to go.
+
+"Don't you hold on to it too long, that'th all," was his advice.
+
+
+
+HOW MANY CHARMS HATH MUSIC, WOULD YOU SAY?
+
+
+
+The argument of the late Herr Wagner was that grand opera--the music
+drama, as he called it--included, and therefore did away with the
+necessity for--all other arts. Music in all its branches, of course,
+it provides: so much I will concede to the late Herr Wagner. There
+are times, I confess, when my musical yearnings might shock the late
+Herr Wagner--times when I feel unequal to following three distinct
+themes at one and the same instant.
+
+"Listen," whispers the Wagnerian enthusiast to me, "the cornet has
+now the Brunnhilda motive." It seems to me, in my then state of
+depravity, as if the cornet had even more than this the matter with
+him.
+
+"The second violins," continues the Wagnerian enthusiast, "are
+carrying on the Wotan theme." That they are carrying on goes without
+saying: the players' faces are streaming with perspiration.
+
+"The brass," explains my friend--his object is to cultivate my ear--
+"is accompanying the singers." I should have said drowning them.
+There are occasions when I can rave about Wagner with the best of
+them. High class moods come to all of us. The difference between
+the really high-class man and us commonplace, workaday men is the
+difference between, say, the eagle and the barnyard chicken. I am
+the barnyard chicken. I have my wings. There are ecstatic moments
+when I feel I want to spurn the sordid earth and soar into the realms
+of art. I do fly a little, but my body is heavy, and I only get as
+far as the fence. After a while I find it lonesome on the fence, and
+I hop down again among my fellows.
+
+Listening to Wagner, during such temporary Philistinic mood, my sense
+of fair play is outraged. A lone, lorn woman stands upon the stage
+trying to make herself heard. She has to do this sort of thing for
+her living; maybe an invalid mother, younger brothers and sisters are
+dependent upon her. One hundred and forty men, all armed with
+powerful instruments, well-organised, and most of them looking well-
+fed, combine to make it impossible for a single note of that poor
+woman's voice to be heard above their din. I see her standing there,
+opening and shutting her mouth, getting redder and redder in the
+face. She is singing, one feels sure of it; one could hear her if
+only those one hundred and forty men would ease up for a minute. She
+makes one mighty, supreme effort; above the banging of the drums, the
+blare of the trumpets, the shrieking of the strings, that last
+despairing note is distinctly heard.
+
+She has won, but the victory has cost her dear. She sinks down
+fainting on the stage and is carried off by supers. Chivalrous
+indignation has made it difficult for me to keep my seat watching the
+unequal contest. My instinct was to leap the barrier, hurl the bald-
+headed chief of her enemies from his high chair, and lay about me
+with the trombone or the clarionet--whichever might have come the
+easier to my snatch.
+
+"You cowardly lot of bullies," I have wanted to cry, "are you not
+ashamed of yourselves? A hundred and forty of you against one, and
+that one a still beautiful and, comparatively speaking, young lady.
+Be quiet for a minute--can't you? Give the poor girl a chance."
+
+A lady of my acquaintance says that sitting out a Wagnerian opera
+seems to her like listening to a singer accompanied by four
+orchestras playing different tunes at the same time. As I have said,
+there are times when Wagner carries me along with him, when I exult
+in the crash and whirl of his contending harmonies. But, alas! there
+are those other moods--those after dinner moods--when my desire is
+for something distinctly resembling a tune. Still, there are other
+composers of grand opera besides Wagner. I grant to the late Herr
+Wagner, that, in so far as music is concerned, opera can supply us
+with all we can need.
+
+But it was also Wagner's argument that grand opera could supply us
+with acting, and there I am compelled to disagree with him. Wagner
+thought that the arts of acting and singing could be combined. I
+have seen artists the great man has trained himself. As singers they
+left nothing to be desired, but the acting in grand opera has never
+yet impressed me. Wagner never succeeded in avoiding the operatic
+convention and nobody else ever will. When the operatic lover meets
+his sweetheart he puts her in a corner and, turning his back upon
+her, comes down to the footlights and tells the audience how he
+adores her. When he has finished, he, in his turn, retires into the
+corner, and she comes down and tells the audience that she is simply
+mad about him.
+
+Overcome with joy at finding she really cares for him, he comes down
+right and says that this is the happiest moment of his life; and she
+stands left, twelve feet away from him, and has the presentiment that
+all this sort of thing is much too good to last. They go off
+together, backwards, side by side. If there is any love-making, such
+as I understand by the term, it is done "off." This is not my idea
+of acting. But I do not see how you are going to substitute for it
+anything more natural. When you are singing at the top of your
+voice, you don't want a heavy woman hanging round your neck. When
+you are killing a man and warbling about it at the same time, you
+don't want him fooling around you defending himself. You want him to
+have a little reasonable patience, and to wait in his proper place
+till you have finished, telling him, or rather telling the crowd, how
+much you hate and despise him.
+
+When the proper time comes, and if he is where you expect to find him
+while thinking of your upper C, you will hit him lightly on the
+shoulder with your sword, and then he can die to his own particular
+tune. If you have been severely wounded in battle, or in any other
+sort of row, and have got to sing a long ballad before you finally
+expire, you don't want to have to think how a man would really behave
+who knew he had only got a few minutes to live and was feeling bad
+about it. The chances are that he would not want to sing at all.
+The woman who really loved him would not encourage him to sing. She
+would want him to keep quiet while she moved herself about a bit, in
+case there was anything that could be done for him.
+
+If a mob is climbing the stairs thirsting for your blood, you do not
+want to stand upright with your arms stretched out, a good eighteen
+inches from the door, while you go over at some length the varied
+incidents leading up to the annoyance. If your desire were to act
+naturally you would push against that door for all you were worth,
+and yell for somebody to bring you a chest of drawers and a bedstead,
+and things like that, to pile up against it. If you were a king, and
+were giving a party, you would not want your guests to fix you up at
+the other end of the room and leave you there, with nobody to talk to
+but your own wife, while they turned their backs upon you, and had a
+long and complicated dance all to themselves. You would want to be
+in it; you would want to let them know that you were king.
+
+In acting, all these little points have to be considered. In opera,
+everything is rightly sacrificed to musical necessity. I have seen
+the young, enthusiastic opera-singer who thought that he or she could
+act and sing at the same time. The experienced artist takes the
+centre of the stage and husbands his resources. Whether he is
+supposed to be indignant because somebody has killed his mother, or
+cheerful because he is going out to fight his country's foes, who are
+only waiting until he has finished singing to attack the town, he
+leaves it to the composer to make clear.
+
+Also it was Herr Wagner's idea that the back cloth would leave the
+opera-goer indifferent to the picture gallery. The castle on the
+rock, accessible only by balloon, in which every window lights up
+simultaneously and instantaneously, one minute after sunset, while
+the full moon is rushing up the sky at the pace of a champion comet--
+that wonderful sea that suddenly opens and swallows up the ship--
+those snow-clad mountains, over which the shadow of the hero passes
+like a threatening cloud--the grand old chateau, trembling in the
+wind--what need, will ask the opera-goer of the future, of your
+Turners and your Corots, when, for prices ranging from a shilling
+upwards, we can have a dozen pictures such as these rolled up and
+down before us every evening?
+
+But perhaps the most daring hope of all was the dream that came to
+Herr Wagner that his opera singers, his grouped choruses, would
+eventually satisfy the craving of the public for high class statuary.
+I am not quite sure the general public does care for statuary. I do
+not know whether the idea has ever occurred to the Anarchist, but,
+were I myself organising secret committee meetings for unholy
+purposes, I should invite my comrades to meet in that section of the
+local museum devoted to statuary. I can conceive of no place where
+we should be freer from prying eyes and listening ears. A select
+few, however, do appreciate statuary; and such, I am inclined to
+think, will not be weaned from their passion by the contemplation of
+the opera singer in his or her various quaint costumes.
+
+And even if the tenor always satisfied our ideal of Apollo, and the
+soprano were always as sylph-like as she is described in the
+libretto, even then I should doubt the average operatic chorus being
+regarded by the connoisseur as a cheap and pleasant substitute for a
+bas relief from the Elgin marbles. The great thing required of that
+operatic chorus is experience. The young and giddy-pated the chorus
+master has no use for. The sober, honest, industrious lady or
+gentleman, with a knowledge of music is very properly his ideal.
+
+What I admire about the chorus chiefly is its unity. The whole
+village dresses exactly alike. In wicked, worldly villages there is
+rivalry, leading to heartburn and jealously. One lady comes out
+suddenly, on, say, a Bank Holiday, in a fetching blue that conquers
+every male heart. Next holiday her rival cuts her out with a green
+hat. In the operatic village it must be that the girls gather
+together beforehand to arrange this thing. There is probably a
+meeting called.
+
+"The dear Count's wedding," announces the chairwoman, "you will all
+be pleased to hear, has been fixed for the fourteenth, at eleven
+o'clock in the morning. The entire village will be assembled at ten-
+thirty to await the return of the bridal cortege from the church, and
+offer its felicitations. Married ladies, will, of course, come
+accompanied by their husbands. Unmarried ladies must each bring a
+male partner as near their own height as possible. Fortunately, in
+this village the number of males is exactly equal to that of females,
+so that the picture need not be spoiled. The children will organise
+themselves into an independent body and will group themselves
+picturesquely. It has been thought advisable," continues the
+chairwoman, "that the village should meet the dear Count and his
+bride at some spot not too far removed from the local alehouse. The
+costume to be worn by the ladies will consist of a short pink skirt
+terminating at the knees and ornamented with festoons of flowers;
+above will be worn a bolero in mauve silk without sleeves and cut
+decollete. The shoes should be of yellow satin over flesh-coloured
+stockings. Ladies who are 'out' will wear pearl necklaces, and a
+simple device in emeralds to decorate the hair. Thank God, we can
+all of us afford it, and provided the weather holds up and nothing
+unexpected happens--he is not what I call a lucky man, our Count, and
+it is always as well to be prepared for possibilities--well, I think
+we may look forward to a really pleasant day."
+
+It cannot be done, Herr Wagner, believe me. You cannot substitute
+the music drama for all the arts combined. The object to be aimed at
+by the wise composer should be to make us, while listening to his
+music, forgetful of all remaining artistic considerations.
+
+
+
+THE WHITE MAN'S BURDEN! NEED IT BE SO HEAVY?
+
+
+
+It is a delightful stroll on a sunny summer morning from the Hague to
+the Huis ten Bosch, the little "house in the wood," built for
+Princess Amalia, widow of Stadtholter Frederick Henry, under whom
+Holland escaped finally from the bondage of her foes and entered into
+the promised land of Liberty. Leaving the quiet streets, the tree-
+bordered canals, with their creeping barges, you pass through a
+pleasant park, where the soft-eyed deer press round you, hurt and
+indignant if you have brought nothing in your pocket--not even a
+piece of sugar--to offer them. It is not that they are grasping--it
+is the want of attention that wounds them.
+
+"I thought he was a gentleman," they seem to be saying to one
+another, if you glance back, "he looked like a gentleman."
+
+Their mild eyes haunt you; on the next occasion you do not forget.
+The Park merges into the forest; you go by winding ways till you
+reach the trim Dutch garden, moat-encircled, in the centre of which
+stands the prim old-fashioned villa, which, to the simple Dutchman,
+appears a palace. The concierge, an old soldier, bows low to you and
+introduces you to his wife--a stately, white-haired dame, who talks
+most languages a little, so far as relates to all things within and
+appertaining to this tiny palace of the wood. To things without,
+beyond the wood, her powers of conversation do not extend:
+apparently such matters do not interest her.
+
+She conducts you to the Chinese Room; the sun streams through the
+windows, illuminating the wondrous golden dragons standing out in
+bold relief from the burnished lacquer work, decorating still further
+with light and shade the delicate silk embroideries thin taper hands
+have woven with infinite pains. The walls are hung with rice paper,
+depicting the conventional scenes of the conventional Chinese life.
+
+You find your thoughts wandering. These grotesque figures, these
+caricatures of humanity! A comical creature, surely, this Chinaman,
+the pantaloon of civilization. How useful he has been to us for our
+farces, our comic operas! This yellow baby, in his ample pinafore,
+who lived thousands of years ago, who has now passed into this
+strange second childhood.
+
+But is he dying--or does the life of a nation wake again, as after
+sleep? Is he this droll, harmless thing he here depicts himself?
+And if not? Suppose fresh sap be stirring through his three hundred
+millions? We thought he was so very dead; we thought the time had
+come to cut him up and divide him, the only danger being lest we
+should quarrel over his carcase among ourselves.
+
+Suppose it turns out as the fable of the woodcutter and the bear?
+The woodcutter found the bear lying in the forest. At first he was
+much frightened, but the bear lay remarkably still. So the woodman
+crept nearer, ventured to kick the bear--very gently, ready to run if
+need be. Surely the bear was dead! And parts of a bear are good to
+eat, and bearskin to poor woodfolk on cold winter nights is grateful.
+So the woodman drew his knife and commenced the necessary
+preliminaries. But the bear was not dead.
+
+If the Chinaman be not dead? If the cutting-up process has only
+served to waken him? In a little time from now we shall know.
+
+From the Chinese Room the white-haired dame leads us to the Japanese
+Room. Had gentle-looking Princess Amalia some vague foreshadowing of
+the future in her mind when she planned these two rooms leading into
+one another? The Japanese decorations are more grotesque, the
+designs less cheerfully comical than those of cousin Chinaman. These
+monstrous, mis-shapen wrestlers, these patient-looking gods, with
+their inscrutable eyes! Was it always there, or is it only by the
+light of present events that one reads into the fantastic fancies of
+the artist working long ago in the doorway of his paper house, a
+meaning that has hitherto escaped us?
+
+But the chief attraction of the Huis ten Bosch is the gorgeous Orange
+Saloon, lighted by a cupola, fifty feet above the floor, the walls
+one blaze of pictures, chiefly of the gorgeous Jordaen school--"The
+Defeat of the Vices," "Time Vanquishing Slander"--mostly allegorical,
+in praise of all the virtues, in praise of enlightenment and
+progress. Aptly enough in a room so decorated, here was held the
+famous Peace Congress that closed the last century. One can hardly
+avoid smiling as one thinks of the solemn conclave of grandees
+assembled to proclaim the popularity of Peace.
+
+It was in the autumn of the same year that Europe decided upon the
+dividing-up of China, that soldiers were instructed by Christian
+monarchs to massacre men, women and children, the idea being to
+impress upon the Heathen Chinee the superior civilization of the
+white man. The Boer war followed almost immediately. Since when the
+white man has been pretty busy all over the world with his
+"expeditions" and his "missions." The world is undoubtedly growing
+more refined. We do not care for ugly words. Even the burglar
+refers airily to the "little job" he has on hand. You would think he
+had found work in the country. I should not be surprised to learn
+that he says a prayer before starting, telegraphs home to his anxious
+wife the next morning that his task has been crowned with blessing.
+
+Until the far-off date of Universal Brotherhood war will continue.
+Matters considered unimportant by both parties will--with a mighty
+flourish of trumpets--be referred to arbitration. I was talking of a
+famous financier a while ago with a man who had been his secretary.
+Amongst other anecdotes, he told me of a certain agreement about
+which dispute had arisen. The famous financier took the paper into
+his own hands and made a few swift calculations.
+
+"Let it go," he concluded, "it is only a thousand pounds at the
+outside. May as well be honest."
+
+Concerning a dead fisherman or two, concerning boundaries through
+unproductive mountain ranges we shall arbitrate and feel virtuous.
+For gold mines and good pasture lands, mixed up with a little honour
+to give respectability to the business, we shall fight it out, as
+previously. War being thus inevitable, the humane man will rejoice
+that by one of those brilliant discoveries, so simple when they are
+explained, war in the future is going to be rendered equally
+satisfactory to victor and to vanquished.
+
+In by-elections, as a witty writer has pointed out, there are no
+defeats--only victories and moral victories. The idea seems to have
+caught on. War in the future is evidently going to be conducted on
+the same understanding. Once upon a time, from a far-off land, a
+certain general telegraphed home congratulating his Government that
+the enemy had shown no inclination whatever to prevent his running
+away. The whole country rejoiced.
+
+"Why, they never even tried to stop him," citizens, meeting other
+citizens in the street, told each other. "Ah, they've had enough of
+him. I bet they are only too glad to get rid of him. Why, they say
+he ran for miles without seeing a trace of the foe."
+
+The enemy's general, on the other hand, also wrote home
+congratulating his Government. In this way the same battle can be
+mafficked over by both parties. Contentment is the great secret of
+happiness. Everything happens for the best, if only you look at it
+the right way. That is going to be the argument. The general of the
+future will telegraph to headquarters that he is pleased to be able
+to inform His Majesty that the enemy, having broken down all
+opposition, has succeeded in crossing the frontier and is now well on
+his way to His Majesty's capital.
+
+"I am luring him on," he will add, "as fast as I can. At our present
+rate of progress, I am in hopes of bringing him home by the tenth."
+
+Lest foolish civilian sort of people should wonder whereabouts lies
+the cause for rejoicing, the military man will condescend to explain.
+The enemy is being enticed farther and farther from his base. The
+defeated general--who is not really defeated, who is only artful, and
+who appears to be running away, is not really running away at all.
+On the contrary, he is running home--bringing, as he explains, the
+enemy with him.
+
+If I remember rightly--it is long since I played it--there is a
+parlour game entitled "Puss in the Corner." You beckon another
+player to you with your finger. "Puss, puss!" you cry. Thereupon he
+has to leave his chair--his "base," as the military man would term
+it--and try to get to you without anything happening to him.
+
+War in the future is going to be Puss in the Corner on a bigger
+scale. You lure your enemy away from his base. If all goes well--if
+he does not see the trap that is being laid for him--why, then,
+almost before he knows it, he finds himself in your capital. That
+finishes the game. You find out what it is he really wants.
+Provided it is something within reason, and you happen to have it
+handy, you give it to him. He goes home crowing, and you, on your
+side, laugh when you think how cleverly you succeeded in luring him
+away from his base.
+
+There is a bright side to all things. The gentleman charged with the
+defence of a fortress will meet the other gentleman who has captured
+it and shake hands with him mid the ruins.
+
+"So here you are at last!" he will explain. "Why didn't you come
+before? We have been waiting for you."
+
+And he will send off dispatches felicitating his chief on having got
+that fortress off their hands, together with all the worry and
+expense it has been to them. When prisoners are taken you will
+console yourself with the reflection that the cost of feeding them
+for the future will have to be borne by the enemy. Captured cannon
+you will watch being trailed away with a sigh of relief.
+
+"Confounded heavy things!" you will say to yourself. "Thank goodness
+I've got rid of them. Let him have the fun of dragging them about
+these ghastly roads. See how he likes the job!"
+
+War is a ridiculous method of settling disputes. Anything that can
+tend to make its ridiculous aspect more apparent is to be welcomed.
+The new school of military dispatch-writers may succeed in turning
+even the laughter of the mob against it.
+
+The present trouble in the East would never have occurred but for the
+white man's enthusiasm for bearing other people's burdens. What we
+call the yellow danger is the fear that the yellow man may before
+long request us, so far as he is concerned, to put his particular
+burden down. It may occur to him that, seeing it is his property, he
+would just as soon carry it himself. A London policeman told me a
+story the other day that struck him as an example of Cockney humour
+under trying circumstances. But it may also serve as a fable. From
+a lonely street in the neighbourhood of Covent Garden, early one
+morning, the constable heard cries of "Stop thief!" shouted in a
+childish treble. He arrived on the scene just in time to collar a
+young hooligan, who, having snatched a basket of fruit from a small
+lad--a greengrocer's errand boy, as it turned out--was, with it,
+making tracks. The greengrocer's boy, between panting and tears,
+delivered his accusation. The hooligan regarded him with an
+expression of amazed indignation.
+
+"What d'yer mean, stealing it?" exclaimed Mr. Hooligan. "Why, I was
+carrying it for yer!"
+
+The white man has got into the way of "carrying" other people's
+burdens, and now it looks as if the yellow man were going to object
+to our carrying his any further. Maybe he is going to get nasty, and
+insist on carrying it himself. We call this "the yellow danger."
+
+A friend of mine--he is a man who in the street walks into lamp-
+posts, and apologises--sees rising from the East the dawn of a new
+day in the world's history. The yellow danger is to him a golden
+hope. He sees a race long stagnant, stretching its giant limbs with
+the first vague movements of returning life. He is a poor sort of
+patriot; he calls himself, I suppose, a white man, yet he shamelessly
+confesses he would rather see Asia's millions rise from the ruins of
+their ancient civilization to take their part in the future of
+humanity, than that half the population of the globe should remain
+bound in savagery for the pleasure and the profit of his own
+particular species.
+
+He even goes so far as to think that the white man may have something
+to learn. The world has belonged to him now for some thousands of
+years. Has he done all with it that could have been done? Are his
+ideals the last word?
+
+Not what the yellow man has absorbed from Europe, but what he is
+going to give Europe it is that interests my friend. He is watching
+the birth of a new force--an influence as yet unknown. He clings to
+the fond belief that new ideas, new formulae, to replace the old worn
+shibboleths, may, during these thousands of years, have been
+developing in those keen brains that behind the impressive yellow
+mask have been working so long in silence and in mystery.
+
+
+
+WHY DIDN'T HE MARRY THE GIRL?
+
+
+
+What is wrong with marriage, anyhow? I find myself pondering this
+question so often, when reading high-class literature. I put it to
+myself again the other evening, during a performance of Faust. Why
+could not Faust have married the girl? I would not have married her
+myself for any consideration whatsoever; but that is not the
+argument. Faust, apparently, could not see anything amiss with her.
+Both of them were mad about each other. Yet the idea of a quiet,
+unostentatious marriage with a week's honeymoon, say, in Vienna,
+followed by a neat little cottage orne, not too far from Nurnberg, so
+that their friends could have come out to them, never seems to have
+occurred to either of them.
+
+There could have been a garden. Marguerite might have kept chickens
+and a cow. That sort of girl, brought up to hard work and by no
+means too well educated, is all the better for having something to
+do. Later, with the gradual arrival of the family, a good, all-round
+woman might have been hired in to assist. Faust, of course, would
+have had his study and got to work again; that would have kept him
+out of further mischief. The idea that a brainy man, his age, was
+going to be happy with nothing to do all day but fool round a
+petticoat was ridiculous from the beginning. Valentine--a good
+fellow, Valentine, with nice ideas--would have spent his Saturdays to
+Monday with them. Over a pipe and a glass of wine, he and Faust
+would have discussed the local politics.
+
+He would have danced the children on his knee, have told them tales
+about the war--taught the eldest boy to shoot. Faust, with a
+practical man like Valentine to help him, would probably have
+invented a new gun. Valentine would have got it taken up.
+
+Things might have come of it. Sybil, in course of time, would have
+married and settled down--perhaps have taken a little house near to
+them. He and Marguerite would have joked--when Mrs. Sybil was not
+around--about his early infatuation. The old mother would have
+toddled over from Nurnberg--not too often, just for the day.
+
+The picture grows upon one the more one thinks of it. Why did it
+never occur to them? There would have been a bit of a bother with
+the Old Man. I can imagine Mephistopheles being upset about it,
+thinking himself swindled. Of course, if that was the reason--if
+Faust said to himself:
+
+"I should like to marry the girl, but I won't do it; it would not be
+fair to the Old Man; he has been to a lot of trouble working this
+thing up; in common gratitude I cannot turn round now and behave like
+a decent, sensible man; it would not be playing the game"--if this
+was the way Faust looked at the matter there is nothing more to be
+said. Indeed, it shows him in rather a fine light--noble, if
+quixotic.
+
+If, on the other hand, he looked at the question from the point of
+view of himself and the girl, I think the thing might have been
+managed. All one had to do in those days when one wanted to get rid
+of the Devil was to show him a sword hilt. Faust and Marguerite
+could have slipped into a church one morning, and have kept him out
+of the way with a sword hilt till the ceremony was through. They
+might have hired a small boy:
+
+"You see the gentleman in red? Well, he wants us and we don't want
+him. That is the only difference between us. Now, you take this
+sword, and when you see him coming show him the hilt. Don't hurt
+him; just show him the sword and shake your head. He will
+understand."
+
+The old gentleman's expression, when subsequently Faust presented him
+to Marguerite, would have been interesting:
+
+"Allow me, my wife. My dear, a--a friend of mine. You may remember
+meeting him that night at your aunt's."
+
+As I have said, there would have been ructions; but I do not myself
+see what could have been done. There was nothing in the bond to the
+effect that Faust should not marry, so far as we are told. The Old
+Man had a sense of humour. My own opinion is that, after getting
+over the first annoyance, he himself would have seen the joke. I can
+even picture him looking in now and again on Mr. and Mrs. Faust. The
+children would be hurried off to bed. There would be, for a while,
+an atmosphere of constraint.
+
+But the Old Man had a way with him. He would have told one or two
+stories at which Marguerite would have blushed, at which Faust would
+have grinned. I can see the old fellow occasionally joining the
+homely social board. The children, awed at first, would have sat
+silent, with staring eyes. But, as I have said, the Old Man had a
+way with him. Why should he not have reformed? The good woman's
+unconsciously exerted influence--the sweet childish prattle! One
+hears of such things. Might he not have come to be known as
+"Nunkie"?
+
+Myself--I believe I have already mentioned it--I would not have
+married Marguerite. She is not my ideal of a good girl. I never
+liked the way she deceived her mother. And that aunt of hers! Well,
+a nice girl would not have been friends with such a woman. She did
+not behave at all too well to Sybil, either. It is clear to me that
+she led the boy on. And what was she doing with that box of jewels,
+anyhow? She was not a fool. She could not have gone every day to
+that fountain, chatted with those girl friends of hers, and learnt
+nothing. She must have known that people don't go leaving twenty
+thousand pounds' worth of jewels about on doorsteps as part of a
+round game. Her own instinct, if she had been a good girl, would
+have told her to leave the thing alone.
+
+I don't believe in these innocent people who do not know what they
+are doing half their time. Ask any London magistrate what he thinks
+of the lady who explains that she picked up the diamond brooch:-
+
+"Not meaning, of course, your Worship, to take it. I would not do
+such a thing. It just happened this way, your Worship. I was
+standing as you might say here, and not seeing anyone about in the
+shop I opened the case and took it out, thinking as perhaps it might
+belong to someone; and then this gentleman here, as I had not noticed
+before, comes up quite suddenly and says; 'You come along with me,'
+he says. 'What for,' I says, 'when I don't even know you?' I says.
+'For stealing,' he says. 'Well, that's a hard word to use to a
+lady,' I says; 'I don't know what you mean, I'm sure.'"
+
+And if she had put them all on, not thinking, what would a really
+nice girl have done when the gentleman came up and assured her they
+were hers? She would have been thirty seconds taking them off and
+flinging them back into the box.
+
+"Thank you," she would have said, "I'll trouble you to leave this
+garden as quickly as you entered it and take them with you. I'm not
+that sort of girl."
+
+Marguerite clings to the jewels, and accepts the young man's arm for
+a moonlight promenade. And when it does enter into her innocent head
+that he and she have walked that shady garden long enough, what does
+she do when she has said good-bye and shut the door? She opens the
+ground-floor window and begins to sing!
+
+Maybe I am not poetical, but I do like justice. When other girls do
+these sort of things they get called names. I cannot see why this
+particular girl should be held up as an ideal. She kills her mother.
+According to her own account this was an accident. It is not an
+original line of defence, and we are not allowed to hear the evidence
+for the prosecution. She also kills her baby. You are not to blame
+her for that, because at the time she was feeling poorly. I don't
+see why this girl should have a special line of angels to take her up
+to heaven. There must have been decent, hard-working women in
+Nurnburg more entitled to the ticket.
+
+Why is it that all these years we have been content to accept
+Marguerite as a type of innocence and virtue? The explanation is, I
+suppose, that Goethe wrote at a time when it was the convention to
+regard all women as good. Anything in petticoats was virtuous. If
+she did wrong it was always somebody else's fault. Cherchez la femme
+was a later notion. In the days of Goethe it was always Cherchez
+l'homme. It was the man's fault. It was the devil's fault. It was
+anybody's fault you liked, but not her's.
+
+The convention has not yet died out. I was reading the other day a
+most interesting book by a brilliant American authoress. Seeing I
+live far away from the lady's haunts, I venture to mention names. I
+am speaking of "Patience Sparhawk," by Gertrude Atherton. I take
+this book because it is typical of a large body of fiction. Miss
+Sparhawk lives a troubled life: it puzzles her. She asks herself
+what is wrong. Her own idea is that it is civilisation.
+
+If it is not civilisation, then it is the American man or Nature--or
+Democracy. Miss Sparhawk marries the wrong man. Later on she gets
+engaged to another wrong man. In the end we are left to believe she
+is about to be married to the right man. I should be better
+satisfied if I could hear Miss Sparhawk talking six months after that
+last marriage. But if a mistake has again been made I am confident
+that, in Miss Sparhawk's opinion, the fault will not be Miss
+Sparhawk's. The argument is always the same: Miss Sparhawk, being a
+lady, can do no wrong.
+
+If Miss Sparhawk cared to listen to me for five minutes, I feel I
+could put her right on this point.
+
+"It is quite true, my dear girl," I should say to her, "something is
+wrong--very wrong. But it is not the American man. Never you mind
+the American man: you leave him to worry out his own salvation. You
+are not the girl to put him right, even where he is wrong. And it is
+not civilisation. Civilisation has a deal to answer for, I admit:
+don't you load it up with this additional trouble. The thing that is
+wrong in this case of yours--if you will forgive my saying so--is
+you. You make a fool of yourself; you marry a man who is a mere
+animal because he appeals to your animal instincts. Then, like the
+lady who cried out 'Alack, I've married a black,' you appeal to
+heaven against the injustice of being mated with a clown. You are
+not a nice girl, either in your ideas or in your behaviour. I don't
+blame you for it; you did not make yourself. But when you set to
+work to attract all that is lowest in man, why be so astonished at
+your own success? There are plenty of shocking American men, I
+agree. One meets the class even outside America. But nice American
+girls will tell you that there are also nice American men. There is
+an old proverb about birds of a feather. Next time you find yourself
+in the company of a shocking American man, you just ask yourself how
+he got there, and how it is he seems to be feeling at home. You
+learn self-control. Get it out of your head that you are the centre
+of the universe, and grasp the idea that a petticoat is not a halo,
+and you will find civilisation not half as wrong as you thought it."
+
+I know what Miss Sparhawk's reply would be.
+
+"You say all this to me--to me, a lady? Great Heavens! What has
+become of chivalry?"
+
+A Frenchman was once put on trial for murdering his father and
+mother. He confessed his guilt, but begged for mercy on the plea
+that he was an orphan. Chivalry was founded on the assumption that
+woman was worthy to be worshipped. The modern woman's notion is that
+when she does wrong she ought to be excused by chivalrous man because
+she is a lady.
+
+I like the naughty heroine; we all of us do. The early Victorian
+heroine--the angel in a white frock, was a bore. We knew exactly
+what she was going to do--the right thing. We did not even have to
+ask ourselves, "What will she think is the right thing to do under
+the circumstances?" It was always the conventional right thing. You
+could have put it to a Sunday school and have got the answer every
+time. The heroine with passions, instincts, emotions, is to be
+welcomed. But I want her to grasp the fact that after all she is
+only one of us. I should like her better if, instead of demanding:
+
+"What is wrong in civilisation? What is the world coming to?" and so
+forth, she would occasionally say to herself:
+
+"Guess I've made a fool of myself this time. I do feel that 'shamed
+of myself."
+
+She would not lose by it. We should respect her all the more.
+
+
+
+WHAT MRS. WILKINS THOUGHT ABOUT IT.
+
+
+
+Last year, travelling on the Underground Railway, I met a man; he was
+one of the saddest-looking men I had seen for years. I used to know
+him well in the old days when we were journalists together. I asked
+him, in a sympathetic tone, how things were going with him. I
+expected his response would be a flood of tears, and that in the end
+I should have to fork out a fiver. To my astonishment, his answer
+was that things were going exceedingly well with him. I did not want
+to say to him bluntly:
+
+"Then what has happened to you to make you look like a mute at a
+temperance funeral?" I said:
+
+"And how are all at home?"
+
+I thought that if the trouble lay there he would take the
+opportunity. It brightened him somewhat, the necessity of replying
+to the question. It appeared that his wife was in the best of
+health.
+
+"You remember her," he continued with a smile; "wonderful spirits,
+always cheerful, nothing seems to put her out, not even--"
+
+He ended the sentence abruptly with a sigh.
+
+His mother-in-law, I learned from further talk with him, had died
+since I had last met him, and had left them a comfortable addition to
+their income. His eldest daughter was engaged to be married.
+
+"It is entirely a love match," he explained, "and he is such a dear,
+good fellow, that I should not have made any objection even had he
+been poor. But, of course, as it is, I am naturally all the more
+content."
+
+His eldest boy, having won the Mottle Scholarship, was going up to
+Cambridge in the Autumn. His own health, he told me, had greatly
+improved; and a novel he had written in his leisure time promised to
+be one of the successes of the season. Then it was that I spoke
+plainly.
+
+"If I am opening a wound too painful to be touched," I said, "tell
+me. If, on the contrary, it is an ordinary sort of trouble upon
+which the sympathy of a fellow worker may fall as balm, let me hear
+it."
+
+"So far as I am concerned," he replied, "I should be glad to tell
+you. Speaking about it does me good, and may lead--so I am always in
+hopes--to an idea. But, for your own sake, if you take my advice,
+you will not press me."
+
+"How can it affect me?" I asked, "it is nothing to do with me, is
+it?"
+
+"It need have nothing to do with you," he answered, "if you are
+sensible enough to keep out of it. If I tell you: from this time
+onward it will be your trouble also. Anyhow, that is what has
+happened in four other separate cases. If you like to be the fifth
+and complete the half dozen of us, you are welcome. But remember I
+have warned you."
+
+"What has it done to the other five?" I demanded.
+
+"It has changed them from cheerful, companionable persons into gloomy
+one-idead bores," he told me. "They think of but one thing, they
+talk of but one thing, they dream of but one thing. Instead of
+getting over it, as time goes on, it takes possession of them more
+and more. There are men, of course, who would be unaffected by it--
+who could shake it off. I warn you in particular against it,
+because, in spite of all that is said, I am convinced you have a
+sense of humour; and that being so, it will lay hold of you. It will
+plague you night and day. You see what it has made of me! Three
+months ago a lady interviewer described me as of a sunny temperament.
+If you know your own business you will get out at the next station."
+
+I wish now I had followed his advice. As it was, I allowed my
+curiosity to take possession of me, and begged him to explain. And
+he did so.
+
+"It was just about Christmas time," he said. "We were discussing the
+Drury Lane Pantomime--some three or four of us--in the smoking room
+of the Devonshire Club, and young Gold said he thought it would prove
+a mistake, the introduction of a subject like the Fiscal question
+into the story of Humpty Dumpty. The two things, so far as he could
+see, had nothing to do with one another. He added that he
+entertained a real regard for Mr. Dan Leno, whom he had once met on a
+steamboat, but that there were other topics upon which he would
+prefer to seek that gentleman's guidance. Nettleship, on the other
+hand, declared that he had no sympathy with the argument that artists
+should never intrude upon public affairs. The actor was a fellow
+citizen with the rest of us. He said that, whether one agreed with
+their conclusions or not, one must admit that the nation owed a debt
+of gratitude to Mrs. Brown Potter and to Miss Olga Nethersole for
+giving to it the benefit of their convictions. He had talked to both
+ladies in private on the subject and was convinced they knew as much
+about it as did most people.
+
+"Burnside, who was one of the party, contended that if sides were to
+be taken, a pantomime should surely advocate the Free-Food Cause,
+seeing it was a form of entertainment supposed to appeal primarily to
+the tastes of the Little Englander. Then I came into the discussion.
+
+"'The Fiscal question,' I said, 'is on everybody's tongue. Such
+being the case, it is fit and proper it should be referred to in our
+annual pantomime, which has come to be regarded as a review of the
+year's doings. But it should not have been dealt with from the
+political standpoint. The proper attitude to have assumed towards it
+was that of innocent raillery, free from all trace of partisanship.'
+
+"Old Johnson had strolled up and was standing behind us.
+
+"'The very thing I have been trying to get hold of for weeks,' he
+said--'a bright, amusing resume of the whole problem that should give
+offence to neither side. You know our paper,' he continued; 'we
+steer clear of politics, but, at the same time, try to be up-to-date;
+it is not always easy. The treatment of the subject, on the lines
+you suggest, is just what we require. I do wish you would write me
+something.'
+
+"He is a good old sort, Johnson; it seemed an easy thing. I said I
+would. Since that time I have been thinking how to do it. As a
+matter of fact, I have not thought of much else. Maybe you can
+suggest something."
+
+I was feeling in a good working mood the next morning.
+
+"Pilson," said I to myself, "shall have the benefit of this. He does
+not need anything boisterously funny. A few playfully witty remarks
+on the subject will be the ideal."
+
+I lit a pipe and sat down to think. At half-past twelve, having to
+write some letters before going out to lunch, I dismissed the Fiscal
+question from my mind.
+
+But not for long. It worried me all the afternoon. I thought,
+maybe, something would come to me in the evening. I wasted all that
+evening, and I wasted all the following morning. Everything has its
+amusing side, I told myself. One turns out comic stories about
+funerals, about weddings. Hardly a misfortune that can happen to
+mankind but has produced its comic literature. An American friend of
+mine once took a contract from the Editor of an Insurance Journal to
+write four humorous stories; one was to deal with an earthquake, the
+second with a cyclone, the third with a flood, and the fourth with a
+thunderstorm. And more amusing stories I have never read. What is
+the matter with the Fiscal question?
+
+I myself have written lightly on Bime-metallism. Home Rule we used
+to be merry over in the eighties. I remember one delightful evening
+at the Codgers' Hall. It would have been more delightful still, but
+for a raw-boned Irishman, who rose towards eleven o'clock and
+requested to be informed if any other speaker was wishful to make any
+more jokes on the subject of Ould Ireland; because, if so, the raw-
+boned gentleman was prepared to save time by waiting and dealing with
+them altogether. But if not, then--so the raw-boned gentleman
+announced--his intention was to go for the last speaker and the last
+speaker but two at once and without further warning.
+
+No other humourist rising, the raw-boned gentleman proceeded to make
+good his threat, with the result that the fun degenerated somewhat.
+Even on the Boer War we used to whisper jokes to one another in quiet
+places. In this Fiscal question there must be fun. Where is it?
+
+For days I thought of little else. My laundress--as we call them in
+the Temple--noticed my trouble.
+
+"Mrs. Wilkins," I confessed, "I am trying to think of something
+innocently amusing to say on the Fiscal question."
+
+"I've 'eard about it," she said, "but I don't 'ave much time to read
+the papers. They want to make us pay more for our food, don't they?"
+
+"For some of it," I explained. "But, then, we shall pay less for
+other things, so that really we shan't be paying more at all."
+
+"There don't seem much in it, either way," was Mrs. Wilkins' opinion.
+
+"Just so," I agreed, "that is the advantage of the system. It will
+cost nobody anything, and will result in everybody being better off."
+
+"The pity is," said Mrs. Wilkins "that pity nobody ever thought of it
+before."
+
+"The whole trouble hitherto," I explained, "has been the foreigner."
+
+"Ah," said Mrs. Wilkins, "I never 'eard much good of 'em, though they
+do say the Almighty 'as a use for almost everything."
+
+"These foreigners," I continued, "these Germans and Americans, they
+dump things on us, you know."
+
+"What's that?" demanded Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+"What's dump? Well, it's dumping, you know. You take things, and
+you dump them down."
+
+"But what things? 'Ow do they do it?" asked Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+"Why, all sorts of things: pig iron, bacon, door-mats--everything.
+They bring them over here--in ships, you understand--and then, if you
+please, just dump them down upon our shores."
+
+"You don't mean surely to tell me that they just throw them out and
+leave them there?" queried Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+"Of course not," I replied; "when I say they dump these things upon
+our shores, that is a figure of speech. What I mean is they sell
+them to us."
+
+"But why do we buy them if we don't want them?" asked Mrs. Wilkins;
+"we're not bound to buy them, are we?"
+
+"It is their artfulness," I explained, "these Germans and Americans,
+and the others; they are all just as bad as one another--they insist
+on selling us these things at less price than they cost to make."
+
+"It seems a bit silly of them, don't it?" thought Mrs. Wilkins. "I
+suppose being foreigners, poor things, they ain't naturally got much
+sense."
+
+"It does seem silly of them, if you look at it that way," I admitted,
+"but what we have got to consider is, the injury it is doing us."
+
+"Don't see 'ow it can do us much 'arm," argued Mrs. Wilkins; "seems a
+bit of luck so far as we are concerned. There's a few more things
+they'd be welcome to dump round my way."
+
+"I don't seem to be putting this thing quite in the right light to
+you, Mrs. Wilkins," I confessed. "It is a long argument, and you
+might not be able to follow it; but you must take it as a fact now
+generally admitted that the cheaper you buy things the sooner your
+money goes. By allowing the foreigner to sell us all these things at
+about half the cost price, he is getting richer every day, and we are
+getting poorer. Unless we, as a country, insist on paying at least
+twenty per cent. more for everything we want, it is calculated that
+in a very few years England won't have a penny left."
+
+"Sounds a bit topsy turvy," suggested Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+"It may sound so," I answered, "but I fear there can be no doubt of
+it. The Board of Trade Returns would seem to prove it conclusively."
+
+"Well, God be praised, we've found it out in time," ejaculated Mrs.
+Wilkins piously.
+
+"It is a matter of congratulation," I agreed; "the difficulty is that
+a good many other people say that far from being ruined, we are doing
+very well indeed, and are growing richer every year."
+
+"But 'ow can they say that," argued Mrs. Wilkins, "when, as you tell
+me, those Trade Returns prove just the opposite?"
+
+"Well, they say the same, Mrs. Wilkins, that the Board of Trade
+Returns prove just the opposite."
+
+"Well, they can't both be right," said Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+"You would be surprised, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "how many things can
+be proved from Board of Trade Returns!"
+
+But I have not yet thought of that article for Pilson.
+
+
+
+SHALL WE BE RUINED BY CHINESE CHEAP LABOUR?
+
+
+
+"What is all this talk I 'ear about the Chinese?" said Mrs. Wilkins
+to me the other morning. We generally indulge in a little chat while
+Mrs. Wilkins is laying the breakfast-table. Letters and newspapers
+do not arrive in my part of the Temple much before nine. From half-
+past eight to nine I am rather glad of Mrs. Wilkins. "They 'ave been
+up to some of their tricks again, 'aven't they?"
+
+"The foreigner, Mrs. Wilkins," I replied, "whether he be Chinee or
+any other he, is always up to tricks. Was not England specially
+prepared by an all-wise Providence to frustrate these knavish tricks?
+Which of such particular tricks may you be referring to at the
+moment, Mrs. Wilkins?"
+
+"Well, 'e's comin' over 'ere--isn't he, sir? to take the work out of
+our mouths, as it were."
+
+"Well, not exactly over here, to England, Mrs. Wilkins," I explained.
+"He has been introduced into Africa to work in the mines there."
+
+"It's a funny thing," said Mrs. Wilkins, "but to 'ear the way some of
+them talk in our block, you might run away with the notion--that is,
+if you didn't know 'em--that work was their only joy. I said to one
+of 'em, the other evening--a man as calls 'isself a brass finisher,
+though, Lord knows, the only brass 'e ever finishes is what 'is poor
+wife earns and isn't quick enough to 'ide away from 'im--well,
+whatever 'appens, I says, it will be clever of 'em if they take away
+much work from you. It made them all laugh, that did," added Mrs.
+Wilkins, with a touch of pardonable pride.
+
+"Ah," continued the good lady, "it's surprising 'ow contented they
+can be with a little, some of 'em. Give 'em a 'ard-working woman to
+look after them, and a day out once a week with a procession of the
+unemployed, they don't ask for nothing more. There's that beauty my
+poor sister Jane was fool enough to marry. Serves 'er right, as I
+used to tell 'er at first, till there didn't seem any more need to
+rub it into 'er. She'd 'ad one good 'usband. It wouldn't 'ave been
+fair for 'er to 'ave 'ad another, even if there'd been a chance of
+it, seeing the few of 'em there is to go round among so many. But
+it's always the same with us widows: if we 'appen to 'ave been lucky
+the first time, we put it down to our own judgment--think we can't
+ever make a mistake; and if we draw a wrong 'un, as the saying is, we
+argue as if it was the duty of Providence to make it up to us the
+second time. Why, I'd a been making a fool of myself three years ago
+if 'e 'adn't been good-natured enough to call one afternoon when I
+was out, and 'ook it off with two pounds eight in the best teapot
+that I 'ad been soft enough to talk to 'im about: and never let me
+set eyes on 'im again. God bless 'im! 'E's one of the born-tireds,
+'e is, as poor Jane might 'ave seen for 'erself, if she 'ad only
+looked at 'im, instead of listening to 'im.
+
+"But that's courtship all the world over--old and young alike, so far
+as I've been able to see it," was the opinion of Mrs. Wilkins. "The
+man's all eyes and the woman all ears. They don't seem to 'ave any
+other senses left 'em. I ran against 'im the other night, on my way
+'ome, at the corner of Gray's Inn Road. There was the usual crowd
+watching a pack of them Italians laying down the asphalt in 'Olborn,
+and 'e was among 'em. 'E 'ad secured the only lamp-post, and was
+leaning agen it.
+
+"'Ullo,' I says, 'glad to see you 'aven't lost your job. Nothin'
+like stickin' to it, when you've dropped into somethin' that really
+suits you.'
+
+"'What do you mean, Martha?' 'e says. 'E's not one of what I call
+your smart sort. It takes a bit of sarcasm to get through 'is 'ead.
+
+"'Well,' I says, 'you're still on the old track, I see, looking for
+work. Take care you don't 'ave an accident one of these days and run
+up agen it before you've got time to get out of its way.'
+
+"'It's these miserable foreigners,' 'e says. 'Look at 'em,' 'e says.
+
+"'There's enough of you doing that,' I says. 'I've got my room to
+put straight and three hours needlework to do before I can get to
+bed. But don't let me 'inder you. You might forget what work was
+like, if you didn't take an opportunity of watching it now and then.'
+
+"'They come over 'ere,' 'e says, 'and take the work away from us
+chaps.'
+
+"'Ah,' I says, 'poor things, perhaps they ain't married.'
+
+"'Lazy devils! 'e says. 'Look at 'em, smoking cigarettes. I could
+do that sort of work. There's nothing in it. It don't take 'eathen
+foreigners to dab a bit of tar about a road.'
+
+"'Yes,' I says, 'you always could do anybody else's work but your
+own.'
+
+"'I can't find it, Martha,' 'e says.
+
+"'No,' I says, 'and you never will in the sort of places you go
+looking for it. They don't 'ang it out on lamp-posts, and they don't
+leave it about at the street corners. Go 'ome,' I says, 'and turn
+the mangle for your poor wife. That's big enough for you to find,
+even in the dark.'
+
+"Looking for work!" snorted Mrs. Wilkins with contempt; "we women
+never 'ave much difficulty in finding it, I've noticed. There are
+times when I feel I could do with losing it for a day."
+
+"But what did he reply, Mrs. Wilkins," I asked; "your brass-finishing
+friend, who was holding forth on the subject of Chinese cheap
+labour." Mrs. Wilkins as a conversationalist is not easily kept to
+the point. I was curious to know what the working classes were
+thinking on the subject.
+
+"Oh, that," replied Mrs. Wilkins, "'e did not say nothing. 'E ain't
+the sort that's got much to say in an argument. 'E belongs to the
+crowd that 'angs about at the back, and does the shouting. But there
+was another of 'em, a young fellow as I feels sorry for, with a wife
+and three small children, who 'asn't 'ad much luck for the last six
+months; and that through no fault of 'is own, I should say, from the
+look of 'im. 'I was a fool,' says 'e, 'when I chucked a good
+situation and went out to the war. They told me I was going to fight
+for equal rights for all white men. I thought they meant that all of
+us were going to 'ave a better chance, and it seemed worth making a
+bit of sacrifice for, that did. I should be glad if they would give
+me a job in their mines that would enable me to feed my wife and
+children. That's all I ask them for!'"
+
+"It is a difficult problem, Mrs. Wilkins," I said. "According to the
+mine owners--"
+
+"Ah," said Mrs. Wilkins. "They don't seem to be exactly what you'd
+call popular, them mine owners, do they? Daresay they're not as bad
+as they're painted."
+
+"Some people, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "paint them very black. There
+are those who hold that the South African mine-owner is not a man at
+all, but a kind of pantomime demon. You take Goliath, the whale that
+swallowed Jonah, a selection from the least respectable citizens of
+Sodom and Gomorrah at their worst, Bluebeard, Bloody Queen Mary, Guy
+Fawkes, and the sea-serpent--or, rather, you take the most
+objectionable attributes of all these various personages, and mix
+them up together. The result is the South African mine-owner, a
+monster who would willingly promote a company for the putting on the
+market of a new meat extract, prepared exclusively from new-born
+infants, provided the scheme promised a fair and reasonable
+opportunity of fleecing the widow and orphan."
+
+"I've 'eard they're a bad lot," said Mrs. Wilkins. "But we're most
+of us that, if we listen to what other people say about us."
+
+"Quite so, Mrs. Wilkins," I agreed. "One never arrives at the truth
+by listening to one side only. On the other hand, for example, there
+are those who stoutly maintain that the South African mine-owner is a
+kind of spiritual creature, all heart and sentiment, who, against his
+own will, has been, so to speak, dumped down upon this earth as the
+result of over-production up above of the higher class of archangel.
+The stock of archangels of superior finish exceeds the heavenly
+demand; the surplus has been dropped down into South Africa and has
+taken to mine owning. It is not that these celestial visitors of
+German sounding nomenclature care themselves about the gold. Their
+only desire is, during this earthly pilgrimage of theirs, to benefit
+the human race. Nothing can be obtained in this world without money-
+-"
+
+"That's true," said Mrs. Wilkins, with a sigh.
+
+"For gold, everything can be obtained. The aim of the mine-owning
+archangel is to provide the world with gold. Why should the world
+trouble to grow things and make things? 'Let us,' say these
+archangels, temporarily dwelling in South Africa, 'dig up and
+distribute to the world plenty of gold, then the world can buy
+whatever it wants, and be happy.'
+
+"There may be a flaw in the argument, Mrs. Wilkins," I allowed. "I
+am not presenting it to you as the last word upon the subject. I am
+merely quoting the view of the South African mine-owner, feeling
+himself a much misunderstood benefactor of mankind."
+
+"I expect," said Mrs. Wilkins, "they are just the ordinary sort of
+Christian, like the rest of us, anxious to do the best they can for
+themselves, and not too particular as to doing other people in the
+process."
+
+"I am inclined to think, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "that you are not
+very far from the truth. A friend of mine, a year ago, was very
+bitter on this subject of Chinese cheap labour. A little later there
+died a distant relative of his who left him twenty thousand South
+African mining shares. He thinks now that to object to the Chinese
+is narrow-minded, illiberal, and against all religious teaching. He
+has bought an abridged edition of Confucius, and tells me that there
+is much that is ennobling in Chinese morality. Indeed, I gather from
+him that the introduction of the Chinese into South Africa will be
+the saving of that country. The noble Chinese will afford an object
+lesson to the poor white man, displaying to him the virtues of
+sobriety, thrift, and humility. I also gather that it will be of
+inestimable benefit to the noble Chinee himself. The Christian
+missionary will get hold of him in bulk, so to speak, and imbue him
+with the higher theology. It appears to be one of those rare cases
+where everybody is benefited at the expense of nobody. It is always
+a pity to let these rare opportunities slip by."
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Wilkins, "I've nothin' to say agen the Chinaman, as
+a Chinaman. As to 'is being a 'eathen, well, throwin' stones at a
+church, as the sayin' is, don't make a Christian of you. There's
+Christians I've met as couldn't do themselves much 'arm by changing
+their religion; and as to cleanliness, well, I've never met but one,
+and 'e was a washerwoman, and I'd rather 'ave sat next to 'im in a
+third-class carriage on a Bank 'Oliday than next to some of 'em.
+
+"Seems to me," continued Mrs. Wilkins, "we've got into the 'abit of
+talkin' a bit too much about other people's dirt. The London
+atmosphere ain't nat'rally a dry-cleanin' process in itself, but
+there's a goodish few as seem to think it is. One comes across
+Freeborn Britons 'ere and there as I'd be sorry to scrub clean for a
+shillin' and find my own soap."
+
+"It is a universal failing, Mrs. Wilkins," I explained. "If you talk
+to a travelled Frenchman, he contrasts to his own satisfaction the
+Paris ouvrier in his blue blouse with the appearance of the London
+labourer."
+
+"I daresay they're all right according to their lights," said Mrs.
+Wilkins, "but it does seem a bit wrong that if our own chaps are
+willin' and anxious to work, after all they've done, too, in the way
+of getting the mines for us, they shouldn't be allowed the job."
+
+"Again, Mrs. Wilkins, it is difficult to arrive at a just
+conclusion," I said. "The mine-owner, according to his enemies,
+hates the British workman with the natural instinct that evil
+creatures feel towards the noble and virtuous. He will go to trouble
+and expense merely to spite the British workman, to keep him out of
+South Africa. According to his friends, the mine-owner sets his face
+against the idea of white labour for two reasons. First and
+foremost, it is not nice work; the mine-owner hates the thought of
+his beloved white brother toiling in the mines. It is not right that
+the noble white man should demean himself by such work. Secondly,
+white labour is too expensive. If for digging gold men had to be
+paid anything like the same prices they are paid for digging coal,
+the mines could not be worked. The world would lose the gold that
+the mine-owner is anxious to bestow upon it.
+
+"The mine-owner, following his own inclinations, would take a little
+farm, grow potatoes, and live a beautiful life--perhaps write a
+little poetry. A slave to sense of duty, he is chained to the
+philanthropic work of gold-mining. If we hamper him and worry him
+the danger is that he will get angry with us--possibly he will order
+his fiery chariot and return to where he came from."
+
+"Well, 'e can't take the gold with him, wherever 'e goes to?" argued
+Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+"You talk, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "as if the gold were of more value
+to the world than is the mine-owner."
+
+"Well, isn't it?" demanded Mrs. Wilkins.
+
+"It's a new idea, Mrs. Wilkins," I answered; "it wants thinking out."
+
+
+
+HOW TO SOLVE THE SERVANT PROBLEM.
+
+
+
+"I am glad to see, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "that the Women's Domestic
+Guild of America has succeeded in solving the servant girl problem--
+none too soon, one might almost say."
+
+"Ah," said Mrs. Wilkins, as she took the cover off the bacon and gave
+an extra polish to the mustard-pot with her apron, "they are clever
+people over there; leastways, so I've always 'eard."
+
+"This, their latest, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "I am inclined to regard
+as their greatest triumph. My hope is that the Women's Domestic
+Guild of America, when it has finished with the United States and
+Canada, will, perhaps, see its way to establishing a branch in
+England. There are ladies of my acquaintance who would welcome, I
+feel sure, any really satisfactory solution of the problem."
+
+"Well, good luck to it, is all I say," responded Mrs. Wilkins, "and
+if it makes all the gals contented with their places, and all the
+mistresses satisfied with what they've got and 'appy in their minds,
+why, God bless it, say I."
+
+"The mistake hitherto," I said, "from what I read, appears to have
+been that the right servant was not sent to the right place. What
+the Women's Domestic Guild of America proposes to do is to find the
+right servant for the right place. You see the difference, don't
+you, Mrs. Wilkins?"
+
+"That's the secret," agreed Mrs. Wilkins. They don't anticipate any
+difficulty in getting the right sort of gal, I take it?"
+
+"I gather not, Mrs. Wilkins," I replied.
+
+Mrs. Wilkins is of a pessimistic turn of mind.
+
+"I am not so sure about it," she said; "the Almighty don't seem to
+'ave made too many of that sort. Unless these American ladies that
+you speak of are going to start a factory of their own. I am afraid
+there is disappointment in store for them."
+
+"Don't throw cold water on the idea before it is fairly started, Mrs.
+Wilkins," I pleaded.
+
+"Well, sir," said Mrs. Wilkins, "I 'ave been a gal myself in service;
+and in my time I've 'ad a few mistresses of my own, and I've 'eard a
+good deal about others. There are ladies and ladies, as you may
+know, sir, and some of them, if they aren't exactly angels, are about
+as near to it as can be looked for in this climate, and they are not
+the ones that do most of the complaining. But, as for the average
+mistress--well it ain't a gal she wants, it's a plaster image,
+without any natural innards--a sort of thing as ain't 'uman, and
+ain't to be found in 'uman nature. And then she'd grumble at it, if
+it didn't 'appen to be able to be in two places at once."
+
+"You fear that the standard for that 'right girl' is likely to be set
+a trifle too high Mrs. Wilkins," I suggested.
+
+"That 'right gal,' according to the notions of some of 'em," retorted
+Mrs. Wilkins, "'er place ain't down 'ere among us mere mortals; 'er
+place is up in 'eaven with a 'arp and a golden crown. There's my
+niece, Emma, I don't say she is a saint, but a better 'earted, 'arder
+working gal, at twenty pounds a year, you don't expect to find,
+unless maybe you're a natural born fool that can't 'elp yourself.
+She wanted a place. She 'ad been 'ome for nearly six months, nursing
+'er old father, as 'ad been down all the winter with rheumatic fever;
+and 'ard-put to it she was for a few clothes. You 'ear 'em talk
+about gals as insists on an hour a day for practising the piano, and
+the right to invite their young man to spend the evening with them in
+the drawing-room. Perhaps it is meant to be funny; I ain't come
+across that type of gal myself, outside the pictures in the comic
+papers; and I'll never believe, till I see 'er myself, that anybody
+else 'as. They sent 'er from the registry office to a lady at
+Clapton.
+
+"'I 'ope you are good at getting up early in the morning?' says the
+lady, 'I like a gal as rises cheerfully to 'er work.'
+
+"'Well, ma'am,' says Emma, 'I can't say as I've got a passion for it.
+But it's one of those things that 'as to be done, and I guess I've
+learnt the trick.'
+
+"'I'm a great believer in early rising,' says my lady; 'in the
+morning, one is always fresher for one's work; my 'usband and the
+younger children breakfast at 'arf past seven; myself and my eldest
+daughter 'ave our breakfest in bed at eight.'
+
+'That'll be all right, ma'am,' says Emma.
+
+"'And I 'ope,' says the lady, 'you are of an amiable disposition.
+Some gals when you ring the bell come up looking so disagreeable, one
+almost wishes one didn't want them.'
+
+"'Well, it ain't a thing,' explains Emma, 'as makes you want to burst
+out laughing, 'earing the bell go off for the twentieth time, and
+'aving suddenly to put down your work at, perhaps, a critical moment.
+Some ladies don't seem able to reach down their 'at for themselves.'
+
+"'I 'ope you are not impertinent,' says the lady; 'if there's one
+thing that I object to in a servant it is impertinence.'
+
+"'We none of us like being answered back,' says Emma, 'more
+particularly when we are in the wrong. But I know my place ma'am,
+and I shan't give you no lip. It always leads to less trouble, I
+find, keeping your mouth shut, rather than opening it.'
+
+"'Are you fond of children,' asks my lady.
+
+"'It depends upon the children,' says Emma; 'there are some I 'ave
+'ad to do with as made the day seem pleasanter, and I've come across
+others as I could 'ave parted from at any moment without tears.'
+
+"'I like a gal,' says the lady, 'who is naturally fond of children,
+it shows a good character.'
+
+"'How many of them are there?' says Emma.
+
+"'Four of them,' answers my lady, 'but you won't 'ave much to do
+except with the two youngest. The great thing with young children is
+to surround them with good examples. Are you a Christian?' asks my
+lady.
+
+"'That's what I'm generally called,' says Emma.
+
+"'Every other Sunday evening out is my rule,' says the lady, 'but of
+course I shall expect you to go to church.'
+
+"'Do you mean in my time, ma'am,' says Emma, 'or in yours.'
+
+"'I mean on your evening of course,' says my lady. ''Ow else could
+you go?'
+
+"'Well, ma'am,' says Emma, 'I like to see my people now and then.'
+
+"'There are better things,' says my lady, 'than seeing what you call
+your people, and I should not care to take a girl into my 'ouse as
+put 'er pleasure before 'er religion. You are not engaged, I 'ope?'
+
+"'Walking out, ma'am, do you mean?' says Emma. 'No, ma'am, there is
+nobody I've got in my mind--not just at present.'
+
+"'I never will take a gal,' explains my lady, 'who is engaged. I
+find it distracts 'er attention from 'er work. And I must insist if
+you come to me,' continues my lady, 'that you get yourself another
+'at and jacket. If there is one thing I object to in a servant it is
+a disposition to cheap finery.'
+
+"'Er own daughter was sitting there beside 'er with 'alf a dozen
+silver bangles on 'er wrist, and a sort of thing 'anging around 'er
+neck, as, 'ad it been real, would 'ave been worth perhaps a thousand
+pounds. But Emma wanted a job, so she kept 'er thoughts to 'erself.
+
+"'I can put these things by and get myself something else,' she says,
+'if you don't mind, ma'am, advancing me something out of my first
+three months' wages. I'm afraid my account at the bank is a bit
+overdrawn.'
+
+"The lady whispered something to 'er daughter. 'I am afraid, on
+thinking it over,' she says, 'that you won't suit, after all. You
+don't look serious enough. I feel sure, from the way you do your
+'air,' says my lady, 'there's a frivolous side to your nature.'
+
+"So Emma came away, and was not, on the whole, too sorry."
+
+"But do they get servants to come to them, this type of mistress, do
+you think, Mrs. Wilkins?" I asked.
+
+"They get them all right," said Mrs. Wilkins, "and if it's a decent
+gal, it makes a bad gal of 'er, that ever afterwards looks upon every
+mistress as 'er enemy, and acts accordingly. And if she ain't a
+naturally good gal, it makes 'er worse, and then you 'ear what awful
+things gals are. I don't say it's an easy problem," continued Mrs.
+Wilkins, "it's just like marriages. The good mistress gets 'old of
+the bad servant, and the bad mistress, as often as not is lucky."
+
+"But how is it," I argued, "that in hotels, for instance, the service
+is excellent, and the girls, generally speaking, seem contented? The
+work is hard, and the wages not much better, if as good."
+
+"Ah," said Mrs. Wilkins, "you 'ave 'it the right nail on the 'ead,
+there, sir. They go into the 'otels and work like niggers, knowing
+that if a single thing goes wrong they will be bully-ragged and sworn
+at till they don't know whether they are standing on their 'ead or
+their 'eels. But they 'ave their hours; the gal knows when 'er work
+is done, and when the clock strikes she is a 'uman being once again.
+She 'as got that moment to look forward to all day, and it keeps 'er
+going. In private service there's no moment in the day to 'ope for.
+If the lady is reasonable she ain't overworked; but no 'ow can she
+ever feel she is her own mistress, free to come and go, to wear 'er
+bit of finery, to 'ave 'er bit of fun. She works from six in the
+morning till eleven or twelve at night, and then she only goes to bed
+provided she ain't wanted. She don't belong to 'erself at all; it's
+that that irritates them."
+
+"I see your point, Mrs. Wilkins," I said, "and, of course, in a house
+where two or three servants were kept some such plan might easily be
+arranged. The girl who commenced work at six o'clock in the morning
+might consider herself free at six o'clock in the evening. What she
+did with herself, how she dressed herself in her own time, would be
+her affair. What church the clerk or the workman belongs to, what
+company he keeps, is no concern of the firm. In such matters,
+mistresses, I am inclined to think, saddle themselves with a
+responsibility for which there is no need. If the girl behaves
+herself while in the house, and does her work, there the contract
+ends. The mistress who thinks it her duty to combine the roles of
+employer and of maiden aunt is naturally resented. The next month
+the girl might change her hours from twelve to twelve, and her
+fellow-servant could enjoy the six a.m. to six p.m. shift. But how
+do you propose to deal, Mrs. Wilkins, with the smaller menage, that
+employs only one servant?"
+
+"Well, sir," said Mrs. Wilkins, "it seems to me simple enough.
+Ladies talk pretty about the dignity of labour, and are never tired
+of pointing out why gals should prefer domestic service to all other
+kinds of work. Suppose they practise what they preach. In the
+'ouse, where there's only the master and the mistress, and, say a
+couple of small children, let the lady take her turn. After all,
+it's only her duty, same as the office or the shop is the man's.
+Where, on the other 'and, there are biggish boys and gals about the
+place, well it wouldn't do them any 'arm to be taught to play a
+little less, and to look after themselves a little more. It's just
+arranging things--that's all that's wanted."
+
+"You remind me of a family I once knew, Mrs. Wilkins," I said; "it
+consisted of the usual father and mother, and of five sad, healthy
+girls. They kept two servants--or, rather, they never kept any
+servants; they lived always looking for servants, breaking their
+hearts over servants, packing servants off at a moment's notice,
+standing disconsolately looking after servants who had packed
+themselves off at a moment's notice, wondering generally what the
+world was coming too. It occurred to me at the time, that without
+much trouble, they could have lived a peaceful life without servants.
+The eldest girl was learning painting--and seemed unable to learn
+anything else. It was poor sort of painting; she noticed it herself.
+But she seemed to think that, if she talked a lot about it, and
+thought of nothing else, that somehow it would all come right. The
+second girl played the violin. She played it from early morning till
+late evening, and friends fell away from them. There wasn't a spark
+of talent in the family, but they all had a notion that a vague
+longing to be admired was just the same as genius.
+
+"Another daughter fancied she would like to be an actress, and
+screamed all day in the attic. The fourth wrote poetry on a
+typewriter, and wondered why nobody seemed to want it; while the
+fifth one suffered from a weird belief that smearing wood with a red-
+hot sort of poker was a thing worth doing for its own sake. All of
+them seemed willing enough to work, provided only that it was work of
+no use to any living soul. With a little sense, and the occasional
+assistance of a charwoman, they could have led a merrier life."
+
+"If I was giving away secrets," said Mrs. Wilkins, "I'd say to the
+mistresses: 'Show yourselves able to be independent.' It's because
+the gals know that the mistresses can't do without them that they
+sometimes gives themselves airs."
+
+
+
+WHY WE HATE THE FOREIGNER.
+
+
+
+The advantage that the foreigner possesses over the Englishman is
+that he is born good. He does not have to try to be good, as we do.
+He does not have to start the New Year with the resolution to be
+good, and succeed, bar accidents, in being so till the middle of
+January. He is just good all the year round. When a foreigner is
+told to mount or descend from a tram on the near side, it does not
+occur to him that it would be humanly possible to secure egress from
+or ingress to that tram from the off side.
+
+In Brussels once I witnessed a daring attempt by a lawless foreigner
+to enter a tram from the wrong side. The gate was open: he was
+standing close beside it. A line of traffic was in his way: to have
+got round to the right side of that tram would have meant missing it.
+He entered when the conductor was not looking, and took his seat.
+The astonishment of the conductor on finding him there was immense.
+How did he get there? The conductor had been watching the proper
+entrance, and the man had not passed him. Later, the true
+explanation suggested itself to the conductor, but for a while he
+hesitated to accuse a fellow human being of such crime.
+
+He appealed to the passenger himself. Was his presence to be
+accounted for by miracle or by sin? The passenger confessed. It was
+more in sorrow than in anger that the conductor requested him at once
+to leave. This tram was going to be kept respectable. The passenger
+proved refractory, a halt was called, and the gendarmerie appealed
+to. After the manner of policemen, they sprang, as it were, from the
+ground, and formed up behind an imposing officer, whom I took to be
+the sergeant. At first the sergeant could hardly believe the
+conductor's statement. Even then, had the passenger asserted that he
+had entered by the proper entrance, his word would have been taken.
+Much easier to the foreign official mind would it have been to
+believe that the conductor had been stricken with temporary
+blindness, than that man born of woman would have deliberately done
+anything expressly forbidden by a printed notice.
+
+Myself, in his case, I should have lied and got the trouble over.
+But he was a proud man, or had not much sense--one of the two, and so
+held fast to the truth. It was pointed out to him that he must
+descend immediately and wait for the next tram. Other gendarmes were
+arriving from every quarter: resistance in the circumstances seemed
+hopeless. He said he would get down. He made to descend this time
+by the proper gate, but that was not justice. He had mounted the
+wrong side, he must alight on the wrong side. Accordingly, he was
+put out amongst the traffic, after which the conductor preached a
+sermon from the centre of the tram on the danger of ascents and
+descents conducted from the wrong quarter.
+
+There is a law throughout Germany--an excellent law it is: I would
+we had it in England--that nobody may scatter paper about the street.
+An English military friend told me that, one day in Dresden,
+unacquainted with this rule, he tore a long letter he had been
+reading into some fifty fragments and threw them behind him. A
+policeman stopped him and explained to him quite politely the law
+upon the subject. My military friend agreed that it was a very good
+law, thanked the man for his information, and said that for the
+future he would bear it in mind. That, as the policeman pointed out,
+would make things right enough for the future, but meanwhile it was
+necessary to deal with the past--with the fifty or so pieces of paper
+lying scattered about the road and pavement.
+
+My military friend, with a pleasant laugh, confessed he did not see
+what was to be done. The policeman, more imaginative, saw a way out.
+It was that my military friend should set to work and pick up those
+fifty scraps of paper. He is an English General on the Retired List,
+and of imposing appearance: his manner on occasion is haughty. He
+did not see himself on his hands and knees in the chief street of
+Dresden, in the middle of the afternoon, picking up paper.
+
+The German policeman himself admitted that the situation was awkward.
+If the English General could not accept it there happened to be an
+alternative. It was that the English General should accompany the
+policeman through the streets, followed by the usual crowd, to the
+nearest prison, some three miles off. It being now four o'clock in
+the afternoon, they would probably find the judge departed. But the
+most comfortable thing possible in prison cells should be allotted to
+him, and the policeman had little doubt that the General, having paid
+his fine of forty marks, would find himself a free man again in time
+for lunch the following day. The general suggested hiring a boy to
+pick up the paper. The policeman referred to the wording of the law,
+and found that this would not be permitted.
+
+"I thought the matter out," my friend told me, "imagining all the
+possible alternatives, including that of knocking the fellow down and
+making a bolt, and came to the conclusion that his first suggestion
+would, on the whole, result in the least discomfort. But I had no
+idea that picking up small scraps of thin paper off greasy stones was
+the business that I found it! It took me nearly ten minutes, and
+afforded amusement, I calculate, to over a thousand people. But it
+is a good law, mind you: all I wish is that I had known it
+beforehand."
+
+On one occasion I accompanied an American lady to a German Opera
+House. The taking-off of hats in the German Schausspielhaus is
+obligatory, and again I would it were so in England. But the
+American lady is accustomed to disregard rules made by mere man. She
+explained to the doorkeeper that she was going to wear her hat. He,
+on his side, explained to her that she was not: they were both a bit
+short with one another. I took the opportunity to turn aside and buy
+a programme: the fewer people there are mixed up in an argument, I
+always think, the better.
+
+My companion explained quite frankly to the doorkeeper that it did
+not matter what he said, she was not going to take any notice of him.
+He did not look a talkative man at any time, and, maybe, this
+announcement further discouraged him. In any case, he made no
+attempt to answer. All he did was to stand in the centre of the
+doorway with a far-away look in his eyes. The doorway was some four
+feet wide: he was about three feet six across, and weighed about
+twenty stone. As I explained, I was busy buying a programme, and
+when I returned my friend had her hat in her hand, and was digging
+pins into it: I think she was trying to make believe it was the
+heart of the doorkeeper. She did not want to listen to the opera,
+she wanted to talk all the time about that doorkeeper, but the people
+round us would not even let her do that.
+
+She has spent three winters in Germany since then. Now when she
+feels like passing through a door that is standing wide open just in
+front of her, and which leads to just the place she wants to get to,
+and an official shakes his head at her, and explains that she must
+not, but must go up two flights of stairs and along a corridor and
+down another flight of stairs, and so get to her place that way, she
+apologises for her error and trots off looking ashamed of herself.
+
+Continental Governments have trained their citizens to perfection.
+Obedience is the Continent's first law. The story that is told of a
+Spanish king who was nearly drowned because the particular official
+whose duty it was to dive in after Spanish kings when they tumbled
+out of boats happened to be dead, and his successor had not yet been
+appointed, I can quite believe. On the Continental railways if you
+ride second class with a first-class ticket you render yourself
+liable to imprisonment. What the penalty is for riding first with a
+second-class ticket I cannot say--probably death, though a friend of
+mine came very near on one occasion to finding out.
+
+All would have gone well with him if he had not been so darned
+honest. He is one of those men who pride themselves on being honest.
+I believe he takes a positive pleasure in being honest. He had
+purchased a second-class ticket for a station up a mountain, but
+meeting, by chance on the platform, a lady acquaintance, had gone
+with her into a first-class apartment. On arriving at the journey's
+end he explained to the collector what he had done, and, with his
+purse in his hand, demanded to know the difference. They took him
+into a room and locked the door. They wrote out his confession and
+read it over to him, and made him sign it, and then they sent for a
+policeman.
+
+The policeman cross-examined him for about a quarter of an hour.
+They did not believe the story about the lady. Where was the lady?
+He did not know. They searched the neighbourhood for her, but could
+not find her. He suggested--what turned out to be the truth--that,
+tired of loitering about the station, she had gone up the mountain.
+An Anarchist outrage had occurred in the neighbouring town some
+months before. The policeman suggested searching for bombs.
+Fortunately, a Cook's agent, returning with a party of tourists,
+arrived upon the scene, and took it upon himself to explain in
+delicate language that my friend was a bit of an ass and could not
+tell first class from second. It was the red cushions that had
+deceived my friend: he thought it was first class, as a matter of
+fact it was second class.
+
+Everybody breathed again. The confession was torn up amid universal
+joy: and then the fool of a ticket collector wanted to know about
+the lady--who must have travelled in a second-class compartment with
+a first-class ticket. It looked as if a bad time were in store for
+her on her return to the station.
+
+But the admirable representative of Cook was again equal to the
+occasion. He explained that my friend was also a bit of a liar.
+When he said he had travelled with this lady he was merely boasting.
+He would like to have travelled with her, that was all he meant, only
+his German was shaky. Joy once more entered upon the scene. My
+friend's character appeared to be re-established. He was not the
+abandoned wretch for whom they had taken him--only, apparently, a
+wandering idiot. Such an one the German official could respect. At
+the expense of such an one the German official even consented to
+drink beer.
+
+Not only the foreign man, woman and child, but the foreign dog is
+born good. In England, if you happen to be the possessor of a dog,
+much of your time is taken up dragging him out of fights, quarrelling
+with the possessor of the other dog as to which began it, explaining
+to irate elderly ladies that he did not kill the cat, that the cat
+must have died of heart disease while running across the road,
+assuring disbelieving game-keepers that he is not your dog, that you
+have not the faintest notion whose dog he is. With the foreign dog,
+life is a peaceful proceeding. When the foreign dog sees a row,
+tears spring to his eyes: he hastens on and tries to find a
+policeman. When the foreign dog sees a cat in a hurry, he stands
+aside to allow her to pass. They dress the foreign dog--some of
+them--in a little coat, with a pocket for his handkerchief, and put
+shoes on his feet. They have not given him a hat--not yet. When
+they do, he will contrive by some means or another to raise it
+politely when he meets a cat he thinks he knows.
+
+One morning, in a Continental city, I came across a disturbance--it
+might be more correct to say the disturbance came across me: it
+swept down upon me, enveloped me before I knew that I was in it. A
+fox-terrier it was, belonging to a very young lady--it was when the
+disturbance was to a certain extent over that we discovered he
+belonged to this young lady. She arrived towards the end of the
+disturbance, very much out of breath: she had been running for a
+mile, poor girl, and shouting most of the way. When she looked round
+and saw all the things that had happened, and had had other things
+that she had missed explained to her, she burst into tears. An
+English owner of that fox-terrier would have given one look round and
+then have jumped upon the nearest tram going anywhere. But, as I
+have said, the foreigner is born good. I left her giving her name
+and address to seven different people.
+
+But it was about the dog I wished to speak more particularly. He had
+commenced innocently enough, trying to catch a sparrow. Nothing
+delights a sparrow more than being chased by a dog. A dozen times he
+thought he had the sparrow. Then another dog had got in his way. I
+don't know what they call this breed of dog, but abroad it is
+popular: it has no tail and looks like a pig--when things are going
+well with it. This particular specimen, when I saw him, looked more
+like part of a doormat. The fox-terrier had seized it by the scruff
+of the neck and had rolled it over into the gutter just in front of a
+motor cycle. Its owner, a large lady, had darted out to save it, and
+had collided with the motor cyclist. The large lady had been thrown
+some half a dozen yards against an Italian boy carrying a tray load
+of plaster images.
+
+I have seen a good deal of trouble in my life, but never one yet that
+did not have an Italian image-vendor somehow or other mixed up in it.
+Where these boys hide in times of peace is a mystery. The chance of
+being upset brings them out as sunshine brings out flies. The motor
+cycle had dashed into a little milk-cart and had spread it out neatly
+in the middle of the tram lines. The tram traffic looked like being
+stopped for a quarter of an hour; but the idea of every approaching
+tram driver appeared to be that if he rang his bell with sufficient
+vigor this seeming obstruction would fade away and disappear.
+
+In an English town all this would not have attracted much attention.
+Somebody would have explained that a dog was the original cause, and
+the whole series of events would have appeared ordinary and natural.
+Upon these foreigners the fear descended that the Almighty, for some
+reason, was angry with them. A policeman ran to catch the dog.
+
+The delighted dog rushed backwards, barking furiously, and tried to
+throw up paving stones with its hind legs. That frightened a
+nursemaid who was wheeling a perambulator, and then it was that I
+entered into the proceedings. Seated on the edge of the pavement,
+with a perambulator on one side of me and a howling baby on the
+other, I told that dog what I thought of him.
+
+Forgetful that I was in a foreign land--that he might not understand
+me--I told it him in English, I told it him at length, I told it very
+loud and clear. He stood a yard in front of me, listening to me with
+an expression of ecstatic joy I have never before or since seen
+equalled on any face, human or canine. He drank it in as though it
+had been music from Paradise.
+
+"Where have I heard that song before?" he seemed to be saying to
+himself, "the old familiar language they used to talk to me when I
+was young?"
+
+He approached nearer to me; there were almost tears in his eyes when
+I had finished.
+
+"Say it again!" he seemed to be asking of me. "Oh! say it all over
+again, the dear old English oaths and curses that in this God-
+forsaken land I never hoped to hear again."
+
+I learnt from the young lady that he was an English-born fox-terrier.
+That explained everything. The foreign dog does not do this sort of
+thing. The foreigner is born good: that is why we hate him.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's of Idle Ideas in 1905, by Jerome K. Jerome
+
diff --git a/old/idlid10.zip b/old/idlid10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2baf585
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/idlid10.zip
Binary files differ