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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Puppets at Large, by F. Anstey
+
+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: Puppets at Large
+ Scenes and Subjects from Mr Punch's Show
+
+Author: F. Anstey
+
+Illustrator: J. Bernard Partridge
+
+Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37449]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUPPETS AT LARGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Katie Hernandez and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Puppets at Large
+
+
+
+
+ Puppets at Large
+
+ Scenes and Subjects
+ From Mr. Punch's Show.
+
+ By F. Anstey
+ Author of "Vice Versa," "Voces Populi," &c., &c.
+
+ With Illustrations by
+ J. Bernard Partridge
+
+ London
+ Bradbury, Agnew, & Co. Ld., Bouverie St., E.C.
+ 1897
+
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD., PRINTERS,
+ LONDON AND TONBRIDGE.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PAGE
+ Doing a Cathedral 1
+ The Instantaneous Process 13
+ In the Cause of Charity 27
+ The Classical Scholar in Reduced Circumstances 43
+ Rus in Urbe 51
+ Catching the Early Boat 61
+ Society's Next Craze 71
+ An Ideal Interviewer 83
+ Saturday Night in the Edgware Road 91
+ The "Model Husband" Contest 101
+ The Courier of the Hague 109
+ Feeling their Way 119
+ A Testimonial Manqué 131
+ The Model Democracy 145
+ By Parliamentary 159
+ The Farming of the Future 167
+ A Dialogue on Art 177
+ The Old Love and the New 189
+ A Doll's Diary 201
+ Elevating the Masses 219
+ Bookmakers on the Beach 231
+ 'Igher Up! 243
+ At a Highland Cattle Auction 257
+ The Country of Cockaigne 265
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ PAGE
+ "What did 'e want to go and git the fair 'ump about?" 11
+ "What's she got hold of now?" 21
+ "You have lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament" 37
+ "They ain't on'y a lot o' sheep! I thought it was reciters,
+ or somethink o' that" 55
+ "Mokestrians" 75
+ "Dear, dear! _not_ a county family!" 125
+ "Well, he's had a sharp lesson,--there's no denying that" 135
+ "None of your humour here, mind!" 155
+ "I cann't get nothen done to 'en till the weather's a bit
+ more hopen like" 171
+ "They haven't the _patiensh_ for it" 183
+ "It must be a sort of animal, I suppose" 193
+ "I see _him_ standing on the very brink of the precipice" 209
+ "To-night is ours!" 225
+ "Why the blazes don't ye take it?" 239
+ "Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!" 251
+ "'Ere, Florrie, you ain't _croying_, are yer?" 271
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+DOING A CATHEDRAL.
+
+(A SKETCH FROM THE PROVINCES.)
+
+
+_The interior of Dulchester Cathedral._ TIME--_About 12.30. The March
+sunshine slants in pale shafts through the clerestory windows, leaving
+the aisles in shadow. From without, the cawing of rooks and shouts of
+children at play are faintly audible. By the West Door, a party of
+Intending Sightseers have collected, and the several groups, feeling
+that it would be a waste of time to observe anything in the building
+until officially instructed to do so, are engaged in eyeing one another
+with all the genial antipathy and suspicion of true-born Britons._
+
+
+A Stodgy Sightseer (_to his friend_). Disgraceful, keeping us standing
+about like this! If I'd only known, I'd have told the head-waiter at the
+"Mitre" to keep back those chops till----
+
+ [_He breaks off abruptly, finding that the chops are
+ reverberating from column to column with
+ disproportionate solemnity; a white-haired and
+ apple-faced verger rustles down from the choir
+ and beckons the party forward benignantly, whereupon they
+ advance with a secret satisfaction at the prospect of "getting
+ the cathedral 'done' and having the rest of the day to
+ themselves;" they are conducted to a desk and requested, as a
+ preliminary, to put sixpence apiece in the Restoration Fund
+ box and inscribe their names in a book._
+
+_Confused Murmurs._ Would you put "Portico Lodge, Camden Road, or only
+London?"... Here, I'd better sign for the lot of you, eh?... They
+_might_ provide a better pen--in a _cathedral_, I _do_ think!... He
+might have given all our names in full instead of just "And party!"...
+Oh, I've been and made a blot--will it _matter_, should you think?... I
+never _can_ write my name with people looking on, can _you_?... I'm sure
+you've done it beautifully, dear!... Just hold my umbrella while I take
+off my glove, Maria.... Oh, why _don't_ they make haste? &c., &c.
+
+ [_The_ STODGY SIGHTSEER _fumes, feeling that, while they are
+ fiddling, his chops are burning._
+
+The VERGER. Now, ladies and gentlemen, if you will please to follow me,
+the portion of the building where we now are is part of the original
+hedifice founded by Ealfrytha, wife of Earl Baldric, in the year height
+'undred heighty-height, though we 'ave reason to believe that an even
+hearlier church was in existence 'ere so far back as the Roman
+occupation, as is proved by a hancient stone receptacle recently
+discovered under the crypt and hevidently used for baptismal purposes.
+
+A SPECTACLED S. (_who feels it due to herself to put an intelligent
+question at intervals._) What _was_ the method of baptism among the
+Early Christians?
+
+The VERGER. We believe it to 'ave been by total immersion, Ma'am.
+
+The SPECT. S. Oh? _Baptists!_
+
+ [_She sets down the Early Christians as Dissenters, and takes
+ no further interest in them._
+
+The VERGER. At the back of the choir, and immediately in front of you,
+is the shrine, formerly containing the bones of St. Chasuble, with
+relics of St. Alb. (_An_ EVANGELICAL SIGHTSEER _snorts in disapproval._)
+The 'ollow depressions in the steps leading up to the shrine, which are
+still visible, were worn away, as you see, by the pilgrims ascending on
+their knees. (_The party verify the depressions conscientiously, and
+click their tongues to express indulgent contempt._) The spaces between
+the harches of the shrine were originally enriched by valuable gems and
+mosaics, all of which 'ave now long since disappeared, 'aving been
+removed by the more devout parties who came 'ere on pilgrimages. In the
+chapel to your left a monument with recumbent heffigies of Bishop
+Buttress and Dean Gurgoyle, represented laying side by side with clasped
+'ands, in token of the lifelong affection between them. The late Bishop
+used to make a rather facetious remark about this tomb. He was in the
+'abit of observing that it was the honly instance in _his_ experience of
+a Bishop being on friendly terms with his Dean. (_He glances round for
+appreciation of this instance of episcopal humour, but is pained to find
+that it has produced a general gloom; the_ EVANGELICAL SIGHTSEER,
+_indeed, conveys by another and a louder snort, his sense that a Bishop
+ought to set a better example._) In the harched recess to your right, a
+monument in painted halibarster to Sir Ralph Ringdove and his lady,
+erected immediately after her decease by the disconsolate widower, with
+a touching inscription in Latin, stating that their ashes would shortly
+be commingled in the tomb. (_He pauses, to allow the ladies of the party
+to express a becoming sympathy--which they do, by clicks._) Sir Ralph
+himself, however, is interred in Ficklebury Parish Church, forty mile
+from this spot, along with his third wife, who survived him.
+
+ [_The ladies regard the image of Sir Ralph with
+ indignation, and pass on; the_ VERGER _chuckles faintly at
+ having produced his effect._
+
+The EVANGELICAL S. (_snuffing the air suspiciously_). I'm sorry to
+perceive that you are in the habit of burning _incense_ here!
+
+ [_He looks sternly at the_ VERGER, _as though to imply that it
+ is useless to impose upon him._
+
+The VERGER. No, Sir, what you smell ain't incense--on'y the vaults after
+the damp weather we've bin 'aving.
+
+ [_The_ EVANGELICAL SIGHTSEER _drops behind, divided between
+ relief and disappointment._
+
+A PLASTIC S. (_to the_ VERGER). What a perfectly _exquisite_ rose-window
+that is! For all the world like a kaleidoscope. I suppose it dates from
+the Norman period, at _least_?
+
+The VERGER (_coldly_). No, Ma'am, it was only put up about thirty year
+ago. _We_ consider it the poorest glass we 'ave.
+
+The PLAST. S. Oh, the glass, yes; _that's_ hideous, certainly. I meant
+the--the other part.
+
+The VERGER. The tracery, Ma'am? That was restored at the same time by a
+local man--and a shocking job he made of it, too!
+
+The PLAST. S. Yes, it _quite_ spoils the Cathedral, _doesn't_ it?
+Couldn't it be taken down?
+
+The VERGER (_in answer to another Inquirer_). Crowborough Cathedral
+finer than this, Sir? Oh, _dear_ me, no. I went over a-purpose to 'ave a
+look at it the last 'oliday I took, and I was quite surprised to find
+'ow very inferior it was. The spire? I don't say that mayn't be 'igher
+as a mere matter of feet, but our lantern-tower is so 'appily
+proportioned as to give the effect of being by far the 'ighest in
+existence.
+
+A TRAVELLED S. Ah, you should see the _continental_ cathedrals. Why,
+_our_ towers would hardly come up to the top of the naves of some of
+them!
+
+The VERGER (_loftily_). I don't take no notice of foreign cathedrals,
+Ma'am. If foreigners like to build so ostentatious, all I can say is,
+I'm sorry _for_ them.
+
+A LADY (_who has provided herself with a "Manual of Architecture" and an
+unsympathetic_ COMPANION). _Do_ notice the excessive use of the
+ball-flower as a decoration, dear. Parker says it is especially
+characteristic of this cathedral.
+
+UNSYMPATHETIC COMPANION. I don't see _any_ flowers myself. And if they
+like to decorate for festivals and that, where's the harm?
+
+ [_The_ LADY WITH THE MANUAL _perceives that it is hopeless to
+ explain_.
+
+The VERGER. The dog-tooth mouldings round the triforium harches is
+considered to belong to the best period of Norman work----
+
+The LADY WITH THE MANUAL. Surely not _Norman_? Dog-tooth is Saxon, _I_
+always understood.
+
+The VERGER (_indulgently_). You'll excuse _me_, Ma'am, but I fancy it's
+'erringbone as is running in _your_ 'ed.
+
+The LADY WITH THE M. (_after consulting "Parker" for corroboration, in
+vain_). Well, I'm sure dog-tooth is quite _Early English_, anyway. (_To
+her_ COMPANION.) Did you know it was the interlacing of the round arches
+that gave the first idea of the pointed arch, dear?
+
+Her COMP. No. But I shouldn't have thought there was so very much in the
+_idea_.
+
+The LADY WITH THE M. I do _wish_ you took more _interest_, dear. Look at
+those two young men who have just come in. They don't _look_ as if
+they'd care for carving; but they've been studying every one of the
+Miserere seats in the choir-stalls. That's what _I_ like to see!
+
+The VERGER. That concludes my dooties, ladies and gentlemen. You can go
+out by the South Transept door, and that'll take you through the
+Cloisters. (_The Party go out, with the exception of the two_ 'ARRIES,
+_who linger, expectantly, and cough in embarrassment._) Was there
+anything you wished to know?
+
+FIRST 'ARRY. Well, Mister, it's on'y--er--'aven't you got some old
+carving or other 'ere of a rather--well, _funny_ kind--sorter thing you
+on'y show to _gentlemen_, if you know what I mean?
+
+The VERGER (_austerely_). There's nothing in _this_ Cathedral for
+gentlemen o' _your_ sort, and I'm surprised at your expecting of it.
+
+[_He turns on his heel._
+
+FIRST 'ARRY (_to Second_). I spoke civil enough to _'im_, didn't I? What
+did 'e want to go and git the fair 'ump about?
+
+SECOND 'ARRY. Oh, _I_ dunno. But you don't ketch _me_ comin' over to no
+more cathedrils, and wastin' time and money all for nuthink--that's all.
+
+ [_They tramp out, feeling that their confidence has been
+ imposed upon._
+
+[Illustration: "What did 'e want to go and git the fair 'ump about?"]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE INSTANTANEOUS PROCESS;
+
+OR, FLUFF SITS FOR HIS PHOTOGRAPH.
+
+
+_A Photographer's Studio on the Seventh Floor. It is a warm afternoon._
+MR. STIPPLER, _Photographic Artist, is discovered alone._
+
+MR. STIPPLER (_to himself_). No appointments while this weather lasts,
+thank goodness! I shall be able to get ahead with those negatives now.
+(_Sharp whistle from speaking-tube, to which he goes._) Well?
+
+VOICE OF LADY ASSISTANT (_in shop below_). Lady just brought her dog in;
+wants to know if she can have it taken now.
+
+MR. STIP. (_to himself_). Oh, dash the dog and the lady too!
+
+THE VOICE. No, only the _dog_, the lady says.
+
+MR. STIP. (_confused_). Eh? Oh, exactly. Ask the lady to have the
+goodness to--ah--step up. (_He opens the studio door, and awaits the
+arrival of his client; interval, at the end of which sounds as of a
+female in distress about halfway down are distinctly audible._) She's
+_stepping_ up. (_Another interval. The head of a breathless_ ELDERLY
+LADY _emerges from the gloom._) This way, Madam.
+
+ELDERLY LADY (_entering and sinking into the first plush chair_). Oh,
+_dear_ me, I thought I should _never_ get to the top! Now _why_ can't
+you photographers have your studios on the ground floor? So _much_ more
+convenient!
+
+MR. STIP. No doubt, Madam, no doubt. But there is--ah--a prejudice in
+the profession in favah of the roof; possibly the light is considered
+somewhat superiah. I thought I understood there was--ah--a dog?
+
+The E. L. Oh, he'll be here presently. I think he saw something in one
+of the rooms on the way up that took his fancy, or very likely he's
+resting on one of the landing mats,--such an _intelligent_ dog! I'll
+call him. Fluffy, Fluffy, come along, my pet, nearly up now! Mustn't
+keep his missis waiting for him. (_A very long pause: presently a small
+rough-haired terrier lounges into the studio with an air of
+proprietorship_.) That's the dog; he's so small, he can't take _very_
+long to do, _can_ he?
+
+MR. STIP. The--ah--precise size of the animal does not signify, Madam;
+we do it by an instantaneous process. The only question is the precise
+pose you would prefer. I presume the dog is a good--ah--rattah?
+
+The E. L. Really, I've no idea. But he's _very_ clever at killing
+bluebottles; he _will_ smash them on the window-panes.
+
+MR. STIP. (_without interest_). I see, Madam. We have a speciality for
+our combination backgrounds, and you might like to have him represented
+on a country common, in the act of watching a hole in a bank.
+
+The E. L. (_impressed_). For bluebottles?
+
+MR. STIP. For--ah--rats. (_By way of concession._) _Or_ bluebottles, of
+course, if you prefer it.
+
+The E. L. I think I would rather have something more characteristic. He
+has such a pretty way of lying on his back with all his paws sticking
+straight up in the air. I never saw any _other_ dog do it.
+
+MR. STIP. Precisely. But I doubt whether that particulah pose would be
+effective--in a photograph.
+
+The E. L. You think not? Where _has_ he got to, now? Oh, _do_ just look
+at him going round, examining everything! He _quite_ understands what
+he's wanted to do; you've no idea what a clever dog he is!
+
+MR. STIP. Ray-ally? How would it do to have him on a rock in the middle
+of a salmon stream?
+
+The E. L. It would make me so uncomfortable to see it; he has a perfect
+_horror_ of wetting his little feet!
+
+MR. STIP. In _that_ case, no doubt----Then what do you say to posing
+him on an ornamental pedestal? We could introduce a Yorkshire moor, or a
+view of Canterbury Cathedral, as a background.
+
+The E. L. A pedestal seems _so_ suggestive of a cemetery, doesn't it?
+
+MR. STIP. Then we must try some other position. (_He resigns himself to
+the commonplace._) Can the dog--ah--sit up?
+
+The E. L. Bee-yutifully! Fluffy, come and show how nicely you can sit
+up!
+
+FLUFF (_to himself_). Show off for this fellow? Who pretends he's got
+rats--and hasn't! Not if _I_ know it!
+
+ [_He rolls over on his back with a well-assumed air of
+ idiotcy_.
+
+The E. L. (_delighted_). There, _that's_ the attitude I told you of. But
+perhaps it _would_ come out rather too leggy?
+
+MR. STIP. It is--ah--open to that objection, certainly, Madam. Perhaps
+we had better take him on a chair sitting up. (FLUFF is, _with infinite
+trouble, prevailed upon to mount an arm-chair, from which he growls
+savagely whenever_ MR. STIPPLER _approaches_.) You will probably be more
+successful with him than I, Madam.
+
+The E. L. I could make him sit up in a _moment_, if I had any of his
+biscuits with me. But I forgot to bring them.
+
+MR. STIP. There is a confectionah next door. We could send out a lad for
+some biscuits. About how much would you requiah--a quartah of a pound?
+_He goes to the speaking tube._
+
+The E. L. He won't eat _all_ those; he's a _most_ abstemious dog. But
+they must be _sweet_, tell them. (_Delay. Arrival of the biscuits. The_
+ELDERLY LADY _holds one up, and_ FLUFF _leaps, barking frantically,
+until he succeeds in snatching it; a manoeuvre which he repeats with
+each successive biscuit_.) Do you know, I'm afraid he really _mustn't_
+have any more--biscuits always _excite_ him so. Suppose you take him
+lying on the chair, much as he is now? (MR. STIPPLER _attempts to place
+the dog's paws, and is snapped at_.) Oh, _do_ be careful!
+
+MR. STIP. (_heroically_). Oh, it's of no consequence, Madam. I
+am--ah--_accustomed_ to it.
+
+The E. L. Oh, yes; but _he_ isn't, you know; so please be _very_ gentle
+with him! And could you get him a little water first? I'm sure he's
+thirsty. (MR. STIPPLER _brings water in a developing dish, which_ FLUFF
+_empties promptly_.) Now he'll be as _good_----!
+
+MR. STIP. (_after wiping_ FLUFF'S _chin and arranging his legs_). If we
+can only keep him like that for one second.
+
+The E. L. But he ought to have his ears pricked. (MR. STIPPLER _makes
+weird noises behind the camera, resembling demon cats in torture_; FLUFF
+_regards him with calm contempt_.) Oh, and his hair is all in his eyes,
+and they're his best feature!
+
+ [MR. STIPPLER _attempts to part_ FLUFF'S _fringe; snarls_.
+
+MR. STIP. I have not discovered his eyes at present, Madam; but he
+appears to have excellent--ah--_teeth_.
+
+The E. L. _Has_n't he! Now, couldn't you catch him like _that_?
+
+MR. STIP. _(to himself_). He's more likely to catch _me_ like that!
+(_Aloud; as he retreats under a hanging canopy._) I think we shall get a
+good one of him as he is. (_Focussing_.) Yes, that will do very nicely.
+(_He puts in the plate, and prepares to release the shutter, whereupon_
+FLUFF _deliberately rises and presents his tail to the camera_.) I
+presume you do not desiah a _back_ view of the dog, Madam!
+
+[Illustration: "What's she got hold of _now_."]
+
+The E. L. Certainly not! Oh, Fluffy, naughty--naughty! Now lie down
+again, like a good dog. Oh, I'm afraid he's going to sleep!
+
+MR. STIP. If you would kindly take this--ah--toy in your hand, Madam, it
+might rouse him a little.
+
+The E. L. (_exhibiting a gutta-percha rat_). Here, Fluffy, Fluffy,
+_here's_ a pitty sing! What _is_ it, eh!
+
+FLUFF (_after opening one eye_). The old fool fancies she's got a rat!
+Well, she may _keep_ it!
+
+[_He curls himself up again_.
+
+MR. STIP. We must try to obtain more--ah--animation than that.
+
+[_He hands the_ ELDERLY LADY _a jingling toy_.
+
+The E. L. (_shaking it vigorously_). Fluffy, see what Missis has got!
+
+FLUFF _(by a yawn of much eloquence_). At _her_ age, too! Wonderful how
+she can _do_ it!
+
+[_He closes his eyes wearily._
+
+MR. STIP. Perhaps you may produce a better effect with this. [_He hands
+her a stuffed stoat._
+
+FLUFF (_to himself_). What's she got hold of _now_? Hul-lo! (_He rises,
+and inspects the stoat with interest._) I'd no idea the old girl was so
+"varmint"!
+
+MR. STIP. Capital! Now, if he'll stay like that another----(FLUFF
+_jumps down, and wags his tail with conscious merit._) Oh, _dear_ me. I
+never saw such a dog!
+
+The E. L. He's tired out, poor doggie, and no wonder. But he'll be all
+the _quieter_ for it, _won't_ he? (_After restoring_ FLUFF _to the
+chair._) Now, couldn't you take him panting, like that?
+
+MR. STIP. I must wait till he's got a little less tongue out, Madam.
+
+The E. L. Must you? Why? _I_ should have thought it was a capital
+opportunity.
+
+MR. STIP. For a physician, Madam, _not_ a photographer. If I were to
+take him now the result would be an--ah--enormous tongue, with a dog in
+the remote distance.
+
+The E. L. And he's putting out more and more of it! Perhaps he's thirsty
+again. Here, Fluffy, water--water! [_She produces the developing dish._
+
+FLUFF (_in barks of unmistakable significance_). Look here, I've had
+about enough of this tomfoolery. Let's go. _Come_ on!
+
+MR. STIP. (_seconding the motion with relief_). I'm _afraid_ we're not
+likely to do better with him to-day. Perhaps if you could look in some
+othah afternoon?
+
+The E. L. Why, we've only been an hour and twenty minutes as yet! But
+what would be the best time to bring him?
+
+MR. STIP. I should say the light and the temperatuah would probably be
+more favourable by the week aftah next--(_to himself_) when I shall be
+taking my holiday!
+
+The E. L. Very well, I'll come then. Oh, Fluffy, Fluffy, what a silly
+little dog you are to give all this trouble!
+
+FLUFF (_to himself, as he makes a triumphant exit_). Not half so silly
+as some people think! I _must_ tell the cat about this; she'll go into
+fits! I will say she has a considerable sense of humour--for a cat.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+IN THE CAUSE OF CHARITY.
+
+
+_Mona House, the Town Mansion of the Marquis of Manx, which has been
+lent for a Sale of Work in aid of the "Fund for Super-annuated
+Skirt-dancers," under the patronage of Royalty and other distinguished
+personages_.
+
+_In the Entrance Hall._
+
+MRS. WYLIE DEDHEAD (_attempting to insinuate herself between the
+barriers_). Excuse me; I only wanted to pop in for a moment, just to see
+if a lady friend of mine is in there, that's _all_!
+
+The LADY MONEY-TAKER (_blandly_). If you will let me know your friend's
+name--?
+
+MRS. W. D. (_splendide mendax_). She's assisting the dear Duchess.
+_Now_, perhaps, you will allow me to pass!
+
+The L. M. Afraid I can't, really. But if you mean Lady Honor
+Hyndlegges--_she_ is the only lady at the Duchess's stall--I could send
+_in_ for her. Or of course, if you like to pay half-a-crown----
+
+MRS. W. D. (_hastily_). Thank you, I--I won't disturb her
+ladyship. I had no _idea_ there was any charge for admission,
+and--(_bristling_)--allow me to say I consider such regulations _most_
+absurd.
+
+The L. M. (_sweetly, with a half glance at the bowl of coins on the
+table_). Quite _too_ ridiculous, ain't they? _Good_ afternoon!
+
+MRS. W. D. (_audibly, as she flounces out_). If they suppose _I'm_ going
+to pay half-a-crown for the privilege of being _fleeced_----!
+
+FOOTMAN (_on steps, sotto voce, to confrère_). "Fleeced"! that's a good
+'un, eh? _She_ ain't brought much wool in with _her_!
+
+His CONFRÈRE. On'y what's stuffed inside of her ear. [_They resume their
+former impassive dignity._
+
+_In the Venetian Gallery--where the Bazaar is being held._
+
+A LOYAL OLD LADY (_at the top of her voice--to_ STALL-KEEPER). Which of
+'em's the Princess, my dear, eh? It's her I paid _my_ money to see.
+
+The STALL-KEEPER (_in a dismayed whisper_). Ssh! Not _quite_ so loud!
+There--just opposite--petunia bow in her bonnet--selling kittens.
+
+The L. O. L. (_planting herself on a chair_). So _that's_ her! Well, she
+_is_ dressed plain--for a Royalty--but looks _pleasant_ enough. I
+wouldn't mind taking one o' them kittens off her Royal 'Ighness myself,
+if they was going at all reasonable. But there, I expect, the cats
+_'ere_ is meat for my masters, so to speak; and you see, my dear, 'aving
+the promise of a tortoise-shell Tom from the lady as keeps the Dairy
+next door, whenever----
+
+[_She finds, with surprise, that her confidences are not encouraged_.
+
+MISS ST. LEGER DE MAYNE (_persuasively to_ MRS. NIBBLER). Do let me show
+you some of this exquisite work, all embroidered entirely by hand, you
+see!
+
+MRS. NIBBLER (_edging away_). Lovely--_quite_ lovely; but I
+think--a--I'll just take a look round before I----
+
+MISS DE M. If there is any _particular_ thing you were looking for,
+perhaps _I_ could----
+
+MRS. N. (_becoming confidential_). Well, I _did_ think if I could come
+across a nice _sideboard-cloth_----
+
+MISS DE M. (_to herself_). What on earth's a sideboard-cloth? (_Aloud._)
+Why, I've the very _thing_! See--all worked in Russian stitch!
+
+MRS. N. (_dubiously_). I thought they were always quite plain. And
+what's that queer sort of flap-thing for?
+
+MISS DE M. Oh, _that_? That's--a--to cover up the spoons, and forks,
+and things; quite the latest fashion, _now_, you know.
+
+MRS. N. (_with self-assertion_). I _have_ noticed it at several dinner
+parties I've been to in society lately, certainly. Still I am not sure
+that----
+
+MISS DE M. I always have them on my _own_ sideboard now--my husband
+won't _hear_ of any others.... Then, I _may_ put this one in paper for
+you? fifteen-and-sixpence--thanks _so_ much! (_To her colleague, as_
+Mrs. N. _departs_). Connie, I've got rid of that awful nightgown case at
+_last_!
+
+MRS. MAYCUP. A--you _don't_ happen to have a small bag to hold a
+powder-puff, and so on, you know?
+
+MISS DE M. I _had_ some very pretty ones; but I'm afraid they're
+all--oh, no, there's just _one_ left--crimson velvet and real
+_passementerie_. (_She produces a bag_). Too trotty for words, isn't it?
+
+MRS. MAYCUP (_tacitly admitting its trottiness_). But then--that sort of
+purse shape----Could I get a small pair of folding curling-irons into
+it, should you think, at a pinch?
+
+MISS DE M. You could get _anything_ into it--at a pinch. I've one myself
+which will hold--well, I can't tell you what it _won't_ hold!
+Half-a-guinea--so _many_ thanks! (_To herself, as_ MRS. MAYCUP _carries
+off her_ _bag_.) What _would_ the vicar's wife say if she knew I'd sold
+her church collection bag for _that_! But it's all in a good cause!
+(_An_ ELDERLY LADY _comes up_.) May I show you some of these----?
+
+The ELDERLY LADY. Well, I was wondering if you had such a thing as a
+good warm pair of sleeping socks; because, these bitter nights, I do
+find I suffer so from cold in my feet.
+
+MISS DE M. (_with effusion_). Ah, then I can _feel_ for you--so do _I_!
+At least, I _used_ to before I tried--(_To herself._) Where _is_ that
+pair of thick woollen driving-gloves? Ah, _I_ know. (_Aloud._)--these.
+I've found them _such_ a comfort!
+
+The E. L. (_suspiciously_). They have rather a queer----And then they
+are divided at the ends, too.
+
+MISS DE M. Oh, haven't you seen _those_ before? Doctors consider them so
+much healthier, don't you know.
+
+The E. L. I daresay they are, my dear. But aren't the--(_with delicate
+embarrassment_)--the separated parts rather long?
+
+MISS DE M. Do you _think_ so? They allow so much more freedom, you see;
+and then, of course, they'll shrink.
+
+The E. L. That's true, my dear. Well, I'll take a pair, as you recommend
+them so strongly.
+
+MISS DE M. I'm quite _sure_ you'll never regret it!
+
+(_To herself, as the_ E. L. _retires, charmed_.) I'd give _anything_ to
+see the poor old thing trying to put them on!
+
+MISS MIMOSA TENDRILL (_to herself_). I do so _hate_ hawking this horrid
+old thing about! (_Forlornly, to_ MRS. ALLBUTT-INNETT.) I--I beg your
+pardon; but _will_ you give me ten-and-sixpence for this lovely
+work-basket?
+
+MRS. ALLBUTT-INNETT. My good girl, let me tell you I've been pestered to
+buy that identical basket at every bazaar I've set foot in for the last
+twelve-month, and how you can have the face to ask ten-and-six for
+it--you must think I've more money than wit!
+
+MISS TENDR. (_abashed_). Well--_eighteenpence_ then? (_To herself, as_
+Mrs. A. I. _closes promptly_.) There, I've sold _something_, anyhow!
+
+The HON. DIANA D'AUTENBAS (_to herself_). It's rather fun selling at a
+Bazaar; one can let oneself _go_ so much more! (_To the first man she
+meets._) I'm sure you'll buy one of my buttonholes--now _won't_ you? If
+I fasten it in for you myself?
+
+MR. CADNEY ROWSER. A button'ole, eh? Think I'm not classy enough as I
+am?
+
+MISS D'AUT. I don't think _anyone_ could accuse you of not being
+"_classy_;" still a flower would just give the finishing-touch.
+
+MR. C. R. (_modestly_). Rats!--if you'll pass the reedom. But you've
+such a way with you that--there--'ow much.
+
+MISS D'AUT. Only five shillings. Nothing to _you_!
+
+MR. C. R. Five bob? You're a artful girl, _you_ are! "_Fang de
+Seakale_," and no error! But I'm _on_ it; it's worth the money to 'ave a
+flower fastened in by such fair 'ands. I won't 'owl--not even if you
+_do_ run a pin into me.... What? You ain't done a'ready! No _'urry_, yer
+know.... 'Ere, won't you come along to the refreshment-stall, and 'ave a
+little something at my expense. Do!
+
+MISS D'AUT. I think you must imagine you are talking to a barmaid!
+
+MR. C. R. (_with gallantry_). I on'y wish barmaids was 'alf as pleasant
+and sociable as _you_, Miss. But they're a precious stuck-up lot, _I_
+can assure you!
+
+MISS D'AUT. (_to herself as she escapes_). I suppose one ought to put up
+with this sort of thing--for a charity!
+
+MRS. BABBICOMBE (_at the Toy Stall, to the Belle of the Bazaar, aged
+three-and-a-half_). You _perfect_ duck! You're simply too _sweet_! I
+_must_ find you something. (_She tempers generosity with discretion by
+presenting her with a small pair of knitted doll's socks_.) There,
+darling!
+
+The BELLE'S MOTHER. What do you say to the kind lady _now_, Marjory?
+
+MARJORY (_a practical young person, to the donor_). Now div me a dolly
+to put ve socks on.
+
+[MRS. B. _finds herself obliged to repair this omission_.
+
+A YOUNG LADY RAFFLER (_to a_ YOUNG MAN). Do take a ticket for this
+charmin' _sachet_. Only half-a-crown!
+
+The YOUNG MAN. Delighted! If you'll put in for this _splendid_ cigar
+cabinet. Two shillin's!
+
+[_The_ YOUNG LADY _realises that she has encountered an Augur, and
+passes on_.
+
+MISS DE. M. (_to_ MR. ISTHMIAN GATWICK). Can't I tempt you with this
+tea-cosy? It's so absurdly cheap!
+
+MR. ISTHMIAN GATWICK (_with dignity_). A-thanks; I think not. Never
+_take_ tea, don't you know.
+
+MISS DE M. (_with her characteristic adaptability_). Really? No more do
+_I_. But you _could_ use it as a _smoking-cap_, you know. _I_ always----
+
+[_Recollects herself, and breaks off in confusion_.
+
+[Illustration: "You have lofty ambitions and the artistic
+temperament."]
+
+MISS OPHELIA PALMER (_in the "Wizard's Cave"--to_ MR. CADNEY ROWSER).
+Yes, your hand indicates an intensely refined and spiritual nature; you
+are perhaps a _little_ too indifferent to your personal comfort where
+that of others is concerned; sensitive--too much so for your own
+happiness, perhaps--you feel things keenly when you _do_ feel them. You
+have lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament--seven-and-sixpence,
+please.
+
+MR. C. R. (_impressed_). Well, Miss, if you can read all that for
+seven-and-six on the palm of my 'and, I wonder what you _wouldn't_ see
+for 'alf a quid on the sole o' my boot!
+
+[MISS P.'S _belief in Chiromancy sustains a severe shock_.
+
+BOBBIE PATTERSON (_outside tent, as Showman_). This way to the
+Marvellous Jumping Bean from Mexico! Threepence!
+
+VOICE FROM TENT. Bobbie! Stop! The Bean's _lost_! Lady Honor's horrid
+Thought-reading Poodle has just stepped in and swallowed it.
+
+BOBBIE. Ladies and Gentlemen, owing to sudden domestic calamity, the
+Bean has been unavoidably compelled to retire, and will be unable to
+appear till further notice.
+
+MISS SMYLIE (_to_ MR. OTIS BARLEYWATER, _who--in his own set--is
+considered "almost equal to Corney Grain"_). I thought you were giving
+your entertainment in the library? Why _aren't_ you?
+
+MR. OTIS BARLEYWATER (_in a tone of injury_). Why? Because I can't give my
+imitations of Arthur Roberts and Yvette Guilbert with anything _like_
+the requisite "go," unless I get a better audience than three
+programme-sellers, all under ten, and the cloak-room maid--_that's_ why!
+
+MRS. ALLBUTT-INNETT (_as she leaves, for the benefit of bystanders_). I
+must say, the house is _most_ disappointing--not at _all_ what I should
+expect a _Marquis_ to live in. Why, my _own_ reception-rooms are very
+nearly as large, and decorated in a much more modern style!
+
+BOBBIE PATTERSON (_to a_ "DOOSID GOOD-NATURED FELLOW, _who doesn't care
+what he does," and whom he has just discovered inside a case got up to
+represent an automatic sweetmeat machine_). Why, my dear old _chap_! No
+idea it was _you_ inside that thing! Enjoying yourself in there, eh?
+
+The DOOSID GOOD-NATURED FELLOW (_fluffily, from the interior_). Enjoying
+myself! With the beastly pennies droppin' down into my boots, and the
+kids howlin' because all the confounded chocolates have worked up
+between my shoulder-blades, and I can't shake 'em out of the slit in my
+arm? I'd like to see _you_ tryin' it!
+
+The L. O. L. (_to a stranger, who is approaching the_ _Princess's
+stall_). 'Ere, Mister, where are your manners? 'Ats off in the presence
+o' Royalty!
+
+[_She pokes him in the back with her umbrella; the stranger turns,
+smiles slightly, and passes on._
+
+A WELL-INFORMED BYSTANDER. You are evidently unaware, Madam, that the
+gentleman you have just addressed is His Serene Highness the Prince of
+Potsdam!
+
+The L. O. L. (_aghast_). Her '_usban_'! And me a jobbin' of 'im with my
+umbrella! 'Ere, let me get out!
+
+[_She staggers out, in deadly terror of being sent to the Tower on the
+spot._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE CLASSICAL SCHOLAR IN REDUCED CIRCUMSTANCES.
+
+
+You are, let us say, a young professional man in chambers or offices,
+incompetently guarded by an idiot boy whom you dare not trust with the
+responsibility of denying you to strangers. You hear a knock at your
+outer door, followed by conversation in the clerk's room, after which
+your salaried idiot announces "A Gentleman to see you." Enter a dingy
+and dismal little man in threadbare black, who advances with an air of
+mysterious importance. "I think," he begins, "I 'ave the pleasure of
+speaking to Mr.----" (_whatever your name is_.) "I take the liberty of
+calling, Mr.----, to consult you on a matter of the utmost importance,
+and I shall feel personally obliged if you will take precautions for our
+conversation not being over'eard."
+
+He looks grubby for a client--but appearances are deceptive, and you
+offer him a seat, assuring him that he may speak with perfect
+security--whereupon he proceeds in a lowered voice.
+
+"The story I am about to reveal," he says, smoothing a slimy tall hat,
+"is of a nature so revolting, so 'orrible in its details, that I can
+'ardly bring myself to speak it to any 'uming ear!" (_Here you will
+probably prepare to take notes._) "You see before you one who is of 'igh
+birth but low circumstances!" (_At this you give him up as a possible
+client, but a mixture of diffidence and curiosity compels you to
+listen._) "Yes, Sir, I was '_ fruges consumeary nati_.' I 'ave received
+a neducation more befitting a dook than my present condition. Nursed in
+the lap of haffluence, I was trained to fill the lofty position which
+was to have been my lot. But, '_necessitas_,' Sir, as you are aware,
+'_necessitas non abat lejim_,' and such I found it. While still
+receiving a classical education at Cambridge College--(praps you are
+yourself an alumbus of _Halma Mater_? No? I apologise, Sir, I'm
+sure)--but while preparing to take my honorary degree, my father
+suddenly enounced the horful news that he was a bankrup'. Stript of all
+we possessed, we were turned out of our sumchuous 'ome upon the cold
+world, my father's grey 'airs were brought down sorrowing to sangwidge
+boards, though he is still sangwin of paying off his creditors in time
+out of what he can put by from his scanty hearnings. My poor dear
+Mother--a lady born and bred--sank by slow degrees to a cawfy-stall,
+which is now morgidged to the 'ilt, and my eldest Sister, a lovely and
+accomplished gairl, was 'artlessly thrown over by a nobleman, to 'oom
+she was engaged to be married, before our reverses overtook us. His name
+the delikit hinstinks of a gentleman will forbid you to inquire, as
+likewise me to mention--enough to 'int that he occupies a prominent
+position amongst the hupper circles of Society, and is frequently to be
+met with in the papers. His faithlessness preyed on my Sister's mind to
+that degree, that she is now in the Asylum, a nopeless maniac! My honely
+Brother was withdrawn from 'Arrow, and now 'as the 'yumiliation of
+selling penny toys on the kerbstone to his former playfellers. '_Tantee
+nannymice salestibus hiræ_,' indeed, Sir!
+
+"But you ask what befell myself." (_You have not--for the simple reason
+that, even if you desired information, he has given you no chance, as
+yet, of putting in a word._) "Ah, Sir, there you 'ave me on a tender
+point. '_Hakew tetigisti_,' if I may venture once more upon a scholarly
+illusion. But I 'ave resolved to conceal nothing--and you shall 'ear.
+For a time I obtained employment as Seckertary and Imanuensis to a
+young baranit, 'oo had been the bosom friend of my College days. He
+would, I know, have used his influence with Goverment to obtain me a
+lucritive post; but, alas, ere he could do so, unaired sheets, coupled
+with deliket 'elth, took him off premature, and I was once more thrown
+on my own resources.
+
+"In conclusion, Sir, you 'ave doubtless done me the hinjustice to
+expect, from all I 'ave said, that my hobjick in obtaining this
+interview was to ask you for pecuniary assistance?" (_Here you reflect
+with remorse that a suspicion to this effect has certainly crossed your
+mind._) "Nothing of the sort or kind, I do assure you. A little 'uming
+sympathy, the relief of pouring out my sorrers upon a feeling 'art, a
+few kind encouraging words, is all I arsk, and that, Sir, the first
+sight of your kind friendly face told me I should not lack. Pore as I
+am, I still 'ave my pride, the pride of a English gentleman, and if you
+was to orfer me a sovereign as you sit there, I should fling it in the
+fire--ah, I _should_--'urt and indignant at the hinsult!" (_Here you
+will probably assure him that you have no intention of outraging his
+feelings in any such manner._) "No, and _why_, Sir? Because you 'ave a
+gentlemanly 'art, and if you were to make sech a orfer, you would do it
+in a kindly Christian spirit which would rob it of all offence. There's
+not many as I would bring myself to accept a paltry sovereign from, but
+I dunno--I might from one like yourself--I _might_. _Ord hignara mali,
+miseris succur-reary disco_, as the old philosopher says. You 'ave that
+kind of _way_ with you." (_You mildly intimate that he is mistaken here,
+and take the opportunity of touching the bell_.) "No, Sir, don't be
+untrue to your better himpulses. '_Ave_ a feelin 'art, Sir! Don't send
+me away, after allowing me to waste my time 'ere--which is of value _to
+me_, let me tell yer, whatever _yours_ is!--like this!.... Well, well,
+there's 'ard people in this world? I'm _going_, Sir ... I 'ave
+sufficient dignity to take a'int.... You 'aven't got even a trifle to
+spare an old University Scholar in redooced circumstances then?... Ah,
+it's easy to see you ain't been at a University yourself--you ain't got
+the _hair_ of it! Farewell, Sir, and may your lot in life be 'appier
+than----All right, don't _hexcite_ yourself. I've bin mistook in yer,
+that's all. I thought you was as soft-edded a young mug as you look.
+Open that door, will yer; I want to get out of this 'ole!"
+
+Here he leaves you with every indication of disgust and disappointment,
+and you will probably hear him indulging in unclassical vituperation on
+the landing.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+RUS IN URBE.
+
+(A SKETCH IN REGENT'S PARK.)
+
+
+_A railed-in corner of the Park. TIME--About 7 p.m. Inside the enclosure
+three shepherds are engaged in shearing the park sheep. The first
+shepherd has just thrown his patient on its back, gripped its shoulders
+between his knees, and tucked its head, as a tiresome and obstructive
+excrescence, neatly away under one of his arms, while he reaches for the
+shears. The second is straddled across his animal, which is lying with
+its hind legs hobbled on a low stage under an elm, in a state of stoical
+resignation, as its fleece is deftly nipped from under its chin. The
+third operator has almost finished his sheep, which, as its dark grey
+fleece slips away from its pink-and-white neck and shoulders, suggests a
+rather décolletée dowager in the act of removing her theatre-cloak in
+the stalls. Sheep, already shorn, lie and pant in shame and shivering
+bewilderment, one or two nibble the blades of grass, as if to assure
+themselves that that resource is still open to them. Sheep whose turn is
+still to come are penned up at the back, and look on, scandalised, but
+with an air which seems to express that their own superior
+respectability is a sufficient protection against similar outrage. The
+shearers appear to take a humorous view of their task, and are watched
+by a crowd which has collected round the railings, with an agreeable
+assurance that they are not expected to contribute towards the
+entertainment._
+
+FIRST WORK-GIRL (_edging up_). Whatever's goin' on inside 'ere? (_After
+looking--disappointed._) Why they ain't on'y a lot o' sheep! I thought
+it was Reciters, or somethink o' that.
+
+SECOND WORK-GIRL (_with irony_). They _look_ like Reciters, don't they!
+It do seem a shime cuttin' them poor things as close as convicks, that
+it do!
+
+FIRST W.-G. They don't mind it partickler; you'd 'ear 'em 'oller fast
+enough if they did.
+
+SECOND W.-G. I expeck they feel so redic'lus, they 'aven't the 'art to
+'oller.
+
+LUCILLA (_to GEORGE_). Do look at that one going up and sniffing at the
+bundle of fleeces, trying to find out which is his. _Isn't_ it pathetic?
+
+GEORGE. H'm--puts one in mind of a shy man in a cloak-room after a
+party, saying feebly, "I rather think that's _my_ coat, and there's a
+crush hat of mine _somewhere_ about," eh?
+
+LUCILLA (_who is always wishing that GEORGE would talk more sensibly_).
+Considering that sheep don't _wear_ crush hats, I hardly see how----
+
+GEORGE. My dear, I bow to your superior knowledge of natural history.
+Now you mention it, I believe it _is_ unusual. But I merely meant to
+suggest a general resemblance.
+
+[Illustration: "They ain't on'y a lot o' sheep! I thought it was
+Reciters, or somethink o' that."]
+
+LUCILLA (_reprovingly_). I know. And you've got into such a silly habit
+of seeing resemblances in things that are perfectly different. I'm sure
+I'm _always_ telling you of it.
+
+GEORGE. You are, my dear. But I'm not nearly so bad as I _was_. Think of
+all the things I used to compare _you_ to before we were married!
+
+SARAH JANE (_to her TROOPER_). I could stand an' look at 'em hours, I
+could. I was born and bred in the country, and it do seem to bring back
+my old 'ome that plain.
+
+Her TROOPER. I'm country bred too, though yer mightn't think it. But
+there ain't much in sheep shearin' to _my_ mind. If it was _pig
+killin'_, now!
+
+SARAH JANE. Ah, that's along o' your bein' in the milingtary, I expect.
+
+Her TROOPER. No, it ain't that. It's the reckerlections it 'ud call up.
+I 'ad a 'ole uncle a pork-butcher, d'ye see, and (_with sentiment_) many
+and many a 'appy hour I've spent as a boy----[_He indulges in tender
+reminiscences._
+
+A YOUNG CLERK (_who belongs to a Literary Society, to his FIANCÉE_). It
+has a wonderfully rural look--quite like a scene in 'Ardy, isn't it?
+
+His FIANCÉE (_who has "no time for reading rubbish"_). I daresay; though
+I've never been there myself.
+
+The CLERK. Never been? Oh, I see. _You_ thought I said _Arden_--the
+Forest of Arden, in Shakspeare, didn't you?
+
+His FIANCÉE. Isn't that where Mr. Gladstone lives, and goes cutting down
+the trees in?
+
+The CLERK. No; At least it's spelt different. But it was 'Ardy _I_
+meant. _Far from the Madding Crowd_, you know.
+
+His FIANCÉE (_with a vague view to the next Bank Holiday_). What do you
+_call_ "far"--farther than _Margate_?
+
+ [_Her companion has a sense of discouragement._
+
+An ARTISAN (_to a neighbour in broadcloth and a white choker_). It's
+wonderful 'ow they can go so close without 'urtin' of 'em, ain't it?
+
+His NEIGHBOUR (_with unction_). Ah, my friend, it on'y shows 'ow true it
+is that 'eving tempers the shears for the shorn lambs!
+
+A GOVERNESS (_instructively, to her charge_). Don't you think you ought
+to be very grateful to that poor sheep, Ethel, for giving up her nice
+warm fleece on purpose to make a frock for _you_?
+
+ETHEL (_doubtfully_). Y--yes, Miss Mavor. But (_with a fear that some
+reciprocity may be expected of her_) she's too big for any of my _best_
+frocks, _isn't_ she?
+
+FIRST URCHIN (_perched on the railings_). Ain't that 'un a-kicking? 'E
+don't like 'aving _'is_ 'air cut, 'e don't, no more shouldn't I if it
+was me.... 'E's bin an' upset 'is bloke on the grorss, now! Look at the
+bloke layin' there larfin'.... 'E's ketched 'im agin now. See 'im
+landin' 'im a smack on the 'ed; that'll learn 'im to stay quiet, eh?
+'E's strong, ain't 'e?
+
+SECOND URCHIN. Rams is the wust, though, 'cause they got 'orns, rams
+'ave.
+
+FIRST URCH. What, same as goats?
+
+SECOND URCH. (_emphatically_). Yuss! Big crooked 'uns. And runs at yer,
+they do.
+
+FIRST URCH. I wish they was rams in 'ere. See all them sheep waitin' to
+be done. I wonder what they're finkin' of.
+
+SECOND URCH. Ga-arn! They _don't_ fink, sheep don't.
+
+FIRST URCH. Not o' anyfink?
+
+SECOND URCH. Na-ow! They ain't got nuffink to fink _about_, sheep ain't.
+
+FIRST URCH. I lay they _do_ fink, 'orf and on.
+
+SECOND URCH. Well, I lay _you_ never see 'em doin' of it!
+
+ [_And so on. The first Shepherd disrobes his sheep, and
+ dismisses it with a disrespectful spank. After which he
+ proceeds to refresh himself from a brown jar, and hands it to
+ his comrades. The spectators look on with deeper interest, and
+ discuss the chances of the liquid being beer, cider, or cold
+ tea, as the scene closes._
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CATCHING THE EARLY BOAT.
+
+
+_In Bed; At the Highland Hotel, Oban._
+
+What an extraordinary thing is the mechanism of the human mind! Went to
+sleep last night impressed with vital importance of waking at six, to
+catch early steamer to Gairloch. And here I am--broad awake--at exactly
+5.55! Is it automatic action, or what? Like setting clockwork for
+explosive machine. When the time comes, I blow up--I mean, _get_ up.
+Think out this simile--rather a good one.... Need not have been so
+particular in telling Boots to call me, after all. Shall I get up
+_before_ he comes? He'll be rather surprised when he knocks at the door,
+and hears me singing inside like a lark. But, on reflection, isn't it
+rather _petty_ to wish to astonish an hotel Boots? And why on earth
+should I get up myself, when I've tipped another fellow to get me up?
+But suppose he forgets to call me. I've no right, as yet, to _assume_
+that he will. To get up now would argue want of confidence in
+him--might hurt his feelings. I will give him another five minutes, poor
+fellow....
+
+_Getting up._--No actual necessity to get up yet, but, to make assurance
+doubly--something or other, forget what--I will ... I do. Portmanteau
+rather refractory; retreats under bed--quite ten minutes before I can
+coax it out.... When I have, it won't let me pack it. That's the worst
+of this breed of brown portmanteaus--they're always nasty-tempered.
+However, I am getting a few things into it now, by degrees. Very
+annoying--as fast as I put them in, this confounded portmanteau shoots
+them out again! If I've put in that pair of red and white striped
+pyjamas once, I've done it twenty times--and they always come twisting
+and rolling out of the back, somehow. Fortunate I left myself ample
+time.
+
+Man next door to me is running it rather fine. _He_ has to catch the
+boat, too, and he's not up yet! Hear the Boots hammering away at his
+door. How _can_ a fellow, just for the sake of a few more minutes in
+bed--which he won't even know he's _had_!--go and risk losing his
+steamer in that way? I'll do him a good turn--knock at the wall myself.
+"Hi! get up, you lazy beggar. Look sharp--you'll be late!" He thanks
+me, in a muffled tone, through the wall. He is a remarkably quick
+dresser, he tells me--it won't take him thirty-five seconds to pack,
+dress, pay his bill, and get on board. If that's the case, I don't see
+why _I_ should hurry. I've got much more than that _already_.
+
+_At the Quay._--People in Oban stare a good deal. Can't quite make out
+reason, unless they're surprised to find me up so early. Explain that I
+got up without having even been called. Oban populace mildly surprised,
+and offer me neckties--_Why?_
+
+Fine steamer this; has a paddle-wheel at _both_ ends--"because," the
+Captain explains, "she has not only to _go_ to Gairloch--but come back
+as well."
+
+First-rate navigator, the Captain; he has written my weight, the date of
+my last birthday, and the number of the house I live in, down in a sort
+of ledger he keeps. He does this with all his passengers, he tells me,
+reduces the figures to logarithms, and works out the ship's course in
+decimals. No idea there was so much science in modern seamanship.
+
+_On Board._--Great advantage of being so early is that you can breakfast
+quietly on deck before starting. Have mine on bridge of steamer, under
+awning; everything very good--ham-méringues _excellent_. No coffee,
+but, instead, a capital brand of dry, sparkling marmalade, served,
+sailor-fashion, in small pomatum-pots.
+
+What a small world we live in! Of all people in the world, who should be
+sitting next to me but my Aunt Maria! I was always under the impression
+that she had died in my infancy. Don't like to mention this, because if
+I am _wrong_, she might be offended. But if she _did_ die when I was a
+child, she ought to be a much older woman than she looks. I _do_ tell
+her this--because it is really a compliment.
+
+My Aunt, evidently an experienced traveller, never travels, she informs
+me, without a pair of globes and a lawn-mower. She offers, very kindly,
+to lend me the Celestial globe, if the weather is at all windy. This is
+behaving _like_ an Aunt!
+
+We are taking in live-stock; curious-looking creatures, like spotted
+pug-dogs (only bigger and woollier, of course) and without horns.
+Somebody leaning over the rail next to me (I _think_ he is the Public
+Prosecutor, but am not quite sure), tells me they are "Scotch
+Shortbreads." Agreeable man, but rather given to staring.
+
+Didn't observe it before, but my Aunt is really amazingly like Mr.
+Gladstone. Ask her to explain this. She is much distressed that I have
+noticed it; says she has felt it coming on for some time; it is not, as
+she justly complains, as if she took any interest in politics either.
+She has consulted every doctor in London, and they all tell her it is
+simply weakness, and she will outgrow it with care. Singular case--must
+find out (delicately) whether it's catching.
+
+We ought to be starting soon; feel quite fresh and lively, in spite of
+having got up so early. Mention this to Captain. Wish he and the Public
+Prosecutor wouldn't stare at me so. Just as if there was something
+singular in my appearance!
+
+They're embarking my portmanteau now. Knew they would have a lively time
+of it! It takes at least four sailors, in kilts, to manage it. Ought I
+to step ashore and quiet it down? Stay where I am. Don't know why, but
+feel a little afraid of it when it's like this. Shall exchange it for a
+quiet hand-bag when I get home.
+
+Captain busy hammering at a hole in the funnel--dangerous place to
+spring a leak in--hope he is making it water-tight. The hammering
+reminds me of that poor devil in the bedroom next to mine at the hotel.
+_He_ won't catch the boat now--he _can't_! My Aunt (who has left off
+looking like Mr. Gladstone) asks me why I am laughing. I tell her about
+that unfortunate man and his "thirty-five seconds." She screams with
+laughter. Very humorous woman, my Aunt.
+
+Deck crowded with passengers now: all pointing and staring ... at whom?
+Ask Aunt Maria. She declines to tell me: says, severely, that "If I
+don't know, I ought to."
+
+Great Heavens! It's at _me_ they're staring! And no wonder--in the hurry
+I was in, I must have packed _everything_ up!... I've come away just as
+I was! _Now_ I understand why someone offered me a necktie. Where shall
+I go and hide myself? Shall I ever persuade that beast of a portmanteau
+to give me out one or two things to put on--because I really _can't_ go
+about like this! Captain still hammering at funnel--but he can't wake
+that sleepy-headed idiot in the next room. "Louder--knock _louder_, or
+the boat will go without him! Tell him there isn't another for two days.
+He's said good-bye to everybody he knows at Oban--he will look such an
+ass if he doesn't go, after all!"... Not the least use! Wonder what his
+name is. My Aunt says _she_ knows, only she won't tell me--she'll
+whisper it, as a great secret. She is just about to disclose the name,
+which, somehow, I am extremely curious to know--when ...
+
+Where am I? Haven't they got that unhappy fellow up _yet_? Why the
+dickens are they knocking at _my_ door? I've been on board the steamer
+for hours, I tell you? Eh? _what?_ Five minutes to eight! And the
+Gairloch boat? "Sailed at usual time--seven. Tried to make you hear--but
+couldn't."... Confound it all! Good mind not to get up all day--now!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+SOCIETY'S NEXT CRAZE.
+
+(AS FORESEEN BY MR. PUNCH'S SECOND-SIGHTED CLAIRVOYANT.)
+
+
+_It is the summer of 189-. The scene is a road skirting Victoria Park,
+Bethnal Green, which Society's leaders have recently discovered and
+appointed as the rendez-vous for the Season, and where it is now the
+correct thing for all really smart people to indulge, between certain
+prescribed hours, in sports and pastimes that have hitherto been more
+characteristic of the masses than the classes. The only permissible
+mount now is the donkey, which must be ridden close to the tail, and
+referred to as a "moke." A crowd of well-turned-out spectators arrives
+from the West End every morning about eleven to watch the brilliant
+parade of "Mokestrians" (as the Society journalist will already have
+decided to call them). Some drive slowly up and down on coster-barrows,
+attended by cockaded and disgusted grooms. About twelve, they break up
+into light luncheon parties; after which they play democratic games for
+half an hour or so, and drive home on drags._
+
+MR. WOODBY-INNETT (_to the DONKEY PROPRIETOR_). Kept a moke for me? I
+told you I should be wantin' one every mornin' now.
+
+The DONKEY PROPRIETOR (_after consulting engagement book_). I've not got
+it down on my list, Sir. Very sorry, but the Countess of Cumberback has
+just booked the last for the 'ole of this week. Might let you 'ave one
+by-and-by, if Sir Hascot Goodwood brings his in punctual, but I can't
+promise it.
+
+MR. WOODBY-INN. That's no good; no point in ridin' after the right time.
+(_To himself, as he turns away._) Nuisance! Not that I'm so keen about a
+moke. Not a patch on a bike!--though it don't do to say so. Only if I'd
+known this, I'd have turned up in a tall hat and frock coat; and then I
+could have taken a turn on the steam-circus. Wonder if it would be any
+sort of form shyin' at cocoa-nuts in tweeds and a straw hat. Must ask
+some chap who knows. More puzzlin' what to put on this year than ever!
+
+LADY RANELA HURLINGHAM (_breathlessly to DONKEY PROPRIETOR_). That's
+mine, isn't it? Will you please put me up, and _promise_ me you'll keep
+close behind and make him run. (_Suppliantly._) You will, _won't_ you?
+
+The DONKEY PROPRIETOR (_with a due sense of his own value_). Well, I
+dessay I can come along presently, Lady 'Urlingham, and fetch 'im a
+whack or two; jest now I can't, having engaged to come and 'old the
+Marshiness of 'Ammercloth on _'er_ moke; but there, you orter be able
+to git along well enough by yourself now--_you_ ought!
+
+[Illustration: "Mokestrians."]
+
+CAPTAIN SONBYRNE (_just home on leave from India--to MRS.
+CHESHAM-LOWNDES_). Rather an odd sort of idea this--I mean, coming all
+the way out here to ride a lot of donkeys, eh?
+
+MRS. CHESHAM-LOWNDES. It used to be rather amusing a month ago, before
+they all got used to riding so near the tail; but now they're all so
+good at it, don't you know.
+
+CAPT. SONB. I went down to Battersea Park yesterday to see the
+bicyclists. Not a soul there, give you my word!
+
+MRS. C.-L. No; there _wouldn't_ be _this_ season. You see, all sorts and
+conditions of people began to take it up, and it got too fearfully
+common. And now moke-riding has quite cut it out.
+
+CAPT. SONB. But why ride donkeys when you can get gees?
+
+MRS. C.-L. Oh, well, they're democratic, and cheap, and all that, don't
+you know. And one really can't be _seen_ on a horse this year--in town,
+at least. In the country it don't matter so much.
+
+FIRST MOKESTRIAN (_to second ditto_). Hullo, old chap, so _you_'ve taken
+to a moke at last, eh? How are you gettin' on?
+
+SECOND MOKESTRIAN. Pretty well. I can sit on his tail all right now, but
+I can't get into the way of keepin' my heels off the ground yet, it's so
+beastly difficult.
+
+_Fragments from_ SPECTATORS. That's rather a smart barrow Lady
+Barinrayne's drivin' to-day.... Who's the fellow with her, with the
+paper feather in his pot-hat? Bad style, _I_ call it.... That's Lord
+Freddy Fugleman--best dressed man in London. You'll see everybody
+turnin' up in a paper feather in a day or two.... Lot of men seem to be
+using a short clay as a cigarette-holder now, don't they?... Yes, Roddie
+Rippingill introduced the idea last week, and it seems to have caught
+on. [_&c._, _&c._]
+
+
+_After Luncheon; at the Steam-Circus and other Sports._
+
+_Scraps of Small-talk._ No end sorry, Lady Gwendolen; been tryin' to get
+you a scent-squirt everywhere; but they're all gone; such a run on 'em
+for Ascot, don't you know.... Thanks; it doesn't matter; only dear Lady
+Buckram has just thrown some red ochre down the back of my neck, and
+Algy Vere came and shot out a coloured paper thing right in my face, and
+I shouldn't like to seem uncivil.... Suppose I shall see you at Lady
+Brabazon's "Kiss in the Ring" at Bethnal Green to-morrow afternoon?...
+I believe she _did_ send us cards, but we promised to look in at a
+friendly lead the Duchess of Dillwater is giving at such a dear little
+public she's discovered in Whitechapel, so we may be rather late....
+You'll keep a handkerchief-throw for me if you _do_ come on, won't
+you?... It will have to be an _extra_, then, I'm afraid.... Are you
+goin' to Lord Balmisyde's eight o'clock breakfast to-morrow? _So_ glad;
+I hear he's engaged five coffee-stalls, and we're all to stand up and
+eat saveloys and trotters and thick bread and butter.... Oh, I wanted to
+ask you, my girls have got an invitation to a hoky-poky party the
+Vavasours are giving after the moke-ridin' next Thursday, and I'm told
+it's quite wrong to eat hoky-poky with a spoon--do you know how that
+is?... The only _correct_ way, Caroline, is to lick it out of the glass,
+which requires practice before it can be _attempted_ in public. But I
+hear there's quite a pleasant boy-professor somewhere in the Mile End
+Road who teaches it in a single lesson; he's _very_ moderate; his terms
+are only half a guinea, which includes the hoky-poky. I'll send you his
+address if I can find it.... Thanks _so_ much; the dear girls _will_ be
+so grateful to you.... I _do_ think it's _quite_ too bad of Lady
+Geraldine Grabber, she goes and sticks her card on the only decent
+wooden horse in the steam-circus and says she's engaged it for the whole
+time, though she hardly ever takes a round! And so many girls standing
+out who can ride without getting in the _least_ giddy!... Rathah a
+boundah, that fellow, if you ask me; I've _seen_ him pullin' a swing
+boat in brown boots and ridin'-breeches!... How wonderfully well your
+daughter throws the rings, dear Lady Cornelia, I hear she's won three
+walking-sticks and five clasp knives.... You're very kind. She is quite
+clever at it; but then she's had some private coaching from a gipsy,
+don't you know.... What are you going to do with yourself this
+afternoon?... Oh, I'm going to the People's Palace to see the finals
+played off for the Skittles Championship; bound to be a closish thing;
+rather excitin', don't you know.... Ah, Duchess, you've been in form
+to-day, I see, five cocoa-nuts! Can I relieve you of some of them?...
+Thanks, they _are_ rather tiresome to carry; if you _could_ find my
+carriage and tell the footman to keep his eye on them. [_&c._, _&c._]
+
+LADY ROSEHUGH (_to MR. LUKE WALMER, on the way home_). You know I _do_
+think it's _such_ a cheering sign of the times, Society getting simpler
+in its tastes, and sharing the pleasures of the Dear People, and all
+that; it must tend to bring all classes more _together_, don't you know!
+
+MR. LUKE WALMER. Perhaps. Only I was thinking, I don't remember seeing
+any of the Dear People _about_.
+
+LADY ROSEHUGH. No; somebody was telling me they had taken to playing
+Polo on bicycles in Hyde Park. So extraordinary of them--such a pity
+they haven't some higher form of amusement, you know!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+AN IDEAL INTERVIEWER.
+
+
+_Den of Latest Lion._
+
+LATEST LION (_perusing card with no visible signs of gratification_).
+Confound it! don't remember telling the Editor of _Park Lane_ I'd let
+myself be interviewed. Suppose I must have, though. (_Aloud to SERVANT,
+who is waiting._) You can show the Gentleman up.
+
+SERVANT (_returning_). Mr. Walsingham Jermyn!
+
+ [_A youthful Gentleman is shown in; he wears a pink-striped
+ shirt-front, an enormous buttonhole, and a woolly frock-coat,
+ and is altogether most expensively and fashionably attired,
+ which, however, does not prevent him from appearing somewhat
+ out of countenance after taking a seat._
+
+The L. L. (_encouragingly_). I presume, Mr. Jermyn, you're here to ask
+me some questions about the future of the British East African Company,
+and the duty of the Government in the matter?
+
+MR. JERMYN (_gratefully_). Er--yes, that's what I've come about, don't
+you know--that sort of thing. Fact is (_with a burst of confidence_),
+this isn't exactly my line--I've been rather let in for this. You see,
+I've not been by way of doin' this long--but what's a fellow to do when
+he's stony-broke? Got to do _somethin'_, don't you know. So I thought
+I'd go in for journalism--I don't mean the drudgery of it,
+leader-writin' and that--but the light part of it, _Society_, you know.
+But the other day, man who does the interviews for _Park Lane_ (that's
+the paper I'm on) jacked up all of a sudden, and my Editor said I'd
+better take on his work for a bit, and see what I made of it. I wasn't
+particular. You see, I've always been rather a dead hand at drawin'
+fellows out, leadin' them on, you know, and all that, so I knew it would
+come easy enough to me, for all you've got to do is to sit tight and let
+the other chap--I mean to say, the man you're interviewin'--do all the
+talking, while you--I mean to say, myself--keep, keeps--hullo, I'm
+getting my grammar a bit mixed; however, it don't signify--_I_ keep
+quiet and use my eyes and ears like blazes. Talking of grammar, I
+thought when I first started that I should get in a regular hat over the
+grammar, and the spellin', and that--_you_ write, don't you, when you're
+not travellin'? So you know what a grind it is to spell right. But I
+soon found they kept a Johnny at the office with nothing to do but put
+all your mistakes right for you, so, soon as I knew that, I went ahead
+gaily.
+
+The L. L. Exactly, and now, perhaps, you will let me know what
+particular information you require?
+
+MR. J. Oh, _you_ know the sort of thing the public likes--they'll want
+to know what sort of diggings you've got, how you dress when you're at
+home, and all that, how you write your books, now--you do write books,
+don't you? Thought so. Well, that's what the public likes. You see, your
+name's a good deal up just now--no humbug, it _is_ though! Between
+ourselves, you know, I think the whole business is the balliest kind of
+rot, but they've got to have it, so there you are, don't you see. I
+don't pretend to be a well-read sort of fellow, never was particularly
+fond of readin' and that; no time for it, and besides, I've always said
+_Books_ don't teach you knowledge of the world. I know the world fairly
+well--but I didn't learn it from books--ah, you agree with me
+there--_you_ know what skittles all that talk is about education and
+that. Well, as I was sayin', I don't read much, I see the _Field_ every
+week, and a clinkin' good paper it is, tells you everythin' worth
+knowin', and I read the _Pink Un_, too. Do you know any of the fellows
+on it? Man I know is a great friend of one of them, he's going to
+introduce me some day, I like knowin' literary chaps, don't you? You've
+been about a good deal, haven't you? I expect you must have seen a lot,
+travellin' as you do. I've done a little travellin' myself, been to
+Monte Carlo, you know, and the Channel Islands--_you_ ever been to the
+Channel Islands? Oh, you ought to go, it's a very cheery place. Talkin'
+of Monte Carlo, I had a rattlin' good time at the tables there; took out
+a hundred quid, determined I would have a downright good flutter, and
+Jove! I made that hundred last me over five days, and came away in
+nothing but my lawn-tennis flannels. That's what I _call_ a flutter,
+don't you know! Er--beastly weather we're havin'! You have pretty good
+weather where you've been? A young brother of mine has been out for a
+year in Texas--he said _he'd_ very good weather--of course that's some
+way off where _you_'ve come from--Central Africa, isn't it? Talkin' of
+my brother, what do you think the young ass did?--went out there with a
+thousand pounds, and paid it all down to some sportsmen who took him to
+see some stock they said belonged to them--of course he found out after
+they'd off'd it that they didn't own a white mouse among 'em! But then,
+Dick's one of those chaps, you know, that think themselves so uncommon
+knowing, they _can't_ be had. I always told him he'd be taken in some
+day if he let his tongue wag so much--too fond of hearing himself talk,
+don't you know, great mistake for a young fellow; sure to say somethin'
+you'd better have let alone. I suppose you're getting rather sick of all
+these banquets, receptions, and that? They do you very well, certainly.
+I went to one of these Company dinners some time ago, and they did me as
+well as I've ever been done in my life, but when you've got to sit still
+afterwards and listen to some chap who's been somewhere and done
+somethin' jawin' about it by the hour together without a check, why,
+it's not _good_ enough, I'm hanged if it is! Well, I'm afraid I can't
+stay any longer--my time's valuable now, don't you know. I daresay yours
+is, too. I'm awfully glad to have had a chat with you, and all that. I
+expect you could tell me a lot more interestin' things, only of course
+you've got to keep the best of 'em to put in your book--you _are_
+writin' a book or somethin', ain't you? Such heaps of fellows are
+writin' books nowadays, the wonder is how any of 'em get read. I shall
+try and get a look at yours, though, if I come across it anywhere; hope
+you'll put some amusin' things in,--nigger stories and that, don't make
+it too bally scientific, you know. Directly I get back, I shall sit
+down, slick off, and write off all you've told me. I shan't want any
+notes, I can carry it all in my head, and of course I shan't put in
+anything you'd rather I didn't, don't you know.
+
+The L. L. (_solemnly_). Mr. Jermyn, I place implicit confidence in your
+discretion. I have no doubt whatever that your head, Sir, is more than
+capable of containing such remarks as I have found it necessary to make
+in the course of our interview. I like your system of extracting
+information, Sir, very much. Good morning.
+
+Mr. J. (_outside_). Nice pleasant-spoken fellow--trifle long-winded,
+though! Gad, I was so busy listenin' I forgot to notice what his rooms
+were like or anythin'! How would it do to go back? No, too much of a
+grind. Daresay I can manage to fox up somethin'. I shall tell the Chief
+what he said about my system. Chief don't quite know what I _can_ do
+yet--this will open his eyes a bit.
+
+ [_And it does._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+SATURDAY NIGHT IN THE EDGWARE ROAD.
+
+
+_For over half-a-mile the pavement on the East side of the road is
+thronged with promenaders, and the curbstone lined with stalls and
+barrows, and hawkers of various wares. Marketing housewives with covered
+baskets oscillate undecidedly from stalls to shops, and put off
+purchasing to the last possible moment. Maids-of-all-work perambulate
+arm-in-arm, exchanging airy badinage with youths of their acquaintance,
+though the latter seem to prefer the society of their own sex. A man
+with a switchback skittle-board plays gloomy games by himself to an
+unspeculative group of small boys. The tradesmen stand outside their
+shops and conduct their business with a happy blend of the methods of a
+travelling showman and a clown._
+
+BURLESQUE BUTCHER. Now then, all o' _you_ there! Buy, buy, buy! Just
+give yer minds to spendin' yer money! (_In a tone of artless wonder._)
+Where _does_ the Butcher git this _luverly_ meat? What can I do fur
+_you_ now, Marm? (_Triumphantly, after selling the scrag-end of a neck
+of mutton._) _Now_ we're busy!
+
+FARCICAL FISHMONGER (_with two Comic Assistants_). Ahar! (_To crowd._)
+Come 'ere, you silly young snorkers! I've the quali_tee_! I've the
+quali_tay_! _Keep_ takin' money!
+
+FIRST COMIC ASSISTANT. Ahye! Foppence a pound nice plaice! Kippers two
+fur three 'apence. _We're_ the Perfeshnul Curers! What are yer all goin'
+to _do_? Sort 'em out cheap!
+
+SECOND C. A. I don't mind! What care I? (_Bursting into song._) "'Ow,
+she rowled me 'ed, and rumbled in the 'ay!" On me word, she did, ladies!
+
+ [_He executes a double shuffle, and knocks over several boxes
+ of bloaters in the gaiety of his heart._
+
+A HAWKER OF PENNY MEMORANDUM BOOKS (_to an audience of small boys_).
+Those among you 'oo are not mechanics, decidedly you 'ave mechanical
+_hideers_!
+
+ [_He enlarges upon the convenience of having a notebook in
+ which to jot down any inspirations of this kind; but his
+ hearers do not appear to agree with him._
+
+A LUGUBRIOUS VENDOR. One penny for six comic pypers. Hevery one
+different!
+
+A RUDE BOY. You ain't bin _readin'_ o' any on 'em, 'ave yer, guv'nor?
+
+A CROCKERY MERCHANT (_as he unpacks a variety of vases of appalling
+hideousness_). _I_ don't care--it's self-sacrifice to give away!
+Understand, you ain't buyin' _common_ things, you're buyin' suthin'
+_good_! It 'appens to be my buthday to-night, so I'm goin' to let you
+people 'ave the benefit of the doubt. Come on 'ere. I don't ask you to
+b'lieve _me_--on'y to jedge fur yerselves. I'm not 'ere to tell you no
+fairy tales; and the reason why I'm in a position to orfer up these
+vawses--all richly gilt, and decorated in three colours, the most
+expensive ever made--the reason I'm able to sell them so cheap as I'm
+doin' is this--(_he lowers his voice mysteriously_)--'arf the stuff I
+'ave 'ere we git _in very funny ways_!
+
+ [_This ingeniously suggestive hint enhances the natural charm
+ of his ware to such a degree that the vases are bought up
+ briskly, as calculated to brighten the humblest home._
+
+A SANCTIMONIOUS YOUNG MAN (_with a tongue too large for his mouth, who
+has just succeeded in collecting a circle round him_). I am only 'ere
+to-night, my friends, as a paid servant--for the purpose of deciding a
+wager. Some o' you may have noticed an advertisement lately in the
+_Daily Telegrawf_, asking for men to stand on Southwark Bridge and orfer
+arf-suverings for a penny apiece. You are equally well aware that it is
+illegal to orfer the Queen's coinage for money: and that is _not_ my
+intention this evening. _But_ I 'ave 'ere several pieces of gold,
+guaranteed to be of the exact weight of arf a suvering, and 'all-marked,
+which, in order to decide the wager I 'ave spoken of, I shall now
+perceed to charge you the sum of one penny for, and no more. I am not
+allowed to sell _more_ than one to each person----
+
+ [_Here a constable comes up, and the decision of the wager is
+ postponed until a more favourable opportunity._
+
+FIRST "GENERAL" (_looking into a draper's window_). Look at them
+coloured felt 'ats--all shades, and on'y sixpence three-fardens!
+
+SECOND "G." They _are_ reasonable; but I've 'eard as felt 'ats is gone
+out of fashion now.
+
+FIRST "G." Don't you believe it, Sarah. Why, my married sister bought
+one on'y last week!
+
+COSTER (_to an old lady who has repudiated a bunch of onions after a
+prolonged scrutiny_). Frorsty? So would _you_ be if _your_ onion 'ad bin
+layin' out in the fields all night as long as these 'ave!
+
+FIRST ITINERANT PHYSICIAN (_as he screws up fragments of candy in pieces
+of newspaper_). That is Frog in your Froat what I'm doin' up now. I arsk
+you to try it. It's given to me to give away, and I'm goin' to _give_
+it away--you understand?--that's all. And now I'm going to tork to you
+about suthink else. You see this small bottle what I 'old up. I tell you
+there's 'undreds layin' in bed at this present moment as 'ud give a
+shillin' fur one of these--and I offer it to you at one penny! It
+corrects all nerve-pains connected with the 'ed, cures earache,
+toothache, neuralgy, noomonia, 'art-complaint, fits, an' syhatica. Each
+bottle is charged with helectricity, forming a complete
+galvanic-battery. Hall _you_ 'ave to do is to place the bottle to one o'
+your nawstrils, first closing the other with your finger. You will find
+it compels you to sniff. The moment you _tyke_ that sniff, you'll find
+the worter comin' into your heyes--and that's the helectricity. You'll
+say, "_I_ always 'eard helectricity was a _fluid_." (_With withering
+scorn._) Very _likely_! You _'ave_? An' _why_? Be-cawse o' the hignirant
+notions prevailin' about scientific affairs! Hevery one o' these bottles
+contains a battery, and to each purchaser I myke 'im a present--a
+_present_, mind yer--of Frog in 'is Froat!
+
+SUSAN JANE (_to LIZERANN, before a stall where "Novelettes, three a
+penny," are to be procured by the literary_). Shall we 'ave a penn'orth,
+an' you go 'alves along o' me?
+
+LIZERANN. Not _me_. I ain't got no time to go improvin' o' _my_ mind,
+whatever _you_ 'ave!
+
+A VENDOR OF "'ORE'OUND TABLETS" (_he is a voluble young man, with
+considerable lung-power, and a tendency to regard his cough lozenges as
+not only physical but moral specifics_). I'm on'y a young feller, as you
+see, and yet 'ere I _am_, with my four burnin' lamps, and a lassoo-soot
+as belonged to my Uncle Bill, doin' _wunnerful_ well. Why, I've took
+over two pound in coppers a'ready! Mind you, I don't deceive you; you
+may all on you do as well as me; on'y you'll 'ave to get two good
+ref'rences fust, _and_ belong to a temp'rance society, like I do. This
+is the badge as I've got on me at this minnit. I ain't always bin like I
+am now. I started business four year ago, and was doin' wunnerful well,
+too, till I got among 'orse-copers an' dealers and went on the booze,
+and lost the lot. Then I turned up the drink and got a berth sellin'
+these 'ere Wangoo Tablets--and now I've got a neat little missus, and a
+nice 'ome, goin' on wunnerful comfortable. Never a week passes but what
+I buy myself something. Last week it was a pair o' noo socks. Soon as
+the sun peeps out and the doo dries up, I'm orf to Yarmouth. And what's
+the reason? I've _enjoyed_ myself there. My Uncle Bill, as lives at
+Lowestoft, and keeps six fine 'orses and a light waggon, _he's_ doin'
+wunnerful well, and he'd take me into partnership to-morrow, he would.
+But no--I'm 'appier as I am. What's the reason I kin go on torkin' to
+you like this night after night, without injury to my voice? Shall I
+tell yer? Because, every night o' my life, afore I go to bed, I take
+four o' these Wangoo Tablets--compounded o' the purest 'erbs. You take
+them to the nearest doctor's and arsk 'im to analyse an' test them as he
+_will_, and you 'ear what _he_ says of them! Take one o' them
+tablets--after your pipe; after your cigaw; after your cigarette. You
+won't want no more drink, you'll find them make you come 'ome reglar
+every evening, and be able to buy a noo 'at every week. You've ony to
+persevere for a bit with these 'ere lawzengers to be like I am myself,
+doin' _wunnerful_ well! You see this young feller 'ere? (_Indicating a
+sheepish head in a pot-hat, which is visible over the back of his
+stall._) Born and bred in Kenada, _'e_ was. And quite _right_! Bin over
+'ere six year, so, o' course he speaks the lengwidge. And _quite_ right.
+Now I'm no Amerikin myself, but they're a wunnerful clever people, the
+Amerikins are, allays inventin' or suthink o' that there. And you're at
+liberty to go and arsk 'im for yourselves whether this is a real
+Amerikin invention or not--as he'll tell yer it _is_--and quite right,
+too! An' it stands to reason as _he_ orter know, seein' he introdooced
+it 'imself and doin' wunnerful well with it ever since. I ain't come
+'ere to _rob_ yer. Lady come and give me a two-shillin' piece just now.
+I give it her back. _She_ didn't know--thort it was a penny, till I told
+her. Well, that just shows you what these 'ere Wangoo 'Ore'ound Tablets
+_are_!
+
+ [_After this practical illustration of their efficacy, he
+ pauses for oratorical effect, and a hard-worked-looking matron
+ purchases three packets, in the apparent hope that a similar
+ halo of the best horehound will shortly irradiate the head of
+ her household._
+
+LIZERANN (_to SUSAN JANE, as they walk homewards_). On'y fancy--the
+other evenin', as I was walkin' along this very pavement, a cab-'orse
+come up beyind me, unbeknown like, and put 'is 'ed over my shoulder and
+breathed right in my ear!
+
+SUSAN JANE (_awestruck_). You _must_ ha' bin a bad gell!
+
+ [_LIZERANN is clearly disquieted by so mystical an
+ interpretation, even while she denies having done anything
+ deserving of a supernatural rebuke._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE "MODEL HUSBAND" CONTEST.
+
+
+_Scene the First--At the GALAHAD-GREEN'S._
+
+MRS. G.-G. Galahad!
+
+MR. G.-G. (_meekly_). My love?
+
+MRS. G.-G. I see that the proprietors of _All Sorts_ are going to follow
+the American example, and offer a prize of £20 to the wife who makes out
+the best case for her husband as a Model. It's just as well, perhaps,
+that you should know that I've made up my mind to enter _you_!
+
+MR. G.-G. (_gratified_). My dear Cornelia! really, I'd no idea you had
+such a----
+
+MRS. G.-G. Nonsense! The drawing-room carpet is a perfect disgrace, and,
+as you can't, or won't, provide the money in any _other_ way,
+why----Would you like to hear what I've said about you?
+
+MR. G.-G. Well, if you're sure it wouldn't be troubling you too much, I
+_should_, my dear.
+
+MRS. G.-G. Then sit where I can see you, and listen. (_She reads._)
+"Irreproachable in all that pertains to morality"--(and it would be a
+bad day indeed for you, Galahad, if I ever had cause to think
+_otherwise_!)--"morality; scrupulously dainty and neat in his
+person"--(ah, you may well blush, Galahad, but fortunately, they won't
+want me to _produce_ you!)--"he imports into our happy home the delicate
+refinement of a _preux chevalier_ of the olden time." (Will you kindly
+take your dirty boots off the steel fender!) "We rule our little kingdom
+with a joint and equal sway, to which jealousy and friction are alike
+unknown; he, considerate and indulgent to my womanly weakness"--(You
+need not stare at me in that perfectly idiotic fashion!)--"I, looking to
+him for the wise and tender support which has never yet been denied. The
+close and daily scrutiny of many years has discovered"--(What are you
+shaking like _that_ for?)--"discovered no single weakness; no taint or
+flaw of character; no irritating trick of speech or habit." (How often
+have I told you that I will _not_ have the handle of that paper-knife
+sucked? Put it down; do!) "His conversation--sparkling but ever
+spiritual--renders our modest meals veritable feasts of fancy and flows
+of soul.... _Well_, Galahad?"
+
+MR. G.-G. Nothing, my dear; nothing. It struck me as, well,--a trifle
+_flowery_, that last passage, that's all!
+
+MRS. G.-G. (_severely_). If I cannot expect to win the prize without
+descending to floweriness, whose fault is _that_, I should like to know?
+If you can't make sensible observations, you had better not speak at
+all. (_Continuing._) "Over and over again, gathering me in his strong,
+loving arms, and pressing fervent kisses upon my forehead, he has cried,
+'Why am I not a Monarch that so I could place a diadem upon that brow?
+With such a Consort am I not doubly crowned?'" Have you anything to say
+to _that_, Galahad?
+
+MR. G.-G. Only, my love, that I--I don't seem to remember having made
+that particular remark.
+
+MRS. G.-G. Then make it _now_. I'm sure I wish to be as accurate as I
+_can_.
+
+ [_MR. G.-G. makes the remark--but without fervour._
+
+
+_Scene the Second--At the MONARCH-JONES'._
+
+MR. M.-J. Twenty quid would come in precious handy just now, after all
+I've dropped lately, and I mean to pouch that prize if I can--so just
+you sit down, Grizzle, and write out what I tell you; do you hear?
+
+MRS. M.-J. (_timidly_). But, Monarch, dear, would that be quite _fair_?
+No, don't be angry, I didn't mean that--I'll write whatever you please!
+
+MR. M.-J. You'd _better_, that's all! Are you ready? I must screw myself
+up another peg before I begin. (_He screws._) Now, then. (_Stands over
+her and dictates._) "To the polished urbanity of a perfect gentleman he
+unites the kindly charity of a true Christian." (Why the devil don't you
+learn to write decently, eh?) "Liberal, and even lavish, in all his
+dealings, he is yet a stern foe to every kind of excess"--(Hold on a
+bit, I must have another nip after that)--"every kind of excess. Our
+married life is one long dream of blissful contentment, in which each
+contends with the other in loving self-sacrifice." (Haven't you corked
+all that down _yet_!) "Such cares and anxieties as he has he conceals
+from me with scrupulous consideration as long as possible"--(Gad, I
+should be a fool if I _didn't_!)--"while I am ever sure of finding in
+him a patient and sympathetic listener to all my trifling worries and
+difficulties."--(_Two_ f's in difficulties, you little fool--can't you
+even _spell_?) "Many a time, falling on his knees at my feet, he has
+rapturously exclaimed, his accents broken by manly emotion, 'Oh, that I
+were more worthy of such a pearl among women! With such a helpmate, I
+am indeed to be envied!'" That _ought_ to do the trick. If I don't romp
+in after that!----(_Observing that MRS. M.-J.'S shoulders are
+convulsed._) What the dooce are you giggling at _now_?
+
+MRS. M.-J. I--I wasn't giggling, Monarch dear, only----
+
+MR. M.-J. Only _what_?
+
+MRS. M.-J. Only crying!
+
+
+_The Sequel._
+
+"The judges appointed by the spirited proprietors of _All Sorts_ to
+decide the 'Model Husband Contest'--which was established on lines
+similar to one recently inaugurated by one of our New York
+contemporaries--have now issued their award. Two competitors have sent
+in certificates which have been found equally deserving of the prize;
+viz., Mrs. Cornelia Galahad-Green, Graemair Villa, Peckham, and Mrs.
+Griselda Monarch-Jones, Aspen Lodge, Lordship Lane. The sum of twenty
+pounds will consequently be divided between these two ladies, to whom,
+with their respective spouses, we beg to tender our cordial
+felicitations."--(_Extract from Daily Paper, some six months hence._)
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE COURIER OF THE HAGUE.
+
+
+He is an elderly amiable little Dutchman in a soft felt hat; his name is
+BOSCH, and he is taking me about. _Why_ I engaged him I don't quite
+know--unless from a general sense of helplessness in Holland, and a
+craving for any kind of companionship. Now I have got him, I feel rather
+more helpless than ever--a sort of composite of SANDFORD and MERTON,
+with a didactic, but frequently incomprehensible Dutch BARLOW. My
+SANDFORD half would like to exhibit an intelligent curiosity, but is
+generally suppressed by MERTON, who has a morbid horror of useful
+information. Not that BOSCH is remarkably erudite, but nevertheless he
+contrives to reduce me to a state of imbecility, which I catch myself
+noting with a pained surprise. There is a statue in the Plein, and the
+SANDFORD element in me finds a satisfaction in recognising it aloud as
+William the Silent. It is--but, as my MERTON part thinks, a fellow
+_would_ be a fool if he didn't recognise William after a few hours in
+Holland--his images, in one form or another, are tolerably numerous.
+Still BOSCH is gratified. "Yass, dot is ole Volliam," he says,
+approvingly, as to a precocious infant just beginning to take notice.
+"Lokeer," he says, "you see dot Apoteek?" He indicates a chemist's shop
+opposite, with nothing remarkable about it externally, except a Turk's
+head with his tongue out over the door.
+
+"Yes, I (speaking for SANDFORD and MERTON) see it--has it some
+historical interest--did Volliam get medicine there, or what?"
+
+"Woll, dis mornin dare vas two sairvans dere, and de von cot two blaces
+out of de odder's haid, and afderwarts he go opstairs and vas hang
+himself mit a pedbost."
+
+BOSCH evidently rather proud of this as illustrating the liveliness of
+The Hague.
+
+"Was he mad?"
+
+"Yass, he vas mard, mit a vife and seeks childrens."
+
+"No, but was he out of his senses?"
+
+"I tink it was oud of Omsterdam he vas com," says BOSCH.
+
+"But how did it happen?"
+
+"Wol-sare, de broprietor vas die, and leaf de
+successor de pusiness, and he dells him in von mons he will go, begause
+he nod egsamin to be a Chimigal--so he do it, and dey dake him to de
+hosbital, and I tink _he_ vas die too by now!" adds BOSCH, cheerfully.
+
+Very sad affair evidently--but a little complicated. SANDFORD would like
+to get to the bottom of it, but MERTON convinced there is _no_ bottom.
+So, between us, subject allowed to drop.
+
+SANDFORD (now in the ascendant again) notices, as the clever boy,
+inscription on house-front, "Hier woonden Groen Van Prinsterer,
+1838-76."
+
+"I suppose that means Van Prinsterer lived here, Bosch?"
+
+"Yass, dot vas it."
+
+"And who was he?"
+
+"He vas--wol, he vos a Member of de Barliaments."
+
+"Was he celebrated?"
+
+"Celebrated? oh, yaas!"
+
+"What did he _do_?" (I think MERTON gets this in.)
+
+"Do?" says BOSCH, quite indignantly, "he nefer do _nodings_!"
+
+BOSCH takes me into the Fishmarket, when he directs my attention to a
+couple of very sooty live storks, who are pecking about at the refuse.
+
+"Dose pirts are shtorks; hier dey vas oblige to keep alvays two shtorks
+for de arms of de Haag. Vhen de yong shtorks porn, de old vons vas
+kill."
+
+SANDFORD shocked--MERTON sceptical.
+
+"Keel dem? Oh, yaas, do anytings mit dem ven dey vas old," says BOSCH,
+and adds:--"Ve haf de breference mit de shtorks, eh?"
+
+What _is_ he driving at?
+
+"Yaas--ven _ve_ vas old ve vas nod kill."
+
+This reminds BOSCH--BARLOW-like--of an anecdote.
+
+"Dere vas a vrent to me," he begins, "he com and say to me, 'Bosch, I am
+god so shtout and my bark is so dick, I can go no more on my lacks--vat
+vas I do?' To him I say, 'Wol, I dell you vat I do mit you--I dake you
+at de booshair to be cot op; I tink you vas make vary goot shdeak-meat!"
+
+Wonder whether this is a typical sample of BOSCH'S _badinage_.
+
+"What did he say to that, Bosch?"
+
+"Oh, he vas vair moch loff, a-course!" says BOSCH, with the natural
+complacency of a successful humorist.
+
+We go into the Old Prison, and see some horrible implements of torture,
+which seem to exhilarate BOSCH.
+
+"Lokeer!" he says, "Dis vas a pinition" (BOSCH for "punishment") "mit a
+can. Dey lie de man down and vasten his foots, and efery dime he vas
+shdrook mit de can, he jomp op and hit his vorehaid.... Hier dey lie
+down de beoples on de back, and pull dis shdring queeck, and all dese
+tings go roundt, and preak deir bones. Ven de pinition was feenish you
+vas det." He shows where the Water-torture was practised. "Nottice 'ow
+de vater vas vork a 'ole in de tile," he chuckles, "I tink de tile vas
+vary hardt det, eh?" Then he points out a pole with a spiked prong.
+"Tief-catcher--put 'em in de tief's nack--and get 'im!" Before a
+grim-looking cauldron he halts appreciatively. "You know vat dat vas
+for?" he says. "Dat vas for de blode-foots; put 'em in dere, yaas, and
+light de vire onderneat."
+
+No idea what "_blode-foots_" may be, but from the relish in BOSCH'S
+tone, evidently something very unpleasant, so don't press him for
+explanations. We go upstairs, and see some dark and very mouldy
+dungeons, which BOSCH is very anxious that I should enter. Make him go
+in _first_, for the surroundings seem to have excited his sense of the
+humorous to such a degree, that he might be unable to resist locking me
+in, and leaving me, if I gave him a chance.
+
+Outside at last, thank goodness! The Groote Kerk, according to BOSCH,
+"is not vort de see," so we don't see it. SANDFORD has a sneaking
+impression that I ought to go in, but MERTON glad to be let off. We go
+to see the pictures at the Mauritshuis instead. BOSCH exchanges
+greetings with the attendants in Dutch. "Got _another_ of 'em in tow,
+you see--and collar-work, _I_ can tell you!" would be a free
+translation, I suspect, of his remarks. Must say that, in a
+Picture-gallery, BOSCH is a superfluous luxury. He _does_ take my
+ignorance just a trifle too much for granted. He _might_ give me credit
+for knowing the story of Adam and Eve, at all events! "De Sairpan gif
+Eva de opple, an' Eva gif him to Adam," BOSCH carefully informs me,
+before a "_Paradise_," by Rubens and Brueghel.
+
+This rouses my MERTON half to inquire what Adam did with it.
+
+"Oh, _he_ ead him too!" says BOSCH in perfect good faith.
+
+I do wish, too, he wouldn't lead me up to Paul Potter's "_Bull_," and
+ask me enthusiastically if it isn't "real meat." I shouldn't mind it so
+much if there were not several English people about, without
+couriers--but there _are_. My only revenge is (as MERTON) to carefully
+pick out the unsigned canvases and ask BOSCH who painted them; whereupon
+BOSCH endeavours furtively to make out the label on the frames, and then
+informs me in desperation, "it vas '_School_,'--yass, _he_ baint him!"
+BOSCH kindly explains the subject of every picture in detail. He tells
+me a Droochsloot represents a "balsham pedder." I suppose I look
+bewildered, for he adds--"oppen air tance mit a village." "Hier dey vas
+haf a tispute; dis man say de ham vas more value as de cheese--dere is
+de cheese, and dere is de ham." "Hier is an old man dot marry a yong
+vife, and two tevils com in, and de old man he ron avay." "Hier he dress
+him in voman, and de vife is vrighten." "Hier is Jan Steen himself as a
+medicine, and he veel de yong voman's polse, and say dere is nodings de
+madder, and the modder ask him to trink a glass of vine." "Hier is de
+beach at Skavening--now dey puild houses on de dunes--bot de beach is
+schdill dere."
+
+Such are BOSCH'S valuable and instructive comments, to which, as
+representing SANDFORD and MERTON, I listen with depressed docility. All
+the same, can't help coming to the conclusion that Art is _not_ BOSCH'S
+strong point. Shall come here again--alone. We go on to the Municipal
+Museum, where he shows me what _he_ considers the treasures of the
+collection--a glass goblet, engraved "mit dails of tobaggo bipes," and
+the pipes themselves; a painting of a rose, "mit ade beople's faces in
+de leafs;" and a drawing of "two pirts mit only von foots."
+
+Outside again. BOSCH shows me a house.
+
+"Lokeer. In dot house leef an oldt lady all mit herself and ade
+sairvans. She com from Friesland, yassir."
+
+Really, I think BOSCH is going to be interesting--at last. There is a
+sly twinkle in his eye, denoting some story of a scandalous but
+infinitely humorous nature.
+
+"Well, Bosch, go on--what about the old lady?" I ask eagerly, as MERTON.
+
+"Wol, Sir," says BOSCH, "she nefer go noveres."...
+
+That's _all_! "A devilish interesting story, _Sumph_, indeed!" to quote
+Mr. Wagg.
+
+But, as BOSCH frequently reminds me, "It vas pedder, you see, as a
+schendlemans like you go apout mit me; I dell you tings dot vas not in
+de guide-books." Which I am not in a position to deny.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+FEELING THEIR WAY.
+
+(A STUDY IN THE ART OF GENTEEL CONVERSATION.)
+
+
+_The Drawing-room of a Margate Hotel. TIME--Evening. MRS. ARDLEIGH (of
+Balham), and MRS. ALLBUTT (of Brondesbury), are discovered in the midst
+of a conversation, in which each is anxious both to impress the other,
+and ascertain how far she is a person to be cultivated. At present, they
+have not got beyond the discovery of a common bond in Cookery._
+
+MRS. ALLBUTT. You have the yolks of two eggs, I must tell you; squeeze
+the juice of half a lemon into it, and, when you boil the butter in the
+pan, make a paste of it with _dry_ flour.
+
+MRS. ARDLEIGH. It sounds delicious--but you never can trust a Cook to
+carry out instructions exactly.
+
+MRS. ALL. I never _do_. Whenever I want to have anything specially nice
+for my husband, I make a point of seeing to it myself. He appreciates
+it. Now _some_ men, if you cook for them, never notice whether it's you
+or the Cook. My husband _does_.
+
+MRS. ARD. I wonder how you find time to do it. I'm sure _I_ should
+never----
+
+MRS. ALL. Oh, it takes time, of course--but what does that matter when
+you've nothing to do? Did I mention just a small pinch of Cayenne
+pepper?--because that's a _great_ improvement!
+
+MRS. ARD. I tell you what I like Cayenne pepper with, better than
+anything--and that's eggs.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_with elegant languor_). I hardly ever eat an egg. Oysters,
+now, I'm _very_ fond of--_fried_, that is.
+
+MRS. ARD. They're very nice done in the real shells. Or on scollops. We
+have silver--or rather--(_with a magnanimous impulse to tone down her
+splendour_), silver-plated ones.
+
+MRS. ALL. How funny--so have we! (_Both women feel an increase of liking
+for one another._) I like them cooked in milk, too.
+
+ [_The first barrier being satisfactorily passed, they proceed,
+ as usual, to the subject of ailments._
+
+MRS. ARD. My doctor _does_ do me good, I must say--he never lets me get
+ill. He just sees your liver's all right, and then he feeds you up.
+
+MRS. ALL. That's like _my_ doctor; he always tells me, if he didn't keep
+on constantly building me up, I should go all to pieces in no time.
+That's how I come to be here. I always run down at the end of every
+Season.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_feeling that MRS. ALLBUTT can't be "anybody very particular"
+after all_). What--to Margate? Fancy! Don't you find you get tired of
+it? _I_ should.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_with dignity_). I didn't say I always went to Margate. On
+the contrary, I have never been here before, and shouldn't be here now,
+if my doctor hadn't told me it was my only chance.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_reassured_). I only came down here on my little girl's
+account. One of those nasty croupy coughs, you know, and hoops with it.
+But she's almost well already. I will say it's a wonderful air. Still,
+the worst of Margate is, one isn't likely to meet a soul one knows!
+
+MRS. ALL. Well, that's the charm of it--to me. One has enough of that
+during the Season.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_recognising the superiority of this view_). Indeed one has.
+What a whirl it has been to be sure!
+
+MRS. ALL. The Season? Why, I never remember one with so little doing.
+Most of the best houses closed--hardly a single really smart party--one
+or two weddings--and that's positively all!
+
+MRS. ARD. (_slightly crushed, in spite of a conviction_ _that--socially
+speaking--Balham has been rather more brilliant than usual this year_).
+Yes, that's very true. I suppose the Elections have put a stop to most
+things?
+
+MRS. ALL. There never was much going on. _I_ should rather have said it
+was Marlborough House being shut up that made everything so dull from
+the first.
+
+MRS. ARD. Ah, that _does_ make such a difference, doesn't it? (_She
+feels she must make an effort to recover lost ground._) I fully expected
+to be at Homburg this year.
+
+MRS. ALL. Then you would have met Lady Neuraline Menthol. She _was_
+ordered there, I happen to know.
+
+MRS. ARD. Really, you don't say so? Lady Neuraline! Well, that's the
+first _I've_ heard of it. (_It is also the first time she has heard of
+her, but she trusts to be spared so humiliating an admission._)
+
+MRS. ALL. It's a fact, I can assure you. You know her, perhaps?
+
+MRS. ARD. (_who would dearly like to say she does, if she only dared_).
+Well, I can hardly say I exactly _know_ her. I know _of_ her. I've met
+her about, and so on. (_She tells herself this is quite as likely to be
+true as not._)
+
+[Illustration: "Dear, dear! _not_ a county family!"]
+
+MRS. ALL. (_who of course does not know Lady Neuraline either_). Ah, she
+is a most delightful person--requires _knowing_, don't you know.
+
+MRS. ARD. So many in her position do, don't they? (_So far as she is
+concerned--they all do._) You'd think it was haughtiness--but it's
+really only _manner_.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_feeling that she can go ahead with safety now_). I have
+never found anything of _that_ sort in Lady Neuraline myself (_which is
+perfectly true._) She's rather odd and flighty, but _quite_ a dear. By
+the way, _how_ sad it is about those poor dear Chutneys--the Countess,
+don't you know!
+
+MRS. ARD. Ah (_as if she knew all the rest of the family_), I don't know
+_her_ at all.
+
+MRS. ALL. Such a sweet woman--but the trouble she's had with her eldest
+boy, Lord Mango! He married quite beneath him, you know, some girl from
+the provinces--not a county-family girl even.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_shocked_). Dear, dear! _not_ a county family!
+
+MRS. ALL. No; somebody quite common--I forget the name, but it was
+either Gherkin or Onion, or something of that sort. I was told they had
+been in Chili a good while. Poor Mango never had much taste, or he would
+never have got mixed up with such a set. Anyway, he's got himself into
+a terrible pickle. I hear Capsicums is actually to be sold to pay his
+debts.
+
+MRS. ALL. You don't say so! Capsicums! Gracious!
+
+MRS. ALL. Yes, _isn't_ it a pity! Such a lovely old place as it was,
+too--_the_ most comfortable house to stay at in all England; so
+beautifully _warm_! But it's dreadful to think of how the aristocracy
+are taking to marry out of their own set. Look at the Duke of
+Dragnet--married a Miss Duckweed--goodness only knows where he picked
+her up! but he got entangled somehow, and now his people are trying to
+get rid of her. I see so many of these cases. Well, I'm afraid I must
+wish you good evening--it's my time for retiring. (_Patronisingly._)
+I've quite enjoyed the conversation--such a pleasure in a place like
+this to come across a genial companion!
+
+MRS. ARD. (_fluttered and flattered_). I'm sure you're exceedingly kind
+to say so, and I can say the same for myself. I hope we may become
+better acquainted. (_To herself, after MRS. ALLBUTT has departed._) I've
+quite taken to that woman--she's so thoroughly the lady, and moves in
+very high society, too. You can tell that from the way she talks. What's
+that paper on the table? (_She picks up a journal in a coloured
+wrapper._) "_Society Snippets, the Organ of the Upper Ten. One Penny._"
+The very thing I wanted. It's such a comfort to know who's who. (_She
+opens it and reads sundry paragraphs headed "Through the Keyhole."_) Now
+how funny this is! Here's the very same thing about the dulness of the
+Season that she said. That shows she must be really in it. And a note
+about Lady Neuraline being about to recruit at Homburg. And another
+about her reputation or eccentricity, and her "sweetness to the select
+few privileged to be her intimates." And here's all about Lord Mango,
+and what a pleasant house Capsicums is, and his marriage, and the Duke
+of Dragnet's, too. Her information was very correct, I must say! (_A
+light begins to break in upon her._) I wonder whether----but
+there--people of her sort wouldn't require to read the papers for such
+things.
+
+ [_Here the door opens, and MRS. ALLBUTT appears, in some
+ embarrassment._
+
+MRS. ALL. (_scrutinising the tables_). Oh, it's nothing. I thought I'd
+left something of mine here; it was only a paper--I see I was mistaken,
+don't trouble.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_producing Society Snippets_). I expect it will be this.
+(_MRS. ALLBUTT'S face reveals her ownership._) I took it up, not knowing
+it was yours. (_Meaningly_.) It has some highly interesting
+information, I see.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_slightly demoralised_). Oh, has it? I--I've not had time to
+glance at it yet. Pray don't let me deprive you of it. I dare say
+there's very little in it I don't know already.
+
+MRS. ARD. So I should have thought. (_To herself, after MRS. ALLBUTT has
+retired in disorder._) Fancy that woman trying to take me in like that,
+and no more in Society than I am--if so much! However, I've found her
+out before going too far--luckily. And I've a good mind to take in this
+_Society Snippets_ myself--it certainly does improve one's conversation.
+She won't have it _all_ her own way _next_ time!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+A TESTIMONIAL MANQUÉ.
+
+(A SKETCH FROM THE SUBURBS.)
+
+
+_THE ARGUMENT.--Mr. Hotspur Porpentine, a distinguished resident in the
+rising suburb of Jerrymere, has recently been awarded fourteen days'
+imprisonment, without the option of a fine, for assaulting a
+ticket-collector, who had offered him the indignity of requiring him to
+show his season-ticket at the barrier. The scene is a Second-Class
+Compartment, in which four of Mr. Porpentine's neighbours are discussing
+the affair during their return from the City._
+
+MR. COCKCROFT (_warmly_). I say, Sir--and I'm sure all here will bear me
+out--that such a sentence was a scandalous abuse of justice. As a near
+neighbour, and an intimate friend of Porpentine's, I don't 'esitate to
+assert that he has done nothing whatever to forfeit our esteem. He's a
+quick-tempered man, as we're all aware, and to be asked by some
+meddlesome official to show his season, after travelling on the line
+constantly for years, and leaving it at home that morning--why--_I_
+don't blame him if he _did_ use his umbrella!
+
+MR. BALCH (_sympathetically_). Nor I. Porpentine's a man I've always had
+a very 'igh respect for ever since I came into this neighbourhood. I've
+always found him a good feller, and a good neighbour.
+
+MR. FILKINS (_deferentially_). I can't claim to be as intimate with him
+as some here; but, if it isn't putting myself too far forward to say so,
+I very cordially beg to say ditto to those sentiments.
+
+MR. SIBBERING (_who has never "taken to" Porpentine_). Well, he's had a
+sharp lesson,--there's no denying that.
+
+MR. COCKCR. Precisely, and it occurs to me that when he--ah--returns to
+public life, it would be a kind thing, and a graceful thing, and a thing
+he would--ah--appreciate in the spirit it was intended, if we were to
+present him with some little token of our sympathy and unabated
+esteem--what do you fellers think?
+
+MR. FILK. A most excellent suggestion, if my friend here will allow me
+to say so. I, for one, shall be proud to contribute to so worthy an
+object.
+
+MR. BALCH. I don't see why we shouldn't present him with an
+address--'ave it illuminated, and framed and glazed; sort of thing he
+could 'ang up and 'and down to his children after him as an _heirloom_,
+yi-know.
+
+[Illustration: "Well, he's had a sharp lesson,--there's no denying
+that."]
+
+MR. SIBB. I don't like to throw cold water on any proposition, but if
+you want _my_ opinion, I must say I see no necessity for making a public
+thing out of it in that way.
+
+MR. COCKCR. I'm with Sibbering there. The less fuss there is about it,
+the better Porpentine'll be pleased. My idea is to give him something of
+daily use--a _useful_ thing, yi-know.
+
+MR. BALCH. Useful _or_ ornamental. Why not his own portrait? There's
+many an artist who would do him in oils, and guarantee a likeness, frame
+included, for a five-pound note.
+
+MR. SIBB. If it's to be like Porpentine, it certainly won't be
+_ornamental_, whatever else it is.
+
+MR. FILK. It can't be denied that he is remarkably plain in the face.
+We'd better, as our friend Mr. Cockcroft here proposes, make it
+something of daily use--a good serviceable silk umbrella now--that's
+_always_ appropriate.
+
+MR. SIBB. To make up for the one he broke over the collector's head,
+eh?--that's _appropriate_ enough!
+
+MR. COCKCR. No, no; you mean well, Filkins, but you must see yourself,
+on reflection, that there would be a certain want of--ah--good taste in
+giving him a thing like that under the circumstances. I should suggest
+something like a hatstand--a handsome one, of course. I happen to know
+that he has nothing in the passage at present but a row of pegs.
+
+MR. SIBB. I should have thought he'd been taken down enough pegs
+already.
+
+MR. FILK. (_who resents the imputation upon his taste_). I can't say
+what the width of Mr. Porpentine's passage may be, never having been
+privileged with an invitation to pass the threshold, but unless it's
+wider than ours is, he couldn't get a hatstand in if he tried, and if my
+friend Cockcroft will excuse the remark, I see no sense--to say nothing
+of good taste, about which perhaps I mayn't be qualified to pass an
+opinion--in giving him an article he's got no room for.
+
+MR. COCKCR. (_with warmth_). There's room enough in Porpentine's passage
+for a whole host of hatstands, if that's all, and I know what I'm
+speaking about. I've been in and out there often enough. I'm--ah--a
+regular tame cat in that house. But if you're against the 'atstand, I
+say no more--we'll waive it. How would it do if we gave him a nice
+comfortable easy-chair--something he could sit in of an evening,
+yi-know?
+
+MR. SIBB. A touchy chap like Porpentine would be sure to fancy we
+thought he wanted something soft after a hard bench and a plank
+bed--you can't go and give him _furniture_!
+
+MR. COCKCR. (_with dignity_). There's a way of doing all things. I
+wasn't proposing to go and chuck the chair _at_ him--he's a sensitive
+feller in many respects, and he'd feel _that_, I grant you. He can't
+object to a little present of that sort just from four friends like
+ourselves.
+
+MR. BALCH (_with a falling countenance_). Oh! I thought it was to be a
+general affair, limited to a small sum, so that all who liked could join
+in. I'd no notion you meant to keep it such a private matter as all
+that.
+
+MR. FILK. Nor I. And, knowing Mr. Porpentine so slightly as I do, he
+might consider it presumption in me, making myself so prominent in the
+matter--or else I'm sure----
+
+MR. COCKCR. There's no occasion for anyone to be prominent, except
+myself. You leave it entirely in my 'ands. I'll have the chair taken up
+some evening to Porpentine's house on a 'andcart, and drop in, and just
+lead up to it carelessly, if you understand me, then go out and wheel
+the chair in, make him try it--and there you _are_.
+
+MR. BALCH. There _you_ are, right enough; but I don't see where _we_
+come in, exactly.
+
+MR. FILLK. If it's to be confined to just us four, I certingly think we
+ought _all_ to be present at the presentation.
+
+MR. COCKCR. That would be just the very thing to put a man like
+Porpentine out--a crowd dropping in on him like that! I know his ways,
+and, seeing I'm providing the chair----
+
+MR. BALCH (_relieved_). _You_ are? That's different, of course; but I
+thought you said that we four----
+
+MR. COCKCR. I'm coming to that. As the prime mover, and a particular
+friend of Porpentine's, it's only right and fair I should bear the chief
+burden. There's an easy-chair I have at home that only wants re-covering
+to be as good as new, and all you fellers need do is to pay for 'aving
+it nicely done up in velvet, or what not, and we'll call it quits.
+
+MR. BALCH. I daresay; but I like to know what I'm letting myself in for;
+and there's upholsterers who'll charge as much for doing up a chair as
+would furnish a room.
+
+MR. FILK. I--I shouldn't feel justified, with my family, and, as,
+comparatively speaking, a recent resident, in going beyond a certain
+limit, and unless the estimate could be kep' down to a moderate sum, I
+really-----
+
+MR. SIBB. (_unmasking_). After all, you know, I don't see why we should
+go to any expense over a stuck-up, cross-grained chap like Porpentine.
+It's well-known he hasn't a good word to say for us Jerrymere folks, and
+considers himself above the lot of us!
+
+MR. BALCH and MR. FILK. I'm bound to say there's a good deal in what
+Sibbering says. Porpentine's never shown himself what _I_ should call
+sociable.
+
+MR. COCKCR. I've never found him anything but pleasant myself, whatever
+he may be to others. I'm not denying he's an _exclusive_ man, and a
+_fastidious_ man, but he's been 'arshly treated, and _I_ should have
+thought this was an occasion--if ever there was one--for putting any
+private feelings aside, and rallying round him to show our respect and
+sympathy. But of course if you're going to let petty jealousies of this
+sort get the better of you, and leave me to do the 'ole thing myself,
+_I've_ no objection. I daresay he'll value it all the more coming from
+me.
+
+MR. SIBB. Well, he _ought_ to, after the shameful way he's spoken of you
+to a friend of mine in the City, who shall be nameless. You mayn't know,
+and if not, it's only right I should mention it, that he complained
+bitterly of having to change his regular train on your account, and said
+(I'm only repeating his words, mind you), that Jerrymere was entirely
+populated by bores, but you were the worst of the lot, and your jabber
+twice a day was more than he _could_ stand. He mayn't have _meant_
+anything by it, but it was decidedly uncalled for.
+
+MR. COCKCR. (_reddening_). I 'ope I'm above being affected by the
+opinion any man may express of my conversation--especially a
+cantankerous feller, who can't keep his temper under decent control. A
+feller who goes and breaks his umbrella over an unoffending official's
+'ead like that, and gets, very properly, locked up for it! Jerrymere
+society isn't good enough for him, it seems. He won't be troubled with
+much of it in future--_I_ can assure him! Upon my word, now I come to
+think of it, I'm not sure he shouldn't be called upon for an explanation
+of how he came to be travelling without a ticket; it looks very much to
+me as if he'd been systematically defrauding the Company!
+
+MR. FILK. Well, I didn't like to say so before; but that's been _my_
+view all along!
+
+MR. BALCH. And mine.
+
+MR. SIBB. Now perhaps you understand why we'd rather leave it to you to
+give him the arm-chair.
+
+MR. COCKCR. I give a man an arm-chair for bringing disgrace on the 'ole
+of Jerrymere! I'd sooner break it up for firewood! Whoever it was that
+first started all this tomfoolery about a testimonial, I'm not going to
+'ave _my_ name associated with it, and if you'll take _my_ advice,
+you'll drop it once and for all, for it's only making yourselves
+ridiculous!
+
+ [_His companions, observing that he is in a somewhat excited
+ condition, consider it advisable to change the subject._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE MODEL DEMOCRACY.
+
+
+"I think you left directions that you were to be thawed in 199--
+precisely?" said the stranger politely. "Allow me to introduce
+myself--NUMBER SEVEN MILLION AND SIX. If you feel equal to the effort,
+and would care to see the vast improvements in our social condition
+since the close of the benighted Nineteenth Century, I shall be pleased
+to conduct you."
+
+MR. PUNCH then began to realise that he had had himself frozen by a
+patent process just a hundred years ago, and that he had returned to
+animation in time for the close of the marvellous Twentieth Century; so
+he prepared, in much curiosity and excitement, to accompany his guide.
+
+"By the way," observed the latter, "you must not be annoyed if
+your--hem--habiliments, which we are unaccustomed to nowadays, should
+attract some attention."
+
+Singularly enough, MR. PUNCH had just begun to feel a certain
+embarrassment at the prospect of being seen in Piccadilly or Regent
+Street in the company of a person attired in grey cellular pyjamas, a
+drab blanket, and a glazed pot hat. However, on reaching the street, he
+found that every man he met was similarly clad, while his own
+costume--which, in his original century, would only have been remarkable
+for its unimpeachable taste--was, in this, the subject of universal and
+invidious comment.
+
+"You'll have your regulation pot hat and pyjamas served out to you in
+time!" said MR. SEVEN MILLION AND SIX encouragingly. "Then no one will
+say anything to you. In these days we resent anything that tends to
+confer an artificial distinction on any man. Surnames, for example,
+which occasionally suggested superiority of birth, have long been
+abolished, and official numbers substituted. You seem to be looking for
+something you do not see?" he added, noting a certain blankness and
+disappointment in MR. PUNCH'S expressive countenance.
+
+"I was only wondering why I saw no signs of any new and marvellous
+inventions at present," said MR. PUNCH. "I rather expected to see the
+air full of electric trains, manageable balloons, or coveys of citizens
+darting about on mechanical pinions. But I see none, and even more
+people go on foot than in my own time."
+
+"Inventions, I take it," was the reply, "only served to enrich the
+Capitalist, and save time or labour. Now we have no Capitalists and no
+riches, and no reason for hurrying anywhere, while it would be absurd
+and useless to lessen the amount of manual labour when, even as it is,
+there is scarcely enough to keep everyone employed for six hours a day."
+
+"Why are all the women I see dressed exactly alike in navy-blue woollen
+frocks and coal-scuttle bonnets?" MR. PUNCH inquired presently. "Surely
+they can't _all_ be members of the Sal----"
+
+"A uniform costume was decreed by plebiscite some years ago," replied
+his mentor, promptly. "Any real equality amongst women was found
+hopeless so long as some were able to render themselves exceptionally
+attractive by a distinctive toilette."
+
+"What!" exclaimed MR. PUNCH, "did all the pretty women consent to such a
+sacrifice?"
+
+"They were in a very decided minority, even then," said MR. SEVEN
+MILLION AND SIX; "and it is not our way to think much of minorities. At
+present, owing no doubt to an enactment which penalised every pretty
+woman by compelling her to wear blue goggles and a respirator, feminine
+beauty is practically extinct."
+
+MR. PUNCH could not restrain a sigh. They were now entering a somewhat
+gloomy thoroughfare, between massive blocks of buildings, with large
+doors and innumerable small windows, which towered into the sky on
+either hand.
+
+"I seem to miss the shop-fronts," he said aloud, "with their
+plate-glass, and all their glitter and luxury. What has become of them
+all?"
+
+"Such necessaries as the citizen requires," said his companion, "are
+procured at the Public Storehouses, which you see around you, by the
+simple method of presenting a ticket. The luxuries you refer to were
+only procurable by the rich, and nobody is rich now. If you will come
+with me, I will take you over one of the State Dwelling-houses, and show
+you one of the suites of rooms. Every citizen has a room; or, if
+married, a couple of rooms, exactly the same shape and size as those of
+his fellows.... Beautifully clean, you see!" he remarked, complacently,
+as he threw open one of the doors. "Neat whitewashed walls, plain deal
+furniture, nice holland blinds--what more can any reasonable citizen
+want in the way of comfort?"
+
+"There used to be a celebrated poet in my time," said MR. PUNCH,
+with some hesitation, "Who designed and sold very beautiful
+upholster--tapestry, wall-papers, curtains, and so on. I fancy _he_
+held socialistic views. But I see no trace of his work _here_."
+
+"I think I know whom you refer to," was the reply. "The community would
+doubless have been glad of his company's services if they would only
+have contracted to supply every citizen with precisely the same pattern
+and quality of their manufactures at, say, a pork-pie a yard, but, for
+some reason, the firm could not see their way to it, and the industry
+declined; which is not to be regretted, for it certainly tended to
+foster individualism."
+
+"It is curious," said MR. PUNCH, when they were outside again, "that I
+have not as yet seen a single policeman."
+
+"Not at all curious. We _have_ none. Crime simply proceeded from the
+galling sense of social inequality. Consequently, as soon as that was
+removed, Justice, with all its machinery, became an anachronism."
+
+"I think," said MR. PUNCH, presently, "I should like to take a stroll in
+Hyde Park."
+
+"That," said his guide, "has not been possible for at least fifty years.
+All the parks are now cut up into three-acre allotments, where every
+able-bodied citizen does an hour's compulsory spade-work once a
+fortnight. A most admirable reform, as you will agree!"
+
+"Capital!" gasped MR. PUNCH, with an anticipatory pain in his back.
+"Then I am curious to see what strides have been made by your modern
+painters. Could you take me to a picture-gallery?"
+
+"There are _no_ modern painters. It is perhaps a pity--but quite
+unavoidable. It was an obvious injustice that, when all citizens had to
+perform their share of more or less distasteful manual labour, there
+should be any one class that earned a living by work in which they took
+a positive pleasure. So that every artist had to do his six hours'
+stone-breaking or brick-making; or what not, as an antecedent condition
+of being permitted to paint at all, and naturally the State declined to
+provide him with paints and brushes at the expense of the community. A
+few artists persisted for a while, from sheer love of the thing; but as
+no picture fetched more than a pound of sausages, and the average price
+was a bowl of porridge, they found it expedient to turn to some more
+useful occupation. And it is undeniable that they contribute more to the
+resources of the commonwealth by wielding a trowel or a broom than by
+messing about with brushes and paint. As a concession to hereditary
+instinct, however, their descendants are still set apart as State
+white-washers."
+
+"And the drama?" MR. PUNCH inquired next. "How is _that_ getting on? Has
+the New Dramatist made his appearance at last?"
+
+"On the contrary, I am glad to say he has disappeared--let us hope for
+ever. For, the essence of Drama, as I understand, was Emotion--Passion,
+Jealousy, Marital and Parental relations, and so on. Now that marriages
+are the subject of State regulation, and extend only for a limited
+period, Passion, of course is obsolete; Jealousy, too, is recognised as
+merely Selfishness in disguise, and we have grown too altruistic to
+desire the exclusive possession of anything. While as the offspring of
+every union are removed at birth to a communal _crèche_, and brought up
+and educated by the State, there are no longer any opportunities for
+filial or parental affection."
+
+"Then I presume Fiction is equally----?"
+
+"Just so. Fiction depended on Contrast. When everybody is on precisely
+the same level, the novelist is, happily, unnecessary. What are you
+looking for _now_?"
+
+"I was wondering if I could buy an evening paper anywhere," said MR.
+PUNCH, wistfully. "But perhaps Journalism is also----?"
+
+"Of course. Everyone is so contentedly and peacefully absorbed in
+contributing his share of work to the State, that he has no desire to
+read about the doings of other persons, even if there was anything of
+interest to be told, which there isn't. We produce just sufficient for
+our own wants, so there is no commerce; we have no Army or Navy, since
+we don't desire to conquer, and are not worth conquering. No Politics,
+because we govern ourselves by our own consent and co-operation; no
+Science, as inventors only benefited capital at the expense of labour;
+and, this being so, what _is_ there to put into a newspaper, if we had
+one?"
+
+"Haven't you even a--a _humorous_ paper?" said MR. PUNCH. "I used to do
+a little in that way once."
+
+"You had better not do it _here_. Humour, I believe, consisted in
+representing Humanity under ridiculous aspects. _We_'re Humanity, and we
+don't see any fun in being laughed at. None of your humour here, mind!"
+
+"But the citizens have a certain amount of leisure, I suppose," said MR.
+PUNCH. "How _do_ they amuse themselves? For I can discover no
+libraries, no circuses, nor concert-rooms, nor anything!"
+
+[Illustration: "None of your humour here, mind!"]
+
+"It was seen to be invidious to furnish any entertainment at the public
+expense which did not give equal amusement to all, and so the idea was
+gradually dropped. When our citizens have finished their daily task,
+they find their relaxation, in the intervals of eating and sleeping, in
+the harmless and soothing practice of chewing gum. They can all do
+_that_, and the State provides each with a weekly supply for the
+purpose. Now tell me--is there anything _more_ I can do for you?"
+
+"Yes," murmured MR. PUNCH; "if you would be so very kind as to freeze me
+again for five hundred years or so, I should be exceedingly obliged. I
+don't feel quite at home in _this_ century!"
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+BY PARLIAMENTARY.
+
+
+_On the Platform._
+
+A LADY OF FAMILY. Oh, yes, I do travel third-class sometimes, my dear. I
+consider it a duty to try to know something of the lower orders.
+
+ [_Looks out for an empty third-class compartment._
+
+ _In the Carriage._--_The seats are now occupied: the LADY OF
+ FAMILY is in one corner, next to a CHATTY WOMAN with a basket,
+ and opposite to an ECCENTRIC-LOOKING MAN with a flighty
+ manner._
+
+The ECCENTRIC MAN (_to the LADY OF FAMILY_). Sorry to disturb you, Mum,
+but you're a-setting on one o' my 'am sandwiches.
+
+The _L. of F._???!!!
+
+The E. M. (_considerately_). Don't trouble yourself, Mum, it's of no
+intrinsic value. I on'y put it there to keep my seat.
+
+The CHATTY W. (_to the L. OF F._). I think I've seen you about
+Shinglebeach, 'ave I not?
+
+The L. OF F. It is very possible. I have been staying with some friends
+in the neighbourhood.
+
+The C. W. It's a nice cheerful place is Shinglebeach; but
+(_confidentially_) don't you think it's a very singler thing that in a
+place like that--a fash'nable place, too--there shouldn't be a single
+'am an' beef shop?
+
+The L. OF F. (_making a desperate effort to throw herself into the
+question_). What a very extraordinary thing to be sure. Dear, _dear_ me!
+No ham and beef shop!
+
+The C. W. It's so indeed, Mum; and what's more, as I daresay you have
+noticed for yourself, if you 'appen to want a snack o' fried fish ever
+so, there isn't a place you could go to--leastways, at a moment's
+notice. Now, 'ow do you explain such a thing as that?
+
+The L. OF F. (_faintly_). I'm afraid I can't suggest any explanation.
+
+A SENTENTIOUS MAN. Fried fish is very sustaining.
+
+ [_Relapses into silence for remainder of journey._
+
+The ECCENTRIC MAN. Talking of sustaining, I remember, when we was kids,
+my father ud bring us home two pennorth o' ches'nuts, and we 'ad 'em
+boiled, and they'd last us days. (_Sentimentally._) He was a kind man,
+my father (_to the L. OF F., who bows constrainedly_), though you
+wouldn't ha' thought it, to look at him. I don't know, mind yer, that he
+wasn't fond of his bit o' booze--(_the L. OF F. looks out of
+window_)--like the best of us. I'm goin' up to prove his will now, I
+am--if you don't believe me, 'ere's the probate. (_Hands that document
+round for inspection._) That's all reg'lar enough, I 'ope. (_To the L.
+OF F._) Don't give it back before you've done with it--I'm in no 'urry,
+and there's good reading in it. (_Points out certain favourite passages
+with a very dirty forefinger._) Begin there--_that's_ my name.
+
+ [_The L. OF F. peruses the will with as great a show of
+ interest as she can bring herself to assume._
+
+The ECCENTRIC MAN. D'ye see that big 'andsome building over there?
+That's the County Lunatic Asylum--where my poor wife is shut up. I went
+to see her last week, I did. (_Relates his visit in detail to the L. OF
+F., who listens unwillingly._) It's wonderful how many of our family
+have been in that asylum from first to last. I 'ad a aunt who died
+cracky; and my old mother, she's very peculiar at times. There's days
+when I feel as if I was a little orf my own 'ed, so if I say anything
+at all out of the way, you'll know what it is.
+
+[_L. OF F. changes carriages at the next station. In the second carriage
+are two Men of seafaring appearance, and a young Man who is parting from
+his FIANCÉE as the L. OF F. takes her seat._
+
+The FIANCÉ. Excuse me one moment, Ma'am.
+
+(_Leans across the L. OF F. and out of the window._) Well, good-bye, my
+girl; take care of yourself.
+
+The FIANCÉE (_with a hysterical giggle._) Oh, I'll take care o' _my_
+self.
+
+ [_Looks at the roof of the carriage._
+
+HE (_with meaning_). No more pickled onions, eh?
+
+SHE. What a one you are to remember things! (_After a pause._) Give my
+love to Joe.
+
+HE. All right. Well, Jenny, just one, for the last. (_They embrace
+loudly, after which the F. resumes his seat with an expression of
+mingled sentiment and complacency._) Oh (_to L. OF F._), if you don't
+mind my stepping across you again, Mum. Jenny, if you see Dick between
+this and Friday, just tell him as----
+
+ [_Prolonged whispers; sounds of renewed kisses; final parting
+ as train starts with a jerk, which throws the FINACÉ upon the
+ L. OF F.'S lap. After the train is started a gleam of peculiar
+ significance is observable in the eyes of one of the Seafaring_
+ _Men, who is reclining in an easy attitude on the seat. His
+ companion responds with a grin of intelligence, and produces a
+ large black bottle from the rack. They drink, and hand the
+ bottle to the FIANCÉ._
+
+The F. Thankee, I don't mind if I do. Here's wishing you----
+
+ [_Remainder of sentiment drowned in sound of glug-glug-glug; is
+ about to hand back bottle when the first SEAFARER intimates
+ that he is to pass it on. The L. OF F. recoils in horror._
+
+BOTH SEAFARERS. It's _wine_, Mum!
+
+ [_Tableau. The LADY OF FAMILY realises that the study of
+ third-class humanity has its drawbacks._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE FARMING OF THE FUTURE; OR, WHAT BRITISH AGRICULTURE IS COMING TO.
+
+
+_A Car on the Electric Light Railway. TIME.--Twentieth Century._
+
+FIRST FARMER (_recognising Second Farmer_). Why, 'tis Muster Fretwail,
+surelie! didn't see it was you afore. And how be things gettin' along
+with _you_, Sir, eh?
+
+FARMER FRETWAIL (_lugubriously_). 'Mong the middlin's, Muster Lackaday;
+'mong the middlin's! Nothen doin' just now--nothen 't all!
+
+THIRD FARMER (_enviously_). Well, _you_ hevn't no call fur to cry out,
+neighbour. I see you've got a likely lot o' noo 'oardins comin' up all
+along your part o' the line. I wish mine wur arf as furrard, I know
+thet!
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Ah, them "Keep yer 'air on"'s, _you_ mean, Ryemouth. I
+don't deny as they was lookin' tidy enough a week back. But just as I
+was makin' ready fur to paint up "Try it on a Billiard Ball," blamed if
+this yere frost didn't set in, and now theer's everything at a
+standstill, wi' the brushes froze 'ard in the pots!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. 'Tis the same down with me. Theer's a acre o' "Bunyan's
+Easy Boots" as must hev a noo coat, and I cann't get nothen done to 'en
+till the weather's a bit more hopen like. Don' keer _'ow_ soon we hev a
+change, myself, I don't!
+
+F. LACKADAY. Nor yet me, so long as we don't 'ave no gales with it.
+Theer was my height acre pasture as I planted only las' Candlemas wi'
+"Roopy's Lung Tonics"--wunnerful fine and tall they was, too--and ivery
+one on 'en blowed down the next week!
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Well I 'ope theer wun't be no rain, neither, come to that.
+I know I had all the P's of my "Piffler's Persuasive Pillules" fresh
+gold-leaved at Michaelmas, and it come on wet directly arter I done it,
+and reg'lar washed the gilt out o' sight an' knowledge, it did. Theer
+ain't no standin' up agen rain!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. I dunno as I wouldn't as lief hev rain as sun. My
+"Hanti-Freckle Salves" all blistered up and peeled afore the summer was
+'ardly begun a'most.
+
+[Illustration: "I cann't get nothen done to 'en till the weather's a bit
+more hopen like."]
+
+F. LACKADAY. 'Tis a turr'ble hard climate to make 'ead against, is
+ourn. I've 'eard tell as some farmers are takin' to they enamelled hiron
+affairs, same as they used to hev when I wur a lad. I mind theer wur a
+crop o' "Read Comic Cagmag" as lingered on years arter the paper itself.
+Not as I hold with enamelling, myself--'tain't what I call 'igh
+farmin'--takes too much outer the land in _my_ 'pinion.
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Aye, aye. "Rotation o' boards." Say, "Spooner's Sulphur
+Syrup" fur a spring crop, follered with some kind o' soap or candles,
+and p'raps cough lozengers, or hembrocation, or bakin' powder, if the
+soil will bear it, arterwards--that's the system _I_ wur reared on, and
+there ain't no better, 'pend upon it!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. I tell 'ee what 'tis; it's time we 'ad some protection agen
+these yere furrin advartisements. I was travellin' along the Great
+Northern t'other day, an' I see theer wos two or three o' them French
+boards nigh in ivery field, a downright shame and disgrace I call it,
+disfigurin' the look of the country and makin' it that ontidy--let alone
+drivin' honest British boards off the land. Government ought to put a
+stop to it; that's what _I_ say!
+
+F. LACKADAY. They Parliment chaps don't keer _what_ becomes of us poor
+farmers, they don't. Look at last General Election time. They might ha'
+given our boards a turn; but not they. Most o' they candidates did all
+their 'tisin' with rubbishy flags and balloons--made in Japan, Sir,
+every blamed one o' them! And they wonder British Agriculture don't
+prosper more!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. Speaking o' queer ways o' hadvertisin', hev any of ye set
+eyes on that farm o' young Fullacrank's? Danged if ever _I_ see sech
+tomfool notions as he's took up with in all _my_ born days.
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Why, what hev he been up to _now_, eh?
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. Well, I thought I shud ha' bust myself larfin' when I see
+it fust. Theer ain't not a board nor a sky sign; no, nor yet a 'oarding,
+on the 'ole of his land!
+
+F. LACKADAY. Then how do he expect to get a profit out of it?--that's
+what _I_ want to year.
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. You'll 'ardly credit it, neighbours, but he's been buryin'
+some o' they furrin grains, hoats and barley, an' I dunno what not, in
+little holes about his fields, so as to make the words, "Use Faddler's
+Non-Farinaceous Food"--and the best of it is the darned young fool
+expecks as 'ow it'll all sprout come next Aperl--he do indeed, friends!
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Flying in the face o' Providence, I calls it. He must ha'
+gone clean out of his senses!
+
+F. LACKADAY. Stark starin' mad. I never heerd tell o' such extravagance.
+Why, as likely as not, 'twill all die off o' the land afore the year's
+out--and wheer wull he be _then_?
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. Azactly what I said to 'en myself. "You tek my word for
+it," I sez, "'twun't never come to no good. The nateral crop for these
+yere British Hiles," I told 'en, "is good honest Henglish hoak an'
+canvas," I sez, "and 'tain't the action of no sensible man, nor yet no
+Christian," sez I, "to go a-drillin' 'oles and a-droppin' in houtlandish
+seeds from Canada an' Roosha, which the sile wasn't never intended to
+bear!"
+
+FARMERS FRETWELL and LACKADAY. Rightly spoke, neighbour Ryemouth, 'twas
+a true word! But theer'll be a jedgment on sech new-fangled doin's, and,
+what's moor, you and I will live fur to see it afore we're very much
+older!
+
+ [_They all shake their heads solemnly as scene closes in._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+A DIALOGUE ON ART.
+
+(A STUDY IN SPIRITS AND WATERS.)
+
+
+_The Smoke-room of a Provincial Hotel. TIME--Towards midnight.
+CHARACTERS--MR. LUCESLIPP-BLETHERON, a middle-aged Art Patron and
+Dilettante. He has arrived at his third tumbler of whiskey and water,
+and the stage at which a man alludes freely before strangers to his
+"poor dear father." MR. MILBOARD, a Painter, on a sketching tour. He is
+enduring MR. L.-B. with a patience which will last for just one more
+pipe. FIRST COMMERCIAL, who considers Mr. L.-B. a highly agreeable and
+well-informed gentleman, and is anxious to be included in his audience.
+SECOND COMMERCIAL, who doesn't intend to join in the conversation until
+he feels he can do so with crushing effect._
+
+MR. LUCESLIPP-BLETHERON. Yes, I assure you, I never come acrosh a David
+Cox but I say to myself, "_There_'sh a Bit!" (_Here he fixes his
+eye-glass, sips whiskey and water, and looks at MR. MILBOARD as if he
+expected him to express admiration at this evidence of penetration. The
+only tribute he extorts, however, is a grunt._) Now, we've a Cornelius
+Janssen at home. Itsh only hishtory is--my dear father bought it. He was
+an artist himself, painted a bit, travelled man, an' all that short o'
+thing. Well, _he_ picked it up for ten pounds!
+
+FIRST COMMERCIAL (_deferentially_). Did he reelly now? A Johnson for ten
+pounds! Did he get a warranty with it, Sir?
+
+MR. L.-B. (_after bringing the eye-glass to bear on the intruder for a
+second_). Then I've a Mieris--at leasht, _shome_ clever f'ler painted
+it, and it'sh a pleashure to look at it, and you can't get over _that_,
+can you?
+
+MR. MILBOARD. I don't intend to _try_ to get over it.
+
+MR. L.-B. You're qui' right. Now I'm the lasht man in the world to
+shwagger; shtill, I'm goin' to ashk you to lemme have my lil' shwagger
+now. I happened to be at Rome shor' time ago, and I met Middleman there.
+We had our lil' chat together and what not--he'sh no pershonal friend o'
+mine. Well; I picked up a lil' drawing by a Roman chap; worth nothing
+more than what I got it for, or _anything_, as you may shay. Middleman
+had the whole run of this chap's studio. I saw this drawing--didn't care
+mush about it--but thought it wash a gem, and gave the modesh shum of a
+hundred an' fifty _lire_ for it. Put it in my portmanteau between a
+couple o' shirts----
+
+FIRST COMM. (_still pining for notice_). When you say shirts, Sir, I
+presume you mean _clean_ ones?
+
+MR. L.-B. No man with the shlightest feelin' or reverence for Art would
+_put_ sush a queshtion! (_The FIRST COMM. collapses._) Between a couple
+of--(_underlining the word_) Shirts, and brought it home. Now I'm comin'
+to my point. One afternoon after my return, I wash walking down Bond
+Street, when I saw a sketch exhibited in a window by the shame f'ler. I
+went in and shaid, "What are you asking for thish? Mind I don' wanter
+_buy_ it; ashk me any price yer like!" And they shaid forty guineash.
+
+MR. MILB. Apparently they availed themselves of your permission, and
+_did_ ask you any price they liked.
+
+MR. L.-B. No doubt; but wait till I've _done_. I saw another--a finished
+drawing not qui' so good as mine, there. Then I shaid to them quietly,
+"Now, look _here_, why don' you go an' buy 'em for yourshelves in the
+artist's own shtudio?" It shtruck me as sho odd, a man like Middleman,
+being there, and having the pick, shouldn' buy _more_ of 'em!
+
+MR. MILB. Wasn't worth his while; he can't buy _everything_!
+
+MR. L.-B. (_after considering this impartially with some more whiskey_).
+No; your ansher is a very _good_ one, and a very _fair_ one. He _can't_
+buy everything. I _did_ pick, however, an' I gorrit. I said to him, "How
+mush?" an' he tol' me, and there wash an end of it, do you shee?
+
+MR. MILB. It's the ordinary course of business, isn't it?
+
+MR. L.-B. Egshackly. But how few _do_ it! Now, I'll tell you 'nother
+shtory 'bout my poo' dear father. He came 'pon a sculpture in a
+curioshity shop; it wash very dirty and used up, but my dear father saw
+it was worth shpotting, and a thing to _be_ shpotted, and sho he put
+hish _finger_ on it!
+
+FIRST COMM. (_undaunted by past failure_). And was it antique, Sir?
+
+MR. L.-B. That'sh more'n I can tell you; it wash very dirty, at any
+rate, and he only gave fifty guineash for it. Wasn't a _great_ shum----
+
+FIRST COMM. (_encouraged by his affability_). No, indeed; a mere
+nothing, so to speak, Sir!
+
+MR. L.-B. (_annoyed_). Will you have the goodnesh to lemme finish what I
+was telling thish gentleman? When my poo' father got that busht home, it
+was the mos' perfect likenesh o' Napoleon!
+
+[Illustration: "They haven't the _patiensh_ for it."]
+
+MR. MILB. Ha! puts me in mind of the old story of the man who picked up
+a dingy panel somewhere or other, took it home, cleaned it, and found a
+genuine Morland; went on cleaning and discovered an undoubted Rembrandt;
+cleaned _that_, and came to a Crivelli; couldn't stop, kept on cleaning,
+and was rewarded by a portrait of George the Fourth!
+
+FIRST COMM. (_deeply impressed_). And all of them genuine? How _very_
+extraordinary, to be sure!
+
+MR. L.-B. (_wagging his head sapiently_). I could tell you shtranger
+things than _that_. But as I was shaying, here was this busht of
+Napoleon, by some French chap--which _you_ would tell me was _against_
+it.
+
+MR. MILB. Why? The French are the best sculptors in the world.
+
+MR. L.-B. The Frensh! I can _not_ bring myshelf to believe that, if only
+for thish shimple reashon, they haven't the _patiensh_ for it.
+
+FIRST COMM. So _I_ should have said. For my own part--not knowing much
+_about_ it, very likely--I should have put the _Italians_ first.
+
+MR. MILB. If you are talking of all time----
+
+FIRST COMM. (_feeling at last at his ease_). I should say, even _now_.
+Why, there was a piece of statuary in the Italian Exhibition at Earl's
+Court some years back that took _my_ fancy and took my _wife's_ fancy
+very much. It was a representation in marble of a 'en and chickens, all
+so natural, and with every individual feather on the birds done to such
+a nicety----!
+
+MR. MILB. I was hardly referring to the skill with which the Italians
+carve--ah--_poultry_.
+
+MR. L.-B. Ridic'lous! Great mishtake to talk without unnershtanding
+shubject. (_The FIRST COMMERCIAL retires from the room in disorder._)
+One thing I should like to ashk is thish. Why are sculptors at present
+day so inferior to the antique? Ishn't the human form divine ash noble
+and ash shymmetrical ash formerly? Why can't they _reproduce_ it then?
+
+MR. MILB. You must first find your sculptor. Providence doesn't see fit
+to create a Michael Angelo or a Praxiteles every five minutes, any more
+than a Shakspeare.
+
+MR. L.-B. (_wavering between piety and epigram_). Thank the Lord for
+_that_! Now there'sh Florensh. Shome of us who have had the _run_
+there--well, there you see all the original thingsh--all the
+_originalsh_. And yet, if you'll believe me (_dreamily_), with all my
+love and charm for Art, gimme the Capitoline Venush living and breathing
+in _flesh and blood_, Sir, not in cold lifelesh marble!
+
+MR. MILB. That of course is a matter of taste. But we are talking about
+Art, not women.
+
+MR. L.-B. (_profoundly_). Unforsh'nately, women are the _shubjects_ of
+Art. You've got to find out your client's shtyle of Art firsht, and then
+carry it out in the besht possible manner.
+
+MR. MILB. (_rising, and knocking his pipe out_). Have I? But I'm going
+to bed now, so you'll excuse me.
+
+MR. L.-B. (_detaining him_). But look here again. Take the Louvre. (_As
+MR. MILBOARD disclaims any desire to take it._) Now, nobody talksh about
+the Gallery _there_, and yet, if you only egshemp the thingsh that are
+rude and vulgar, and go quietly roun'----
+
+SECOND COMMERCIAL (_who sees a Socratic opening at last_). Might I ask
+you, Sir, to enumerate any pictures there, that, in your opinion, are
+"rude and vulgar"?
+
+ [_MR. MILBOARD avails himself of this diversion to escape._
+
+MR. L.-B. In the Grand Gallery of the Louvre there'sh an enormous amount
+of shtuff, as everybody who'sh an artisht and a lover of Art knowsh. If
+I had a friend who wash thinking of going to the Louvre (_here he looks
+round vaguely for MR. MILBOARD_), I should shay to him, "Do you _care_
+about pictursh at all? If you _don't_, don't borrer yourshelf 'bout it.
+If you _do_, drop in shome day with Me, and I'll give you a hint what
+to shee." (_As he cannot make out what has become of MR. MILBOARD, he
+has to content himself with the SECOND COMMERCIAL._) If you were _my_
+boy, I should shay to you----
+
+SECOND COMM. (_at the door_). Pardon me for remarking that, if I was
+your boy, I should probably prefer to take my own opinion. (_With
+dignified independence._) I never follow other persons' taste in Art!
+
+ [_He goes out as the Smoke-room Page enters._
+
+MR. L.-B. (_hazily with half-closed eyes_). If you wash _my_ boy, I
+should shay to you, very quietly, very sherioushly, and without
+'tempting to dictate----(_Perceives that he is addressing the Page._)
+Jus' bring me 'nother glash whiskey an' warrer.
+
+ [_He is left sitting._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE OLD LOVE AND THE NEW.
+
+A CONTRAST.
+
+
+_The Stables at Saddlesprings, the Wheelers' Country House near
+Bykersall. MISS DIANA'S Horse BAYARD discovered in his Stall._
+
+BAYARD (_talking to himself, as is the habit of some horses when
+alone_). I can't make it out. She's here. All the family came down
+yesterday--I heard the omnibus start for the station to meet them. And
+yet she hasn't sent for me; hasn't even been near me! She always used to
+rush in here and kiss me on the nose the very first--She's ill--that's
+it of course--sprained her fetlock or something. If she was well, she'd
+have had me saddled as soon as she'd had her morning feed, and we'd have
+gone for a canter together somewhere.... I hope she'll get well soon.
+I'm sick of being taken out by the stable-man; he's so dull--no notion
+of conversation beyond whistling! Now, Miss Diana would talk to me the
+whole way.... Perhaps her hands and seat might have been----But what did
+_that_ matter? I liked to feel she was on my back, I liked the sound of
+her pretty voice, and the touch of her hand when she patted me after her
+ride.... (_He pricks his ears._) Why, that's her voice outside now!
+She's all right, after all. She's coming in to see me!... I _knew_ she
+couldn't have forgotten!
+
+MISS DIANA'S VOICE (_outside_). Yes, you might put it in here for the
+present, Stubbs. I suppose it will be quite safe?
+
+STUBBS' VOICE. Safe enough, Miss, there's plenty o' empty stalls this
+side. Nothing _in_ 'ere just now, except----
+
+MISS D.'S VOICE. Very well, then. Just wipe some of the dust off the
+mud-guards, because I shall want it again after lunch. And mind you
+don't scratch the enamel taking it in.
+
+STUBBS. Very good, Miss. I'll be keerful.
+
+ [_MISS DIANA'S steps die away upon the cobbles._
+
+BAYARD (_to himself_). She's gone--without even asking after me! What
+has she been out in--a bath chair? I'm sure she _must_ be ill.
+
+STUBBS (_to the Bicycle, as he wheels it in_). 'Ere, steady now, 'old
+up, can't ye? And keep that blarsted near pedal o' yourn off o' _my_
+enamel. Blest if I wouldn't rather rub down arf a dozen 'unters nor one
+o' them yere bloomin' bi-cycles. I know where I _am_ with a 'orse; but
+these 'ere little, twisty, spidery wheels----Come _over_, will ye. I'll
+lean ye up agen 'ere till I've 'ad my dinner.
+
+[Illustration: "It must be a sort of animal, I suppose."]
+
+ [_He places the machine against a partition next to BAYARD'S
+ stall, and goes out._
+
+BAYARD (_to himself, as he inspects his neighbour with the corner of his
+eye_). It's _not_ a bath-chair; it's one of these bicycles. It must be a
+sort of animal, I suppose, or Stubbs wouldn't have spoken to it. I
+should like to ask it one or two questions. (_He gets his neck over the
+partition, and breathes gently through his nostrils upon the
+handle-bars._) Excuse me, but do you understand horse-language at all?
+
+The BICYCLE (_answering by a succession of saddle-creaks_). Perfectly.
+I'm a kind of horse myself, I believe, only greatly _improved_, of
+course. _Would_ you mind not breathing on my handle-bars like that? It
+tarnishes the plating so. The saddle is the seat of _my_ intelligence,
+if you will kindly address your remarks here.
+
+BAYARD. I beg your pardon. I will in future. I don't creak myself, but
+I've been closely connected with saddles ever since I was a
+two-year-old, so I can follow you fairly well. Didn't I hear my
+mistress's voice outside just now?
+
+The BICYCLE. No; _my_ mistress's, Miss Diana's. I'd just taken her out
+for a short spin--not far, only fifteen miles or so.
+
+BAYARD. Then, she--she's quite well?
+
+The BICYCLE. Thanks, she's pedalling pretty strong just now. I'm going
+out with her again this afternoon.
+
+BAYARD. Again! You will have had a hard day of it altogether, then. But
+I suppose you'll get a day or two's rest afterwards? I know _I_ should
+want it.
+
+The BICYCLE. Bless you, _I_ never want rest. Why, I've been forty miles
+with her, and come home without clanking a link! _She_ was knocked up,
+if you like--couldn't go out for days!
+
+BAYARD. Ah, she was never knocked up after riding _me_!
+
+The BICYCLE. Because--it's no fault of yours, of course, but the way
+you've been constructed--you couldn't go far enough to knock _anybody_
+up. And she doesn't get tired now, either. I'm not the kind of bicycle
+to boast; but I've often heard her say that she much prefers her "bike"
+(she always calls me her "bike"--very nice and friendly of her, isn't
+it?) to any mere _horse_.
+
+BAYARD. To any mere horse! And does she--give any reasons?
+
+The BICYCLE. Lots. For one thing, she says she feels so absolutely safe
+on me; she knows that, whatever she meets, I shall never start, or shy,
+or rear, or anything of that sort.
+
+BAYARD. I don't remember playing any of those tricks with her, however
+hard she pulled the curb.
+
+The BICYCLE. Then she says she never has to consider whether any
+distance will be too much for me.
+
+BAYARD. As for _that_----But the longer I was out with her, the better I
+was pleased; she might have brought me home as lame as a tree all round,
+and _I_ shouldn't have cared!
+
+The BICYCLE. Perhaps not. But _she_ would; so inconvenient, you see. Now
+_my_ strong point is, I _can't_ go lame--in good hands, of course, and
+she knows exactly how to manage me, I will say that for her!
+
+BAYARD. Does she give you carrots or sugar after a ride? she did _me_.
+
+THE BICYCLE (_with a creak of contempt_). Now what _do_ you suppose I
+could do with sugar or a carrot if I had it? No, a drop or two of oil
+now and then is all I take in the way of sustenance. That's _another_
+point in my favour, I cost little or nothing to keep. Now, your oats and
+hay and stuff, I daresay, cost more in a year than I'm worth altogether!
+
+BAYARD.. I must admit that you have the advantage of me in cheapness. If
+I thought she grudged me my oats----But I'm afraid I couldn't manage on
+a drop or two of oil.
+
+The BICYCLE. You'd want buckets of it to oil _your_ bearings. No, she
+wouldn't save by that! (_STUBBS re-enters._) Ah, here comes my man. I
+must be going; got to take her over to Pineborough, rather a bore this
+dusty weather, but when a lady's in the case, eh?
+
+BAYARD. There's a nasty hill going into Pineborough; do be careful how
+you take her down it!
+
+The BICYCLE. You forget, my friend, I'm not a Boneshaker, I'm a Safety.
+Why, she'll just put her feet up on the rests, fold her arms, and leave
+the rest to me. She knows _I_ can be trusted.
+
+BAYARD. Just tell me this before you go. Does--she doesn't pat you, or
+kiss you on your--er--handle-bar after a run, does she?
+
+The BICYCLE (_turning its front wheel to reply, as STUBBS wheels it
+out_). You don't imagine I should stand any sentimental rot of that
+sort, do you? She knows better than to try it on!
+
+BAYARD (_to himself_). I'm glad she doesn't kiss it. I don't think I
+_could_ have stood that!
+
+
+_Same Scene. Some Hours Later._
+
+STUBBS (_enters, carrying a dilapidated machine with crumpled handles, a
+twisted saddle, and a front wheel distorted into an irregular pentagon_).
+Well, I 'ope as 'ow this'll sarve as a lesson to 'er, I dew; a marcy she
+ain't broke her blessed little neck! (_To the Bicycle._) No need to be
+hover and above purtickler 'bout scratchin' your enamel _now_, any'ow!
+(_He pitches it into a corner, and goes._)
+
+BAYARD (_after reconnoitring_). You don't mean to say it's _you_!
+
+The BICYCLE. Me? of course it's me! A nice mess I'm in, too, entirely
+owing to her carelessness. Never put the brake on down that infernal
+hill, lost all control over me, and here I am, a wreck, Sir! Why, I had
+to be driven home, by a grinning groom, in a beastly dog-cart! Pleasant
+that!
+
+BAYARD. But she--Miss Diana--was she hurt? Not--not _seriously_, eh?
+
+The BICYCLE. Oh, of course you don't care what becomes of _me_ so long
+as----_She's_ all right enough--fell in a ditch, luckily for her, _I_
+came down on a heap of stones. It'll be weeks before I'm out of the
+repairer's hands.
+
+BAYARD (_to himself_). I _oughtn't_ to be glad; but I am--I _am_! She's
+safe, and--and she'll come back to me after this! (_To the Bicycle._)
+Wasn't she sorry for you?
+
+The BICYCLE. Not she! These women have no feeling in them. Why, what do
+you suppose she said when they told me it would take weeks to tinker me
+up?
+
+BAYARD (_to himself--with joy_). I think I can guess! (_To the
+Bicycle._) What _did_ she say?
+
+The BICYCLE (_rattling with indignation_). Why, all _she_ said was: "How
+tiresome! I wonder if I can hire a decent bike here without having to
+send to town for one." There's gratitude for you! But _you_ can't enter
+into my feelings about it.
+
+BAYARD. Pardon me--I fancy I can. And, after all, your day will come,
+when the Vet has set you up again. _Mine's_ over for ever. (_To
+himself._) Oh, why, _why_ wasn't I born a bicycle!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+A DOLL'S DIARY.
+
+
+_January 1._--Just had a brilliant idea--_quite_ original. I don't
+believe even any human person ever _thought_ of such a thing, but
+then,--besides being extremely beautiful and expensive, with refined wax
+features and golden hair--I am a very clever doll indeed. Frivolous, no
+doubt; heartless, so they tell me--but the very reverse of a _fool_. I
+flatter myself that if _anybody_ understands the nature of toys,
+especially _male_ toys--but I am forgetting my idea--which is this. I am
+going this year to write down--the little girl I belong to has no idea I
+can write, but I _can_--and better than _she_ does, too!--to write down
+every event of importance that happens, _with the dates_. There! I fancy
+_that_ is original enough. It will be a valuable dollian document when
+it is done, and _most_ interesting to look back upon. Now I must wait
+for something to happen.
+
+_January 6._--Went to Small Dance given by the Only Other Wax Doll (a
+dreadful old frump!) on the Nursery Hearthrug. Room rather nicely
+illuminated by coloured fire from grate, and a pyramid nightlight, but
+floor poor. Didn't think much of the music--a fur monkey at the
+Digitorium, and a woolly lamb who brought his own bellows, make _rather_
+a feeble orchestra. Still, on the whole, enjoyed myself. Much admired.
+Several young Ninepins, who are considered stuck-up, and keep a good
+deal to their own set, begged to be introduced. Sat out one dance with a
+Dice-box, who rattled away most amusingly. I understand he is quite an
+authority on games, and anything that falls from his mouth is received
+with respect. He is a great sporting character, too, and arranges all
+the meetings on the Nursery Race-course, besides being much interested
+in Backgammon. I _do_ like a Toy to have _manly_ tastes!
+
+The Captain of a Wooden Marching Regiment quartered in the neighbourhood
+was there in full uniform, but not dancing. Told me they _didn't_ in his
+regiment. As his legs are made in one piece and glued on to a yellow
+stand, inclined to think this was not mere military swagger. He seemed
+considerably struck with me. Made an impression, too, on a rather
+elderly India-rubber Ball. Snubbed him, as one of the Ninepins told me
+he was considered "a bit of a bounder."
+
+Some of the Composition Dolls, I could see, were perfectly _stiff_ with
+spite and envy. Spent a very pleasant evening, not getting back to my
+drawer till daylight. Too tired to write more.
+
+_Mem._--Not to sit out behind the coal-scuttle another time!
+
+_February 14._--Amount of attention I receive really quite embarrassing.
+The Ninepins are too _absurdly_ devoted. One of them (the nicest of all)
+told me to-day he had never been so completely bowled over in his whole
+existence! I manage to play them off against each other, however. The
+India-rubber Ball, too, is at my feet--and, naturally, I spurn him, but
+he is so short-winded that nothing will induce him to rise. Though
+naturally of an elastic temperament, he has been a good deal cast down
+of late. I smile on him occasionally--just to keep the Ball rolling; but
+it is becoming a frightful bore.
+
+_March._--Have been presented with a charming pony-carriage, with two
+piebald ponies that go by clock work. I wish, though, I was not expected
+to share it with a _live kitten_! The kitten has no idea of repose, and
+spoils the effect of the turn-out. Try not to seem aware of it--even
+when it claws my frock. Rather interested in a young Skipjack, whom I
+see occasionally; he is quite good-looking, in a common sort of way. I
+talk to him now and then--it is something to do; and he is a new type,
+so different from the Ninepins!
+
+_April 1._--Have just heard the Skipjack is engaged to a plaster
+Dairy-maid. A little annoyed, because he really seemed----Have been to
+see his _fiancée_, a common-place creature, with red cheeks, and a thick
+waist. Congratulate the Skipjack, with just a _hint_ that he might have
+looked higher. Afraid that he misunderstood me, for he absolutely
+jumped.
+
+_April 7._--The Skipjack tells me he has _broken off his engagement_; he
+seems to think I shall guess the reason--but I don't, of _course_. Then
+he actually has the impertinence to (I can scarcely pen the words for
+indignation) to _propose_--to Me! I inform him, in the most
+_unmistakable_ terms, that he has presumed on my good-nature, and that
+there are social barriers between us, which no Skipjack can ever
+surmount. He leaves me abruptly, after declaring that I have broken the
+spring of his existence.
+
+_April 8._--Much shocked and annoyed. The Skipjack found quite stiff and
+colourless this morning, in the water-jug! Must have jumped in last
+night. So _very_ rash and silly of him! Am sure I gave him no
+encouragement--or _next_ to none. Hear that the Dairy-maid has gone off
+her head. Of course it will be put down to _grief_; but we all know how
+easily plaster heads get cracked. Feel really distressed about it all,
+for the blame is sure to fall on _me_. Those Composition Dolls will make
+a fine scandal out of it!
+
+_May._--The Ninepins are getting very difficult to manage; have to put
+them down as delicately as possible; but I am afraid, poor fellows, they
+are dreadfully upset. The Wooden Captain has challenged the Dice-box to
+a duel--I fear, on _my_ account. However, as the officer's sword will
+not unglue, I _hope_ nothing will come of it. All this _most_ worrying,
+though, and gives me little _real_ satisfaction. I find myself sighing
+for more _difficult_ conquests.
+
+_June._--Went to afternoon tea with the biggest Dutch Doll. Rather a
+come-down, but now that there is this coolness between the Composition
+set and myself, I must go _somewhere_. I feel _so_ bored at times! Can
+see the ridiculous Dutch thing is trying to _out-dress_ me! She had a
+frock on that _must_ have cost at _least_ fifty beads, and I don't
+believe it will _ever_ be paid for! Only made her look the bigger _guy,_
+though! Tea-party a stupid affair. Make-believe tea in pewter cups. Met
+the latest arrival, a really nice-looking Gentleman Doll, introduced as
+"Mr. Joseph." Very innocent face, without any moustache, and the
+sweetest blue eyes (except mine) I think I _ever_ saw! Seemed rather
+shy, but pleasant. Asked him to call.
+
+_June 18._--Mr. Joseph has not called _yet_. Very strange! Suspect those
+horrid Composition Dolls have been setting him against me. Met him by
+the back-board and scolded him. He seemed confused. By a little
+management, I got it all out of him. I was right. He _has_ been told
+about the Skipjack. He has strict principles, and gave me to understand
+that he would prefer to decline my acquaintance--which was _like his
+impudence_! This is exciting, though. I intend to overcome these
+scruples; I mean him to be madly in love with me--then I shall
+scornfully reject him, which will serve him just _right_!
+
+_July._--My tactics have succeeded--_at last_! To-day Joseph called,
+_ostensibly_ to beg me to go and see the unhappy Ball, who, it seems, is
+terribly collapsed, reduced to a _mere bowl_, and so exhausted that he
+cannot hold out much longer. However, in the course of the interview, I
+soon made him oblivious of the Ball. He fell at my feet. "Beautiful
+Gloriana," he cried, "with all your many and glaring faults, I love
+you!" Then I carried out the _rest_ of my programme--it was a painful
+scene, and I will only record that when he left me, he was completely
+_un-dolled_! I feel almost sorry for him--he had rather a nice face!
+
+[Illustration: "I see _him_ standing, on the very brink of the
+precipice."]
+
+_July 4._--I don't seem able to settle to anything. After all, I think I
+will go and see the poor Ball. It would comfort him, and I might see
+_him_ there. I will order the pony-carriage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_August._--What has happened to me? Where have I been all this time? Let
+me collect myself, and see how much I remember. My last clear
+recollection is of being in my carriage on my way to receive the
+departing Ball's last sigh.... Something has started the clockwork. My
+ponies are bolting, and I haven't the _slightest_ control over them! We
+are rushing along the smooth plain of the chest of drawers, and rapidly
+nearing the edge. I try to scream for help, but all I can utter is,
+"Papa!" and "Mamma!" All at once I see _him_ standing, calm and
+collected, on the very brink of the precipice. Is he strong enough to
+stop the ponies in their mad clockwork career, and save me, _even yet_?
+_How_ I will love him if he does! An instant of sickening suspense ...
+we are _over_!--falling down, down, down.... A crash, a whirr of
+clockwork, a rush of bran to my head--and I know no more. What follows
+is a dream--a horrible, confused nightmare--of lying among a heap of
+limp bodies--some armless, some legless, others (ah! the horror of it)
+_headless_! I grope blindly for my own limbs--they are intact; then I
+feel the place where I naturally expect to find my head--it is
+_gone_!... The shock is too much--I faint once more. And that is all.
+
+Thank goodness, it was only a dream--for here I am, in the same old
+nursery again! Not _all_ a dream, either--or my pony-carriage would
+scarcely present such a damaged appearance. The _accident_ was real.
+Then what--_what_ has become of Joseph? I _must_ find him--I must make
+him understand that I repent--that, for the future, I intend to be a
+changed doll!
+
+_September._--Still searching for Joseph. No trace of him. I seem to be
+a changed doll in more ways than one. My former set knows me not. The
+Ninepins do not stagger when I smile at them now; the Dice-box gapes
+open-mouthed at my greeting. I call upon the Composition Dolls--they are
+very polite; but it is quite clear that they don't remember me in the
+least! Alas! how soon one is forgotten in the world of Toys! Have no
+heart to recall myself to them. I go, for the first time since my
+accident, to a convenient brass knob, in which I would once gaze at my
+reflected features by the hour. How indescribable are my sensations at
+the discovery that I have a _totally new head_--a china one! I, who used
+to look down on china dolls! It is a very decent head, in its way; quite
+neat and inoffensive, with smooth, shiny hair, which won't come down
+like the golden locks I _once_ had. I am glad--yes, _glad_ now--that
+Joseph has gone, and the home he used to occupy is deserted, and shut
+up. If he were here, _he_ would not know me either. Now I can live
+single all my remaining days, in memory of him, and devote myself to
+doing good!
+
+_October._--Have entered on my new career. Am organising a Mission for
+Lost Toys, and a Clothing Club for Rag Dolls. To-day, while "slumming"
+in the lumber-closet, found my old acquaintance, the Dutch Doll in a
+_shocking_ state of destitution--nothing on her but a piece of _tattered
+tissue-paper_! To think that my evil example and her own _senseless
+extravagance_ have brought her to _this_! Gave her one of my old
+tea-gowns and a Sunday domino, but did not reveal myself. Feeling very
+sad and lonely: think I shall have to keep a mouse--I must have
+_something_ to love me!
+
+_October 15._--Someone has taken poor dear Joseph's old house. I see a
+new doll, with a small but worldly black moustache and a very bad
+countenance, watching me as I pass the windows. Shall call and leave a
+scripture brick. It may do him good.
+
+_October 16._--Have called.... _Never_ heard worse language from the
+lips of _any_ doll! Came across my old admirer, the Ball, who is better,
+though still what I have heard the nursery governess describe as an
+"_oblate spheroid_." Of course, he did not recognise me.
+
+_December._--Have seen a good deal of the Doll with the worldly
+moustache lately. From certain symptoms, do not despair of reforming
+him--ultimately. He seems softening. Yesterday he told me he did not
+think he should live long. Yet he has a splendid constitution--the best
+porcelain. He is dreadfully cynical--seems so reckless about everything.
+If I could only reclaim him--for Joseph's sake!
+
+This afternoon I saw the yellow stand which the Wooden Captain used to
+occupy. What memories it recalled, ah me! Can he have disgraced himself
+and been "broke"? And am _I_ responsible?
+
+_Christmas Eve._--Am sitting in my corner, my mouse curled comfortably
+at my feet, when the Walking Postman comes up with a letter--for _me_!
+It is from the Wicked Doll! He is very ill--_dying_, he thinks--and
+wishes to see me. How well I remember that _other_ message which
+Joseph--but Joseph is taken, and the Ball still bounds! Well, I will go.
+It will be something to tell my Diary.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Christmas Day._--Something _indeed_! How shall I begin my wondrous
+_incredible_ tale? I reached the Doll's House, which looked gloomier and
+more deserted than ever, with the sullen glow of the dying fire
+reflected redly in its windows. The green door stood open--I went in.
+"Ha, ha! _trapped_!" cried a sneering voice behind me. It was the Wicked
+Doll! His letter was a _ruse_--he was as well as I was--and I--I was
+shut up there in that lonely house, entirely at his mercy!... It was a
+frightful position for any doll to be placed in; and yet, looking back
+on it now, I don't think I minded it so _very_ much.
+
+"Listen!" he said, in response to my agonized entreaties. "Long, long
+ago, when I was young and innocent, a beautiful but heartless being
+bewitched me, kid and bran! I told my love--she mocked at me. Since then
+I have sworn, though she has escaped me, to avenge myself by sacrificing
+the life of the first doll I could entice into my power. _You_ are that
+doll. You must die!"... "I am quite prepared," I told him--"do your
+worst!" which seemed to confuse him very much. "I will," he said,
+"presently--presently; there is no hurry. You see," he explained, in a
+tone almost of apology, "in endeavouring to save her life (it was my
+last good action) I got my head smashed, and received the substitute I
+now wear, which, as you will observe, is that of an unmitigated villain.
+And it's no use having a head like that if you don't live _up_ to
+it--_is_ it, now? So--as I think I observed before--prepare for the
+worst!" "Don't talk about it any more--_do_ it!" I said, and I breathed
+Joseph's name softly. But the Wicked Doll did nothing at all. I began to
+feel safer--it was so obvious that he hadn't the faintest notion _what_
+to do. "She treated me abominably," he said feebly; "_any_ doll would
+have been annoyed at the heartless way in which Gloriana----"
+
+I could contain my feelings no longer.
+
+"Joseph!" I gasped (I had lost all fear of him), "you ridiculous old
+goose, don't you _know_ me? _I_ am Gloriana, and I have found you at
+last!" And with that I flung myself into his arms, and told him
+everything. I think he was more relieved than anything. "So _you_ are
+Gloriana!" he said. "It's dreadfully bewildering; but, to tell you the
+honest truth, I can't keep up this villainy business any longer. I
+haven't been brought up to it, and I don't understand how it's done. So
+I tell you what we'll do. If you'll leave off living up to _your_ new
+head, I won't try to live up to _mine_!" And so we settled it.
+
+_Postscript. December 31._--We are to be married to-morrow. The Dutch
+Doll is to be my bridesmaid, and the Wooden Captain (who was only away
+on sick leave, after all) is coming up to be best man. I have seen the
+poor old Ball, and told him there will always be a corner for him in our
+new home. I am very, _very_ happy. To think that Joseph should still
+care for his poor Gloriana, altered and homely as her once lovely
+features have now become! But Joseph (who is leaning over my shoulder
+and reading every word I write) stops me here to assure me that I am
+lovelier than ever in _his_ eyes. And really--I don't know--perhaps I
+_am_. And in _other_ persons' eyes, too, if it comes to that. I
+certainly don't intend to give up society just because I happen to be
+_married_!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+ELEVATING THE MASSES.
+
+(A PURELY IMAGINARY SKETCH.)
+
+
+_ARGUMENT--MRS. FLITTERMOUSE, having got up a party to assist her in
+giving an Entertainment at the East End, has called a meeting for the
+purpose of settling the items in the programme._
+
+_MRS. FLITTERMOUSE'S Drawing-room in Park Lane. Everybody discovered
+drinking tea, and chatting on matters totally unconnected with
+Philanthropy._
+
+MRS. FLITTERMOUSE (_imploringly_). Now, _please_, everybody, _do_
+attend! It's quite impossible to settle anything while you're all
+talking about something else. (_Apologies, protests, constrained
+silence._) Selina, dear, what do you think it would be best to begin
+with?
+
+The DOWAGER LADY DAMPIER. My dear Fritilla, I have no suggestion to
+offer. You know my opinion about the whole thing. The people don't want
+to be elevated, and--if they did--entertaining them is not the proper
+means to set about it. But I don't wish to discourage you.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Oh, but I think we could do so _much_ to give them a taste
+for more rational and refined amusements, poor things, to wean them from
+the coarse pleasures which are all they have at present. Only we must
+really decide what each of us is going to do.
+
+MRS. PERSE-WEAVER. A violin solo is always popular. And my daughter
+Cecilia will be delighted to play for you. She has been taught by the
+best----
+
+CECELIA. Oh, Mother, I couldn't, really! I've never played in public. I
+_know_ I should break down!
+
+LADY DAMP. In that case, my dear, it would be certainly unwise on your
+part to attempt it.
+
+MRS. P.-W. Nonsense, Cecilia, nonsense. You _won't_ break down, and it
+wouldn't matter in the least if you did. _They_ wouldn't notice
+anything. And it will be such excellent practice for you to get
+accustomed to a platform, too. Of _course_ she will play for you, dear
+Mrs. Flittermouse!
+
+MRS. FLITT. It will be _so_ good of you, Miss Weaver. And it won't be
+like playing to a _real_ audience, you know--poor people are so easily
+pleased, poor dears. Then I will put that down to begin with. (_She
+makes a note._) Now we must have something quite different for the
+next--a reading or something.
+
+LADY HONOR HYNDLEGGS. A--nothin' _humorous_, I hope. I do think we ought
+to avoid anythin' like descendin' to their level, don't you know.
+
+MR. LOVEGROOVE. Might try something out of _Pickwick_. "_Bob Sawyer's
+Party_," you know. Can't go far wrong with anything out of Dickens.
+
+MISS DIOVA ROSE. Can't endure him myself. All his characters are so
+fearfully common; still--(_tolerantly_) I daresay it might
+amuse--a--that class of persons.
+
+MRS FLITT. I must say I agree with Lady Honor. We should try and aim as
+high as possible--and well, I think _not_ Dickens, dear Mr. Lovegroove.
+_Tennyson_ might do perhaps; he's written some charmin' pieces.
+
+MR. LOVEGR. Well, fact is, I don't go in for poetry much myself. But
+I'll read anythin' of his you think I'm equal to.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Why--a--really, it's so long since I--and I'm afraid I
+haven't one of his poems in the house. I suppose they are down at
+Barn-end. But I could send to Cutt and Hawthorn's. I daresay _they_
+would have a copy somewhere.
+
+MISS SIBSON-GABLER. Surely Tennyson is rather--a--retrograde? Why not
+read them something to set them _thinking_? It would be an interesting
+experiment to try the effect of that marvellous Last Scene in the
+_Doll's House_. I'd love to read it. It would be like a breath of fresh
+air to them!
+
+MRS. P.-W. Oh, I've seen that at the Langham Hall. You remember,
+Cecilia, my taking you there? And Corney Grain played _Noah_. To be
+sure--we were _quite_ amused by it all.
+
+MISS S.-G. (_coldly_). This is _not_ amusing--it's a play of Ibsen's.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Is that the man who wrote the piece at the Criterion--what
+is it, _The Toy Shop_? Wyndham acted in it.
+
+LADY DAMP. No, no; IBSEN is the person there's been all this fuss about
+in the papers--he goes in for unconventionality and all that. I may be
+wrong, but I think it is _such_ a mistake to have anything
+unconventional in an entertainment for the people.
+
+MRS. FLITT. But if he's being _talked_ about, dear Lady Dampier, people
+might like to know something about him. But perhaps we'd better leave
+Ibsen open, then. Now, what shall we have next?
+
+MISS SKIPWORTH. I tell you what would fetch them--a skirt-dance. I'll
+dance for you--like a shot. It would be no end of fun doin' it on a
+regular platform, and I've been studyin' Flossie Frillington, at the
+Inanity, till I've caught her style exactly.
+
+[Illustration: "To-night is ours!"]
+
+MR. KEMPTON. Oh, I say, you can give her a stone and a beatin' any day,
+give you my word you can. She doesn't put anythin' like the go into it
+you do.
+
+ [_MISS S. accepts this tribute with complacency._
+
+MRS. FLITT. A skirt-dance will be the very thing. It's sure to please
+the people we shall bring over for it--and of course they'll be in the
+front rows. Yes, I must put _that_ down. We ought to have a song next.
+Mrs. Tuberose, you promised to come and sing for us--you will, won't
+you?
+
+MRS. TUBEROSE. Delighted! I rather thought of doing a dear little song
+Stephan Otis has just brought out. It's called "_Forbidden Fruit_," and
+he wrote it expressly for me. It goes like this.
+
+ [_She sits down at the piano, and sings, with infinite
+ expression and tenderness._
+
+ "Only the moon espies our bliss,
+ Through the conscious clusters of clematis,
+ Shedding star-sweet showers.
+ To-morrow the world will have gone amiss--
+ Now I gaze in your eyes, love, I thrill to your kiss--
+ So let us remember naught but this:
+ That To-night is ours!
+ Yes, this passionate, perilous, exquisite night--
+ Is Ours!"
+
+SEVERAL VOICES. Charmin'.... Otis puts so much real feeling into all his
+songs ... quite a little gem! &c., &c.
+
+LADY DAMP. I should have thought myself that it was rather advanced--for
+an East-End audience--
+
+MRS. TUBEROSE (_nettled_). Really, dear Lady Dampier, if people see
+nothing to object in it _here_, I don't see why they should be more
+particular at the East-End!
+
+MRS. FLITT. Oh, no,--and as if it matters what the _words_ are in the
+song. I daresay if one heard _their_ songs----Now we want another
+song--something as different as possible.
+
+MR. GARDINIER. Heard a capital song at the "Pav." the other
+night--something about a Cock-eyed Kipper. Just suit my voice. I could
+easily get the words and music, and do that for you--if you like.
+
+SEVERAL VOICES. A Cock-eyed Kipper! It sounds too killing! Oh, we _must_
+have that!
+
+LADY DAMP. Might I ask what kind of creature a--a "Cock-eyed Kipper" may
+be?
+
+MR. GARD. Oh, well, I suppose it's a sort of a dried herring--with a
+squint, don't you know.
+
+LADY DAMP. I see no humour in making light of a personal deformity, I
+must say.
+
+MR. GARD. Oh, don't you? _They_ will--it'll go with a scream there!
+
+MISS DIOVA ROSE. Yes, poor dears--and we mustn't mind being just a
+little vulgar for once--to cheer them up.
+
+LADY HONOR. I have been to the Pavilion and the Tivoli myself, and I
+heard nothing to object to. I know I was much more amused than I ever am
+at theatres--_they_ bore me to death.
+
+MR. BAGOTRIX. We might finish up with _Mrs. Jarley's Waxworks_, you
+know. Some of you can be the figures, and I'll come on in a bonnet and
+shawl as _Mrs. Jarley_, and wind you up and describe you. I've done it
+at lots of places in the country; brought in personal allusions and all
+that sort of thing, and made everybody roar.
+
+LADY DAMP. But will the East-Enders understand your personal allusions?
+
+MR. BAG. Well, you see, the people in the front rows will, which is all
+_I_ want.
+
+LADY HONOR (_suspiciously_). Isn't _Mrs. Jarley_ out of _Pickwick_,
+though? That's Dickens, surely!
+
+MR. BAG. (_reassuringly_). Nothing but the name, Lady Honor. I make up
+all the patter myself, so that'll be all right--just good-natured chaff,
+you know; if anybody's offended--as I've known them to be--it's no fault
+of mine.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Oh, I'm sure you will make it funny,--and about getting
+someone to preside--I suppose we ought to ask the Vicar of the nearest
+church?
+
+LADY HONOR. Wouldn't it be better to get somebody--a--more in Society,
+don't you know?
+
+MRS. FLITT. And he might offer to pay for hiring the Hall, and the other
+expenses. I never thought of that. I'll see whom I can get. Really I
+think it ought to be great fun, and we shall have the satisfaction of
+feeling we are doing real good, which is such a comfort!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+BOOKMAKERS ON THE BEACH.
+
+A SKETCH AT A SEA-SIDE RACE MEETING.
+
+
+_The Sands at Baymouth, where some pony and horse races are being run.
+By the Grand Stand, and under the wall of the esplanade, about a dozen
+bookmakers, perched on old packing-cases, are clamouring with their
+customary energy. The public, however, for some reason seems unusually
+deaf to their blandishments and disinclined for speculation, and the
+bookmakers, after shouting themselves hoarse with little or no result,
+are beginning to feel discouraged._
+
+BOOKMAKERS (_antiphonally_). Evens on the field! Three to one bar one!
+Five to one bar two! Six to one bar one! Even money _Beeswing_! Six to
+one _Popgun_! Come on 'ere. Two to one on the field! What do you want to
+_do_?
+
+ [_The public apparently want to look another way._
+
+FIRST BOOKMAKER (_to SECOND BOOKMAKER_). Not much 'ere to-day! Shawn't
+get no roast baked and biled this journey, eh?
+
+SECOND B. (_with deep disgust_). They ain't _got_ no money! Baymouth's
+going down. Why, this might be a bloomin' Sunday-school treat! Blest if
+I believe they know what we're 'ere _for_!
+
+THIRD B. (_after pausing to refresh himself, sardonically to FOURTH
+BOOKMAKER_). De-lightful weather, William!
+
+WILLIAM (_in a similar tone of irony_). What a glorious day, Percy! Sech
+a treat to see all the people enjoyin' theirselves without any o' the
+silly speculation yer _do_ find sometimes on occasions like this! (_He
+accepts the bottle his friend passes, and drinks._) 'Ere's better luck
+to all!
+
+FIFTH B. (_pathetically_). Don't leave your little Freddy out! (_They
+don't leave their little FREDDY out._) Cheer up, William, there's
+'appier days in store; there'll be Jersey comin' soon. We'll be orf to
+the sunny south! (_To a stranger who comes up to him._) Why, Uncle, you
+don't say it's you! How _well_ you're looking! Shake 'ands and 'ave a
+bit on, jest for ole sake's sake! (_The stranger proceeds to introduce
+himself as the Secretary, and to demand a fee._) What! pay you five
+shillins for standin' 'ere wastin' my time and voice like this? Not me!
+Why, I ain't took two blessed sorcepans since I bin 'ere! (_The
+Secretary remains firm._) I won't do it, my boy. Not on _prinserple_, I
+won't. I wouldn't give you five shillins not if your tongue was 'anging
+down on to your boots--so there! (_The Secretary does not attempt so
+violent an appeal to his better nature, but calls a police-inspector._)
+'Ere, I'd sooner git down and chuck the show altogether; jest to mark my
+contempt for such goings on! (_He descends from his box; takes down his
+sign, unscrews his pole, folds up his professional triptych, and departs
+in a state of virtuous indignation only to be expressed by extreme
+profanity, while the Secretary proceeds unmoved to collect payments from
+the others; who eventually compromise the claims for half-a-crown._)
+
+MR. SAM SATCHELL (_"from Southampton"_). Now then, you gentlemen and
+aristocratic tradesmen, where _are_ you all? Don't any o' you know
+_anything_? Come on 'ere. (_He stops an elderly rustic._) You've got a
+fancy, I can see! (_The rustic denies the impeachment, grinning._) Git
+along with yer, yer artful ole puss, then, and don't keep gentlemen away
+as wants to bet! (_To a Yeomanry trooper._) Come along, my ole
+soldier-boy, give it a name! (_His old soldier-boy declines to give it
+any name, and passes on._) Call yerself a warrior bold, and afraid o'
+riskin' 'alf-a-crown! Why, yer Queen and country orter be ashamed o'
+yer! (_As a young farmer in riding-gaiters comes up, with the evident_
+_intention of business._) Ah, _you_ don't forget the old firm, I see....
+What, four to one not good enough for you? You won't get no better odds,
+go where you _like_! I suppose you expeck me to make you a present o'
+the money? (_The farmer moves on._) I dunno what's _come_ to 'em all.
+_I_ never see nothing like it in all _my_ life!
+
+
+_In the Grand Stand._
+
+A GLIB PERSON, _in a tall hat_ (_as he picks his way up and down the
+benches, the occupants of which treat him with intolerant
+indifference_). I'm not a bookmaker, ladies and gentlemen; don't have
+that impression of me for a moment! I'm simply an amateur, and an
+independent gentleman o' means, like any of yourselves. You all know
+more than _I_ do. I don't come 'ere with any intention o' winning your
+money--far from it. I'm wishful to settle and live among you. I may
+eventually put up as your member; and, if so, when I take my place in
+Parliament I shall be in a position to testify that the Baymouth people
+are extremely cautious as to the manner in which they invest their money
+on 'orse-racing'! Yes, I'm 'ere on beyarf of the Sporting League, just
+to prove how free a meeting like this is from the evils o' gambling. I
+don't come 'ere to _rob_ yer. I want yer all to win. I like to see yer
+bright and shining faces around me; I like the friverolity and
+reckereation and the conviverality of the thing, that's all. I'll tell
+yer how it is. I've a rich ole aunt, and she puts fifty pound into my
+'ands, and sez, "Jacky," she sez, "I love those dear Baymouth people,
+and I want you to take this 'ere money and lay it out among 'em in
+moieties, and make 'em rich and 'appy." You can see for yourselves. I've
+no tickets and no parryfernalia, excep' this little pocket-book, where I
+enter any bets you honour me with. Come, Miss win a pair o' those
+three-and-sixpenny gloves at Chickerell's, the ex-Mayor's, to oblige
+_me_! Did I tread on your corn, Sir? I assure you it was the last thing
+I intended.... "You knew I'd do it afore I'd done?"... Well, Sir, if
+you've sech a gift o' seeing into futoority as that, why not make
+something out of it now? Three to one bar one. _Kitty I'm_ barring.
+Thank _you_, Sir; 'alf-a-crown to seven and six on _Sportsman_. I tell
+you candidly--you've got the winner. The favourite won't win. Now, then,
+all you others, where's your Baymouth pluck? I orfered you thirty to one
+_Beeswing_ last race; and you wouldn't take it. And _Beeswing_ won, and
+you lost the chance o' making yer fortunes. Don't blame _me_ if the
+same thing 'appens again. I'm on'y bettin', as I told you, for my own
+amusement, and to get rid o' the money! (_&c._, _&c._)
+
+MR. SAM SATCHELL (_whom the apathy of the public has apparently reduced
+to a state of defiant buffoonery_). Even money _Daredevil_, you rascals!
+And why the blazes don't ye take it? Come on. I'll take two little bits
+o' twos that _Kitty_ don't win! Four to one against ole bread-and-butter
+_Tommy_, over there in the corner! Eleven and a 'alf to three quarters
+to two against _Kitty_. "What har the Wild Waves say-hay-ing?" Two
+_Kitties_ to three _Daredevils_ against a bloomin' goat-chaise? On the
+Baymouth Durby I'm bettin'!
+
+
+_At the Close of the Last Race--Three horses have started; the favourite
+has led to the turn and then bolted up the shingle, but, as the tide has
+come in and almost covered the course, and the other two horses by
+declining to face the water have let him in again, he wins after an
+exciting finish, up to the girths in sea-water; and such bookmakers as
+have succeeded in obtaining patronage are paying up with as much
+cheerfulness as they can command._
+
+FIRST BOOKMAKER (_to eager backer_). "Wait a bit, my boy, wait _a bit_,
+the number hasn't gone up yet, my son. Where's your ticket--forty-two?
+(_His Clerk refers to book._) That's _Squibbs_. I pay over
+_winners_--not losers. (_To the public._) Come along and fetch your
+money, the bullion's 'ere! (_To another backer._) What was
+yours--threes? ("Fours _I_'ve got," _from his Clerk._) Why don't yer
+arst for what you're entitled to, instead o' makin' me arst my clurk
+what your bet was? There's your money--take it and go."
+
+[Illustration: "Why the blazes don't ye take it?"]
+
+ [_The backer departs wealthier but abashed._
+
+SECOND B. I'm payin' over that 'ard-run race, gentlemen, men and 'orses
+exhorsted! I'm payin' over _Susan_--dear ole Susey-hanner! who wants
+their money? The Bank o' England's 'ere, gentlemen, Mr. Frankie
+Fairprice and his ole friend, who's always by his side and never looses
+'im!
+
+THIRD B. (_who has had to borrow largely from his brethren to meet his
+engagements_). Are you all done now? (_To the crowd._) Then I'll wish
+yer good afternoon, thank ye all for yer comp'ny, but you've bin
+bloomin' bad fun to-day, and you don't ketch me playin' Patience on a
+monument at any more o' yer blanky sand 'oppin' 'andicaps, that's all!
+
+ [_However, the local newspapers report next day that "A number
+ of the sporting fraternity were in attendance to do business
+ and apparently carried on a brisk and profitable trade"--which
+ only shows how difficult it is for the casual observer to form
+ an accurate opinion._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+'IGHER UP!
+
+(A SKETCH OUTSIDE AN OMNIBUS.)
+
+
+_The Omnibus is on its progress from Piccadilly to the Bank; the weather
+is raw and unpleasant, and the occupants of the garden-seats on the roof
+of the vehicle are--for once in a way--mostly men._
+
+FIRST PASSENGER (_to SECOND, an acquaintance_). I see young Bashaway the
+other day. (_Significantly._) Jest been to see his father, so he told
+me.
+
+SECOND PASSENGER (_with interest_). _'Ad_ he though? And 'ow did he
+_find_ him?
+
+FIRST P. Fustrate, young JIM said; didn't know when he'd seen him
+lookin' better--(_with sentiment_)--quite like his old self!
+
+SECOND P. (_heartily_). That _is_ good 'earin', that is!
+(_Reflectively._) Seems _rum_, though, come to think of it.
+
+FIRST P. 'Ow d'yer _mean_--rum? It's no more than what yer'd expect,
+bein' where he is. Look at the _air_ o' the place--there ain't a
+'elthier situation all round London, to my mind!
+
+SECOND P. No, that's right enough; and, from all I 'ear, the food's well
+cooked and served reg'lar, if it _is_ plain.
+
+FIRST P. Ah, and Bill _enjoys_ his meals now, he does--the work gives
+him a appetite, and it's years, to my certain knowledge, since he done a
+stroke, and o' course he ain't allowed no drink----
+
+SECOND P. And _that's_ enough, of itself, to be the savin' of 'im, the
+way he was!
+
+FIRST P. Then, yer see, there's the reg'lar hours, and the freedom from
+worry, and the like, and nothink on his mind, and the place with every
+sanitary improvement and that--why, he owns his own self it's bin the
+makin' of 'im. And from what young Jim was a tellin' me, it appears that
+if Bill goes on gittin' good-conduck marks at the rate he's doin',
+there'll be a nice little sum doo to 'im when he's done his time at
+Wormwood Scrubs.
+
+SECOND P. (_sympathetically_). Well, and that makes suthin' to look
+forward to, don't it, when he _does_ git let out. Talkin' o' that,
+you've known 'im longer 'n what I 'ave. Do you 'appen to know what it
+was as he got inter trouble _for_?
+
+FIRST P. (_with the consciousness of superior delicacy_). Lor' bless
+yer, I never thought o' arskin' 'im the question.
+
+SECOND P. (_with feeble self-assertion under this implied rebuke_).
+Well, it all depends on 'ow yer _put_ a question o' that sort.
+
+ [_He is silent for the remainder of the journey._
+
+A CHATTY PASSENGER (_to a CONTRADICTIOUS PASSENGER, as the 'bus passes
+Trafalgar Square_). Pretty these 'ere fountains look, with the water
+playin', don't they?
+
+The CONTRADICIOUS PASSENGER. The fountings are well enough, if it wasn't
+fur the water--norsty messy stuff, I call it.
+
+The CHATTY P. (_abandoning the fountains_). It's wonderful what an
+amount o' traffic there is in the Strand, ain't it?
+
+CONTRAD. P. Nothink to what it was forty years ago!
+
+ [_His neighbour, not feeling in a position to deny it,
+ subsides._
+
+The DRIVER (_to a PASSENGER WITH A BADGE, immediately behind him_). 'Ow
+is it you're orf yer keb to-day, Bob? Taking a day orf, or what?
+
+The PASSENGER WITH A BADGE. Not much. Goin' up to Bow Street to gimmy
+evidence in a collision case--that's all.
+
+DRIVER (_dubiously_). Bow Street! Ain't that rorther shovin' yer 'ed in
+the lion's mouth, eh?
+
+The P. WITH A B. (_with virtuous serenity_). Not _it_! What ha' they got
+agen me all the time I bin licensed? Only three drunks and a loiter!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_returning to the charge_). Orful state the roads are in
+with all this mud! I s'pose that's the London County Council, eh?
+
+The CONTRAD. P. London Kayounty Kayouncil! No, it ain't--nothink o' the
+sort! I'll _tell_ yer 'oo it is, if yer want to know; it's Gladstone!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_mildly surprised, but glad to have discovered common
+ground_). I see you're a Conservative--like myself.
+
+The CONTRAD. P. That's jest where you're _wrong_! I ain't no
+Conservative, nor yet I don't want none o' Gladstone neither. I'm a
+Radikil, _I_ am. John Burns and Ben Tillett--that's _my_ lot!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_reluctantly relinquishing politics_). Ah, well, every
+man's got a right to form his own opinions, ain't he?
+
+The CONTRAD. P. No, he _ain't_--not if he goes and forms _wrong_ 'uns!
+(_A pause._) 'Ave yer got the time about yer?
+
+The CHATTY P. (_accepting this as a sign of softening_). I'm sorry to
+say I come out without my watch this morning, or else----But there's
+plenty o' clocks about as'll tell yer.
+
+The CONTRAD. P. (_with intense disdain_). Clocks! You don't ketch _me_
+trusting no clocks--with no two of 'em alike!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_as they pass a well-known watchmaker's_). Well, 'ow
+about that clock with the figgers? Won't _that_ do yer? They set it to
+Grinnidge time every hour, so it's bound to be right!
+
+The CONTRAD. P. (_as descends_). There yer _are_! Think I'd put my faith
+in a clock as 'as to be set right every hour? 'Tain't _likely_! Good-day
+to yer!
+
+The CHATTY P. So long! (_To himself._) A pleasant feller enough, I
+dessay, if you leave the subjec' to _'im_!
+
+DRIVER (_to smart HANSOM CABMAN_). Now then, outer the way with that
+'ere 'Ackney keb o' yours!
+
+HANSOM CABMAN (_with hauteur_). As it 'appens, it _ain't_ a 'Ackney
+cab--it's a private kerridge, this is!
+
+DRIVER. Ah, I might ha' known _you_ was a hammytoor by yer silly
+hasslike method o' conducting yer business! [_Drives on triumphant._
+
+A POLITICAL PASSENGER (_with a panacea--to a "KNOWLEDGABLE" PASSENGER_).
+No, I don't want no 'Ome Rule, nor yet no Parish Counsels, nor nothink
+o' _that_. What _I_ wanter see interdooced 'ere is Tereenial Porliments.
+
+The KNOWLEDGABLE PASSENGER (_with respect_). Tereenial Parliments? I
+don't know as I've 'eard o' _them_.
+
+The POL. P. Ain't yer? Well, they're what we _want_. Why, they've 'ad
+'em in America, they've ad 'em in Ostralia, they've 'ad 'em in Orstria;
+and everywhere, mind yer, _everywhere_ they've been in operation they've
+turned out a success!
+
+The KN. P. Then it's 'igh time _we_ 'ad 'em. _What_ is it they're
+called, again?
+
+The POL. P. Tee-reen-ial Porliments. It stands to _reason_ they work
+well. There they _are_, a settin' eight months in the year fur seven
+year on end--somethink's _bound_ to come of it! I'd like to see any o'
+_our_ lot settin' like that! It's a pity we don't take more pattern by
+America in our law-makin'.
+
+[Illustration: "Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!"]
+
+The KN. P. Except in our criminal law. Why, I've 'eard there's States
+out there where a man may go and commit a crime, d'ye see, and once he
+gits across the boundary from one State into another--like as it might
+be a line across this 'ere street like, d'ye see--once he's over that,
+they can't do nothink to 'im!
+
+The POL. P. (_thoughtfully_). Ah, that wouldn't never do '_ere_, that
+wouldn't!
+
+ [_The CONDUCTOR comes up to collect fares._
+
+CONDUCTOR (_to a SLEEPY PASSENGER in a corner_). Now then, fare, please?
+
+The SLEEPY PASSENGER (_with manly regret_). I ain't gorrit, ole pal. If
+yer'd asht me jes' two minutes afore I gorrup, I could ha' done it for
+yer, but I took jes' anorrer glash an' blued th' lot. No man can say I
+don' part s'long's I gorrer _money_; no freehandeder man anywheresh'n
+wharri am; but yer come on me too late. (_Shaking his head
+reproachfully._) Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!
+
+COND. 'Ere, I ain't goin' to stand no nonsense! If yer 'aven't got the
+money, git down orf o' my bus, and quick, too!
+
+The SL. P. Ged _down_? An' _quick_! You wouldn' tor' li' that if you'd
+sheen wharrer bloomin' 'ard job I 'ad to get _up_! [_He resumes his
+slumber._
+
+COND. (_passing on, softened_). I can't go and break the beggar's neck
+for tuppence, and he's got it somewhere about him, as likely as not.
+(_To a LITIGIOUS PASSENGER._) Tuppence is the fare, Sir, if _you_
+please.
+
+The LITIGIOUS PASSENGER. One penny is the legal fare, and all I intend
+to pay. I know the law!
+
+COND. And so do I. It's wrote up tuppence inside the bus. If yer ain't
+going to pay more, yer'd better git down; ye've 'ad over your penn'orth
+a'ready!
+
+The LITIG. P. (_with spirit_). I decline to get down. I insist on being
+taken to the Bank for my penny.
+
+COND. Oh, _do_ yer? We'll see about that.
+
+ [_He stops the 'bus and calls a CONSTABLE, to whom he briefly
+ explains the situation._
+
+CONSTABLE (_pacifically, from below, to the LITIG. P._). Come, Sir,
+don't block the traffic, like this 'ere! Either pay the man his fare or
+get down--one of the two.
+
+The LITIG. P. (_from the roof_). I have a legal right to remain here if
+I like!
+
+CONST. That may be, Sir; but if you do, this man can summons you that's
+all.
+
+The LITIG. P. (_warming with the joy of battle_). That's just what I
+_want_ him to do! Can't I _make_ him summon me?
+
+COND. (_disgusted_). 'Ere, 'ang it all! _do_ yer think I'm goin' to cart
+you 'arf over London fur a penny, and throw yer in the luxury of a
+lawsoot? 'Ere's yer penny back, and I give yer the ride free, _there_!
+
+The LITIG. P. (_accepting the penny, and descending with dignity_). Very
+well; and let me tell you this, it was just as well you gave way when
+you did, for I was quite prepared to carry the case to the House of
+Lords!
+
+COND. Ah! and I s'pose yer think yer'd git _there_ for a penny?
+
+ [_The Omnibus goes on before the LITIGIOUS PERSON has time to
+ think over such an obvious repartee as asking the CONSTABLE to
+ take the man's number._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+AT A HIGHLAND CATTLE AUCTION.
+
+
+_A Yard. In the open space between the rows of pens the AUCTIONEER is
+trying to dispose of some horses which are trotted out one by one in the
+usual fashion._
+
+THE AUCTIONEER (_spectacled, red-bearded, canny, slightly Arcadian touch
+imparted by straw hat, and a sprig of heather in his button-hole_).
+What'll I say for this, noo? (_A horse of a meditative mien is just
+brought in._) Here's a beast, and a very good beast, from Lochaber!
+(_The bystanders remain unmoved._) He was bred by Meester MacFarlane, o'
+Drumtappit, and ye'll all ha' haird on him as the biggest breeder in
+these pairts. (_Heads are shaken, so much as to intimate that this
+particular animal does not do Mr. MacFarlane justice._) Trot him up an'
+doon a bit, boy, and show his action--stan' away back there! _(With
+affected concern_.) Don't curb him so tight--be careful now, or ye'll do
+meeschief to yourself an' others! (_As the horse trots past them,_
+_several critics slap it disrespectfully on the hind-quarters--a liberty
+which it bears with meekness._) There's a pace for ye--he's a guid
+woorker, a gran' beast--hoo much shall we say for him? (_Nobody seems
+able to express his appreciation of the grand beast in figures._) Just
+to stairt ye then--twenty poon! (_Even the animal himself appears
+slightly staggered by this sum; bystanders are quietly derisive;
+AUCTIONEER climbs rapidly down without interruption till he reaches six
+pounds, when he receives his first bid._) Sex poon' is bed for 'm--is
+there ony advance on sex poon? (_Someone in the background:--"Fefteen
+shellin'!"_) Sex-fefteen--noo, Meester McRobbie, wull ye no luik this
+way? (_MR. MCR. responds by a decided negative._) Ye won't? Ah, I never
+got ony guid from ye--'cept when I didn't meet ye. (_This piece of
+Scotch "wut" raises a laugh at MR. MCR.'S expense, but does not affect
+the bidding, which still languishes._) Then, he's going at
+sex-fefteen--for the last time. Whaur's my bedder at sex-fefteen?
+(_Repentance or modesty prevents the bidder from coming forward, and the
+AUCTIONEER continues, more in grief than anger._) Eh, this is too bad
+noo--I'll thank no man for making me a bed, 'cept those that are meant
+in airnest. No one bed onything for a beast like this! Then I hae to
+tell ye ye've not bed near up to the resairve price on it. (_Suddenly
+becomes weary of the animal._) Tak' it awa'. (_The next horse is led
+in._) Now, here's a beast that's well-known, I'm thenkin'. (_The general
+expression signifies that its reputation is not altogether to its
+credit._) There's a well-bred mare--open up, and let her show hersel'.
+(_The mare is shown, but fails to excite competition._) Ah, ye'll ony
+buy screws to-day, an' not the nice things at a'--tak' her away. (_The
+mare is taken out ignominiously; AUCTIONEER, followed by crowd, leads
+the way to where a pony and trap are standing harnessed._) Noo, I'm gaun
+to pit up the pony an' van--just show them hoo she goes in hairness,
+boy. (_To intrusive collie._) Out of the way, dug, in case ye get your
+feet smashed. (_Trap starts off, and is driven out of sight._) Whaur's
+the laddie gaun ta? Thenks he'll show himsel' at Nairn, maybe! Ah, here
+she comes. (_Trap returns at a modest pace._) Stan' back, noo, all of
+ye; give her room. I'll sell the mare first, and a beauty she is--what
+shell we say? Ten poons--and she's a nice one! Well, stairt her at five,
+she may get up. (_Bidding gets up to ten pounds, where it stops._) Then
+she goes at ten, and I'm very glad she's gaun to a gude auld friend o'
+mine--Meester McKenzie, o' Glenbannock. Wull ye say five mair, and take
+the hairness, Meester McKenzie? It's _richt_ hairness! (_MR. MCK.
+declines to be tempted._) Well, I'm sorry ye wull na, I'd ha liked
+(_sentimentally, as if it had been the dream of his life_) for the mare
+an' the hairness to go togither and no to pairt them--but as 'tis, it
+canna be helped. We'll pass on to the pegs, if you please. (_Passes to a
+row of pens containing pigs, and mounts some planks placed along the
+top._) Now, these are some proper pegs. (_A rush is made for the rails
+enclosing the pigs, which instantly become self-conscious and redouble
+their grunts._) Noo, laddies, laddies, it's no fair o' ye taking up a'
+the room i' that way. I'm quite sure there's a lot o' ye in front that's
+no buying pegs--ye hanna the luik o' pairsons that buy pegs. Stan' by
+for shame, and don't keep them that comes to buy, where they canna see
+sae much as a tail. Hoo much apiece for these palefaced pegs? Ye've an
+awfu' guid view o' them there, Mr. Ferguson,---luik this way once again
+for forrty and threepence. (_Persuasively._) It'll soun' better wi' the
+threepence. Gaun' for forty an' three. (_The owner of the pigs calls out
+"No!"_) I thocht I made a law here that people having pegs should gie me
+the resairve at the time--see what ye do now, Peter MacPhairson, make a
+fule of the buyers and a fule o' mysel'!--but (_with tolerant contempt_)
+Peter is not a strong man, we must no be haird on Peter. (_Roar from
+crowd;_ _disappearance of MR. MACPH._) I'll cancel no more sales that
+way, however, as I eentimate to ye once for a'.
+
+'ARRY (_on tour from Town--to his admiring friend_). I say, Charley,
+what d'yer bet I don't talk to some of these chaps in their own lingo?
+
+CHARLEY. What a fellow you are! Mind what you are about, that's all.
+
+'ARRY (_going up to an elderly person in the only Scotch cap visible_).
+Hech, Sair, but yon's a braw bonnie wee bit piggie fur a body to tak' a
+richt gude wullie waucht wi' gin ye meet him comin' thro' the rye!
+
+The PERSON IN THE SCOTCH CAP (_who happens to be a retired Colonel in a
+Highland Regiment, who is somewhat careless in his attire_). I think you
+will find that sort of thing better appreciated after you've got home.
+
+ [_'ARRY returns to CHARLEY, feeling much smaller than he allows
+ his friend to perceive._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE COUNTRY OF COCKAIGNE.
+
+A MONOLOGUE--WITH A MORAL.
+
+
+_An airless Court in a London back Street. TIME--August._
+
+JIMMY (_aged eight, to Florrie, aged seven_). No, I ain't comin' to the
+Reckereation Groun', not jess yit, I carn't.... I'm goin' ter wyte about
+'ere till the lidy comes.... Why, 'er as is comin' to see my Muvver
+'bout sendin' me fur a fortnight in the kerntry.... Yus, where I was
+larst year.... It's settled as I'm ter go agine--leastways as _good_ as
+settled. My Farver 'e've sent in a happlication to the K'mitty, and
+Teacher 'e sez 'e kin reckermend me, an' Mr. and Mrs. Delves--them as
+'ad the cottidge where I went afore--they've arst fur to 'ave me
+agin--so you see, Florrie, it's all _right_. On'y I carn't settle to
+nuffink afore I know when I'm goin', an' about the trine an' that. Yer
+'ave to roide in a trine to git to the kerntry, yer know.... Wot, ain't
+yer never bin there?... Yer'd wanter fawst enough if yer knoo what it
+was loike.... There's grorss there, an' trees an' that.... Na-ow, a
+_lot_ better 'n the Reckereation Groun'--that's all mide outer old
+grivestones as the deaders 'as done wiv. There's 'ills an' bushes an'
+'edges where yer can pick flowers.... There ain't no perlice to _git_
+yer locked up.... An' everyfink smells so lovelly, kinder 'elthy
+like--it mikes yer feel 'ungry.... Not like sassages an' inions
+azackly--'tain't that sorter smell.... On'y 'ere and there, an' yer'd
+'ardly tell they _was_ shops, they kerry 'em on that quoiet.... Yer
+wouldn' call it poky if yer was there. Mr. Delves 'e _was_ a kind man,
+'e was; mide me a whistle out a sickermore brornch, 'e did; and Mrs.
+Delves, she lemme help her feed the chickings.... They 'ad a garding
+beyind, an' there'd bin rasberries an' gooseberries a growin' on
+bushes--strite, there 'ad--I ain't tellin' yer no lies--on'y they was
+all gone by then. An' they 'ad a dog--Rover _'is_ nime was--'e was a
+koind dog, lemme lay insoide of 'is kennel orfen, 'e would.... I'd like
+ter 'ave a run over thet Common agen, too. I dessay as I shell--p'reps
+the d'y arter to-morrer.... There's a pond on it, an' geese, an' they
+comes at yer a stritching out their necks an' a-'issin' thet
+sevidge.... Na-ow, yer've on'y got ter walk up to 'em, an' they goes
+orf, purtendin' they took yer fur somebody else, an' wasn't meanin' no
+offence. I ain't afride o' no geese, I ain't--nor yet Lily wasn't
+neither. We sor a pig 'aving a ring put froo 'is nose one day. 'E
+'ollered out like 'e was bein' killed--but 'e wasn't. An' there was a
+blecksmiff's, where they put the 'orse's shoes on red 'ot, 'an the 'orse
+'e never took no notice. Me and Lily used ter go fur long walks, all
+under trees. Once she showed me a squill--"squerl" _she_ kep' a-calling
+of it, till I tole 'er 'ow--an' it run up a tree zigzag, and jumped on
+to another ever so fur. That was when we was pickin' nuts. We went a
+blackberryin', too, one day.... Na-ow, there warn't nobody dead. An'
+Lily ... Lily Delves 'er nime was, b'longed to them I was stoppin'
+wiv.... I didn't notice partickler.... Older nor you, an' bigger, and
+lots redder 'bout the cheeks.... She wasn't a bad sort--fur a gal.... I
+dunno; I liked _all_ on 'em.... Well, there was Farmer Furrows, 'e was
+very familiar, said as 'ow I might go inter 'is horchard and pick the
+happles up as was layin' there jest fur the askin'. An' Bob Rumble, 'im
+as druv Mr. Kennister the grocer's cart, 'e used ter gimme a roide along
+of 'im when 'e was tikin' round porcels an' that. We'd go along lanes
+that 'igh yer couldn't see nuffink fur leaves; and once 'e druv along a
+Pork with tremenjus big trees in it, an' stagses walkin' about
+underneath with grite big 'orns.... Suthink like 'im as is drawed
+outside the public round the corner--on'y they warn't none o' them gold.
+I 'speck them gold ones is furrin'.... An' the grub--we 'ad beekstike
+pudd'n o' Sundays, an' as much bread an' treacle every day as ever I
+could eat, and I _was_ 'ungry when I was in the kerntry.... An' when I
+come away Mrs. Delves, she gethered me a big noseguy fur to tike 'ome to
+Muvver--kissantimums, merrigoles, an' dyliers, all sorts there was--an'
+Murver she put 'em in a jug, and soon as ever I shet my eyes an'
+sniffed, I could see that garding and Rover and Lily as _pline_--but
+they went bad, an' 'ad to be froed aw'y at larst. I shall see 'em all
+agine very soon now, though, won't thet be proime, eh?... Whatsy? 'Ere,
+Florrie, you ain't _croying_, are yer?... Why don't yer arsk yer Farver
+if 'e won't let _you_ go.... Oh, I thought as yer _wanted_ to go. Then
+what _are_ yer----?... No, I ain't gled to git aw'y from you....
+A-course I shell be gled to see 'er; but that ain't why, it's
+jest----You ain't never bin in the kerntry, or you'd know 'ow I'm
+feelin'.... There's the lidy comin' now. I must cut across an' 'ear
+what she sez to Muvver. Don' tike on--'tain't o'ny fur a fortnight,
+anyway.... Look 'ere, I got suthink' for yer, Florrie, bought it orf a
+man what 'ad a tray on 'em--it's a wornut, d'ye see? Now open it--ain't
+them two little choiner dolls noice, eh?... I'd rorther you 'ad it nor
+'er, strite, I would!... I'll be back in a minnit.
+
+[Illustration: "'Ere, Florrie, you ain't _croying_, are _yer_?"]
+
+_After an Interval of Twenty-four Hours._
+
+No, _I_ ain't bin nowhere particular.... Settled? yus, it's all settled
+'bout me goin' ter the kerntry.... To-morrer? no, I ain't goin'
+_to-morrer_.... Nex' week? not as I _knows_ on.... You wanter know sech
+a _lot_, you do!... If I _do_ tell yer, you'll on'y go an' larf....
+Well, I ain't goin' at all--_now_ I 'ope you're pleased.... What's the
+good o' bein' _sorry_?... Oh, I don't keer much, I don't.... Set down on
+this step alonger me, then, and don't you go saying nuffink, or I'll
+stop tellin' of yer.... You remember me goin' in yes'day arternoon to
+'ear what the lidy said? Well, when I got in, I 'eard 'er s'y, "Yus,
+it'll be a great disappintment for '_im_, pore boy," she sez, "arter
+lookin' forward to it an' all; but it can't be 'elped." And Muvver, she
+sez, "'Is Farver'll be sorry, too; it done Jimmy ser much good larst
+time. 'E can't pay not more nor 'arf-a-crownd a week towards it, but he
+can manage that, bein' in work jess now." But the lidy sez, "It's this
+w'y," she sez, "it costis us neelly arf a suffering over what the parint
+pays fur each child, and we ain't got the fun's fur to send more 'n a
+few, cos the Public don' suscroibe ser much as they might," she sez.
+"An' so this year we're on'y sending children as is delikit, an' reelly
+_wants_ a chinge." So yer see, I ain't a goin'. I dunno as I'm delikit;
+but I _do_ want the kerntry _orful_ bad, I do. I wish I never 'adn't bin
+there at all 'cos then preps I shouldn' mind. An' yit I'm gled I bin,
+too. I dreamt about it larst night, Florrie, I did. I was a-settin' on
+this 'ere step, sime as I am now, an' it was 'ot an' stoiflin', like it
+is; an' all of a suddink I see Mr. Kennister's' cart wiv the grey 'orse
+turn into our court an' pull up hoppersite, an' Bob Rumble 'e was
+a-driving on it. An' 'e sez, "Jump up!" 'e sez, "an' I'll tike yer back
+to Mr. Delves's cottidge." And I sez, "May Florrie come too?" An' 'e
+sez, "Yus, both on yer." So up we gits, and we was droivin' along the
+lanes, and I was showin' yer the squills an' the stagses, an' jes as we
+come to the turn where yer kin see the cottidge----Well, I don'
+remember no more on it. But it was a noice dream so far as I got wiv it,
+an' if I 'adn't never bin there, I couldn' ha' dreamt it, _could_ I,
+eh? An', like as not, I'll dream the rest on it anuvver night.... An'
+you must try an' dream your share, too, Florrie. It'll be a'most like
+bein' in the kerntry in a sort o' w'y fur both on us, won't it?
+
+
+THE MORAL.
+
+(_The Offices of the Children's Country Holidays Fund are at 10,
+Buckingham Street, Strand, and contributions should be made payable to
+the Hon. Treasurer._)
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 5s.
+
+PUPPETS AT LARGE.
+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &c.
+
+Scenes and Sketches reprinted from "PUNCH" with 16 page Illustrations by
+J. B. PARTRIDGE.
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 5s.
+
+UNDER THE ROSE.
+
+A STORY IN SCENES.
+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &c.
+
+Reprinted from "PUNCH" with 15 Illustrations by J. B. PARTRIDGE.
+
+ "Will provoke many a hearty laugh. From first to last the fun
+ is legitimate."--_Morning Post._
+
+ "The fun of it never flags for a moment."--_St. James'
+ Gazette._
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d.
+
+MR. PUNCH'S YOUNG RECITER.
+
+WITH INTRODUCTIONS, REMARKS, AND STAGE-DIRECTIONS.
+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &c.
+
+Reprinted from "PUNCH" with Additions, and with 34 "PUNCH"
+Illustrations.
+
+ "Very well written, and any modern humorist might be proud of
+ them."--_Athenæum._
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 4s. 6d.
+
+MR. PUNCH'S MODEL MUSIC-HALL
+
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+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Mr. Punch's Young Reciter."
+
+Collected, Improved, and Re-arranged from "PUNCH" with 13 full-page and
+a number of other Illustrations.
+
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+ Anstey has written since 'Vice Versa.' Some of the songs and
+ dances are screamingly funny."--_Review of Reviews._
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 4s. 6d.
+
+MR. PUNCH'S PRIZE NOVELS.
+
+By R. C. LEHMANN
+
+With 24 Illustrations by EDWARD REED.
+
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+
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+hunting-field, as they have been since their first publication.
+
+The fictitious heroes, whose doings and sayings inspire these favourite
+volumes, provide a nomenclature which is as much imbedded in the
+phraseology of sport as those of Thackeray or Dickens are in our
+national literature. In what hunting circles may it not be said that the
+names of JORROCKS and SOAPEY SPONGE and FACEY ROMFORD are "familiar in
+their mouths as household words"?
+
+The HANDLEY CROSS Sporting Novels have hitherto, by the form of their
+production, formed the enduring ornament of a Country Gentleman's
+Library, and, by reason of their price, have been somewhat beyond the
+attainment of that extensive and constantly enlarging section who have
+learned to take delight in the out-of-door amusements which brighten
+rural life.
+
+Everyone whose delight in a "finest run across country that ever was
+seen," and whose ambition is "to be in at the finish," may now have as
+his abiding companions on his own book-case within reach of his
+easy-chair, the histories of JORROCKS and SPONGE and ROMFORD, and others
+of the famous creation, in a handsome and handy form; having the pages
+brightened by a selection from the original illustrations to give an
+added vividness to the exhilarating raciness of the author's humour.
+
+_The volumes are sold separately as under:--_
+
+ HANDLEY CROSS; or, Mr. Jorrock's
+ Hunt. With 67 Text and 12 Page
+ Illustrations and Coloured Frontispiece.
+ Price 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+ ASK MAMMA; or, The Richest Commoner
+ In England. With 51 Text
+ and 8 Page Illustrations and Coloured
+ Frontispiece. Price 6_s._
+
+ SPONGE'S SPORTING TOUR. With
+ 60 Text and 8 Page Illustrations and
+ Coloured Frontispiece. Price 6_s._
+
+ PLAIN OR RINGLETS? With 43
+ Text and 8 Page Illustrations and
+ Coloured Frontispiece. Price 6_s._
+
+ MR. FACEY ROMFORD'S HOUNDS.
+ With 46 Text and 8 Page Illustrations
+ and Coloured Frontispiece.
+ Price 6_s._
+
+ HAWBUCK GRANGE; or, The Sporting
+ Adventures of Thomas Scott,
+ Esquire. With 28 Text and 8 Page
+ Illustrations and Coloured Frontispiece.
+ Price 4_s._ 6_d._
+
+BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD. 8, 9, 10, BOUVERIE STREET, E.C.
+
+
+F. C. BURNAND'S WORKS.
+
+A SELECTED COLLECTION FROM "PUNCH."
+
+5 Volumes, Large Crown 8vo, gilt top, price 25s.
+
+ "Mr. Burnand's Writings are well worth collecting. He has
+ produced a very large body of comic writing of a high order of
+ merit, and the amount of it that is first-rate is considerable.
+ There is a perpetual gaiety and airiness about his work which
+ makes it always pleasant to dip into, and few humorists have
+ the power of making their readers laugh so agreeably, so
+ innocently, so often, and so much."--_Athenæum._
+
+_The Volumes are sold separately as under:_
+
+Price 5s. each.
+
+ 1. VERY MUCH ABROAD.
+
+ _With 160 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+ 2. RATHER AT SEA.
+
+ _With 116 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+ 3. QUITE AT HOME.
+
+ _With 108 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+ 4. HAPPY THOUGHTS.
+
+ _With 110 Illustrations_.
+
+ 5. SOME OLD FRIENDS.
+
+ _With 115 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+
+BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD., 8, 9, 10, BOUVERIE STREET, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Puppets at Large, by F. Anstey
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUPPETS AT LARGE ***
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Puppets at Large, by F. Anstey
+
+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: Puppets at Large
+ Scenes and Subjects from Mr Punch's Show
+
+Author: F. Anstey
+
+Illustrator: J. Bernard Partridge
+
+Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37449]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUPPETS AT LARGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Katie Hernandez and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[ iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h1>Puppets at Large</h1>
+
+<h2>Scenes and Subjects<br /></h2>
+<h2>From Mr. Punch's Show.<br /><br /></h2>
+<h3>By F. Anstey<br /></h3>
+<div class='center'>Author of "Vice Versa," "Voces Populi," &amp;c., &amp;c.<br /><br /></div>
+<div class='center'>With Illustrations by<br /></div>
+
+<div class='center'>J. Bernard Partridge<br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class='center'>London<br /></div>
+<div class='center'>Bradbury, Agnew, &amp; Co. Ld., Bouverie St., E.C.<br /></div>
+<div class='center'>1897<br /></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[ iv]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BRADBURY, AGNEW, &amp; CO. LD., PRINTERS,<br />
+LONDON AND TONBRIDGE.<br /></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[ v]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Doing a Cathedral</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The Instantaneous Process</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">In the Cause of Charity</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The Classical Scholar in Reduced Circumstances</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Rus in Urbe</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Catching the Early Boat</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Society's Next Craze</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">An Ideal Interviewer</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Saturday Night in the Edgware Road</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The "Model Husband" Contest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The Courier of the Hague</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Feeling their Way</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[ vi]</a></span>A Testimonial Manque</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The Model Democracy</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">By Parliamentary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The Farming of the Future</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">A Dialogue on Art</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The Old Love and the New</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">A Doll's Diary</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Elevating the Masses</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bookmakers on the Beach</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">'Igher Up!</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">At a Highland Cattle Auction</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_257">257</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">The Country of Cockaigne</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[ vii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"What did 'e want to go and git the fair 'ump about?"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"What's she got hold of now?"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"You have lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"They ain't on'y a lot o' sheep! I thought it was reciters,
+or somethink o' that"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"Mokestrians"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"Dear, dear! <i>not</i> a county family!"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"Well, he's had a sharp lesson,&mdash;there's no denying that".</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"None of your humour here, mind!"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"I cann't get nothen done to 'en till the weather's a bit
+more hopen like"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"They haven't the <i>patiensh</i> for it"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"It must be a sort of animal, I suppose"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"I see <i>him</i> standing on the very brink of the precipice"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"To-night is ours!"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"Why the blazes don't ye take it?"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"'Ere, Florrie, you ain't <i>croying</i>, are yer?"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[ 1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" /></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[ 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>DOING A CATHEDRAL.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">A Sketch From the Provinces</span>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>The interior of Dulchester Cathedral.</i> <span class="smcap">Time</span>&mdash;<i>About 12.30.
+The March sunshine slants in pale shafts through the clerestory
+windows, leaving the aisles in shadow. From without, the
+cawing of rooks and shouts of children at play are faintly
+audible. By the West Door, a party of Intending Sightseers
+have collected, and the several groups, feeling that it would be
+a waste of time to observe anything in the building until officially
+instructed to do so, are engaged in eyeing one another with all
+the genial antipathy and suspicion of true-born Britons.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>A Stodgy Sightseer (<i>to his friend</i>). Disgraceful,
+keeping us standing about like this!
+If I'd only known, I'd have told the head-waiter
+at the "Mitre" to keep back those chops
+till&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">[<i>He breaks off abruptly, finding that the chops are</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>reverberating from column to column with</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>disproportionate solemnity; a white-haired and</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>apple-faced verger rustles down from the choir</i></span><br /><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[ 4]</a></span>
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>and beckons the party forward benignantly,</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>whereupon they advance with a secret satisfaction</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>at the prospect of "getting the cathedral</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>'done' and having the rest of the day to themselves;"</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>they are conducted to a desk and</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>requested, as a preliminary, to put sixpence</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>apiece in the Restoration Fund box and inscribe</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4.5em;"><i>their names in a book.</i></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Confused Murmurs.</i> Would you put "Portico
+Lodge, Camden Road, or only London?"...
+Here, I'd better sign for the lot of you, eh?...
+They <i>might</i> provide a better pen&mdash;in a <i>cathedral</i>, I <i>do</i>
+think!... He might have given all our names
+in full instead of just "And party!"... Oh, I've
+been and made a blot&mdash;will it <i>matter</i>, should you
+think?... I never <i>can</i> write my name with people
+looking on, can <i>you</i>?... I'm sure you've done
+it beautifully, dear!... Just hold my umbrella
+while I take off my glove, Maria.... Oh, why
+<i>don't</i> they make haste? &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The</i> <span class="smcap">Stodgy Sightseer</span> <i>fumes, feeling that,
+while they are fiddling, his chops are burning.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span>. Now, ladies and gentlemen, if you
+will please to follow me, the portion of the building
+where we now are is part of the original hedifice
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[ 5]</a></span>
+founded by Ealfrytha, wife of Earl Baldric, in the
+year height 'undred heighty-height, though we 'ave
+reason to believe that an even hearlier church was in
+existence 'ere so far back as the Roman occupation,
+as is proved by a hancient stone receptacle recently
+discovered under the crypt and hevidently used for
+baptismal purposes.</p>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Spectacled S.</span> (<i>who feels it due to herself to put
+an intelligent question at intervals.</i>) What <i>was</i> the
+method of baptism among the Early Christians?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span>. We believe it to 'ave been by total
+immersion, Ma'am.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Spect. S.</span> Oh? <i>Baptists!</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>She sets down the Early Christians as Dissenters,
+and takes no further interest in them.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span>. At the back of the choir, and immediately
+in front of you, is the shrine, formerly
+containing the bones of St. Chasuble, with relics of
+St. Alb. (<i>An</i> <span class="smcap">Evangelical Sightseer</span> <i>snorts in disapproval.</i>)
+The 'ollow depressions in the steps leading
+up to the shrine, which are still visible, were worn
+away, as you see, by the pilgrims ascending on their
+knees. (<i>The party verify the depressions conscientiously,
+and click their tongues to express indulgent contempt.</i>)
+The spaces between the harches of the shrine were
+originally enriched by valuable gems and mosaics,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[ 6]</a></span>
+all of which 'ave now long since disappeared, 'aving
+been removed by the more devout parties who came
+'ere on pilgrimages. In the chapel to your left
+a monument with recumbent heffigies of Bishop
+Buttress and Dean Gurgoyle, represented laying side
+by side with clasped 'ands, in token of the lifelong
+affection between them. The late Bishop used to
+make a rather facetious remark about this tomb.
+He was in the 'abit of observing that it was the honly
+instance in <i>his</i> experience of a Bishop being on
+friendly terms with his Dean. (<i>He glances round for
+appreciation of this instance of episcopal humour, but is
+pained to find that it has produced a general gloom; the</i>
+<span class="smcap">Evangelical Sightseer</span>, <i>indeed, conveys by another
+and a louder snort, his sense that a Bishop ought to set a
+better example.</i>) In the harched recess to your right,
+a monument in painted halibarster to Sir Ralph
+Ringdove and his lady, erected immediately after her
+decease by the disconsolate widower, with a touching
+inscription in Latin, stating that their ashes would
+shortly be commingled in the tomb. (<i>He pauses,
+to allow the ladies of the party to express a becoming
+sympathy&mdash;which they do, by clicks.</i>) Sir Ralph himself,
+however, is interred in Ficklebury Parish
+Church, forty mile from this spot, along with his
+third wife, who survived him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[ 7]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The ladies regard the image of Sir Ralph with
+indignation, and pass on; the</i> <span class="smcap">Verger</span> <i>chuckles
+faintly at having produced his effect.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Evangelical</span> S. (<i>snuffing the air suspiciously</i>).
+I'm sorry to perceive that you are in the habit of
+burning <i>incense</i> here!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He looks sternly at the</i> <span class="smcap">Verger</span>, <i>as though to imply
+that it is useless to impose upon him.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span>. No, Sir, what you smell ain't
+incense&mdash;on'y the vaults after the damp weather
+we've bin 'aving.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The</i> <span class="smcap">Evangelical Sightseer</span> <i>drops behind,
+divided between relief and disappointment.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Plastic</span> S. (<i>to the</i> <span class="smcap">Verger</span>). What a perfectly
+<i>exquisite</i> rose-window that is! For all the world like
+a kaleidoscope. I suppose it dates from the Norman
+period, at <i>least</i>?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span> (<i>coldly</i>). No, Ma'am, it was only put
+up about thirty year ago. <i>We</i> consider it the poorest
+glass we 'ave.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Plast.</span> S. Oh, the glass, yes; <i>that's</i> hideous,
+certainly. I meant the&mdash;the other part.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span>. The tracery, Ma'am? That was
+restored at the same time by a local man&mdash;and a
+shocking job he made of it, too!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Plast.</span> S. Yes, it <i>quite</i> spoils the Cathedral,
+<i>doesn't</i> it? Couldn't it be taken down?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[ 8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span> (<i>in answer to another Inquirer</i>). Crowborough
+Cathedral finer than this, Sir? Oh, <i>dear</i>
+me, no. I went over a-purpose to 'ave a look at it
+the last 'oliday I took, and I was quite surprised
+to find 'ow very inferior it was. The spire? I don't
+say that mayn't be 'igher as a mere matter of feet,
+but our lantern-tower is so 'appily proportioned as
+to give the effect of being by far the 'ighest in
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Travelled S.</span> Ah, you should see the <i>continental</i>
+cathedrals. Why, <i>our</i> towers would hardly come up
+to the top of the naves of some of them!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span> (<i>loftily</i>). I don't take no notice of
+foreign cathedrals, Ma'am. If foreigners like to build
+so ostentatious, all I can say is, I'm sorry <i>for</i> them.</p>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Lady</span> (<i>who has provided herself with a "Manual
+of Architecture" and an unsympathetic</i> <span class="smcap">Companion</span>).
+<i>Do</i> notice the excessive use of the ball-flower as a
+decoration, dear. Parker says it is especially characteristic
+of this cathedral.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Unsympathetic Companion</span>. I don't see <i>any</i>
+flowers myself. And if they like to decorate for
+festivals and that, where's the harm?</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The</i> <span class="smcap">Lady with the Manual</span> <i>perceives that it
+is hopeless to explain</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span>. The dog-tooth mouldings round the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[ 9]</a></span>
+triforium harches is considered to belong to the best
+period of Norman work&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Lady with the Manual</span>. Surely not <i>Norman</i>?
+Dog-tooth is Saxon, <i>I</i> always understood.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span> (<i>indulgently</i>). You'll excuse <i>me</i>,
+Ma'am, but I fancy it's 'erringbone as is running in
+<i>your</i> 'ed.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Lady with the M.</span> (<i>after consulting "Parker"
+for corroboration, in vain</i>). Well, I'm sure dog-tooth
+is quite <i>Early English</i>, anyway. (<i>To her</i> <span class="smcap">Companion</span>.)
+Did you know it was the interlacing of the round
+arches that gave the first idea of the pointed arch,
+dear?</p>
+
+<p>Her <span class="smcap">Comp.</span> No. But I shouldn't have thought
+there was so very much in the <i>idea</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Lady with the M.</span> I do <i>wish</i> you took more
+<i>interest</i>, dear. Look at those two young men who
+have just come in. They don't <i>look</i> as if they'd care
+for carving; but they've been studying every one of
+the Miserere seats in the choir-stalls. That's what
+<i>I</i> like to see!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span>. That concludes my dooties, ladies
+and gentlemen. You can go out by the South
+Transept door, and that'll take you through the
+Cloisters. (<i>The Party go out, with the exception of
+the two</i> <span class="smcap">'Arries</span>, <i>who linger, expectantly, and cough in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[ 10]</a></span>
+embarrassment.</i>) Was there anything you wished
+to know?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First 'Arry</span>. Well, Mister, it's on'y&mdash;er&mdash;'aven't
+you got some old carving or other 'ere of a rather&mdash;well,
+<i>funny</i> kind&mdash;sorter thing you on'y show to
+<i>gentlemen</i>, if you know what I mean?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Verger</span> (<i>austerely</i>). There's nothing in <i>this</i>
+Cathedral for gentlemen o' <i>your</i> sort, and I'm surprised
+at your expecting of it.</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>He turns on his heel.</i></p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">First 'Arry</span> (<i>to Second</i>). I spoke civil enough to
+<i>'im</i>, didn't I? What did 'e want to go and git the
+fair 'ump about?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second 'Arry</span>. Oh, <i>I</i> dunno. But you don't
+ketch <i>me</i> comin' over to no more cathedrils, and
+wastin' time and money all for nuthink&mdash;that's all.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>They tramp out, feeling that their confidence has
+been imposed upon.</i></p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[ 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 437px;">
+<img src="images/p11.png" width="437" height="600" alt="&quot;What did &#39;e want to go and git the fair &#39;ump about?&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;What did &#39;e want to go and git the fair &#39;ump about?&quot;</span></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[ 13]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" /></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[ 15]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE INSTANTANEOUS PROCESS;</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Or, Fluff Sits for his Photograph.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><i>A Photographer's Studio on the Seventh Floor. It is a warm
+afternoon.</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Stippler</span>, <i>Photographic Artist, is discovered
+alone.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stippler</span> (<i>to himself</i>). No appointments
+while this weather lasts, thank goodness!
+I shall be able to get ahead with those
+negatives now. (<i>Sharp whistle from speaking-tube, to
+which he goes.</i>) Well?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Voice of Lady Assistant</span> (<i>in shop below</i>). Lady
+just brought her dog in; wants to know if she can
+have it taken now.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> (<i>to himself</i>). Oh, dash the dog and the
+lady too!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Voice.</span> No, only the <i>dog</i>, the lady says.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> (<i>confused</i>). Eh? Oh, exactly. Ask
+the lady to have the goodness to&mdash;ah&mdash;step up. (<i>He
+opens the studio door, and awaits the arrival of his client;
+interval, at the end of which sounds as of a female in</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[ 16]</a></span>
+<i>distress about halfway down are distinctly audible.</i>)
+She's <i>stepping</i> up. (<i>Another interval. The head of a
+breathless</i> <span class="smcap">Elderly Lady</span> <i>emerges from the gloom.</i>)
+This way, Madam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Elderly Lady</span> (<i>entering and sinking into the first
+plush chair</i>). Oh, <i>dear</i> me, I thought I should <i>never</i>
+get to the top! Now <i>why</i> can't you photographers
+have your studios on the ground floor? So <i>much</i>
+more convenient!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> No doubt, Madam, no doubt. But
+there is&mdash;ah&mdash;a prejudice in the profession in favah
+of the roof; possibly the light is considered somewhat
+superiah. I thought I understood there was&mdash;ah&mdash;a
+dog?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Oh, he'll be here presently. I
+think he saw something in one of the rooms on
+the way up that took his fancy, or very likely
+he's resting on one of the landing mats,&mdash;such
+an <i>intelligent</i> dog! I'll call him. Fluffy, Fluffy,
+come along, my pet, nearly up now! Mustn't
+keep his missis waiting for him. (<i>A very long
+pause: presently a small rough-haired terrier lounges
+into the studio with an air of proprietorship</i>.) That's
+the dog; he's so small, he can't take <i>very</i> long
+to do, <i>can</i> he?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> The&mdash;ah&mdash;precise size of the animal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[ 17]</a></span>
+does not signify, Madam; we do it by an instantaneous
+process. The only question is the precise
+pose you would prefer. I presume the dog is a
+good&mdash;ah&mdash;rattah?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Really, I've no idea. But he's <i>very</i>
+clever at killing bluebottles; he <i>will</i> smash them on
+the window-panes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> (<i>without interest</i>). I see, Madam. We
+have a speciality for our combination backgrounds,
+and you might like to have him represented on a
+country common, in the act of watching a hole in
+a bank.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> (<i>impressed</i>). For bluebottles?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> For&mdash;ah&mdash;rats. (<i>By way of concession.</i>)
+<i>Or</i> bluebottles, of course, if you prefer it.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> I think I would rather have something
+more characteristic. He has such a pretty way
+of lying on his back with all his paws sticking straight
+up in the air. I never saw any <i>other</i> dog do it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> Precisely. But I doubt whether that
+particulah pose would be effective&mdash;in a photograph.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> You think not? Where <i>has</i> he got
+to, now? Oh, <i>do</i> just look at him going round,
+examining everything! He <i>quite</i> understands what
+he's wanted to do; you've no idea what a clever
+dog he is!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[ 18]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> Ray-ally? How would it do to have
+him on a rock in the middle of a salmon stream?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> It would make me so uncomfortable
+to see it; he has a perfect <i>horror</i> of wetting his
+little feet!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> In <i>that</i> case, no doubt&mdash;&mdash; Then what
+do you say to posing him on an ornamental pedestal?
+We could introduce a Yorkshire moor, or a view
+of Canterbury Cathedral, as a background.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> A pedestal seems <i>so</i> suggestive of
+a cemetery, doesn't it?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> Then we must try some other position.
+(<i>He resigns himself to the commonplace.</i>) Can
+the dog&mdash;ah&mdash;sit up?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Bee-yutifully! Fluffy, come and show
+how nicely you can sit up!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fluff</span> (<i>to himself</i>). Show off for this fellow?
+Who pretends he's got rats&mdash;and hasn't! Not if
+<i>I</i> know it!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He rolls over on his back with a well-assumed air of
+idiotcy</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> (<i>delighted</i>). There, <i>that's</i> the attitude
+I told you of. But perhaps it <i>would</i> come out rather
+too leggy?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> It is&mdash;ah&mdash;open to that objection,
+certainly, Madam. Perhaps we had better take him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[ 19]</a></span>
+on a chair sitting up. (<span class="smcap">Fluff</span> is, <i>with infinite trouble,
+prevailed upon to mount an arm-chair, from which he
+growls savagely whenever</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Stippler</span> <i>approaches</i>.)
+You will probably be more successful with him
+than I, Madam.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> I could make him sit up in a <i>moment</i>,
+if I had any of his biscuits with me. But I forgot
+to bring them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> There is a confectionah next door.
+We could send out a lad for some biscuits. About
+how much would you requiah&mdash;a quartah of a
+pound? <i>He goes to the speaking tube.</i></p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> He won't eat <i>all</i> those; he's a <i>most</i>
+abstemious dog. But they must be <i>sweet</i>, tell them.
+(<i>Delay. Arrival of the biscuits. The</i> <span class="smcap">Elderly
+Lady</span> <i>holds one up, and</i> <span class="smcap">Fluff</span> <i>leaps, barking frantically,
+until he succeeds in snatching it; a man[oe]uvre which he
+repeats with each successive biscuit</i>.) Do you know,
+I'm afraid he really <i>mustn't</i> have any more&mdash;biscuits
+always <i>excite</i> him so. Suppose you take him lying
+on the chair, much as he is now? (<span class="smcap">Mr. Stippler</span>
+<i>attempts to place the dog's paws, and is snapped at</i>.)
+Oh, <i>do</i> be careful!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> (<i>heroically</i>). Oh, it's of no consequence,
+Madam. I am&mdash;ah&mdash;<i>accustomed</i> to it.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Oh, yes; but <i>he</i> isn't, you know;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[ 20]</a></span>
+so please be <i>very</i> gentle with him! And could
+you get him a little water first? I'm sure he's
+thirsty. (<span class="smcap">Mr. Stippler</span> <i>brings water in a developing
+dish, which</i> <span class="smcap">Fluff</span> <i>empties promptly</i>.) Now he'll be
+as <i>good</i>&mdash;&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> (<i>after wiping</i> <span class="smcap">Fluff's</span> <i>chin and arranging
+his legs</i>). If we can only keep him like that for one
+second.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> But he ought to have his ears pricked.
+(<span class="smcap">Mr. Stippler</span> <i>makes weird noises behind the camera,
+resembling demon cats in torture</i>; <span class="smcap">Fluff</span> <i>regards him
+with calm contempt</i>.) Oh, and his hair is all in his
+eyes, and they're his best feature!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<span class="smcap">Mr. Stippler</span> <i>attempts to part</i> <span class="smcap">Fluff's</span> <i>fringe;
+snarls</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> I have not discovered his eyes at
+present, Madam; but he appears to have excellent&mdash;ah&mdash;<i>teeth</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> <i>Has</i>n't he! Now, couldn't you catch
+him like <i>that</i>?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> <i>(to himself</i>). He's more likely to catch
+<i>me</i> like that! (<i>Aloud; as he retreats under a hanging
+canopy.</i>) I think we shall get a good one of him
+as he is. (<i>Focussing</i>.) Yes, that will do very nicely.
+(<i>He puts in the plate, and prepares to release the shutter,
+whereupon</i> <span class="smcap">Fluff</span> <i>deliberately rises and presents his tail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[ 21]</a></span>
+to the camera</i>.) I presume you do not desiah a <i>back</i>
+view of the dog, Madam!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 503px;">
+<img src="images/p21.png" width="503" height="600" alt="&quot;What&#39;s she got hold of now.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;What&#39;s she got hold of now.&quot;</span>
+</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[ 22]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[ 23]</a></span></p><p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Certainly not! Oh, Fluffy, naughty&mdash;naughty!
+Now lie down again, like a good dog.
+Oh, I'm afraid he's going to sleep!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> If you would kindly take this&mdash;ah&mdash;toy
+in your hand, Madam, it might rouse him a little.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> (<i>exhibiting a gutta-percha rat</i>). Here,
+Fluffy, Fluffy, <i>here</i>'s a pitty sing! What <i>is</i> it, eh!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fluff</span> (<i>after opening one eye</i>). The old fool fancies
+she's got a rat! Well, she may <i>keep</i> it!</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>He curls himself up again</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> We must try to obtain more&mdash;ah&mdash;animation
+than that.</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>He hands the</i> <span class="smcap">Elderly Lady</span> <i>a jingling toy</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> (<i>shaking it vigorously</i>). Fluffy, see
+what Missis has got!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fluff</span> <i>(by a yawn of much eloquence</i>). At <i>her</i> age,
+too! Wonderful how she can <i>do</i> it!</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>He closes his eyes wearily.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> Perhaps you may produce a better
+effect with this. [<i>He hands her a stuffed stoat.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fluff</span> (<i>to himself</i>). What's she got hold of <i>now</i>?
+Hul-lo! (<i>He rises, and inspects the stoat with interest.</i>)
+I'd no idea the old girl was so "varmint"!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> Capital! Now, if he'll stay like that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[ 24]</a></span>
+another&mdash;&mdash;(<span class="smcap">Fluff</span> <i>jumps down, and wags his tail
+with conscious merit.</i>) Oh, <i>dear</i> me. I never saw
+such a dog!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> He's tired out, poor doggie, and no
+wonder. But he'll be all the <i>quieter</i> for it, <i>won't</i> he?
+(<i>After restoring</i> <span class="smcap">Fluff</span> <i>to the chair.</i>) Now, couldn't
+you take him panting, like that?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> I must wait till he's got a little less
+tongue out, Madam.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Must you? Why? <i>I</i> should have
+thought it was a capital opportunity.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> For a physician, Madam, <i>not</i> a photographer.
+If I were to take him now the result
+would be an&mdash;ah&mdash;enormous tongue, with a dog in
+the remote distance.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> And he's putting out more and more
+of it! Perhaps he's thirsty again. Here, Fluffy,
+water&mdash;water! [<i>She produces the developing dish.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fluff</span> (<i>in barks of unmistakable significance</i>). Look
+here, I've had about enough of this tomfoolery.
+Let's go. <i>Come</i> on!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> (<i>seconding the motion with relief</i>). I'm
+<i>afraid</i> we're not likely to do better with him
+to-day. Perhaps if you could look in some othah
+afternoon?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Why, we've only been an hour and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[ 25]</a></span>
+twenty minutes as yet! But what would be the best
+time to bring him?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Stip.</span> I should say the light and the temperatuah
+would probably be more favourable by the week
+aftah next&mdash;(<i>to himself</i>) when I shall be taking my
+holiday!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> Very well, I'll come then. Oh, Fluffy,
+Fluffy, what a silly little dog you are to give all this
+trouble!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fluff</span> (<i>to himself, as he makes a triumphant exit</i>).
+Not half so silly as some people think! I <i>must</i> tell
+the cat about this; she'll go into fits! I will say
+she has a considerable sense of humour&mdash;for a cat.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[ 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[ 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" /></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[ 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IN THE CAUSE OF CHARITY.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>Mona House, the Town Mansion of the Marquis of Manx, which
+has been lent for a Sale of Work in aid of the "Fund for Super-annuated
+Skirt-dancers," under the patronage of Royalty and other
+distinguished personages</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>In the Entrance Hall.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Wylie Dedhead</span> (<i>attempting to
+insinuate herself between the barriers</i>). Excuse
+me; I only wanted to pop in for a moment,
+just to see if a lady friend of mine is in there,
+that's <i>all</i>!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Lady Money-taker</span> (<i>blandly</i>). If you will let
+me know your friend's name&mdash;?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. D.</span> (<i>splendide mendax</i>). She's assisting the
+dear Duchess. <i>Now</i>, perhaps, you will allow me to
+pass!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. M.</span> Afraid I can't, really. But if you mean
+Lady Honor Hyndlegges&mdash;<i>she</i> is the only lady at the
+Duchess's stall&mdash;I could send <i>in</i> for her. Or of
+course, if you like to pay half-a-crown&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[ 30]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. D.</span> (<i>hastily</i>). Thank you, I&mdash;I won't disturb
+her ladyship. I had no <i>idea</i> there was any
+charge for admission, and&mdash;(<i>bristling</i>)&mdash;allow me to
+say I consider such regulations <i>most</i> absurd.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. M.</span> (<i>sweetly, with a half glance at the bowl of
+coins on the table</i>). Quite <i>too</i> ridiculous, ain't they?
+<i>Good</i> afternoon!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. W. D.</span> (<i>audibly, as she flounces out</i>). If they
+suppose <i>I</i>'m going to pay half-a-crown for the
+privilege of being <i>fleeced</i>&mdash;&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Footman</span> (<i>on steps, sotto voce, to confrère</i>).
+"Fleeced"! that's a good 'un, eh? <i>She</i> ain't
+brought much wool in with <i>her</i>!</p>
+
+<p>His <span class="smcap">Confrère</span>. On'y what's stuffed inside of her
+ear. [<i>They resume their former impassive dignity.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In the Venetian Gallery&mdash;where the Bazaar is being held.</i></p>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Loyal Old Lady</span> (<i>at the top of her voice&mdash;to</i>
+<span class="smcap">Stall-keeper</span>). Which of 'em's the Princess, my
+dear, eh? It's her I paid <i>my</i> money to see.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Stall-keeper</span> (<i>in a dismayed whisper</i>). Ssh!
+Not <i>quite</i> so loud! There&mdash;just opposite&mdash;petunia
+bow in her bonnet&mdash;selling kittens.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. O. L.</span> (<i>planting herself on a chair</i>). So <i>that's</i>
+her! Well, she <i>is</i> dressed plain&mdash;for a Royalty&mdash;but
+looks <i>pleasant</i> enough. I wouldn't mind taking one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[ 31]</a></span>
+o' them kittens off her Royal 'Ighness myself, if they
+was going at all reasonable. But there, I expect, the
+cats <i>'ere</i> is meat for my masters, so to speak; and
+you see, my dear, 'aving the promise of a tortoise-shell
+Tom from the lady as keeps the Dairy next door,
+whenever&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>She finds, with surprise, that her confidences are not
+encouraged</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss St. Leger de Mayne</span> (<i>persuasively to</i>
+<span class="smcap">Mrs. Nibbler</span>). Do let me show you some of this
+exquisite work, all embroidered entirely by hand, you
+see!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Nibbler</span> (<i>edging away</i>). Lovely&mdash;<i>quite</i> lovely;
+but I think&mdash;a&mdash;I'll just take a look round before
+I&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> If there is any <i>particular</i> thing you
+were looking for, perhaps <i>I</i> could&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. N.</span> (<i>becoming confidential</i>). Well, I <i>did</i> think if
+I could come across a nice <i>sideboard-cloth</i>&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> (<i>to herself</i>). What on earth's a sideboard-cloth?
+(<i>Aloud.</i>) Why, I've the very <i>thing</i>!
+See&mdash;all worked in Russian stitch!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. N.</span> (<i>dubiously</i>). I thought they were always
+quite plain. And what's that queer sort of flap-thing
+for?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> Oh, <i>that</i>? That's&mdash;a&mdash;to cover up the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[ 32]</a></span>
+spoons, and forks, and things; quite the latest
+fashion, <i>now</i>, you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. N.</span> (<i>with self-assertion</i>). I <i>have</i> noticed it at
+several dinner parties I've been to in society lately,
+certainly. Still I am not sure that&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> I always have them on my <i>own</i> sideboard
+now&mdash;my husband won't <i>hear</i> of any others....
+Then, I <i>may</i> put this one in paper for you?
+fifteen-and-sixpence&mdash;thanks <i>so</i> much! (<i>To her
+colleague, as</i> Mrs. N. <i>departs</i>). Connie, I've got rid
+of that awful nightgown case at <i>last</i>!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Maycup.</span> A&mdash;you <i>don't</i> happen to have a
+small bag to hold a powder-puff, and so on, you
+know?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> I <i>had</i> some very pretty ones; but I'm
+afraid they're all&mdash;oh, no, there's just <i>one</i> left&mdash;crimson
+velvet and real <i>passementerie</i>. (<i>She produces a
+bag</i>). Too trotty for words, isn't it?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Maycup</span> (<i>tacitly admitting its trottiness</i>). But
+then&mdash;that sort of purse shape&mdash;&mdash;Could I get a
+small pair of folding curling-irons into it, should you
+think, at a pinch?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> You could get <i>anything</i> into it&mdash;at a
+pinch. I've one myself which will hold&mdash;well, I can't
+tell you what it <i>won't</i> hold! Half-a-guinea&mdash;so <i>many</i>
+thanks! (<i>To herself, as</i> <span class="smcap">Mrs. Maycup</span> <i>carries off her</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[ 33]</a></span>
+<i>bag</i>.) What <i>would</i> the vicar's wife say if she knew I'd
+sold her church collection bag for <i>that</i>! But it's all
+in a good cause! (<i>An</i> <span class="smcap">Elderly Lady</span> <i>comes up</i>.) May
+I show you some of these&mdash;&mdash;?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Elderly Lady</span>. Well, I was wondering if
+you had such a thing as a good warm pair of sleeping
+socks; because, these bitter nights, I do find I suffer
+so from cold in my feet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> (<i>with effusion</i>). Ah, then I can <i>feel</i> for
+you&mdash;so do <i>I</i>! At least, I <i>used</i> to before I tried&mdash;(<i>To
+herself.</i>) Where <i>is</i> that pair of thick woollen
+driving-gloves? Ah, <i>I</i> know. (<i>Aloud.</i>)&mdash;these. I've
+found them <i>such</i> a comfort!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> (<i>suspiciously</i>). They have rather a
+queer&mdash;&mdash;And then they are divided at the ends, too.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> Oh, haven't you seen <i>those</i> before?
+Doctors consider them so much healthier, don't you
+know.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> I daresay they are, my dear. But
+aren't the&mdash;(<i>with delicate embarrassment</i>)&mdash;the separated
+parts rather long?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> Do you <i>think</i> so? They allow so much
+more freedom, you see; and then, of course, they'll
+shrink.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> That's true, my dear. Well, I'll take
+a pair, as you recommend them so strongly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[ 34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> I'm quite <i>sure</i> you'll never regret
+it! (<i>To herself, as the</i> <span class="smcap">E. L.</span> <i>retires, charmed</i>.) I'd give
+<i>anything</i> to see the poor old thing trying to put
+them on!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Mimosa Tendrill</span> (<i>to herself</i>). I do so <i>hate</i>
+hawking this horrid old thing about! (<i>Forlornly, to</i>
+<span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt-Innett</span>.) I&mdash;I beg your pardon;
+but <i>will</i> you give me ten-and-sixpence for this
+lovely work-basket?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt-Innett</span>. My good girl, let me tell
+you I've been pestered to buy that identical basket
+at every bazaar I've set foot in for the last twelve-month,
+and how you can have the face to ask ten-and-six
+for it&mdash;you must think I've more money
+than wit!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Tendr.</span> (<i>abashed</i>). Well&mdash;<i>eighteenpence</i> then?
+(<i>To herself, as</i> Mrs. <span class="smcap">A. I.</span> <i>closes promptly</i>.) There, I've
+sold <i>something</i>, anyhow!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Hon. Diana D'Autenbas</span> (<i>to herself</i>). It's
+rather fun selling at a Bazaar; one can let oneself <i>go</i>
+so much more! (<i>To the first man she meets.</i>) I'm sure
+you'll buy one of my buttonholes&mdash;now <i>won't</i> you?
+If I fasten it in for you myself?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cadney Rowser</span>. A button'ole, eh? Think
+I'm not classy enough as I am?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss D'Aut.</span> I don't think <i>anyone</i> could accuse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[ 35]</a></span>
+you of not being "<i>classy</i>;" still a flower would just
+give the finishing-touch.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C. R.</span> (<i>modestly</i>). Rats!&mdash;if you'll pass the
+reedom. But you've such a way with you that&mdash;there&mdash;'ow
+much.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss D'Aut.</span> Only five shillings. Nothing to <i>you</i>!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C. R.</span> Five bob? You're a artful girl, <i>you</i> are!
+"<i>Fang de Seakale</i>," and no error! But I'm <i>on</i> it;
+it's worth the money to 'ave a flower fastened in by
+such fair 'ands. I won't 'owl&mdash;not even if you <i>do</i> run
+a pin into me.... What? You ain't done a'ready!
+No <i>'urry</i>, yer know.... 'Ere, won't you come along
+to the refreshment-stall, and 'ave a little something
+at my expense. Do!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss D'Aut.</span> I think you must imagine you are
+talking to a barmaid!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C. R.</span> (<i>with gallantry</i>). I on'y wish barmaids
+was 'alf as pleasant and sociable as <i>you</i>, Miss. But
+they're a precious stuck-up lot, <i>I</i> can assure you!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss D'Aut.</span> (<i>to herself as she escapes</i>). I suppose
+one ought to put up with this sort of thing&mdash;for a
+charity!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Babbicombe</span> (<i>at the Toy Stall, to the Belle of
+the Bazaar, aged three-and-a-half</i>). You <i>perfect</i> duck!
+You're simply too <i>sweet</i>! I <i>must</i> find you something.
+(<i>She tempers generosity with discretion by presenting</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[ 36]</a></span>
+<i>her with a small pair of knitted doll's socks</i>.) There,
+darling!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Belle's Mother</span>. What do you say to the
+kind lady <i>now</i>, Marjory?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Marjory</span> (<i>a practical young person, to the donor</i>).
+Now div me a dolly to put ve socks on.</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<span class="smcap">Mrs. B.</span> <i>finds herself obliged to repair this omission</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Young Lady Raffler</span> (<i>to a</i> <span class="smcap">Young Man</span>). Do
+take a ticket for this charmin' <i>sachet</i>. Only half-a-crown!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Young Man</span>. Delighted! If you'll put in for
+this <i>splendid</i> cigar cabinet. Two shillin's!</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>The</i> <span class="smcap">Young Lady</span> <i>realises that she has encountered
+an Augur, and passes on</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de. M.</span> (<i>to</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Isthmian Gatwick</span>). Can't
+I tempt you with this tea-cosy? It's so absurdly
+cheap!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Isthmian Gatwick</span> (<i>with dignity</i>). A-thanks;
+I think not. Never <i>take</i> tea, don't you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss de M.</span> (<i>with her characteristic adaptability).</i>
+Really? No more do <i>I</i>. But you <i>could</i> use it as a
+<i>smoking-cap</i>, you know. <i>I</i> always&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>Recollects herself, and breaks off in confusion</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[ 37]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 478px;">
+<img src="images/p37.png" width="478" height="600" alt="&quot;You have lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;You have lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament.&quot;</span>
+</div><p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[ 38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[ 39]</a></span></p><p><span class="smcap">Miss Ophelia Palmer</span> (<i>in the "Wizard's Cave"&mdash;to</i>
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Cadney Rowser</span>). Yes, your hand indicates
+an intensely refined and spiritual nature; you are
+perhaps a <i>little</i> too indifferent to your personal comfort
+where that of others is concerned; sensitive&mdash;too
+much so for your own happiness, perhaps&mdash;you
+feel things keenly when you <i>do</i> feel them. You have
+lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament&mdash;seven-and-sixpence,
+please.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. C. R.</span> (<i>impressed</i>). Well, Miss, if you can read
+all that for seven-and-six on the palm of my 'and,
+I wonder what you <i>wouldn't</i> see for 'alf a quid on
+the sole o' my boot!</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<span class="smcap">Miss P.'s</span> <i>belief in Chiromancy sustains a severe
+shock</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bobbie Patterson</span> (<i>outside tent, as Showman</i>).
+This way to the Marvellous Jumping Bean from
+Mexico! Threepence!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Voice from Tent</span>. Bobbie! Stop! The Bean's
+<i>lost</i>! Lady Honor's horrid Thought-reading Poodle
+has just stepped in and swallowed it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bobbie</span>. Ladies and Gentlemen, owing to sudden
+domestic calamity, the Bean has been unavoidably
+compelled to retire, and will be unable to appear
+till further notice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Smylie</span> (<i>to</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Otis Barleywater</span>, <i>who&mdash;in
+his own set&mdash;is considered "almost equal to Corney
+Grain"</i>). I thought you were giving your entertainment
+in the library? Why <i>aren't</i> you?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[ 40]</a></span>
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Otis Barleywater</span> (<i>in a tone of injury</i>). Why?
+Because I can't give my imitations of Arthur Roberts
+and Yvette Guilbert with anything <i>like</i> the requisite
+"go," unless I get a better audience than three
+programme-sellers, all under ten, and the cloak-room
+maid&mdash;<i>that's</i> why!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt-Innett</span> (<i>as she leaves, for the
+benefit of bystanders</i>). I must say, the house is <i>most</i>
+disappointing&mdash;not at <i>all</i> what I should expect a
+<i>Marquis</i> to live in. Why, my <i>own</i> reception-rooms
+are very nearly as large, and decorated in a much
+more modern style!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bobbie Patterson</span> (<i>to a</i> "<span class="smcap">Doosid Good-natured
+Fellow</span>, <i>who doesn't care</i> what <i>he does," and whom he
+has just discovered inside a case got up to represent an
+automatic sweetmeat machine</i>). Why, my dear old
+<i>chap</i>! No idea it was <i>you</i> inside that thing! Enjoying
+yourself in there, eh?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Doosid Good-natured Fellow</span> (<i>fluffily, from
+the interior</i>). Enjoying myself! With the beastly
+pennies droppin' down into my boots, and the kids
+howlin' because all the confounded chocolates have
+worked up between my shoulder-blades, and I can't
+shake 'em out of the slit in my arm? I'd like to
+see <i>you</i> tryin' it!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. O. L.</span> (<i>to a stranger, who is approaching the</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[ 41]</a></span>
+<i>Princess's stall</i>). 'Ere, Mister, where are your manners?
+'Ats off in the presence o' Royalty!</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>She pokes him in the back with her umbrella; the
+stranger turns, smiles slightly, and passes on.</i></p>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Well-informed Bystander</span>. You are evidently
+unaware, Madam, that the gentleman you have just
+addressed is His Serene Highness the Prince of
+Potsdam!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. O. L.</span> (<i>aghast</i>). Her '<i>usban</i>'! And me a
+jobbin' of 'im with my umbrella! 'Ere, let me get
+out!</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i>She staggers out, in deadly terror of being sent to
+the Tower on the spot.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[ 42]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[ 43]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[ 45]</a></span>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE CLASSICAL SCHOLAR</h2>
+<h2>IN REDUCED CIRCUMSTANCES.</h2>
+
+
+You are, let us say, a young professional man in
+chambers or offices, incompetently guarded by
+an idiot boy whom you dare not trust with the
+responsibility of denying you to strangers. You hear
+a knock at your outer door, followed by conversation
+in the clerk's room, after which your salaried
+idiot announces "A Gentleman to see you." Enter a
+dingy and dismal little man in threadbare black, who
+advances with an air of mysterious importance. "I
+think," he begins, "I 'ave the pleasure of speaking to
+Mr. &mdash;&mdash;" (<i>whatever your name is</i>.) "I take the
+liberty of calling, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, to consult you on a matter
+of the utmost importance, and I shall feel personally
+obliged if you will take precautions for our conversation
+not being over'eard."
+
+He looks grubby for a client&mdash;but appearances are
+deceptive, and you offer him a seat, assuring him that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[ 46]</a></span>
+he may speak with perfect security&mdash;whereupon he
+proceeds in a lowered voice.
+
+"The story I am about to reveal," he says, smoothing
+a slimy tall hat, "is of a nature so revolting, so
+'orrible in its details, that I can 'ardly bring myself to
+speak it to any 'uming ear!" (<i>Here you will probably
+prepare to take notes.</i>) "You see before you one who
+is of 'igh birth but low circumstances!" (<i>At this you
+give him up as a possible client, but a mixture of
+diffidence and curiosity compels you to listen.</i>) "Yes,
+Sir, I was '<i> fruges consumeary nati</i>.' I 'ave received
+a neducation more befitting a dook than my present
+condition. Nursed in the lap of haffluence, I was
+trained to fill the lofty position which was to have
+been my lot. But, '<i>necessitas</i>,' Sir, as you are aware,
+'<i>necessitas non abat lejim</i>,' and such I found it. While
+still receiving a classical education at Cambridge
+College&mdash;(praps you are yourself an alumbus of
+<i>Halma Mater</i>? No? I apologise, Sir, I'm sure)&mdash;but
+while preparing to take my honorary degree, my
+father suddenly enounced the horful news that he
+was a bankrup'. Stript of all we possessed, we were
+turned out of our sumchuous 'ome upon the cold
+world, my father's grey 'airs were brought down
+sorrowing to sangwidge boards, though he is still
+sangwin of paying off his creditors in time out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[ 47]</a></span>
+what he can put by from his scanty hearnings. My
+poor dear Mother&mdash;a lady born and bred&mdash;sank by
+slow degrees to a cawfy-stall, which is now morgidged
+to the 'ilt, and my eldest Sister, a lovely and accomplished
+gairl, was 'artlessly thrown over by a nobleman,
+to 'oom she was engaged to be married, before
+our reverses overtook us. His name the delikit
+hinstinks of a gentleman will forbid you to inquire,
+as likewise me to mention&mdash;enough to 'int that he
+occupies a prominent position amongst the hupper
+circles of Society, and is frequently to be met with
+in the papers. His faithlessness preyed on my
+Sister's mind to that degree, that she is now in
+the Asylum, a nopeless maniac! My honely Brother
+was withdrawn from 'Arrow, and now 'as the
+'yumiliation of selling penny toys on the kerbstone
+to his former playfellers. '<i>Tantee nannymice salestibus
+hiræ</i>,' indeed, Sir!
+
+"But you ask what befell myself." (<i>You have not&mdash;for
+the simple reason that, even if you desired information,
+he has given you no chance, as yet, of putting in
+a word.</i>) "Ah, Sir, there you 'ave me on a tender
+point. '<i>Hakew tetigisti</i>,' if I may venture once
+more upon a scholarly illusion. But I 'ave resolved
+to conceal nothing&mdash;and you shall 'ear. For a time I
+obtained employment as Seckertary and Imanuensis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[ 48]</a></span>
+to a young baranit, 'oo had been the bosom friend
+of my College days. He would, I know, have used
+his influence with Goverment to obtain me a lucritive
+post; but, alas, ere he could do so, unaired sheets,
+coupled with deliket 'elth, took him off premature,
+and I was once more thrown on my own resources.
+
+"In conclusion, Sir, you 'ave doubtless done me
+the hinjustice to expect, from all I 'ave said, that
+my hobjick in obtaining this interview was to ask
+you for pecuniary assistance?" (<i>Here you reflect
+with remorse that a suspicion to this effect has certainly
+crossed your mind.</i>) "Nothing of the sort or kind,
+I do assure you. A little 'uming sympathy, the
+relief of pouring out my sorrers upon a feeling 'art,
+a few kind encouraging words, is all I arsk, and that,
+Sir, the first sight of your kind friendly face told me
+I should not lack. Pore as I am, I still 'ave my
+pride, the pride of a English gentleman, and if you
+was to orfer me a sovereign as you sit there, I should
+fling it in the fire&mdash;ah, I <i>should</i>&mdash;'urt and indignant
+at the hinsult!" (<i>Here you will probably assure him
+that you have no intention of outraging his feelings in
+any such manner.</i>) "No, and <i>why</i>, Sir? Because
+you 'ave a gentlemanly 'art, and if you were to make
+sech a orfer, you would do it in a kindly Christian
+spirit which would rob it of all offence. There's not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[ 49]</a></span>
+many as I would bring myself to accept a paltry
+sovereign from, but I dunno&mdash;I might from one like
+yourself&mdash;I <i>might</i>. <i>Ord hignara mali, miseris succur-reary
+disco</i>, as the old philosopher says. You 'ave
+that kind of <i>way</i> with you." (<i>You mildly intimate that
+he is mistaken here, and take the opportunity of touching
+the bell</i>.) "No, Sir, don't be untrue to your better
+himpulses. '<i>Ave</i> a feelin 'art, Sir! Don't send me
+away, after allowing me to waste my time 'ere&mdash;which
+is of value <i>to me</i>, let me tell yer, whatever
+<i>yours</i> is!&mdash;like this!.... Well, well, there's 'ard
+people in this world? I'm <i>going</i>, Sir ... I 'ave
+sufficient dignity to take a 'int.... You 'aven't got
+even a trifle to spare an old University Scholar in
+redooced circumstances then?... Ah, it's easy to
+see you ain't been at a University yourself&mdash;you
+ain't got the <i>hair</i> of it! Farewell, Sir, and may
+your lot in life be 'appier than&mdash;&mdash;All right, don't
+<i>hexcite</i> yourself. I've bin mistook in yer, that's all.
+I thought you was as soft-edded a young mug as you
+look. Open that door, will yer; I want to get out
+of this 'ole!"
+
+Here he leaves you with every indication of disgust
+and disappointment, and you will probably
+hear him indulging in unclassical vituperation on
+the landing.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[ 51]</a></span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" /></div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[ 53]</a></span>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>RUS IN URBE.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">A Sketch in Regent's Park.</span>)</h3>
+
+
+<i>A railed-in corner of the Park. <span class="smcap">Time</span>&mdash;About 7 p.m. Inside
+the enclosure three shepherds are engaged in shearing the park
+sheep. The first shepherd has just thrown his patient on its
+back, gripped its shoulders between his knees, and tucked its
+head, as a tiresome and obstructive excrescence, neatly away
+under one of his arms, while he reaches for the shears. The
+second is straddled across his animal, which is lying with its
+hind legs hobbled on a low stage under an elm, in a state of
+stoical resignation, as its fleece is deftly nipped from under its
+chin. The third operator has almost finished his sheep, which, as
+its dark grey fleece slips away from its pink-and-white neck and
+shoulders, suggests a rather décolletée dowager in the act of
+removing her theatre-cloak in the stalls. Sheep, already shorn, lie
+and pant in shame and shivering bewilderment, one or two nibble
+the blades of grass, as if to assure themselves that that resource is
+still open to them. Sheep whose turn is still to come are penned up
+at the back, and look on, scandalised, but with an air which seems
+to express that their own superior respectability is a sufficient
+protection against similar outrage. The shearers appear to take a
+humorous view of their task, and are watched by a crowd which
+has collected round the railings, with an agreeable assurance that
+they are not expected to contribute towards the entertainment.</i>
+
+<span class="smcap">First Work-girl</span> (<i>edging up</i>). Whatever's
+goin' on inside 'ere? (<i>After looking&mdash;disappointed.</i>)
+Why they ain't on'y a lot o'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[ 54]</a></span>
+sheep! I thought it was Reciters, or somethink o'
+that.
+
+<span class="smcap">Second Work-girl</span> (<i>with irony</i>). They <i>look</i>
+like Reciters, don't they! It do seem a shime
+cuttin' them poor things as close as convicks,
+that it do!
+
+<span class="smcap">First W.-g.</span> They don't mind it partickler;
+you'd 'ear 'em 'oller fast enough if they did.
+
+<span class="smcap">Second W.-g.</span> I expeck they feel so redic'lus,
+they 'aven't the 'art to 'oller.
+
+<span class="smcap">Lucilla</span> (<i>to <span class="smcap">George</span></i>). Do look at that one
+going up and sniffing at the bundle of fleeces,
+trying to find out which is his. <i>Isn't</i> it
+pathetic?
+
+<span class="smcap">George.</span> H'm&mdash;puts one in mind of a shy man
+in a cloak-room after a party, saying feebly, "I
+rather think that's <i>my</i> coat, and there's a crush hat
+of mine <i>somewhere</i> about," eh?
+
+<span class="smcap">Lucilla</span> (<i>who is always wishing that <span class="smcap">George</span> would
+talk more sensibly</i>). Considering that sheep don't
+<i>wear</i> crush hats, I hardly see how&mdash;&mdash;
+
+<p><span class="smcap">George.</span> My dear, I bow to your superior knowledge
+of natural history. Now you mention it, I
+believe it <i>is</i> unusual. But I merely meant to suggest
+a general resemblance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[ 55]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 416px;">
+<img src="images/p55.png" width="416" height="600" alt="&quot;They ain&#39;t on&#39;y a lot o&#39; sheep! I thought it was Reciters,
+or somethink o&#39; that.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;They ain&#39;t on&#39;y a lot o&#39; sheep! I thought it was Reciters,
+or somethink o&#39; that.&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[ 57]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Lucilla</span> (<i>reprovingly</i>). I know. And you've got
+into such a silly habit of seeing resemblances in
+things that are perfectly different. I'm sure I'm
+<i>always</i> telling you of it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">George.</span> You are, my dear. But I'm not
+nearly so bad as I <i>was</i>. Think of all the things
+I used to compare <i>you</i> to before we were
+married!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sarah Jane</span> (<i>to her <span class="smcap">Trooper</span></i>). I could stand an'
+look at 'em hours, I could. I was born and bred in
+the country, and it do seem to bring back my old
+'ome that plain.</p>
+
+<p>Her <span class="smcap">Trooper</span>. I'm country bred too, though
+yer mightn't think it. But there ain't much in
+sheep shearin' to <i>my</i> mind. If it was <i>pig killin'</i>,
+now!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sarah Jane.</span> Ah, that's along o' your bein' in the
+milingtary, I expect.</p>
+
+<p>Her <span class="smcap">Trooper</span>. No, it ain't that. It's the
+reckerlections it 'ud call up. I 'ad a 'ole uncle
+a pork-butcher, d'ye see, and (<i>with sentiment</i>)
+many and many a 'appy hour I've spent as a
+boy&mdash;&mdash; [<i>He indulges in tender reminiscences.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Young Clerk</span> (<i>who belongs to a Literary Society,
+to his <span class="smcap">Fiancée</span></i>). It has a wonderfully rural look&mdash;quite
+like a scene in 'Ardy, isn't it?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[ 58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>His <span class="smcap">Fiancée</span> (<i>who has "no time for reading rubbish"</i>).
+I daresay; though I've never been there
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Clerk</span>. Never been? Oh, I see. <i>You</i>
+thought I said <i>Arden</i>&mdash;the Forest of Arden, in
+Shakspeare, didn't you?</p>
+
+<p>His <span class="smcap">Fiancée</span>. Isn't that where Mr. Gladstone
+lives, and goes cutting down the trees in?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Clerk</span>. No; At least it's spelt different.
+But it was 'Ardy <i>I</i> meant. <i>Far from the Madding
+Crowd</i>, you know.</p>
+
+<p>His <span class="smcap">Fiancée</span> (<i>with a vague view to the next Bank
+Holiday</i>). What do you <i>call</i> "far"&mdash;farther than
+<i>Margate</i>?</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Her companion has a sense of discouragement.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>An <span class="smcap">Artisan</span> (<i>to a neighbour in broadcloth and a white
+choker</i>). It's wonderful 'ow they can go so close
+without 'urtin' of 'em, ain't it?</p>
+
+<p>His <span class="smcap">Neighbour</span> (<i>with unction</i>). Ah, my friend, it
+on'y shows 'ow true it is that 'eving tempers the
+shears for the shorn lambs!</p>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">Governess</span> (<i>instructively, to her charge</i>). Don't
+you think you ought to be very grateful to that poor
+sheep, Ethel, for giving up her nice warm fleece on
+purpose to make a frock for <i>you</i>?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[ 59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ethel</span> (<i>doubtfully</i>). Y&mdash;yes, Miss Mavor. But
+(<i>with a fear that some reciprocity may be expected of
+her</i>) she's too big for any of my <i>best</i> frocks, <i>isn't</i>
+she?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Urchin</span> (<i>perched on the railings</i>). Ain't that
+'un a-kicking? 'E don't like 'aving <i>'is</i> 'air cut, 'e
+don't, no more shouldn't I if it was me.... 'E's
+bin an' upset 'is bloke on the grorss, now! Look at
+the bloke layin' there larfin'.... 'E's ketched 'im
+agin now. See 'im landin' 'im a smack on the 'ed;
+that'll learn 'im to stay quiet, eh? 'E's strong,
+ain't 'e?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Urchin.</span> Rams is the wust, though,
+'cause they got 'orns, rams 'ave.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Urch.</span> What, same as goats?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Urch.</span> (<i>emphatically</i>). Yuss! Big crooked
+'uns. And runs at yer, they do.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Urch.</span> I wish they was rams in 'ere. See
+all them sheep waitin' to be done. I wonder what
+they're finkin' of.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Urch.</span> Ga-arn! They <i>don't</i> fink, sheep
+don't.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Urch.</span> Not o' anyfink?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Urch.</span> Na-ow! They ain't got nuffink to
+fink <i>about</i>, sheep ain't.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Urch.</span> I lay they <i>do</i> fink, 'orf and on.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[ 60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Urch.</span> Well, I lay <i>you</i> never see 'em
+doin' of it!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>And so on. The first Shepherd disrobes his sheep,
+and dismisses it with a disrespectful spank.
+After which he proceeds to refresh himself from
+a brown jar, and hands it to his comrades.
+The spectators look on with deeper interest, and
+discuss the chances of the liquid being beer,
+cider, or cold tea, as the scene closes.</i></p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[ 61]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CATCHING THE EARLY BOAT.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>In Bed; At the Highland Hotel, Oban.</i></p>
+
+<p>What an extraordinary thing is the mechanism
+of the human mind! Went to sleep last
+night impressed with vital importance of
+waking at six, to catch early steamer to Gairloch.
+And here I am&mdash;broad awake&mdash;at exactly 5.55! Is it
+automatic action, or what? Like setting clockwork
+for explosive machine. When the time comes, I
+blow up&mdash;I mean, <i>get</i> up. Think out this simile&mdash;rather
+a good one.... Need not have been so particular
+in telling Boots to call me, after all. Shall I
+get up <i>before</i> he comes? He'll be rather surprised
+when he knocks at the door, and hears me singing
+inside like a lark. But, on reflection, isn't it rather
+<i>petty</i> to wish to astonish an hotel Boots? And why
+on earth should I get up myself, when I've tipped
+another fellow to get me up? But suppose he forgets
+to call me. I've no right, as yet, to <i>assume</i> that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[ 64]</a></span>
+he will. To get up now would argue want of confidence
+in him&mdash;might hurt his feelings. I will give
+him another five minutes, poor fellow....</p>
+
+<p><i>Getting up.</i>&mdash;No actual necessity to get up yet,
+but, to make assurance doubly&mdash;something or other,
+forget what&mdash;I will ... I do. Portmanteau rather
+refractory; retreats under bed&mdash;quite ten minutes
+before I can coax it out.... When I have, it won't
+let me pack it. That's the worst of this breed of
+brown portmanteaus&mdash;they're always nasty-tempered.
+However, I am getting a few things into it
+now, by degrees. Very annoying&mdash;as fast as I put
+them in, this confounded portmanteau shoots them
+out again! If I've put in that pair of red and white
+striped pyjamas once, I've done it twenty times&mdash;and
+they always come twisting and rolling out of
+the back, somehow. Fortunate I left myself ample
+time.</p>
+
+<p>Man next door to me is running it rather fine.
+<i>He</i> has to catch the boat, too, and he's not up yet!
+Hear the Boots hammering away at his door. How
+<i>can</i> a fellow, just for the sake of a few more minutes
+in bed&mdash;which he won't even know he's <i>had</i>!&mdash;go
+and risk losing his steamer in that way? I'll do him
+a good turn&mdash;knock at the wall myself. "Hi! get
+up, you lazy beggar. Look sharp&mdash;you'll be late!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[ 65]</a></span>
+He thanks me, in a muffled tone, through the wall.
+He is a remarkably quick dresser, he tells me&mdash;it
+won't take him thirty-five seconds to pack, dress,
+pay his bill, and get on board. If that's the case,
+I don't see why <i>I</i> should hurry. I've got much
+more than that <i>already</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>At the Quay.</i>&mdash;People in Oban stare a good deal.
+Can't quite make out reason, unless they're surprised
+to find me up so early. Explain that I got
+up without having even been called. Oban populace
+mildly surprised, and offer me neckties&mdash;<i>Why?</i></p>
+
+<p>Fine steamer this; has a paddle-wheel at <i>both</i>
+ends&mdash;"because," the Captain explains, "she has
+not only to <i>go</i> to Gairloch&mdash;but come back as well."</p>
+
+<p>First-rate navigator, the Captain; he has written
+my weight, the date of my last birthday, and the
+number of the house I live in, down in a sort of
+ledger he keeps. He does this with all his passengers,
+he tells me, reduces the figures to logarithms,
+and works out the ship's course in decimals. No
+idea there was so much science in modern seamanship.</p>
+
+<p><i>On Board.</i>&mdash;Great advantage of being so early is
+that you can breakfast quietly on deck before starting.
+Have mine on bridge of steamer, under
+awning; everything very good&mdash;ham-méringues<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[ 66]</a></span>
+<i>excellent</i>. No coffee, but, instead, a capital brand
+of dry, sparkling marmalade, served, sailor-fashion,
+in small pomatum-pots.</p>
+
+<p>What a small world we live in! Of all people in
+the world, who should be sitting next to me but my
+Aunt Maria! I was always under the impression
+that she had died in my infancy. Don't like to
+mention this, because if I am <i>wrong</i>, she might be
+offended. But if she <i>did</i> die when I was a child,
+she ought to be a much older woman than she looks.
+I <i>do</i> tell her this&mdash;because it is really a compliment.</p>
+
+<p>My Aunt, evidently an experienced traveller, never
+travels, she informs me, without a pair of globes and
+a lawn-mower. She offers, very kindly, to lend me
+the Celestial globe, if the weather is at all windy.
+This is behaving <i>like</i> an Aunt!</p>
+
+<p>We are taking in live-stock; curious-looking
+creatures, like spotted pug-dogs (only bigger and
+woollier, of course) and without horns. Somebody
+leaning over the rail next to me (I <i>think</i> he is the
+Public Prosecutor, but am not quite sure), tells me
+they are "Scotch Shortbreads." Agreeable man,
+but rather given to staring.</p>
+
+<p>Didn't observe it before, but my Aunt is really
+amazingly like Mr. Gladstone. Ask her to explain
+this. She is much distressed that I have noticed it;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[ 67]</a></span>
+says she has felt it coming on for some time; it is
+not, as she justly complains, as if she took any
+interest in politics either. She has consulted every
+doctor in London, and they all tell her it is simply
+weakness, and she will outgrow it with care. Singular
+case&mdash;must find out (delicately) whether it's
+catching.</p>
+
+<p>We ought to be starting soon; feel quite fresh and
+lively, in spite of having got up so early. Mention
+this to Captain. Wish he and the Public Prosecutor
+wouldn't stare at me so. Just as if there was
+something singular in my appearance!</p>
+
+<p>They're embarking my portmanteau now. Knew
+they would have a lively time of it! It takes at
+least four sailors, in kilts, to manage it. Ought I to
+step ashore and quiet it down? Stay where I am.
+Don't know why, but feel a little afraid of it when
+it's like this. Shall exchange it for a quiet hand-bag
+when I get home.</p>
+
+<p>Captain busy hammering at a hole in the funnel&mdash;dangerous
+place to spring a leak in&mdash;hope he is
+making it water-tight. The hammering reminds me
+of that poor devil in the bedroom next to mine at
+the hotel. <i>He</i> won't catch the boat now&mdash;he <i>can't</i>!
+My Aunt (who has left off looking like Mr. Gladstone)
+asks me why I am laughing. I tell her about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[ 68]</a></span>
+that unfortunate man and his "thirty-five seconds."
+She screams with laughter. Very humorous woman,
+my Aunt.</p>
+
+<p>Deck crowded with passengers now: all pointing
+and staring ... at whom? Ask Aunt Maria. She
+declines to tell me: says, severely, that "If I don't
+know, I ought to."</p>
+
+<p>Great Heavens! It's at <i>me</i> they're staring! And
+no wonder&mdash;in the hurry I was in, I must have
+packed <i>everything</i> up!... I've come away just as
+I was! <i>Now</i> I understand why someone offered me
+a necktie. Where shall I go and hide myself?
+Shall I ever persuade that beast of a portmanteau
+to give me out one or two things to put on&mdash;because
+I really <i>can't</i> go about like this! Captain
+still hammering at funnel&mdash;but he can't wake that
+sleepy-headed idiot in the next room. "Louder&mdash;knock
+<i>louder</i>, or the boat will go without him! Tell
+him there isn't another for two days. He's said
+good-bye to everybody he knows at Oban&mdash;he will
+look such an ass if he doesn't go, after all!"...
+Not the least use! Wonder what his name is. My
+Aunt says <i>she</i> knows, only she won't tell me&mdash;she'll
+whisper it, as a great secret. She is just about to
+disclose the name, which, somehow, I am extremely
+curious to know&mdash;when ...<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[ 69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Where am I? Haven't they got that unhappy
+fellow up <i>yet</i>? Why the dickens are they knocking
+at <i>my</i> door? I've been on board the steamer for
+hours, I tell you? Eh? <i>what?</i> Five minutes
+to eight! And the Gairloch boat? "Sailed at
+usual time&mdash;seven. Tried to make you hear&mdash;but
+couldn't."... Confound it all! Good mind not
+to get up all day&mdash;now!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[ 70]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[ 71]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>SOCIETY'S NEXT CRAZE.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">As Foreseen by Mr. Punch's Second-sighted
+Clairvoyant.</span>)</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>It is the summer of 189-. The scene is a road skirting
+Victoria Park, Bethnal Green, which Society's leaders have
+recently discovered and appointed as the rendez-vous for the
+Season, and where it is now the correct thing for all really smart
+people to indulge, between certain prescribed hours, in sports and
+pastimes that have hitherto been more characteristic of the masses
+than the classes. The only permissible mount now is the donkey,
+which must be ridden close to the tail, and referred to as a "moke."
+A crowd of well-turned-out spectators arrives from the West End
+every morning about eleven to watch the brilliant parade of
+"Mokestrians" (as the Society journalist will already have decided
+to call them). Some drive slowly up and down on coster-barrows,
+attended by cockaded and disgusted grooms. About twelve, they
+break up into light luncheon parties; after which they play
+democratic games for half an hour or so, and drive home on drags.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Woodby-Innett</span> (<i>to the <span class="smcap">Donkey
+Proprietor</span></i>). Kept a moke for me? I
+told you I should be wantin' one every
+mornin' now.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[ 74]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Donkey Proprietor</span> (<i>after consulting engagement
+book</i>). I've not got it down on my list, Sir.
+Very sorry, but the Countess of Cumberback has just
+booked the last for the 'ole of this week. Might let
+you 'ave one by-and-by, if Sir Hascot Goodwood
+brings his in punctual, but I can't promise it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Woodby-Inn.</span> That's no good; no point in
+ridin' after the right time. (<i>To himself, as he turns
+away.</i>) Nuisance! Not that I'm so keen about a
+moke. Not a patch on a bike!&mdash;though it don't
+do to say so. Only if I'd known this, I'd have turned
+up in a tall hat and frock coat; and then I could
+have taken a turn on the steam-circus. Wonder
+if it would be any sort of form shyin' at cocoa-nuts in
+tweeds and a straw hat. Must ask some chap who
+knows. More puzzlin' what to put on this year than
+ever!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Ranela Hurlingham</span> (<i>breathlessly to <span class="smcap">Donkey
+Proprietor</span></i>). That's mine, isn't it? Will you please
+put me up, and <i>promise</i> me you'll keep close behind
+and make him run. (<i>Suppliantly.</i>) You will, <i>won't</i> you?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Donkey Proprietor</span> (<i>with a due sense of his
+own value</i>). Well, I dessay I can come along
+presently, Lady 'Urlingham, and fetch 'im a whack
+or two; jest now I can't, having engaged to come
+and 'old the Marshiness of 'Ammercloth on <i>'er</i> moke;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[ 75]</a></span>
+but there, you orter be able to git along well enough
+by yourself now&mdash;<i>you</i> ought!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 474px">
+<img src="images/p75.png" width="474" height="600" alt="&quot;Mokestrians.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;Mokestrians.&quot;</span>
+</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[ 76]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[ 77]</a></span></p><p><span class="smcap">Captain Sonbyrne</span> (<i>just home on leave from India&mdash;to
+<span class="smcap">Mrs. Chesham-Lowndes</span></i>). Rather an odd sort
+of idea this&mdash;I mean, coming all the way out here to
+ride a lot of donkeys, eh?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Chesham-Lowndes.</span> It used to be rather
+amusing a month ago, before they all got used
+to riding so near the tail; but now they're all so good
+at it, don't you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Capt. Sonb.</span> I went down to Battersea Park
+yesterday to see the bicyclists. Not a soul there,
+give you my word!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.-L.</span> No; there <i>wouldn't</i> be <i>this</i> season.
+You see, all sorts and conditions of people began to
+take it up, and it got too fearfully common. And
+now moke-riding has quite cut it out.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Capt. Sonb.</span> But why ride donkeys when you
+can get gees?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. C.-L.</span> Oh, well, they're democratic, and
+cheap, and all that, don't you know. And one really
+can't be <i>seen</i> on a horse this year&mdash;in town, at least.
+In the country it don't matter so much.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Mokestrian</span> (<i>to second ditto</i>). Hullo, old
+chap, so <i>you</i>'ve taken to a moke at last, eh? How
+are you gettin' on?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[ 78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Mokestrian.</span> Pretty well. I can sit on
+his tail all right now, but I can't get into the way
+of keepin' my heels off the ground yet, it's so beastly
+difficult.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fragments from</i> <span class="smcap">Spectators</span>. That's rather a
+smart barrow Lady Barinrayne's drivin' to-day....
+Who's the fellow with her, with the paper feather in
+his pot-hat? Bad style, <i>I</i> call it.... That's Lord
+Freddy Fugleman&mdash;best dressed man in London.
+You'll see everybody turnin' up in a paper feather
+in a day or two.... Lot of men seem to be
+using a short clay as a cigarette-holder now, don't
+they?... Yes, Roddie Rippingill introduced
+the idea last week, and it seems to have caught
+on. [<i>&amp;c.</i>, <i>&amp;c.</i>]</p>
+
+
+<p><i>After Luncheon; at the Steam-Circus and other Sports.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scraps of Small-talk.</i> No end sorry, Lady
+Gwendolen; been tryin' to get you a scent-squirt
+everywhere; but they're all gone; such a run on 'em
+for Ascot, don't you know.... Thanks; it doesn't
+matter; only dear Lady Buckram has just thrown
+some red ochre down the back of my neck, and Algy
+Vere came and shot out a coloured paper thing right
+in my face, and I shouldn't like to seem uncivil....
+Suppose I shall see you at Lady Brabazon's "Kiss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[ 79]</a></span>
+in the Ring" at Bethnal Green to-morrow afternoon?...
+I believe she <i>did</i> send us cards, but we promised
+to look in at a friendly lead the Duchess of Dillwater
+is giving at such a dear little public she's discovered
+in Whitechapel, so we may be rather late....
+You'll keep a handkerchief-throw for me if you <i>do</i>
+come on, won't you?... It will have to be an
+<i>extra</i>, then, I'm afraid.... Are you goin' to Lord
+Balmisyde's eight o'clock breakfast to-morrow? <i>So</i>
+glad; I hear he's engaged five coffee-stalls, and
+we're all to stand up and eat saveloys and trotters
+and thick bread and butter.... Oh, I wanted to
+ask you, my girls have got an invitation to a hoky-poky
+party the Vavasours are giving after the moke-ridin'
+next Thursday, and I'm told it's quite wrong
+to eat hoky-poky with a spoon&mdash;do you know how
+that is?... The only <i>correct</i> way, Caroline, is to
+lick it out of the glass, which requires practice before
+it can be <i>attempted</i> in public. But I hear there's
+quite a pleasant boy-professor somewhere in the Mile
+End Road who teaches it in a single lesson; he's
+<i>very</i> moderate; his terms are only half a guinea,
+which includes the hoky-poky. I'll send you his
+address if I can find it.... Thanks <i>so</i> much; the
+dear girls <i>will</i> be so grateful to you.... I <i>do</i> think
+it's <i>quite</i> too bad of Lady Geraldine Grabber, she goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[ 80]</a></span>
+and sticks her card on the only decent wooden horse
+in the steam-circus and says she's engaged it for the
+whole time, though she hardly ever takes a round!
+And so many girls standing out who can ride without
+getting in the <i>least</i> giddy!... Rathah a boundah,
+that fellow, if you ask me; I've <i>seen</i> him pullin'
+a swing boat in brown boots and ridin'-breeches!...
+How wonderfully well your daughter throws
+the rings, dear Lady Cornelia, I hear she's won three
+walking-sticks and five clasp knives.... You're
+very kind. She is quite clever at it; but then she's
+had some private coaching from a gipsy, don't you
+know.... What are you going to do with yourself
+this afternoon?... Oh, I'm going to the People's
+Palace to see the finals played off for the Skittles
+Championship; bound to be a closish thing; rather
+excitin', don't you know.... Ah, Duchess, you've
+been in form to-day, I see, five cocoa-nuts! Can I
+relieve you of some of them?... Thanks, they <i>are</i>
+rather tiresome to carry; if you <i>could</i> find my carriage
+and tell the footman to keep his eye on them.
+[<i>&amp;c.</i>, <i>&amp;c.</i>]</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Rosehugh</span> (<i>to <span class="smcap">Mr. Luke Walmer</span>, on the
+way home</i>). You know I <i>do</i> think it's <i>such</i> a cheering
+sign of the times, Society getting simpler in its tastes,
+and sharing the pleasures of the Dear People, and all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[ 81]</a></span>
+that; it must tend to bring all classes more <i>together</i>,
+don't you know!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Luke Walmer.</span> Perhaps. Only I was thinking,
+I don't remember seeing any of the Dear People
+<i>about</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Rosehugh.</span> No; somebody was telling me
+they had taken to playing Polo on bicycles in Hyde
+Park. So extraordinary of them&mdash;such a pity they
+haven't some higher form of amusement, you know!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[ 82]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[ 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>AN IDEAL INTERVIEWER.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Den of Latest Lion.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Latest Lion</span> (<i>perusing card with no visible
+signs of gratification</i>). Confound it! don't
+remember telling the Editor of <i>Park Lane</i> I'd
+let myself be interviewed. Suppose I must have,
+though. (<i>Aloud to <span class="smcap">Servant</span>, who is waiting.</i>) You
+can show the Gentleman up.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Servant</span> (<i>returning</i>). Mr. Walsingham Jermyn!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>A youthful Gentleman is shown in; he wears a
+pink-striped shirt-front, an enormous buttonhole,
+and a woolly frock-coat, and is altogether
+most expensively and fashionably attired, which,
+however, does not prevent him from appearing
+somewhat out of countenance after taking a seat.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The L. L. (<i>encouragingly</i>). I presume, Mr. Jermyn,
+you're here to ask me some questions about the future
+of the British East African Company, and the duty
+of the Government in the matter?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[ 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Jermyn</span> (<i>gratefully</i>). Er&mdash;yes, that's what I've
+come about, don't you know&mdash;that sort of thing.
+Fact is (<i>with a burst of confidence</i>), this isn't exactly
+my line&mdash;I've been rather let in for this. You see,
+I've not been by way of doin' this long&mdash;but what's a
+fellow to do when he's stony-broke? Got to do
+<i>somethin'</i>, don't you know. So I thought I'd go in
+for journalism&mdash;I don't mean the drudgery of it,
+leader-writin' and that&mdash;but the light part of it,
+<i>Society</i>, you know. But the other day, man who
+does the interviews for <i>Park Lane</i> (that's the paper
+I'm on) jacked up all of a sudden, and my Editor said
+I'd better take on his work for a bit, and see what
+I made of it. I wasn't particular. You see, I've
+always been rather a dead hand at drawin' fellows
+out, leadin' them on, you know, and all that, so I
+knew it would come easy enough to me, for all you've
+got to do is to sit tight and let the other chap&mdash;I
+mean to say, the man you're interviewin'&mdash;do all the
+talking, while you&mdash;I mean to say, myself&mdash;keep,
+keeps&mdash;hullo, I'm getting my grammar a bit mixed;
+however, it don't signify&mdash;<i>I</i> keep quiet and use my
+eyes and ears like blazes. Talking of grammar, I
+thought when I first started that I should get in a
+regular hat over the grammar, and the spellin',
+and that&mdash;<i>you</i> write, don't you, when you're not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[ 87]</a></span>
+travellin'? So you know what a grind it is to spell
+right. But I soon found they kept a Johnny at the
+office with nothing to do but put all your mistakes
+right for you, so, soon as I knew that, I went ahead
+gaily.</p>
+
+<p>The L. L. Exactly, and now, perhaps, you will
+let me know what particular information you
+require?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. J.</span> Oh, <i>you</i> know the sort of thing the public
+likes&mdash;they'll want to know what sort of diggings
+you've got, how you dress when you're at home, and
+all that, how you write your books, now&mdash;you do
+write books, don't you? Thought so. Well, that's
+what the public likes. You see, your name's a good
+deal up just now&mdash;no humbug, it <i>is</i> though! Between
+ourselves, you know, I think the whole business is the
+balliest kind of rot, but they've got to have it, so
+there you are, don't you see. I don't pretend to be
+a well-read sort of fellow, never was particularly fond
+of readin' and that; no time for it, and besides, I've
+always said <i>Books</i> don't teach you knowledge of the
+world. I know the world fairly well&mdash;but I didn't
+learn it from books&mdash;ah, you agree with me there&mdash;<i>you</i>
+know what skittles all that talk is about education
+and that. Well, as I was sayin', I don't read much,
+I see the <i>Field</i> every week, and a clinkin' good paper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[ 88]</a></span>
+it is, tells you everythin' worth knowin', and I read
+the <i>Pink Un</i>, too. Do you know any of the fellows
+on it? Man I know is a great friend of one of them,
+he's going to introduce me some day, I like knowin'
+literary chaps, don't you? You've been about a
+good deal, haven't you? I expect you must have
+seen a lot, travellin' as you do. I've done a little
+travellin' myself, been to Monte Carlo, you know,
+and the Channel Islands&mdash;<i>you</i> ever been to the
+Channel Islands? Oh, you ought to go, it's a very
+cheery place. Talkin' of Monte Carlo, I had a
+rattlin' good time at the tables there; took out a
+hundred quid, determined I would have a downright
+good flutter, and Jove! I made that hundred last me
+over five days, and came away in nothing but my
+lawn-tennis flannels. That's what I <i>call</i> a flutter,
+don't you know! Er&mdash;beastly weather we're havin'!
+You have pretty good weather where you've been?
+A young brother of mine has been out for a year in
+Texas&mdash;he said <i>he</i>'d very good weather&mdash;of course
+that's some way off where <i>you</i>'ve come from&mdash;Central
+Africa, isn't it? Talkin' of my brother, what do you
+think the young ass did?&mdash;went out there with a
+thousand pounds, and paid it all down to some
+sportsmen who took him to see some stock they said
+belonged to them&mdash;of course he found out after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[ 89]</a></span>
+they'd off'd it that they didn't own a white mouse
+among 'em! But then, Dick's one of those chaps,
+you know, that think themselves so uncommon
+knowing, they <i>can't</i> be had. I always told him he'd
+be taken in some day if he let his tongue wag so
+much&mdash;too fond of hearing himself talk, don't you
+know, great mistake for a young fellow; sure to say
+somethin' you'd better have let alone. I suppose
+you're getting rather sick of all these banquets,
+receptions, and that? They do you very well, certainly.
+I went to one of these Company dinners
+some time ago, and they did me as well as I've ever
+been done in my life, but when you've got to sit still
+afterwards and listen to some chap who's been somewhere
+and done somethin' jawin' about it by the hour
+together without a check, why, it's not <i>good</i> enough,
+I'm hanged if it is! Well, I'm afraid I can't stay any
+longer&mdash;my time's valuable now, don't you know. I
+daresay yours is, too. I'm awfully glad to have had
+a chat with you, and all that. I expect you could tell
+me a lot more interestin' things, only of course you've
+got to keep the best of 'em to put in your book&mdash;you
+<i>are</i> writin' a book or somethin', ain't you? Such
+heaps of fellows are writin' books nowadays, the
+wonder is how any of 'em get read. I shall try and
+get a look at yours, though, if I come across it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[ 90]</a></span>
+anywhere; hope you'll put some amusin' things in,&mdash;nigger
+stories and that, don't make it too bally
+scientific, you know. Directly I get back, I shall sit
+down, slick off, and write off all you've told me. I
+shan't want any notes, I can carry it all in my head,
+and of course I shan't put in anything you'd rather I
+didn't, don't you know.</p>
+
+<p>The L. L. (<i>solemnly</i>). Mr. Jermyn, I place implicit
+confidence in your discretion. I have no doubt
+whatever that your head, Sir, is more than capable
+of containing such remarks as I have found it
+necessary to make in the course of our interview. I
+like your system of extracting information, Sir, very
+much. Good morning.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. J. (<i>outside</i>). Nice pleasant-spoken fellow&mdash;trifle
+long-winded, though! Gad, I was so busy
+listenin' I forgot to notice what his rooms were like
+or anythin'! How would it do to go back? No, too
+much of a grind. Daresay I can manage to fox up
+somethin'. I shall tell the Chief what he said about
+my system. Chief don't quite know what I <i>can</i> do
+yet&mdash;this will open his eyes a bit.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>And it does.</i></p></blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[ 91]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>SATURDAY NIGHT IN THE EDGWARE ROAD.</h2>
+
+<blockquote><i>For over half-a-mile the pavement on the East side of the road is
+thronged with promenaders, and the curbstone lined with stalls and
+barrows, and hawkers of various wares. Marketing housewives
+with covered baskets oscillate undecidedly from stalls to shops, and
+put off purchasing to the last possible moment. Maids-of-all-work
+perambulate arm-in-arm, exchanging airy badinage with youths
+of their acquaintance, though the latter seem to prefer the society
+of their own sex. A man with a switchback skittle-board plays
+gloomy games by himself to an unspeculative group of small boys.
+The tradesmen stand outside their shops and conduct their business
+with a happy blend of the methods of a travelling showman and
+a clown.</i></blockquote>
+
+<span class="smcap">Burlesque Butcher.</span> Now then, all o'
+<i>you</i> there! Buy, buy, buy! Just give yer
+minds to spendin' yer money! (<i>In a tone
+of artless wonder.</i>) Where <i>does</i> the Butcher git this
+<i>luverly</i> meat? What can I do fur <i>you</i> now, Marm?
+(<i>Triumphantly, after selling the scrag-end of a neck of
+mutton.</i>) <i>Now</i> we're busy!
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[ 94]</a></span>
+
+<span class="smcap">Farcical Fishmonger</span> (<i>with two Comic Assistants</i>).
+Ahar! (<i>To crowd.</i>) Come 'ere, you silly young
+snorkers! I've the quali<i>tee</i>! I've the quali<i>tay</i>!
+<i>Keep</i> takin' money!
+
+<span class="smcap">First Comic Assistant.</span> Ahye! Foppence a
+pound nice plaice! Kippers two fur three 'apence.
+<i>We'</i>re the Perfeshnul Curers! What are yer all
+goin' to <i>do</i>? Sort 'em out cheap!
+
+<span class="smcap">Second C. A.</span> I don't mind! What care I?
+(<i>Bursting into song.</i>) "'Ow, she rowled me 'ed, and
+rumbled in the 'ay!" On me word, she did, ladies!
+
+<p class="right">[<i>He executes a double shuffle, and knocks over several boxes of bloaters in the gaiety of his heart.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Hawker of Penny Memorandum Books</span> (<i>to
+an audience of small boys</i>). Those among you 'oo
+are not mechanics, decidedly you 'ave mechanical
+<i>hideers</i>!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He enlarges upon the convenience of having a notebook
+in which to jot down any inspirations of
+this kind; but his hearers do not appear to
+agree with him.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Lugubrious Vendor.</span> One penny for six
+comic pypers. Hevery one different!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Rude Boy.</span> You ain't bin <i>readin'</i> o' any on
+'em, 'ave yer, guv'nor?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[ 95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Crockery Merchant</span> (<i>as he unpacks a variety of
+vases of appalling hideousness</i>). <i>I</i> don't care&mdash;it's self-sacrifice
+to give away! Understand, you ain't buyin'
+<i>common</i> things, you're buyin' suthin' <i>good</i>! It 'appens
+to be my buthday to-night, so I'm goin' to let you
+people 'ave the benefit of the doubt. Come on 'ere.
+I don't ask you to b'lieve <i>me</i>&mdash;on'y to jedge fur
+yerselves. I'm not 'ere to tell you no fairy tales;
+and the reason why I'm in a position to orfer up
+these vawses&mdash;all richly gilt, and decorated in three
+colours, the most expensive ever made&mdash;the reason
+I'm able to sell them so cheap as I'm doin' is this&mdash;(<i>he
+lowers his voice mysteriously</i>)&mdash;'arf the stuff I 'ave
+'ere we git <i>in very funny ways</i>!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>This ingeniously suggestive hint enhances the
+natural charm of his ware to such a degree
+that the vases are bought up briskly, as calculated
+to brighten the humblest home.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Sanctimonious Young Man</span> (<i>with a tongue too
+large for his mouth, who has just succeeded in collecting a
+circle round him</i>). I am only 'ere to-night, my friends,
+as a paid servant&mdash;for the purpose of deciding a
+wager. Some o' you may have noticed an advertisement
+lately in the <i>Daily Telegrawf</i>, asking for men to
+stand on Southwark Bridge and orfer arf-suverings
+for a penny apiece. You are equally well aware that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[ 96]</a></span>
+it is illegal to orfer the Queen's coinage for money:
+and that is <i>not</i> my intention this evening. <i>But</i> I
+'ave 'ere several pieces of gold, guaranteed to be of
+the exact weight of arf a suvering, and 'all-marked,
+which, in order to decide the wager I 'ave spoken of,
+I shall now perceed to charge you the sum of one
+penny for, and no more. I am not allowed to sell
+<i>more</i> than one to each person&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Here a constable comes up, and the decision of the
+wager is postponed until a more favourable
+opportunity.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First "General"</span> (<i>looking into a draper's window</i>).
+Look at them coloured felt 'ats&mdash;all shades, and on'y
+sixpence three-fardens!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second "G."</span> They <i>are</i> reasonable; but I've
+'eard as felt 'ats is gone out of fashion now.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First "G."</span> Don't you believe it, Sarah. Why,
+my married sister bought one on'y last week!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Coster</span> (<i>to an old lady who has repudiated a bunch
+of onions after a prolonged scrutiny</i>). Frorsty? So
+would <i>you</i> be if <i>your</i> onion 'ad bin layin' out in the
+fields all night as long as these 'ave!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Itinerant Physician</span> (<i>as he screws up fragments
+of candy in pieces of newspaper</i>). That is Frog
+in your Froat what I'm doin' up now. I arsk you
+to try it. It's given to me to give away, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[ 97]</a></span>
+I'm goin' to <i>give</i> it away&mdash;you understand?&mdash;that's
+all. And now I'm going to tork to you about
+suthink else. You see this small bottle what I 'old
+up. I tell you there's 'undreds layin' in bed at
+this present moment as 'ud give a shillin' fur one
+of these&mdash;and I offer it to you at one penny!
+It corrects all nerve-pains connected with the 'ed,
+cures earache, toothache, neuralgy, noomonia, 'art-complaint,
+fits, an' syhatica. Each bottle is charged
+with helectricity, forming a complete galvanic-battery.
+Hall <i>you</i> 'ave to do is to place the bottle
+to one o' your nawstrils, first closing the other with
+your finger. You will find it compels you to sniff.
+The moment you <i>tyke</i> that sniff, you'll find the
+worter comin' into your heyes&mdash;and that's the helectricity.
+You'll say, "<i>I</i> always 'eard helectricity was
+a <i>fluid</i>." (<i>With withering scorn.</i>) Very <i>likely</i>! You
+<i>'ave</i>? An' <i>why</i>? Be-cawse o' the hignirant notions
+prevailin' about scientific affairs! Hevery one o'
+these bottles contains a battery, and to each purchaser
+I myke 'im a present&mdash;a <i>present</i>, mind yer&mdash;of
+Frog in 'is Froat!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Susan Jane</span> (<i>to <span class="smcap">Lizerann</span>, before a stall where
+"Novelettes, three a penny," are to be procured by the
+literary</i>). Shall we 'ave a penn'orth, an' you go
+'alves along o' me?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[ 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lizerann.</span> Not <i>me</i>. I ain't got no time to go
+improvin' o' <i>my</i> mind, whatever <i>you</i> 'ave!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Vendor of "'Ore'ound Tablets"</span> (<i>he is a
+voluble young man, with considerable lung-power, and
+a tendency to regard his cough lozenges as not only
+physical but moral specifics</i>). I'm on'y a young feller,
+as you see, and yet 'ere I <i>am</i>, with my four burnin'
+lamps, and a lassoo-soot as belonged to my Uncle
+Bill, doin' <i>wunnerful</i> well. Why, I've took over two
+pound in coppers a'ready! Mind you, I don't
+deceive you; you may all on you do as well as
+me; on'y you'll 'ave to get two good ref'rences fust,
+<i>and</i> belong to a temp'rance society, like I do. This
+is the badge as I've got on me at this minnit. I
+ain't always bin like I am now. I started business
+four year ago, and was doin' wunnerful well, too, till
+I got among 'orse-copers an' dealers and went on the
+booze, and lost the lot. Then I turned up the drink
+and got a berth sellin' these 'ere Wangoo Tablets&mdash;and
+now I've got a neat little missus, and a nice
+'ome, goin' on wunnerful comfortable. Never a
+week passes but what I buy myself something.
+Last week it was a pair o' noo socks. Soon as
+the sun peeps out and the doo dries up, I'm orf to
+Yarmouth. And what's the reason? I've <i>enjoyed</i>
+myself there. My Uncle Bill, as lives at Lowestoft,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[ 99]</a></span>
+and keeps six fine 'orses and a light waggon, <i>he's</i>
+doin' wunnerful well, and he'd take me into partnership
+to-morrow, he would. But no&mdash;I'm 'appier as
+I am. What's the reason I kin go on torkin' to you
+like this night after night, without injury to my
+voice? Shall I tell yer? Because, every night o'
+my life, afore I go to bed, I take four o' these
+Wangoo Tablets&mdash;compounded o' the purest 'erbs.
+You take them to the nearest doctor's and arsk 'im
+to analyse an' test them as he <i>will</i>, and you 'ear
+what <i>he</i> says of them! Take one o' them tablets&mdash;after
+your pipe; after your cigaw; after your
+cigarette. You won't want no more drink, you'll
+find them make you come 'ome reglar every evening,
+and be able to buy a noo 'at every week. You've
+ony to persevere for a bit with these 'ere lawzengers
+to be like I am myself, doin' <i>wunnerful</i>
+well! You see this young feller 'ere? (<i>Indicating
+a sheepish head in a pot-hat, which is visible over the
+back of his stall.</i>) Born and bred in Kenada, <i>'e</i>
+was. And quite <i>right</i>! Bin over 'ere six year, so,
+o' course he speaks the lengwidge. And <i>quite</i> right.
+Now I'm no Amerikin myself, but they're a wunnerful
+clever people, the Amerikins are, allays inventin'
+or suthink o' that there. And you're at liberty to go
+and arsk 'im for yourselves whether this is a real<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[ 100]</a></span>
+Amerikin invention or not&mdash;as he'll tell yer it <i>is</i>&mdash;and
+quite right, too! An' it stands to reason as
+<i>he</i> orter know, seein' he introdooced it 'imself and
+doin' wunnerful well with it ever since. I ain't
+come 'ere to <i>rob</i> yer. Lady come and give me a
+two-shillin' piece just now. I give it her back.
+<i>She</i> didn't know&mdash;thort it was a penny, till I told
+her. Well, that just shows you what these 'ere
+Wangoo 'Ore'ound Tablets <i>are</i>!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>After this practical illustration of their efficacy,
+he pauses for oratorical effect, and a hard-worked-looking
+matron purchases three packets,
+in the apparent hope that a similar halo of
+the best horehound will shortly irradiate the
+head of her household.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lizerann</span> (<i>to <span class="smcap">Susan Jane</span>, as they walk homewards</i>).
+On'y fancy&mdash;the other evenin', as I was
+walkin' along this very pavement, a cab-'orse come
+up beyind me, unbeknown like, and put 'is 'ed over
+my shoulder and breathed right in my ear!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Susan Jane</span> (<i>awestruck</i>). You <i>must</i> ha' bin a bad
+gell!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i><span class="smcap">Lizerann</span> is clearly disquieted by so mystical an
+interpretation, even while she denies having
+done anything deserving of a supernatural
+rebuke.</i></p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[ 101]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE "MODEL HUSBAND"
+CONTEST.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Scene the First&mdash;At the <span class="smcap">Galahad-Green's</span>.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. G.-G.</span> Galahad!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. G.-G.</span> (<i>meekly</i>). My love?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. G.-G.</span> I see that the proprietors of
+<i>All Sorts</i> are going to follow the American example,
+and offer a prize of £20 to the wife who makes out
+the best case for her husband as a Model. It's just
+as well, perhaps, that you should know that I've
+made up my mind to enter <i>you</i>!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. G.-G.</span> (<i>gratified</i>). My dear Cornelia! really,
+I'd no idea you had such a&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. G.-G.</span> Nonsense! The drawing-room carpet
+is a perfect disgrace, and, as you can't, or won't,
+provide the money in any <i>other</i> way, why&mdash;&mdash;Would
+you like to hear what I've said about you?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. G.-G.</span> Well, if you're sure it wouldn't be
+troubling you too much, I <i>should</i>, my dear.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[ 104]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. G.-G.</span> Then sit where I can see you, and
+listen. (<i>She reads.</i>) "Irreproachable in all that pertains
+to morality"&mdash;(and it would be a bad day
+indeed for you, Galahad, if I ever had cause to think
+<i>otherwise</i>!)&mdash;"morality; scrupulously dainty and neat
+in his person"&mdash;(ah, you may well blush, Galahad, but
+fortunately, they won't want me to <i>produce</i> you!)&mdash;"he
+imports into our happy home the delicate refinement
+of a <i>preux chevalier</i> of the olden time." (Will
+you kindly take your dirty boots off the steel fender!)
+"We rule our little kingdom with a joint
+and equal sway, to which jealousy and friction are
+alike unknown; he, considerate and indulgent to
+my womanly weakness"&mdash;(You need not stare at
+me in that perfectly idiotic fashion!)&mdash;"I, looking
+to him for the wise and tender support which has
+never yet been denied. The close and daily scrutiny
+of many years has discovered"&mdash;(What are you
+shaking like <i>that</i> for?)&mdash;"discovered no single weakness;
+no taint or flaw of character; no irritating
+trick of speech or habit." (How often have I
+told you that I will <i>not</i> have the handle of that
+paper-knife sucked? Put it down; do!) "His
+conversation&mdash;sparkling but ever spiritual&mdash;renders
+our modest meals veritable feasts of fancy and flows
+of soul.... <i>Well</i>, Galahad?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[ 105]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. G.-G.</span> Nothing, my dear; nothing. It struck
+me as, well,&mdash;a trifle <i>flowery</i>, that last passage, that's
+all!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. G.-G.</span> (<i>severely</i>). If I cannot expect to win
+the prize without descending to floweriness, whose
+fault is <i>that</i>, I should like to know? If you can't
+make sensible observations, you had better not speak
+at all. (<i>Continuing.</i>) "Over and over again, gathering
+me in his strong, loving arms, and pressing
+fervent kisses upon my forehead, he has cried,
+'Why am I not a Monarch that so I could place
+a diadem upon that brow? With such a Consort
+am I not doubly crowned?'" Have you anything
+to say to <i>that</i>, Galahad?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. G.-G.</span> Only, my love, that I&mdash;I don't seem
+to remember having made that particular remark.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. G.-G.</span> Then make it <i>now</i>. I'm sure I wish
+to be as accurate as I <i>can</i>.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i><span class="smcap">Mr. G.-G.</span> makes the remark&mdash;but without fervour.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><i>Scene the Second&mdash;At the <span class="smcap">Monarch-Jones'</span>.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. M.-J.</span> Twenty quid would come in precious
+handy just now, after all I've dropped lately, and I
+mean to pouch that prize if I can&mdash;so just you sit
+down, Grizzle, and write out what I tell you; do
+you hear?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[ 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. M.-J.</span> (<i>timidly</i>). But, Monarch, dear, would
+that be quite <i>fair</i>? No, don't be angry, I didn't
+mean that&mdash;I'll write whatever you please!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. M.-J.</span> You'd <i>better</i>, that's all! Are you
+ready? I must screw myself up another peg
+before I begin. (<i>He screws.</i>) Now, then. (<i>Stands
+over her and dictates.</i>) "To the polished urbanity
+of a perfect gentleman he unites the kindly charity
+of a true Christian." (Why the devil don't you
+learn to write decently, eh?) "Liberal, and even
+lavish, in all his dealings, he is yet a stern foe to
+every kind of excess"&mdash;(Hold on a bit, I must have
+another nip after that)&mdash;"every kind of excess. Our
+married life is one long dream of blissful contentment,
+in which each contends with the other in
+loving self-sacrifice." (Haven't you corked all that
+down <i>yet</i>!) "Such cares and anxieties as he has
+he conceals from me with scrupulous consideration
+as long as possible"&mdash;(Gad, I should be a fool if
+I <i>didn't</i>!)&mdash;"while I am ever sure of finding in him
+a patient and sympathetic listener to all my trifling
+worries and difficulties."&mdash;(<i>Two</i> f's in difficulties,
+you little fool&mdash;can't you even <i>spell</i>?) "Many a
+time, falling on his knees at my feet, he has rapturously
+exclaimed, his accents broken by manly
+emotion, 'Oh, that I were more worthy of such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[ 107]</a></span>
+pearl among women! With such a helpmate, I
+am indeed to be envied!'" That <i>ought</i> to do the
+trick. If I don't romp in after that!&mdash;--(<i>Observing
+that <span class="smcap">Mrs. M.-J.'s</span> shoulders are convulsed.</i>) What the
+dooce are you giggling at <i>now</i>?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. M.-J.</span> I&mdash;I wasn't giggling, Monarch dear,
+only&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. M.-J.</span> Only <i>what</i>?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. M.-J.</span> Only crying!</p>
+
+
+<p><i>The Sequel.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The judges appointed by the spirited proprietors
+of <i>All Sorts</i> to decide the 'Model Husband
+Contest'&mdash;which was established on lines similar to
+one recently inaugurated by one of our New York
+contemporaries&mdash;have now issued their award.
+Two competitors have sent in certificates which
+have been found equally deserving of the prize;
+viz., Mrs. Cornelia Galahad-Green, Graemair Villa,
+Peckham, and Mrs. Griselda Monarch-Jones, Aspen
+Lodge, Lordship Lane. The sum of twenty pounds
+will consequently be divided between these two
+ladies, to whom, with their respective spouses, we
+beg to tender our cordial felicitations."&mdash;(<i>Extract
+from Daily Paper, some six months hence.</i>)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[ 108]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[ 109]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" /></div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[ 111]</a></span>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE COURIER OF THE HAGUE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>He is an elderly amiable little Dutchman in a
+soft felt hat; his name is <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>, and he
+is taking me about. <i>Why</i> I engaged him
+I don't quite know&mdash;unless from a general sense of
+helplessness in Holland, and a craving for any kind
+of companionship. Now I have got him, I feel rather
+more helpless than ever&mdash;a sort of composite of
+<span class="smcap">Sandford</span> and <span class="smcap">Merton</span>, with a didactic, but frequently
+incomprehensible Dutch <span class="smcap">Barlow</span>. My
+<span class="smcap">Sandford</span> half would like to exhibit an intelligent
+curiosity, but is generally suppressed by <span class="smcap">Merton</span>,
+who has a morbid horror of useful information.
+Not that <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> is remarkably erudite, but nevertheless
+he contrives to reduce me to a state of
+imbecility, which I catch myself noting with a
+pained surprise. There is a statue in the Plein,
+and the <span class="smcap">Sandford</span> element in me finds a satisfaction
+in recognising it aloud as William the Silent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[ 112]</a></span>
+It is&mdash;but, as my <span class="smcap">Merton</span> part thinks, a fellow
+<i>would</i> be a fool if he didn't recognise William
+after a few hours in Holland&mdash;his images, in one
+form or another, are tolerably numerous. Still
+<span class="smcap">Bosch</span> is gratified. "Yass, dot is ole Volliam,"
+he says, approvingly, as to a precocious infant just
+beginning to take notice. "Lokeer," he says, "you
+see dot Apoteek?" He indicates a chemist's shop
+opposite, with nothing remarkable about it externally,
+except a Turk's head with his tongue out over the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I (speaking for <span class="smcap">Sandford</span> and <span class="smcap">Merton</span>) see
+it&mdash;has it some historical interest&mdash;did Volliam get
+medicine there, or what?"</p>
+
+<p>"Woll, dis mornin dare vas two sairvans dere, and
+de von cot two blaces out of de odder's haid, and
+afderwarts he go opstairs and vas hang himself mit
+a pedbost."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bosch</span> evidently rather proud of this as illustrating
+the liveliness of The Hague.</p>
+
+<p>"Was he mad?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yass, he vas mard, mit a vife and seeks childrens."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but was he out of his senses?"</p>
+
+<p>"I tink it was oud of Omsterdam he vas com,"
+says <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>.</p>
+
+<p>"But how did it happen?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[ 113]</a></span>
+"Wol-sare, de broprietor vas die, and leaf de
+successor de pusiness, and he dells him in von mons
+he will go, begause he nod egsamin to be a Chimigal&mdash;so
+he do it, and dey dake him to de hosbital, and
+I tink <i>he</i> vas die too by now!" adds BOSCH, cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>Very sad affair evidently&mdash;but a little complicated.
+<span class="smcap">Sandford</span> would like to get to the bottom of it, but
+<span class="smcap">Merton</span> convinced there is <i>no</i> bottom. So, between
+us, subject allowed to drop.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sandford</span> (now in the ascendant again) notices,
+as the clever boy, inscription on house-front, "Hier
+woonden Groen Van Prinsterer, 1838-76."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that means Van Prinsterer lived here,
+Bosch?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yass, dot vas it."</p>
+
+<p>"And who was he?"</p>
+
+<p>"He vas&mdash;wol, he vos a Member of de Barliaments."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he celebrated?"</p>
+
+<p>"Celebrated? oh, yaas!"</p>
+
+<p>"What did he <i>do</i>?" (I think <span class="smcap">Merton</span> gets
+this in.)</p>
+
+<p>"Do?" says <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>, quite indignantly, "he nefer
+do <i>nodings</i>!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bosch</span> takes me into the Fishmarket, when he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[ 114]</a></span>
+directs my attention to a couple of very sooty live
+storks, who are pecking about at the refuse.</p>
+
+<p>"Dose pirts are shtorks; hier dey vas oblige to keep
+alvays two shtorks for de arms of de Haag. Vhen
+de yong shtorks porn, de old vons vas kill."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sandford</span> shocked&mdash;<span class="smcap">Merton</span> sceptical.</p>
+
+<p>"Keel dem? Oh, yaas, do anytings mit dem
+ven dey vas old," says <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>, and adds:&mdash;"Ve haf
+de breference mit de shtorks, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>What <i>is</i> he driving at?</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas&mdash;ven <i>ve</i> vas old ve vas nod kill."</p>
+
+<p>This reminds <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Barlow</span>-like&mdash;of an anecdote.</p>
+
+<p>"Dere vas a vrent to me," he begins, "he com
+and say to me, 'Bosch, I am god so shtout and my
+bark is so dick, I can go no more on my lacks&mdash;vat
+vas I do?' To him I say, 'Wol, I dell you vat I
+do mit you&mdash;I dake you at de booshair to be cot op;
+I tink you vas make vary goot shdeak-meat!"</p>
+
+<p>Wonder whether this is a typical sample of <span class="smcap">Bosch's</span>
+<i>badinage</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"What did he say to that, Bosch?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he vas vair moch loff, a-course!" says
+<span class="smcap">Bosch</span>, with the natural complacency of a successful
+humorist.</p>
+
+<p>We go into the Old Prison, and see some horrible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[ 115]</a></span>
+implements of torture, which seem to exhilarate
+<span class="smcap">Bosch</span>.</p>
+
+<p>"Lokeer!" he says, "Dis vas a pinition" (<span class="smcap">Bosch</span>
+for "punishment") "mit a can. Dey lie de man
+down and vasten his foots, and efery dime he vas
+shdrook mit de can, he jomp op and hit his vorehaid....
+Hier dey lie down de beoples on de
+back, and pull dis shdring queeck, and all dese tings
+go roundt, and preak deir bones. Ven de pinition
+was feenish you vas det." He shows where the
+Water-torture was practised. "Nottice 'ow de vater
+vas vork a 'ole in de tile," he chuckles, "I tink de
+tile vas vary hardt det, eh?" Then he points out a
+pole with a spiked prong. "Tief-catcher&mdash;put 'em
+in de tief's nack&mdash;and get 'im!" Before a grim-looking
+cauldron he halts appreciatively. "You
+know vat dat vas for?" he says. "Dat vas for de
+blode-foots; put 'em in dere, yaas, and light de vire
+onderneat."</p>
+
+<p>No idea what "<i>blode-foots</i>" may be, but from the
+relish in <span class="smcap">Bosch's</span> tone, evidently something very
+unpleasant, so don't press him for explanations.
+We go upstairs, and see some dark and very
+mouldy dungeons, which <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> is very anxious
+that I should enter. Make him go in <i>first</i>, for the
+surroundings seem to have excited his sense of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[ 116]</a></span>
+the humorous to such a degree, that he might be
+unable to resist locking me in, and leaving me, if I
+gave him a chance.</p>
+
+<p>Outside at last, thank goodness! The Groote
+Kerk, according to <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>, "is not vort de see," so
+we don't see it. <span class="smcap">Sandford</span> has a sneaking impression
+that I ought to go in, but <span class="smcap">Merton</span> glad to be let off.
+We go to see the pictures at the Mauritshuis instead.
+<span class="smcap">Bosch</span> exchanges greetings with the attendants in
+Dutch. "Got <i>another</i> of 'em in tow, you see&mdash;and
+collar-work, <i>I</i> can tell you!" would be a free translation,
+I suspect, of his remarks. Must say that, in a
+Picture-gallery, <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> is a superfluous luxury. He
+<i>does</i> take my ignorance just a trifle too much for
+granted. He <i>might</i> give me credit for knowing the
+story of Adam and Eve, at all events! "De Sairpan
+gif Eva de opple, an' Eva gif him to Adam," <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>
+carefully informs me, before a "<i>Paradise</i>," by Rubens
+and Brueghel.</p>
+
+<p>This rouses my <span class="smcap">Merton</span> half to inquire what
+Adam did with it.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, <i>he</i> ead him too!" says <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> in perfect
+good faith.</p>
+
+<p>I do wish, too, he wouldn't lead me up to Paul
+Potter's "<i>Bull</i>," and ask me enthusiastically if it
+isn't "real meat." I shouldn't mind it so much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[ 117]</a></span>
+if there were not several English people about,
+without couriers&mdash;but there <i>are</i>. My only revenge
+is (as <span class="smcap">Merton</span>) to carefully pick out the unsigned
+canvases and ask <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> who painted them; whereupon
+<span class="smcap">Bosch</span> endeavours furtively to make out the
+label on the frames, and then informs me in
+desperation, "it vas '<i>School</i>,'&mdash;yass, <i>he</i> baint him!"
+<span class="smcap">Bosch</span> kindly explains the subject of every picture
+in detail. He tells me a Droochsloot represents a
+"balsham pedder." I suppose I look bewildered,
+for he adds&mdash;"oppen air tance mit a village."
+"Hier dey vas haf a tispute; dis man say de ham
+vas more value as de cheese&mdash;dere is de cheese,
+and dere is de ham." "Hier is an old man dot
+marry a yong vife, and two tevils com in, and de
+old man he ron avay." "Hier he dress him in
+voman, and de vife is vrighten." "Hier is Jan
+Steen himself as a medicine, and he veel de yong
+voman's polse, and say dere is nodings de madder,
+and the modder ask him to trink a glass of vine."
+"Hier is de beach at Skavening&mdash;now dey puild
+houses on de dunes&mdash;bot de beach is schdill dere."</p>
+
+<p>Such are <span class="smcap">Bosch's</span> valuable and instructive comments,
+to which, as representing <span class="smcap">Sandford</span> and
+<span class="smcap">Merton</span>, I listen with depressed docility. All the
+same, can't help coming to the conclusion that Art is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[ 118]</a></span>
+<i>not</i> <span class="smcap">Bosch's</span> strong point. Shall come here again&mdash;alone.
+We go on to the Municipal Museum, where
+he shows me what <i>he</i> considers the treasures of the
+collection&mdash;a glass goblet, engraved "mit dails of
+tobaggo bipes," and the pipes themselves; a painting
+of a rose, "mit ade beople's faces in de leafs;"
+and a drawing of "two pirts mit only von foots."</p>
+
+<p>Outside again. <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> shows me a house.</p>
+
+<p>"Lokeer. In dot house leef an oldt lady all mit
+herself and ade sairvans. She com from Friesland,
+yassir."</p>
+
+<p>Really, I think <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> is going to be interesting&mdash;at
+last. There is a sly twinkle in his eye, denoting
+some story of a scandalous but infinitely humorous
+nature.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Bosch, go on&mdash;what about the old lady?"
+I ask eagerly, as <span class="smcap">Merton</span>.</p>
+
+<p>"Wol, Sir," says <span class="smcap">Bosch</span>, "she nefer go
+noveres."...</p>
+
+<p>That's <i>all</i>! "A devilish interesting story, <i>Sumph</i>,
+indeed!" to quote Mr. Wagg.</p>
+
+<p>But, as <span class="smcap">Bosch</span> frequently reminds me, "It vas
+pedder, you see, as a schendlemans like you go apout
+mit me; I dell you tings dot vas not in de guide-books."
+Which I am not in a position to deny.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[ 119]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" /></div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[ 121]</a></span>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>FEELING THEIR WAY.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">A Study in the Art of Genteel Conversation.</span>)</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>The Drawing-room of a Margate Hotel. <span class="smcap">Time</span>&mdash;Evening.
+<span class="smcap">Mrs. Ardleigh</span> (of Balham), and <span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt</span> (of Brondesbury),
+are discovered in the midst of a conversation, in which
+each is anxious both to impress the other, and ascertain how far
+she is a person to be cultivated. At present, they have not got
+beyond the discovery of a common bond in Cookery.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt.</span> You have the yolks of two
+eggs, I must tell you; squeeze the juice of
+half a lemon into it, and, when you boil the
+butter in the pan, make a paste of it with <i>dry</i> flour.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ardleigh.</span> It sounds delicious&mdash;but you
+never can trust a Cook to carry out instructions
+exactly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> I never <i>do</i>. Whenever I want to
+have anything specially nice for my husband, I make
+a point of seeing to it myself. He appreciates it.
+Now <i>some</i> men, if you cook for them, never notice
+whether it's you or the Cook. My husband <i>does</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[ 122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> I wonder how you find time to do it.
+I'm sure <i>I</i> should never&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> Oh, it takes time, of course&mdash;but
+what does that matter when you've nothing to
+do? Did I mention just a small pinch of Cayenne
+pepper?&mdash;because that's a <i>great</i> improvement!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> I tell you what I like Cayenne pepper
+with, better than anything&mdash;and that's eggs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> (<i>with elegant languor</i>). I hardly ever
+eat an egg. Oysters, now, I'm <i>very</i> fond of&mdash;<i>fried</i>,
+that is.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> They're very nice done in the real
+shells. Or on scollops. We have silver&mdash;or rather&mdash;(<i>with
+a magnanimous impulse to tone down her splendour</i>),
+silver-plated ones.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> How funny&mdash;so have we! (<i>Both
+women feel an increase of liking for one another.</i>) I like
+them cooked in milk, too.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The first barrier being satisfactorily passed, they
+proceed, as usual, to the subject of ailments.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> My doctor <i>does</i> do me good, I must
+say&mdash;he never lets me get ill. He just sees your
+liver's all right, and then he feeds you up.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> That's like <i>my</i> doctor; he always tells
+me, if he didn't keep on constantly building me up, I
+should go all to pieces in no time. That's how I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[ 123]</a></span>
+come to be here. I always run down at the end of
+every Season.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>feeling that <span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt</span> can't be
+"anybody very particular" after all</i>). What&mdash;to
+Margate? Fancy! Don't you find you get tired
+of it? <i>I</i> should.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> (<i>with dignity</i>). I didn't say I always
+went to Margate. On the contrary, I have never
+been here before, and shouldn't be here now, if my
+doctor hadn't told me it was my only chance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>reassured</i>). I only came down here on
+my little girl's account. One of those nasty croupy
+coughs, you know, and hoops with it. But she's
+almost well already. I will say it's a wonderful air.
+Still, the worst of Margate is, one isn't likely to meet
+a soul one knows!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> Well, that's the charm of it&mdash;to me.
+One has enough of that during the Season.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>recognising the superiority of this view</i>).
+Indeed one has. What a whirl it has been to
+be sure!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> The Season? Why, I never remember
+one with so little doing. Most of the best houses
+closed&mdash;hardly a single really smart party&mdash;one or
+two weddings&mdash;and that's positively all!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>slightly crushed, in spite of a conviction</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[ 124]</a></span>
+<i>that&mdash;socially speaking&mdash;Balham has been rather more
+brilliant than usual this year</i>). Yes, that's very true.
+I suppose the Elections have put a stop to most
+things?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> There never was much going on. <i>I</i>
+should rather have said it was Marlborough House
+being shut up that made everything so dull from the
+first.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> Ah, that <i>does</i> make such a difference,
+doesn't it? (<i>She feels she must make an effort to recover
+lost ground.</i>) I fully expected to be at Homburg this
+year.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> Then you would have met Lady
+Neuraline Menthol. She <i>was</i> ordered there, I happen
+to know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> Really, you don't say so? Lady
+Neuraline! Well, that's the first <i>I've</i> heard of it.
+(<i>It is also the first time she has heard of her, but she
+trusts to be spared so humiliating an admission.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> It's a fact, I can assure you. You
+know her, perhaps?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>who would dearly like to say she does, if
+she only dared</i>). Well, I can hardly say I exactly
+<i>know</i> her. I know <i>of</i> her. I've met her about, and
+so on. (<i>She tells herself this is quite as likely to be true
+as not.</i>)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[ 125]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/p125.png" width="500" height="600" alt="&quot;Dear, dear! not a county family!&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;Dear, dear! not a county family!&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[ 127]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> (<i>who of course does not know Lady
+Neuraline either</i>). Ah, she is a most delightful
+person&mdash;requires <i>knowing</i>, don't you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> So many in her position do, don't
+they? (<i>So far as she is concerned&mdash;they all do.</i>)
+You'd think it was haughtiness&mdash;but it's really only
+<i>manner</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> (<i>feeling that she can go ahead with safety
+now</i>). I have never found anything of <i>that</i> sort in
+Lady Neuraline myself (<i>which is perfectly true.</i>) She's
+rather odd and flighty, but <i>quite</i> a dear. By the
+way, <i>how</i> sad it is about those poor dear Chutneys&mdash;the
+Countess, don't you know!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> Ah (<i>as if she knew all the rest of the
+family</i>), I don't know <i>her</i> at all.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> Such a sweet woman&mdash;but the trouble
+she's had with her eldest boy, Lord Mango! He
+married quite beneath him, you know, some girl
+from the provinces&mdash;not a county-family girl even.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>shocked</i>). Dear, dear! <i>not</i> a county
+family!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> No; somebody quite common&mdash;I
+forget the name, but it was either Gherkin or Onion,
+or something of that sort. I was told they had been
+in Chili a good while. Poor Mango never had much
+taste, or he would never have got mixed up with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[ 128]</a></span>
+such a set. Anyway, he's got himself into a terrible
+pickle. I hear Capsicums is actually to be sold to
+pay his debts.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> You don't say so! Capsicums!
+Gracious!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> Yes, <i>isn't</i> it a pity! Such a lovely
+old place as it was, too&mdash;<i>the</i> most comfortable house
+to stay at in all England; so beautifully <i>warm</i>!
+But it's dreadful to think of how the aristocracy
+are taking to marry out of their own set. Look at
+the Duke of Dragnet&mdash;married a Miss Duckweed&mdash;goodness
+only knows where he picked her up! but
+he got entangled somehow, and now his people are
+trying to get rid of her. I see so many of these
+cases. Well, I'm afraid I must wish you good
+evening&mdash;it's my time for retiring. (<i>Patronisingly.</i>)
+I've quite enjoyed the conversation&mdash;such a pleasure
+in a place like this to come across a genial companion!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>fluttered and flattered</i>). I'm sure you're
+exceedingly kind to say so, and I can say the same
+for myself. I hope we may become better acquainted.
+(<i>To herself, after <span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt</span> has departed.</i>) I've
+quite taken to that woman&mdash;she's so thoroughly the
+lady, and moves in very high society, too. You can
+tell that from the way she talks. What's that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[ 129]</a></span>
+paper on the table? (<i>She picks up a journal in a
+coloured wrapper.</i>) "<i>Society Snippets, the Organ of the
+Upper Ten. One Penny.</i>" The very thing I wanted.
+It's such a comfort to know who's who. (<i>She opens
+it and reads sundry paragraphs headed "Through the
+Keyhole."</i>) Now how funny this is! Here's the
+very same thing about the dulness of the Season that
+she said. That shows she must be really in it. And
+a note about Lady Neuraline being about to recruit
+at Homburg. And another about her reputation or
+eccentricity, and her "sweetness to the select few
+privileged to be her intimates." And here's all
+about Lord Mango, and what a pleasant house
+Capsicums is, and his marriage, and the Duke of
+Dragnet's, too. Her information was very correct,
+I must say! (<i>A light begins to break in upon her.</i>) I
+wonder whether&mdash;&mdash;but there&mdash;people of her sort
+wouldn't require to read the papers for such things.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Here the door opens, and <span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt</span> appears,
+in some embarrassment.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> (<i>scrutinising the tables</i>). Oh, it's nothing.
+I thought I'd left something of mine here; it was
+only a paper&mdash;I see I was mistaken, don't trouble.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> (<i>producing Society Snippets</i>). I expect
+it will be this. (<i><span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt's</span> face reveals her
+ownership.</i>) I took it up, not knowing it was yours.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[ 130]</a></span>
+(<i>Meaningly</i>.) It has some highly interesting information,
+I see.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. All.</span> (<i>slightly demoralised</i>). Oh, has it? I&mdash;I've
+not had time to glance at it yet. Pray don't
+let me deprive you of it. I dare say there's very
+little in it I don't know already.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ard.</span> So I should have thought. (<i>To herself,
+after <span class="smcap">Mrs. Allbutt</span> has retired in disorder.</i>)
+Fancy that woman trying to take me in like that,
+and no more in Society than I am&mdash;if so much!
+However, I've found her out before going too far&mdash;luckily.
+And I've a good mind to take in this <i>Society
+Snippets</i> myself&mdash;it certainly does improve one's
+conversation. She won't have it <i>all</i> her own way
+<i>next</i> time!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[ 131]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>A TESTIMONIAL MANQUÉ.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">A Sketch from the Suburbs.</span>)</h3>
+
+
+<p><i><span class="smcap">The Argument.</span>&mdash;Mr. Hotspur Porpentine, a distinguished
+resident in the rising suburb of Jerrymere, has recently been
+awarded fourteen days' imprisonment, without the option of a
+fine, for assaulting a ticket-collector, who had offered him the
+indignity of requiring him to show his season-ticket at the barrier.
+The scene is a Second-Class Compartment, in which four of
+Mr. Porpentine's neighbours are discussing the affair during their
+return from the City.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcroft</span> (<i>warmly</i>). I say, Sir&mdash;and
+I'm sure all here will bear me out&mdash;that such
+a sentence was a scandalous abuse of justice.
+As a near neighbour, and an intimate friend of
+Porpentine's, I don't 'esitate to assert that he has
+done nothing whatever to forfeit our esteem. He's
+a quick-tempered man, as we're all aware, and to
+be asked by some meddlesome official to show his
+season, after travelling on the line constantly for
+years, and leaving it at home that morning&mdash;why&mdash;<i>I</i>
+don't blame him if he <i>did</i> use his umbrella!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[ 134]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch</span> (<i>sympathetically</i>). Nor I. Porpentine's
+a man I've always had a very 'igh respect for ever
+since I came into this neighbourhood. I've always
+found him a good feller, and a good neighbour.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Filkins</span> (<i>deferentially</i>). I can't claim to be
+as intimate with him as some here; but, if it isn't
+putting myself too far forward to say so, I very
+cordially beg to say ditto to those sentiments.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibbering</span> (<i>who has never "taken to" Porpentine</i>).
+Well, he's had a sharp lesson,&mdash;there's no
+denying that.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> Precisely, and it occurs to me that
+when he&mdash;ah&mdash;returns to public life, it would be a
+kind thing, and a graceful thing, and a thing he
+would&mdash;ah&mdash;appreciate in the spirit it was intended,
+if we were to present him with some little token of
+our sympathy and unabated esteem&mdash;what do you
+fellers think?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Filk.</span> A most excellent suggestion, if my
+friend here will allow me to say so. I, for one, shall
+be proud to contribute to so worthy an object.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch.</span> I don't see why we shouldn't present
+him with an address&mdash;'ave it illuminated, and framed
+and glazed; sort of thing he could 'ang up and 'and
+down to his children after him as an <i>heirloom</i>,
+yi-know.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[ 135]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 546px;">
+<img src="images/p135.png" width="546" height="600" alt="&quot;Well, he&#39;s had a sharp lesson,&mdash;there&#39;s no denying that.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;Well, he&#39;s had a sharp lesson,&mdash;there&#39;s no denying that.&quot;</span>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[ 137]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> I don't like to throw cold water on
+any proposition, but if you want <i>my</i> opinion, I must
+say I see no necessity for making a public thing out
+of it in that way.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> I'm with Sibbering there. The
+less fuss there is about it, the better Porpentine'll be
+pleased. My idea is to give him something of daily
+use&mdash;a <i>useful</i> thing, yi-know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch.</span> Useful <i>or</i> ornamental. Why not his
+own portrait? There's many an artist who would
+do him in oils, and guarantee a likeness, frame
+included, for a five-pound note.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> If it's to be like Porpentine, it certainly
+won't be <i>ornamental</i>, whatever else it is.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Filk.</span> It can't be denied that he is remarkably
+plain in the face. We'd better, as our friend
+Mr. Cockcroft here proposes, make it something of
+daily use&mdash;a good serviceable silk umbrella now&mdash;that's
+<i>always</i> appropriate.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> To make up for the one he broke over
+the collector's head, eh?&mdash;that's <i>appropriate</i> enough!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> No, no; you mean well, Filkins,
+but you must see yourself, on reflection, that there
+would be a certain want of&mdash;ah&mdash;good taste in
+giving him a thing like that under the circumstances.
+I should suggest something like a hatstand&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[ 138]</a></span>
+handsome one, of course. I happen to know that
+he has nothing in the passage at present but a row
+of pegs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> I should have thought he'd been taken
+down enough pegs already.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Filk.</span> (<i>who resents the imputation upon his taste</i>).
+I can't say what the width of Mr. Porpentine's
+passage may be, never having been privileged with
+an invitation to pass the threshold, but unless it's
+wider than ours is, he couldn't get a hatstand in if
+he tried, and if my friend Cockcroft will excuse the
+remark, I see no sense&mdash;to say nothing of good taste,
+about which perhaps I mayn't be qualified to pass
+an opinion&mdash;in giving him an article he's got no
+room for.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> (<i>with warmth</i>). There's room enough
+in Porpentine's passage for a whole host of hatstands,
+if that's all, and I know what I'm speaking about.
+I've been in and out there often enough. I'm&mdash;ah&mdash;a
+regular tame cat in that house. But if you're
+against the 'atstand, I say no more&mdash;we'll waive it.
+How would it do if we gave him a nice comfortable
+easy-chair&mdash;something he could sit in of an evening,
+yi-know?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> A touchy chap like Porpentine would
+be sure to fancy we thought he wanted something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[ 139]</a></span>
+soft after a hard bench and a plank bed&mdash;you can't
+go and give him <i>furniture</i>!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> (<i>with dignity</i>). There's a way of
+doing all things. I wasn't proposing to go and chuck
+the chair <i>at</i> him&mdash;he's a sensitive feller in many
+respects, and he'd feel <i>that</i>, I grant you. He can't
+object to a little present of that sort just from four
+friends like ourselves.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch</span> (<i>with a falling countenance</i>). Oh! I
+thought it was to be a general affair, limited to a
+small sum, so that all who liked could join in. I'd
+no notion you meant to keep it such a private matter
+as all that.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Filk.</span> Nor I. And, knowing Mr. Porpentine
+so slightly as I do, he might consider it presumption
+in me, making myself so prominent in the matter&mdash;or
+else I'm sure&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> There's no occasion for anyone to
+be prominent, except myself. You leave it entirely
+in my 'ands. I'll have the chair taken up some
+evening to Porpentine's house on a 'andcart, and
+drop in, and just lead up to it carelessly, if you
+understand me, then go out and wheel the chair in,
+make him try it&mdash;and there you <i>are</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch.</span> There <i>you</i> are, right enough; but I
+don't see where <i>we</i> come in, exactly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[ 140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Fillk.</span> If it's to be confined to just us four,
+I certingly think we ought <i>all</i> to be present at the
+presentation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> That would be just the very thing
+to put a man like Porpentine out&mdash;a crowd dropping
+in on him like that! I know his ways, and, seeing
+I'm providing the chair&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch</span> (<i>relieved</i>). <i>You</i> are? That's different,
+of course; but I thought you said that we four&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> I'm coming to that. As the prime
+mover, and a particular friend of Porpentine's, it's
+only right and fair I should bear the chief burden.
+There's an easy-chair I have at home that only
+wants re-covering to be as good as new, and all you
+fellers need do is to pay for 'aving it nicely done up
+in velvet, or what not, and we'll call it quits.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch.</span> I daresay; but I like to know what
+I'm letting myself in for; and there's upholsterers
+who'll charge as much for doing up a chair as would
+furnish a room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Filk.</span> I&mdash;I shouldn't feel justified, with my
+family, and, as, comparatively speaking, a recent
+resident, in going beyond a certain limit, and unless
+the estimate could be kep' down to a moderate sum,
+I really&mdash;&mdash;-</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> (<i>unmasking</i>). After all, you know, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[ 141]</a></span>
+don't see why we should go to any expense over a
+stuck-up, cross-grained chap like Porpentine. It's
+well-known he hasn't a good word to say for us
+Jerrymere folks, and considers himself above the lot
+of us!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch</span> and <span class="smcap">Mr. Filk</span>. I'm bound to say
+there's a good deal in what Sibbering says. Porpentine's
+never shown himself what <i>I</i> should call sociable.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> I've never found him anything but
+pleasant myself, whatever he may be to others. I'm
+not denying he's an <i>exclusive</i> man, and a <i>fastidious</i>
+man, but he's been 'arshly treated, and <i>I</i> should have
+thought this was an occasion&mdash;if ever there was
+one&mdash;for putting any private feelings aside, and
+rallying round him to show our respect and
+sympathy. But of course if you're going to let
+petty jealousies of this sort get the better of you,
+and leave me to do the 'ole thing myself, <i>I've</i> no
+objection. I daresay he'll value it all the more
+coming from me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> Well, he <i>ought</i> to, after the shameful
+way he's spoken of you to a friend of mine in the
+City, who shall be nameless. You mayn't know,
+and if not, it's only right I should mention it, that
+he complained bitterly of having to change his
+regular train on your account, and said (I'm only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[ 142]</a></span>
+repeating his words, mind you), that Jerrymere was
+entirely populated by bores, but you were the worst
+of the lot, and your jabber twice a day was more
+than he <i>could</i> stand. He mayn't have <i>meant</i> anything
+by it, but it was decidedly uncalled for.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> (<i>reddening</i>). I 'ope I'm above being
+affected by the opinion any man may express of my
+conversation&mdash;especially a cantankerous feller, who
+can't keep his temper under decent control. A feller
+who goes and breaks his umbrella over an unoffending
+official's 'ead like that, and gets, very properly, locked
+up for it! Jerrymere society isn't good enough for
+him, it seems. He won't be troubled with much of
+it in future&mdash;<i>I</i> can assure him! Upon my word,
+now I come to think of it, I'm not sure he shouldn't
+be called upon for an explanation of how he came
+to be travelling without a ticket; it looks very much
+to me as if he'd been systematically defrauding the
+Company!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Filk.</span> Well, I didn't like to say so before;
+but that's been <i>my</i> view all along!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Balch.</span> And mine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sibb.</span> Now perhaps you understand why
+we'd rather leave it to you to give him the
+arm-chair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Cockcr.</span> I give a man an arm-chair for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[ 143]</a></span>
+bringing disgrace on the 'ole of Jerrymere! I'd
+sooner break it up for firewood! Whoever it was
+that first started all this tomfoolery about a testimonial,
+I'm not going to 'ave <i>my</i> name associated
+with it, and if you'll take <i>my</i> advice, you'll drop
+it once and for all, for it's only making yourselves
+ridiculous!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>His companions, observing that he is in a somewhat
+excited condition, consider it advisable to
+change the subject.</i></p></blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE MODEL DEMOCRACY.</h2>
+
+<p>"I think you left directions that you were to
+be thawed in 199&mdash; precisely?" said the
+stranger politely. "Allow me to introduce
+myself&mdash;<span class="smcap">Number Seven Million and Six</span>. If you
+feel equal to the effort, and would care to see the
+vast improvements in our social condition since the
+close of the benighted Nineteenth Century, I shall
+be pleased to conduct you."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span> then began to realise that he had had
+himself frozen by a patent process just a hundred
+years ago, and that he had returned to animation
+in time for the close of the marvellous Twentieth
+Century; so he prepared, in much curiosity and
+excitement, to accompany his guide.</p>
+
+<p>"By the way," observed the latter, "you must
+not be annoyed if your&mdash;hem&mdash;habiliments, which we
+are unaccustomed to nowadays, should attract some
+attention."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[ 148]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Singularly enough, <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span> had just begun to
+feel a certain embarrassment at the prospect of being
+seen in Piccadilly or Regent Street in the company
+of a person attired in grey cellular pyjamas, a drab
+blanket, and a glazed pot hat. However, on reaching
+the street, he found that every man he met was
+similarly clad, while his own costume&mdash;which, in his
+original century, would only have been remarkable
+for its unimpeachable taste&mdash;was, in this, the subject
+of universal and invidious comment.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have your regulation pot hat and pyjamas
+served out to you in time!" said <span class="smcap">Mr. Seven Million
+and Six</span> encouragingly. "Then no one will say
+anything to you. In these days we resent anything
+that tends to confer an artificial distinction on any
+man. Surnames, for example, which occasionally
+suggested superiority of birth, have long been
+abolished, and official numbers substituted. You
+seem to be looking for something you do not see?"
+he added, noting a certain blankness and disappointment
+in <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch's</span> expressive countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"I was only wondering why I saw no signs of any
+new and marvellous inventions at present," said
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Punch.</span> "I rather expected to see the air full
+of electric trains, manageable balloons, or coveys
+of citizens darting about on mechanical pinions.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[ 149]</a></span>
+But I see none, and even more people go on foot
+than in my own time."</p>
+
+<p>"Inventions, I take it," was the reply, "only
+served to enrich the Capitalist, and save time or
+labour. Now we have no Capitalists and no riches,
+and no reason for hurrying anywhere, while it would
+be absurd and useless to lessen the amount of
+manual labour when, even as it is, there is scarcely
+enough to keep everyone employed for six hours a
+day."</p>
+
+<p>"Why are all the women I see dressed exactly
+alike in navy-blue woollen frocks and coal-scuttle
+bonnets?" <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span> inquired presently. "Surely
+they can't <i>all</i> be members of the Sal&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A uniform costume was decreed by plebiscite
+some years ago," replied his mentor, promptly.
+"Any real equality amongst women was found hopeless
+so long as some were able to render themselves
+exceptionally attractive by a distinctive toilette."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" exclaimed <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>, "did all the
+pretty women consent to such a sacrifice?"</p>
+
+<p>"They were in a very decided minority, even then,"
+said <span class="smcap">Mr. Seven Million and Six</span>; "and it is not
+our way to think much of minorities. At present,
+owing no doubt to an enactment which penalised
+every pretty woman by compelling her to wear blue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[ 150]</a></span>
+goggles and a respirator, feminine beauty is practically
+extinct."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span> could not restrain a sigh. They were
+now entering a somewhat gloomy thoroughfare, between
+massive blocks of buildings, with large doors
+and innumerable small windows, which towered into
+the sky on either hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I seem to miss the shop-fronts," he said aloud,
+"with their plate-glass, and all their glitter and
+luxury. What has become of them all?"</p>
+
+<p>"Such necessaries as the citizen requires," said
+his companion, "are procured at the Public Storehouses,
+which you see around you, by the simple
+method of presenting a ticket. The luxuries you
+refer to were only procurable by the rich, and
+nobody is rich now. If you will come with me, I
+will take you over one of the State Dwelling-houses,
+and show you one of the suites of rooms. Every
+citizen has a room; or, if married, a couple of rooms,
+exactly the same shape and size as those of his
+fellows.... Beautifully clean, you see!" he remarked,
+complacently, as he threw open one of the
+doors. "Neat whitewashed walls, plain deal furniture,
+nice holland blinds&mdash;what more can any
+reasonable citizen want in the way of comfort?"</p>
+
+<p>"There used to be a celebrated poet in my time,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[ 151]</a></span>
+said <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>, with some hesitation, "who designed
+and sold very beautiful upholstery&mdash;tapestry,
+wall-papers, curtains, and so on. I fancy <i>he</i> held
+Socialistic views. But I see no trace of his work
+<i>here</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I know whom you refer to," was the
+reply. "The community would doubtless have been
+glad of his Company's services if they would only have
+contracted to supply every citizen with precisely the
+same pattern and quality of their manufactures at,
+say, a pork-pie a yard. But, for some reason, the
+firm could not see their way to it, and the industry
+declined; which is not to be regretted, for it certainly
+tended to foster individualism."</p>
+
+<p>"It is curious," said <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>, when they were
+outside again, "that I have not as yet seen a single
+policeman."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all curious. We <i>have</i> none. Crime
+simply proceeded from the galling sense of social
+inequality. Consequently, as soon as that was
+removed, Justice, with all its machinery, became
+an anachronism."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>, presently, "I should
+like to take a stroll in Hyde Park."</p>
+
+<p>"That," said his guide, "has not been possible
+for at least fifty years. All the parks are now cut<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[ 152]</a></span>
+up into three-acre allotments, where every able-bodied
+citizen does an hour's compulsory spade-work
+once a fortnight. A most admirable reform, as you
+will agree!"</p>
+
+<p>"Capital!" gasped <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>, with an anticipatory
+pain in his back. "Then I am curious to
+see what strides have been made by your modern
+painters. Could you take me to a picture-gallery?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are <i>no</i> modern painters. It is perhaps a
+pity&mdash;but quite unavoidable. It was an obvious
+injustice that, when all citizens had to perform their
+share of more or less distasteful manual labour,
+there should be any one class that earned a living by
+work in which they took a positive pleasure. So that
+every artist had to do his six hours' stone-breaking
+or brick-making; or what not, as an antecedent
+condition of being permitted to paint at all, and
+naturally the State declined to provide him with
+paints and brushes at the expense of the community.
+A few artists persisted for a while, from sheer love of
+the thing; but as no picture fetched more than
+a pound of sausages, and the average price was a bowl
+of porridge, they found it expedient to turn to some
+more useful occupation. And it is undeniable that
+they contribute more to the resources of the commonwealth
+by wielding a trowel or a broom than by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[ 153]</a></span>
+messing about with brushes and paint. As a
+concession to hereditary instinct, however, their
+descendants are still set apart as State white-washers."</p>
+
+<p>"And the drama?" <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span> inquired next.
+"How is <i>that</i> getting on? Has the New Dramatist
+made his appearance at last?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, I am glad to say he has disappeared&mdash;let
+us hope for ever. For, the essence
+of Drama, as I understand, was Emotion&mdash;Passion,
+Jealousy, Marital and Parental relations, and so on.
+Now that marriages are the subject of State
+regulation, and extend only for a limited period,
+Passion, of course is obsolete; Jealousy, too, is
+recognised as merely Selfishness in disguise, and
+we have grown too altruistic to desire the exclusive
+possession of anything. While as the offspring of
+every union are removed at birth to a communal
+<i>crèche</i>, and brought up and educated by the State,
+there are no longer any opportunities for filial or
+parental affection."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I presume Fiction is equally&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. Fiction depended on Contrast. When
+everybody is on precisely the same level, the novelist
+is, happily, unnecessary. What are you looking
+for <i>now</i>?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[ 154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I was wondering if I could buy an evening paper
+anywhere," said <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>, wistfully. "But
+perhaps Journalism is also&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. Everyone is so contentedly and
+peacefully absorbed in contributing his share of work
+to the State, that he has no desire to read about the
+doings of other persons, even if there was anything
+of interest to be told, which there isn't. We produce
+just sufficient for our own wants, so there is no
+commerce; we have no Army or Navy, since
+we don't desire to conquer, and are not worth conquering.
+No Politics, because we govern ourselves
+by our own consent and co-operation; no Science,
+as inventors only benefited capital at the expense of
+labour; and, this being so, what <i>is</i> there to put into
+a newspaper, if we had one?"</p>
+
+<p>"Haven't you even a&mdash;a <i>humorous</i> paper?" said
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>. "I used to do a little in that way
+once."</p>
+
+<p>"You had better not do it <i>here</i>. Humour, I
+believe, consisted in representing Humanity under
+ridiculous aspects. <i>We</i>'re Humanity, and we don't
+see any fun in being laughed at. None of your
+humour here, mind!"</p>
+
+<p>"But the citizens have a certain amount of leisure,
+I suppose," said <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>. "How <i>do</i> they amuse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[ 155]</a></span>
+themselves? For I can discover no libraries, no
+circuses, nor concert-rooms, nor anything!"</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 417px;">
+<img src="images/p155.png" width="417" height="600" alt="&quot;None of your humour here, mind!&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;None of your humour here, mind!&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[ 157]</a></span></p>
+<p>"It was seen to be invidious to furnish any
+entertainment at the public expense which did not
+give equal amusement to all, and so the idea was
+gradually dropped. When our citizens have finished
+their daily task, they find their relaxation, in the
+intervals of eating and sleeping, in the harmless and
+soothing practice of chewing gum. They can all
+do <i>that</i>, and the State provides each with a weekly
+supply for the purpose. Now tell me&mdash;is there
+anything <i>more</i> I can do for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," murmured <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch</span>; "if you would be
+so very kind as to freeze me again for five hundred
+years or so, I should be exceedingly obliged. I don't
+feel quite at home in <i>this</i> century!"</p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BY PARLIAMENTARY.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>On the Platform.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Lady of Family.</span> Oh, yes, I do travel
+third-class sometimes, my dear. I consider
+it a duty to try to know something of the
+lower orders.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Looks out for an empty third-class compartment.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>In the Carriage.</i>&mdash;<i>The seats are now occupied: the <span class="smcap">Lady of
+Family</span> is in one corner, next to a <span class="smcap">Chatty Woman</span> with a basket,
+and opposite to an <span class="smcap">Eccentric-Looking Man</span> with a flighty
+manner.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Eccentric Man</span> (<i>to the <span class="smcap">Lady of Family</span></i>).
+Sorry to disturb you, Mum, but you're a-setting on
+one o' my 'am sandwiches.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>L. of F.</i>???!!!</p>
+
+<p>The E. M. (<i>considerately</i>). Don't trouble yourself,
+Mum, it's of no intrinsic value. I on'y put it there
+to keep my seat.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[ 162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty W.</span> (<i>to the <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span></i>). I think I've seen
+you about Shinglebeach, 'ave I not?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> It is very possible. I have been
+staying with some friends in the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>The C. W. It's a nice cheerful place is Shinglebeach;
+but (<i>confidentially</i>) don't you think it's a very
+singler thing that in a place like that&mdash;a fash'nable
+place, too&mdash;there shouldn't be a single 'am an' beef
+shop?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> (<i>making a desperate effort to throw
+herself into the question</i>). What a very extraordinary
+thing to be sure. Dear, <i>dear</i> me! No ham and
+beef shop!</p>
+
+<p>The C. W. It's so indeed, Mum; and what's more,
+as I daresay you have noticed for yourself, if you
+'appen to want a snack o' fried fish ever so, there isn't
+a place you could go to&mdash;leastways, at a moment's
+notice. Now, 'ow do you explain such a thing as
+that?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> (<i>faintly</i>). I'm afraid I can't suggest
+any explanation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Sententious Man.</span> Fried fish is very sustaining.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Relapses into silence for remainder of journey.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Eccentric Man</span>. Talking of sustaining, I
+remember, when we was kids, my father ud bring us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[ 163]</a></span>
+home two pennorth o' ches'nuts, and we 'ad 'em
+boiled, and they'd last us days. (<i>Sentimentally.</i>) He
+was a kind man, my father (<i>to the <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span>, who bows
+constrainedly</i>), though you wouldn't ha' thought it, to
+look at him. I don't know, mind yer, that he wasn't
+fond of his bit o' booze&mdash;(<i>the <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> looks out of
+window</i>)&mdash;like the best of us. I'm goin' up to prove
+his will now, I am&mdash;if you don't believe me, 'ere's the
+probate. (<i>Hands that document round for inspection.</i>)
+That's all reg'lar enough, I 'ope. (<i>To the <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span></i>)
+Don't give it back before you've done with it&mdash;I'm in
+no 'urry, and there's good reading in it. (<i>Points out
+certain favourite passages with a very dirty forefinger.</i>)
+Begin there&mdash;<i>that's</i> my name.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> peruses the will with as great
+a show of interest as she can bring herself to
+assume.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Eccentric Man</span>. D'ye see that big 'andsome
+building over there? That's the County Lunatic
+Asylum&mdash;where my poor wife is shut up. I went to
+see her last week, I did. (<i>Relates his visit in detail to
+the <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span>, who listens unwillingly.</i>) It's wonderful
+how many of our family have been in that asylum
+from first to last. I 'ad a aunt who died cracky; and
+my old mother, she's very peculiar at times. There's
+days when I feel as if I was a little orf my own 'ed, so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[ 164]</a></span>
+if I say anything at all out of the way, you'll know
+what it is.</p>
+
+<p class="right">[<i><span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> changes carriages at the next station. In
+the second carriage are two Men of seafaring
+appearance, and a young Man who is parting
+from his <span class="smcap">Fiancée</span> as the <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> takes her seat.</i></p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Fiancé</span>. Excuse me one moment, Ma'am.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>Leans across the <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> and out of the window.</i>) Well,
+good-bye, my girl; take care of yourself.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Fiancée</span> (<i>with a hysterical giggle.</i>) Oh, I'll
+take care o' <i>my</i> self.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Looks at the roof of the carriage.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">He</span> (<i>with meaning</i>). No more pickled onions, eh?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">She.</span> What a one you are to remember things!
+(<i>After a pause.</i>) Give my love to Joe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">He.</span> All right. Well, Jenny, just one, for the last.
+(<i>They embrace loudly, after which the <span class="smcap">F.</span> resumes his seat
+with an expression of mingled sentiment and complacency.</i>)
+Oh (<i>to <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span></i>), if you don't mind my stepping across
+you again, Mum. Jenny, if you see Dick between
+this and Friday, just tell him as&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Prolonged whispers; sounds of renewed kisses; final
+parting as train starts with a jerk, which throws
+the <span class="smcap">Finacé</span> upon the <span class="smcap">L. of F.'s</span> lap. After the
+train is started a gleam of peculiar significance
+is observable in the eyes of one of the Seafaring</i></p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[ 165]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p><i>Men, who is reclining in an easy attitude on the
+seat. His companion responds with a grin of
+intelligence, and produces a large black bottle
+from the rack. They drink, and hand the bottle
+to the <span class="smcap">Fiancé</span>.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The F. Thankee, I don't mind if I do. Here's
+wishing you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Remainder of sentiment drowned in sound of glug-glug-glug;
+is about to hand back bottle when
+the first <span class="smcap">Seafarer</span> intimates that he is to pass
+it on. The <span class="smcap">L. of F.</span> recoils in horror.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Both Seafarers.</span> It's <i>wine</i>, Mum!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>Tableau. The <span class="smcap">Lady of Family</span> realises that the
+study of third-class humanity has its drawbacks.</i></p></blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE FARMING OF THE FUTURE;</h2>
+<h3><span class="smcap">Or, What British Agriculture is Coming to.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="center"><i>A Car on the Electric Light Railway. <span class="smcap">Time.</span>&mdash;Twentieth
+Century.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Farmer</span> (<i>recognising Second Farmer</i>).
+Why, 'tis Muster Fretwail, surelie! didn't see
+it was you afore. And how be things gettin'
+along with <i>you</i>, Sir, eh?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Farmer Fretwail</span> (<i>lugubriously</i>). 'Mong the
+middlin's, Muster Lackaday; 'mong the middlin's!
+Nothen doin' just now&mdash;nothen 't all!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Third Farmer</span> (<i>enviously</i>). Well, <i>you</i> hevn't no
+call fur to cry out, neighbour. I see you've got
+a likely lot o' noo 'oardins comin' up all along your
+part o' the line. I wish mine wur arf as furrard, I
+know thet!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Fretwail.</span> Ah, them "Keep yer 'air on"'s,
+<i>you</i> mean, Ryemouth. I don't deny as they was
+lookin' tidy enough a week back. But just as I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[ 170]</a></span>
+makin' ready fur to paint up "Try it on a Billiard
+Ball," blamed if this yere frost didn't set in, and
+now theer's everything at a standstill, wi' the brushes
+froze 'ard in the pots!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Ryemouth.</span> 'Tis the same down with me.
+Theer's a acre o' "Bunyan's Easy Boots" as must
+hev a noo coat, and I cann't get nothen done to 'en
+till the weather's a bit more hopen like. Don' keer
+<i>'ow</i> soon we hev a change, myself, I don't!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Lackaday.</span> Nor yet me, so long as we don't
+'ave no gales with it. Theer was my height acre
+pasture as I planted only las' Candlemas wi' "Roopy's
+Lung Tonics"&mdash;wunnerful fine and tall they was,
+too&mdash;and ivery one on 'en blowed down the next
+week!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Fretwail.</span> Well I 'ope theer wun't be no rain,
+neither, come to that. I know I had all the P's of my
+"Piffler's Persuasive Pillules" fresh gold-leaved at
+Michaelmas, and it come on wet directly arter I
+done it, and reg'lar washed the gilt out o' sight an'
+knowledge, it did. Theer ain't no standin' up agen
+rain!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Ryemouth.</span> I dunno as I wouldn't as lief hev
+rain as sun. My "Hanti-Freckle Salves" all blistered
+up and peeled afore the summer was 'ardly begun
+a'most.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[ 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 414px;">
+<img src="images/p171.png" width="414" height="600" alt="&quot;I cann&#39;t get nothen done to &#39;en till the weather&#39;s a bit
+more hopen like.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;I cann&#39;t get nothen done to &#39;en till the weather&#39;s a bit
+more hopen like.&quot;</span>
+</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[ 172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[ 173]</a></span></p><p><span class="smcap">F. Lackaday.</span> 'Tis a turr'ble hard climate to
+make 'ead against, is ourn. I've 'eard tell as some
+farmers are takin' to they enamelled hiron affairs,
+same as they used to hev when I wur a lad. I mind
+theer wur a crop o' "Read Comic Cagmag" as
+lingered on years arter the paper itself. Not as I
+hold with enamelling, myself&mdash;'tain't what I call
+'igh farmin'&mdash;takes too much outer the land in
+<i>my</i> 'pinion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Fretwail.</span> Aye, aye. "Rotation o' boards."
+Say, "Spooner's Sulphur Syrup" fur a spring crop,
+follered with some kind o' soap or candles, and p'raps
+cough lozengers, or hembrocation, or bakin' powder,
+if the soil will bear it, arterwards&mdash;that's the system
+<i>I</i> wur reared on, and there ain't no better, 'pend
+upon it!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Ryemouth.</span> I tell 'ee what 'tis; it's time we
+'ad some protection agen these yere furrin advartisements.
+I was travellin' along the Great Northern
+t'other day, an' I see theer wos two or three o' them
+French boards nigh in ivery field, a downright shame
+and disgrace I call it, disfigurin' the look of the
+country and makin' it that ontidy&mdash;let alone drivin'
+honest British boards off the land. Government
+ought to put a stop to it; that's what <i>I</i> say!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Lackaday.</span> They Parliment chaps don't keer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[ 174]</a></span>
+<i>what</i> becomes of us poor farmers, they don't. Look
+at last General Election time. They might ha' given
+our boards a turn; but not they. Most o' they
+candidates did all their 'tisin' with rubbishy flags and
+balloons&mdash;made in Japan, Sir, every blamed one o'
+them! And they wonder British Agriculture don't
+prosper more!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Ryemouth.</span> Speaking o' queer ways o' hadvertisin',
+hev any of ye set eyes on that farm o' young
+Fullacrank's? Danged if ever <i>I</i> see sech tomfool
+notions as he's took up with in all <i>my</i> born days.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Fretwail.</span> Why, what hev he been up to
+<i>now</i>, eh?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Ryemouth.</span> Well, I thought I shud ha' bust
+myself larfin' when I see it fust. Theer ain't not a
+board nor a sky sign; no, nor yet a 'oarding, on the
+'ole of his land!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Lackaday.</span> Then how do he expect to get a
+profit out of it?&mdash;that's what <i>I</i> want to year.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Ryemouth.</span> You'll 'ardly credit it, neighbours,
+but he's been buryin' some o' they furrin grains,
+hoats and barley, an' I dunno what not, in little holes
+about his fields, so as to make the words, "Use
+Faddler's Non-Farinaceous Food"&mdash;and the best of
+it is the darned young fool expecks as 'ow it'll all
+sprout come next Aperl&mdash;he do indeed, friends!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[ 175]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Fretwail.</span> Flying in the face o' Providence,
+I calls it. He must ha' gone clean out of his
+senses!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Lackaday.</span> Stark starin' mad. I never heerd
+tell o' such extravagance. Why, as likely as not,
+'twill all die off o' the land afore the year's out&mdash;and
+wheer wull he be <i>then</i>?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">F. Ryemouth.</span> Azactly what I said to 'en myself.
+"You tek my word for it," I sez, "'twun't never come
+to no good. The nateral crop for these yere British
+Hiles," I told 'en, "is good honest Henglish hoak an'
+canvas," I sez, "and 'tain't the action of no sensible
+man, nor yet no Christian," sez I, "to go a-drillin'
+'oles and a-droppin' in houtlandish seeds from Canada
+an' Roosha, which the sile wasn't never intended to
+bear!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Farmers Fretwell</span> and <span class="smcap">Lackaday</span>. Rightly
+spoke, neighbour Ryemouth, 'twas a true word! But
+theer'll be a jedgment on sech new-fangled doin's,
+and, what's moor, you and I will live fur to see it
+afore we're very much older!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>They all shake their heads solemnly as scene closes in.</i></p></blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>A DIALOGUE ON ART.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">A Study in Spirits and Waters.</span>)</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>The Smoke-room of a Provincial Hotel. <span class="smcap">Time</span>&mdash;Towards
+midnight. <span class="smcap">Characters</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Mr. Luceslipp-Bletheron</span>, a
+middle-aged Art Patron and Dilettante. He has arrived at his
+third tumbler of whiskey and water, and the stage at which a
+man alludes freely before strangers to his "poor dear father."
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Milboard</span>, a Painter, on a sketching tour. He is enduring
+<span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> with a patience which will last for just one more
+pipe. <span class="smcap">First Commercial</span>, who considers Mr. <span class="smcap">L.-B.</span> a highly
+agreeable and well-informed gentleman, and is anxious to be included
+in his audience. <span class="smcap">Second Commercial</span>, who doesn't intend to join
+in the conversation until he feels he can do so with crushing effect.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Luceslipp-bletheron.</span> Yes, I
+assure you, I never come acrosh a David Cox
+but I say to myself, "<i>There</i>'sh a Bit!" (<i>Here
+he fixes his eye-glass, sips whiskey and water, and looks
+at <span class="smcap">Mr. Milboard</span> as if he expected him to express
+admiration at this evidence of penetration. The only
+tribute he extorts, however, is a grunt.</i>) Now, we've a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[ 180]</a></span>
+Cornelius Janssen at home. Itsh only hishtory is&mdash;my
+dear father bought it. He was an artist himself,
+painted a bit, travelled man, an' all that short o'
+thing. Well, <i>he</i> picked it up for ten pounds!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Commercial</span> (<i>deferentially</i>). Did he reelly
+now? A Johnson for ten pounds! Did he get a
+warranty with it, Sir?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>after bringing the eye-glass to bear on the
+intruder for a second</i>). Then I've a Mieris&mdash;at leasht,
+<i>shome</i> clever f'ler painted it, and it'sh a pleashure to
+look at it, and you can't get over <i>that</i>, can you?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milboard.</span> I don't intend to <i>try</i> to get over it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> You're qui' right. Now I'm the lasht
+man in the world to shwagger; shtill, I'm goin' to
+ashk you to lemme have my lil' shwagger now. I
+happened to be at Rome shor' time ago, and I met
+Middleman there. We had our lil' chat together and
+what not&mdash;he'sh no pershonal friend o' mine. Well;
+I picked up a lil' drawing by a Roman chap; worth
+nothing more than what I got it for, or <i>anything</i>, as
+you may shay. Middleman had the whole run of this
+chap's studio. I saw this drawing&mdash;didn't care mush
+about it&mdash;but thought it wash a gem, and gave the
+modesh shum of a hundred an' fifty <i>lire</i> for it.
+Put it in my portmanteau between a couple o'
+shirts&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[ 181]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Comm.</span> (<i>still pining for notice</i>). When you
+say shirts, Sir, I presume you mean <i>clean</i> ones?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> No man with the shlightest feelin' or
+reverence for Art would <i>put</i> sush a queshtion! (<i>The
+<span class="smcap">First Comm.</span> collapses.</i>) Between a couple of&mdash;(<i>underlining
+the word</i>) Shirts, and brought it home. Now
+I'm comin' to my point. One afternoon after my
+return, I wash walking down Bond Street, when I
+saw a sketch exhibited in a window by the shame
+f'ler. I went in and shaid, "What are you asking
+for thish? Mind I don' wanter <i>buy</i> it; ashk me any
+price yer like!" And they shaid forty guineash.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> Apparently they availed themselves
+of your permission, and <i>did</i> ask you any price they
+liked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> No doubt; but wait till I've <i>done</i>. I
+saw another&mdash;a finished drawing not qui' so good
+as mine, there. Then I shaid to them quietly,
+"Now, look <i>here</i>, why don' you go an' buy 'em for
+yourshelves in the artist's own shtudio?" It shtruck
+me as sho odd, a man like Middleman, being there,
+and having the pick, shouldn' buy <i>more</i> of 'em!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> Wasn't worth his while; he can't
+buy <i>everything</i>!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>after considering this impartially with
+some more whiskey</i>). No; your ansher is a very <i>good</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[ 182]</a></span>
+one, and a very <i>fair</i> one. He <i>can't</i> buy everything.
+I <i>did</i> pick, however, an' I gorrit. I said to him,
+"How mush?" an' he tol' me, and there wash an
+end of it, do you shee?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> It's the ordinary course of business,
+isn't it?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> Egshackly. But how few <i>do</i> it!
+Now, I'll tell you 'nother shtory 'bout my poo' dear
+father. He came 'pon a sculpture in a curioshity
+shop; it wash very dirty and used up, but my dear
+father saw it was worth shpotting, and a thing to
+<i>be</i> shpotted, and sho he put hish <i>finger</i> on it!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Comm.</span> (<i>undaunted by past failure</i>). And
+was it antique, Sir?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> That'sh more'n I can tell you; it
+wash very dirty, at any rate, and he only gave fifty
+guineash for it. Wasn't a <i>great</i> shum&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Comm.</span> (<i>encouraged by his affability</i>). No,
+indeed; a mere nothing, so to speak, Sir!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>annoyed</i>). Will you have the goodnesh
+to lemme finish what I was telling thish gentleman?
+When my poo' father got that busht home, it was
+the mos' perfect likenesh o' Napoleon!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[ 183]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 596px;">
+<img src="images/p183.png" width="596" height="600" alt="&quot;They haven&#39;t the patiensh for it.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;They haven&#39;t the <i>patiensh</i> for it.&quot;</span>
+</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[ 184]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[ 185]</a></span></p><p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> Ha! puts me in mind of the old story
+of the man who picked up a dingy panel somewhere
+or other, took it home, cleaned it, and found a
+genuine Morland; went on cleaning and discovered
+an undoubted Rembrandt; cleaned <i>that</i>, and came
+to a Crivelli; couldn't stop, kept on cleaning,
+and was rewarded by a portrait of George the
+Fourth!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Comm.</span> (<i>deeply impressed</i>). And all of them
+genuine? How <i>very</i> extraordinary, to be sure!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>wagging his head sapiently</i>). I could
+tell you shtranger things than <i>that</i>. But as I was
+shaying, here was this busht of Napoleon, by some
+French chap&mdash;which <i>you</i> would tell me was <i>against</i> it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> Why? The French are the best
+sculptors in the world.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> The Frensh! I can <i>not</i> bring myshelf
+to believe that, if only for thish shimple reashon,
+they haven't the <i>patiensh</i> for it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Comm.</span> So <i>I</i> should have said. For my
+own part&mdash;not knowing much <i>about</i> it, very likely&mdash;I
+should have put the <i>Italians</i> first.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> If you are talking of all time&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Comm.</span> (<i>feeling at last at his ease</i>). I should
+say, even <i>now</i>. Why, there was a piece of statuary
+in the Italian Exhibition at Earl's Court some years
+back that took <i>my</i> fancy and took my <i>wife's</i> fancy
+very much. It was a representation in marble of a
+'en and chickens, all so natural, and with every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[ 186]</a></span>
+individual feather on the birds done to such a
+nicety&mdash;&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> I was hardly referring to the skill
+with which the Italians carve&mdash;ah&mdash;<i>poultry</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> Ridic'lous! Great mishtake to talk
+without unnershtanding shubject. (<i>The <span class="smcap">First Commercial</span>
+retires from the room in disorder.</i>) One thing
+I should like to ashk is thish. Why are sculptors
+at present day so inferior to the antique? Ishn't the
+human form divine ash noble and ash shymmetrical
+ash formerly? Why can't they <i>reproduce</i> it then?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> You must first find your sculptor.
+Providence doesn't see fit to create a Michael Angelo
+or a Praxiteles every five minutes, any more than a
+Shakspeare.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>wavering between piety and epigram</i>).
+Thank the Lord for <i>that</i>! Now there'sh Florensh.
+Shome of us who have had the <i>run</i> there&mdash;well, there
+you see all the original thingsh&mdash;all the <i>originalsh</i>.
+And yet, if you'll believe me (<i>dreamily</i>), with all my
+love and charm for Art, gimme the Capitoline
+Venush living and breathing in <i>flesh and blood</i>, Sir,
+not in cold lifelesh marble!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> That of course is a matter of taste.
+But we are talking about Art, not women.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>profoundly</i>). Unforsh'nately, women<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[ 187]</a></span>
+are the <i>shubjects</i> of Art. You've got to find out your
+client's shtyle of Art firsht, and then carry it out in
+the besht possible manner.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Milb.</span> (<i>rising, and knocking his pipe out</i>).
+Have I? But I'm going to bed now, so you'll
+excuse me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>detaining him</i>). But look here again.
+Take the Louvre. (<i>As <span class="smcap">Mr. Milboard</span> disclaims any
+desire to take it.</i>) Now, nobody talksh about the
+Gallery <i>there</i>, and yet, if you only egshemp the
+thingsh that are rude and vulgar, and go quietly
+roun'&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Commercial</span> (<i>who sees a Socratic opening
+at last</i>). Might I ask you, Sir, to enumerate any
+pictures there, that, in your opinion, are "rude and
+vulgar"?</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i><span class="smcap">Mr. Milboard</span> avails himself of this diversion
+to escape.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> In the Grand Gallery of the Louvre
+there'sh an enormous amount of shtuff, as everybody
+who'sh an artisht and a lover of Art knowsh. If I
+had a friend who wash thinking of going to the
+Louvre (<i>here he looks round vaguely for <span class="smcap">Mr. Milboard</span></i>),
+I should shay to him, "Do you <i>care</i> about pictursh
+at all? If you <i>don't</i>, don't borrer yourshelf 'bout it.
+If you <i>do</i>, drop in shome day with Me, and I'll give<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[ 188]</a></span>
+you a hint what to shee." (<i>As he cannot make out
+what has become of <span class="smcap">Mr. Milboard</span>, he has to content
+himself with the <span class="smcap">Second Commercial</span>.</i>) If you were
+<i>my</i> boy, I should shay to you&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Comm.</span> (<i>at the door</i>). Pardon me for
+remarking that, if I was your boy, I should probably
+prefer to take my own opinion. (<i>With dignified independence.</i>)
+I never follow other persons' taste in Art!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He goes out as the Smoke-room Page enters.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. L.-B.</span> (<i>hazily with half-closed eyes</i>). If you
+wash <i>my</i> boy, I should shay to you, very quietly, very
+sherioushly, and without 'tempting to dictate&mdash;&mdash;(<i>Perceives
+that he is addressing the Page.</i>) Jus' bring
+me 'nother glash whiskey an' warrer.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He is left sitting.</i></p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[ 189]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE OLD LOVE AND THE NEW.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Contrast.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p><i>The Stables at Saddlesprings, the Wheelers' Country House
+near Bykersall. <span class="smcap">Miss Diana's</span> Horse <span class="smcap">Bayard</span> discovered in his
+Stall.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard</span> (<i>talking to himself, as is the habit of some
+horses when alone</i>). I can't make it out. She's
+here. All the family came down yesterday&mdash;I
+heard the omnibus start for the station to
+meet them. And yet she hasn't sent for me; hasn't
+even been near me! She always used to rush in here
+and kiss me on the nose the very first&mdash;She's ill&mdash;that's
+it of course&mdash;sprained her fetlock or something.
+If she was well, she'd have had me saddled as soon
+as she'd had her morning feed, and we'd have gone for
+a canter together somewhere.... I hope she'll get
+well soon. I'm sick of being taken out by the stable-man;
+he's so dull&mdash;no notion of conversation beyond
+whistling! Now, Miss Diana would talk to me the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[ 192]</a></span>
+whole way.... Perhaps her hands and seat might
+have been&mdash;&mdash;But what did <i>that</i> matter? I liked
+to feel she was on my back, I liked the sound of her
+pretty voice, and the touch of her hand when she
+patted me after her ride.... (<i>He pricks his ears.</i>)
+Why, that's her voice outside now! She's all right,
+after all. She's coming in to see me!... I <i>knew</i>
+she couldn't have forgotten!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Diana's Voice</span> (<i>outside</i>). Yes, you might put
+it in here for the present, Stubbs. I suppose it will
+be quite safe?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Stubbs' Voice.</span> Safe enough, Miss, there's plenty
+o' empty stalls this side. Nothing <i>in</i> 'ere just now,
+except&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss D.'s Voice.</span> Very well, then. Just wipe
+some of the dust off the mud-guards, because I shall
+want it again after lunch. And mind you don't
+scratch the enamel taking it in.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Stubbs.</span> Very good, Miss. I'll be keerful.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i><span class="smcap">Miss Diana's</span> steps die away upon the cobbles.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard</span> (<i>to himself</i>). She's gone&mdash;without even
+asking after me! What has she been out in&mdash;a bath
+chair? I'm sure she <i>must</i> be ill.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Stubbs</span> (<i>to the Bicycle, as he wheels it in</i>). 'Ere,
+steady now, 'old up, can't ye? And keep that
+blarsted near pedal o' yourn off o' <i>my</i> enamel.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[ 193]</a></span>
+Blest if I wouldn't rather rub down arf a dozen
+'unters nor one o' them yere bloomin' bi-cycles.
+I know where I <i>am</i> with a 'orse; but these
+'ere little, twisty, spidery wheels&mdash;&mdash;Come <i>over</i>,
+will ye. I'll lean ye up agen 'ere till I've 'ad my
+dinner.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 457px;">
+<img src="images/p193.png" width="457" height="600" alt="&quot;It must be a sort of animal, I suppose.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;It must be a sort of animal, I suppose.&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[ 195]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He places the machine against a partition next to
+<span class="smcap">Bayard's</span> stall, and goes out.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard</span> (<i>to himself, as he inspects his neighbour with
+the corner of his eye</i>). It's <i>not</i> a bath-chair; it's one
+of these bicycles. It must be a sort of animal,
+I suppose, or Stubbs wouldn't have spoken to it.
+I should like to ask it one or two questions. (<i>He
+gets his neck over the partition, and breathes gently through
+his nostrils upon the handle-bars.</i>) Excuse me, but do
+you understand horse-language at all?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span> (<i>answering by a succession of saddle-creaks</i>).
+Perfectly. I'm a kind of horse myself,
+I believe, only greatly <i>improved</i>, of course. <i>Would</i>
+you mind not breathing on my handle-bars like that?
+It tarnishes the plating so. The saddle is the seat of
+<i>my</i> intelligence, if you will kindly address your
+remarks here.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> I beg your pardon. I will in future.
+I don't creak myself, but I've been closely connected
+with saddles ever since I was a two-year-old, so I can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[ 196]</a></span>
+follow you fairly well. Didn't I hear my mistress's
+voice outside just now?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. No; <i>my</i> mistress's, Miss Diana's.
+I'd just taken her out for a short spin&mdash;not far, only
+fifteen miles or so.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> Then, she&mdash;she's quite well?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Thanks, she's pedalling pretty
+strong just now. I'm going out with her again this
+afternoon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> Again! You will have had a hard day
+of it altogether, then. But I suppose you'll get a day
+or two's rest afterwards? I know <i>I</i> should want it.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Bless you, <i>I</i> never want rest.
+Why, I've been forty miles with her, and come home
+without clanking a link! <i>She</i> was knocked up, if you
+like&mdash;couldn't go out for days!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> Ah, she was never knocked up after
+riding <i>me</i>!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Because&mdash;it's no fault of yours, of
+course, but the way you've been constructed&mdash;you
+couldn't go far enough to knock <i>anybody</i> up. And
+she doesn't get tired now, either. I'm not the kind
+of bicycle to boast; but I've often heard her say that
+she much prefers her "bike" (she always calls me
+her "bike"&mdash;very nice and friendly of her, isn't it?)
+to any mere <i>horse</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[ 197]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> To any mere horse! And does she&mdash;give
+any reasons?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Lots. For one thing, she says
+she feels so absolutely safe on me; she knows that,
+whatever she meets, I shall never start, or shy,
+or rear, or anything of that sort.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> I don't remember playing any of those
+tricks with her, however hard she pulled the curb.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Then she says she never has to
+consider whether any distance will be too much for
+me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> As for <i>that</i>&mdash;&mdash;But the longer I was
+out with her, the better I was pleased; she might
+have brought me home as lame as a tree all round,
+and <i>I</i> shouldn't have cared!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Perhaps not. But <i>she</i> would;
+so inconvenient, you see. Now <i>my</i> strong point is,
+I <i>can't</i> go lame&mdash;in good hands, of course, and she
+knows exactly how to manage me, I will say that for
+her!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> Does she give you carrots or sugar after
+a ride? she did <i>me</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Bicycle</span> (<i>with a creak of contempt</i>). Now what
+<i>do</i> you suppose I could do with sugar or a carrot
+if I had it? No, a drop or two of oil now and then
+is all I take in the way of sustenance. That's <i>another</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[ 198]</a></span>
+point in my favour, I cost little or nothing to keep.
+Now, your oats and hay and stuff, I daresay, cost
+more in a year than I'm worth altogether!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span>. I must admit that you have the advantage
+of me in cheapness. If I thought she grudged
+me my oats&mdash;&mdash;But I'm afraid I couldn't manage
+on a drop or two of oil.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. You'd want buckets of it to oil
+<i>your</i> bearings. No, she wouldn't save by that!
+(<i><span class="smcap">Stubbs</span> re-enters.</i>) Ah, here comes my man. I must
+be going; got to take her over to Pineborough, rather
+a bore this dusty weather, but when a lady's in the
+case, eh?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> There's a nasty hill going into Pineborough;
+do be careful how you take her down it!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. You forget, my friend, I'm not
+a Boneshaker, I'm a Safety. Why, she'll just put
+her feet up on the rests, fold her arms, and leave the
+rest to me. She knows <i>I</i> can be trusted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> Just tell me this before you go. Does&mdash;she
+doesn't pat you, or kiss you on your&mdash;er&mdash;handle-bar
+after a run, does she?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span> (<i>turning its front wheel to reply, as
+<span class="smcap">Stubbs</span> wheels it out</i>). You don't imagine I should
+stand any sentimental rot of that sort, do you? She
+knows better than to try it on!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[ 199]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard</span> (<i>to himself</i>). I'm glad she doesn't kiss it.
+I don't think I <i>could</i> have stood that!</p>
+
+
+<p><i>Same Scene. Some Hours Later.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Stubbs</span> (<i>enters, carrying a dilapidated machine with
+crumpled handles, a twisted saddle, and a front wheel
+distorted into an irregular pentagon</i>). Well, I 'ope as
+'ow this'll sarve as a lesson to 'er, I dew; a marcy
+she ain't broke her blessed little neck! (<i>To the
+Bicycle.</i>) No need to be hover and above purtickler
+'bout scratchin' your enamel <i>now</i>, any'ow! (<i>He
+pitches it into a corner, and goes.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard</span> (<i>after reconnoitring</i>). You don't mean to
+say it's <i>you</i>!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Me? of course it's me! A nice
+mess I'm in, too, entirely owing to her carelessness.
+Never put the brake on down that infernal hill, lost
+all control over me, and here I am, a wreck, Sir!
+Why, I had to be driven home, by a grinning groom,
+in a beastly dog-cart! Pleasant that!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> But she&mdash;Miss Diana&mdash;was she hurt?
+Not&mdash;not <i>seriously</i>, eh?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Oh, of course you don't care what
+becomes of <i>me</i> so long as&mdash;&mdash;<i>She's</i> all right enough&mdash;fell
+in a ditch, luckily for her, <i>I</i> came down on
+a heap of stones. It'll be weeks before I'm out
+of the repairer's hands.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[ 200]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard</span> (<i>to himself</i>). I <i>oughtn't</i> to be glad; but I
+am&mdash;I <i>am</i>! She's safe, and&mdash;and she'll come back
+to me after this! (<i>To the Bicycle.</i>) Wasn't she
+sorry for you?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span>. Not she! These women have no
+feeling in them. Why, what do you suppose she
+said when they told me it would take weeks to tinker
+me up?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard</span> (<i>to himself&mdash;with joy</i>). I think I can guess!
+(<i>To the Bicycle.</i>) What <i>did</i> she say?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Bicycle</span> (<i>rattling with indignation</i>). Why, all
+<i>she</i> said was: "How tiresome! I wonder if I can
+hire a decent bike here without having to send
+to town for one." There's gratitude for you! But
+<i>you</i> can't enter into my feelings about it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bayard.</span> Pardon me&mdash;I fancy I can. And, after
+all, your day will come, when the Vet has set you up
+again. <i>Mine's</i> over for ever. (<i>To himself.</i>) Oh, why,
+<i>why</i> wasn't I born a bicycle!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[ 201]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[ 203]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>A DOLL'S DIARY.</h2>
+
+<p><i>January 1.</i>&mdash;Just had a brilliant idea&mdash;<i>quite</i>
+original. I don't believe even any human
+person ever <i>thought</i> of such a thing, but then,&mdash;besides
+being extremely beautiful and expensive, with
+refined wax features and golden hair&mdash;I am a very
+clever doll indeed. Frivolous, no doubt; heartless,
+so they tell me&mdash;but the very reverse of a <i>fool</i>. I
+flatter myself that if <i>anybody</i> understands the nature
+of toys, especially <i>male</i> toys&mdash;but I am forgetting my
+idea&mdash;which is this. I am going this year to write
+down&mdash;the little girl I belong to has no idea I can
+write, but I <i>can</i>&mdash;and better than <i>she</i> does, too!&mdash;to
+write down every event of importance that happens,
+<i>with the dates</i>. There! I fancy <i>that</i> is original enough.
+It will be a valuable dollian document when it is
+done, and <i>most</i> interesting to look back upon. Now
+I must wait for something to happen.</p>
+
+<p><i>January 6.</i>&mdash;Went to Small Dance given by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[ 204]</a></span>
+Only Other Wax Doll (a dreadful old frump!) on the
+Nursery Hearthrug. Room rather nicely illuminated
+by coloured fire from grate, and a pyramid nightlight,
+but floor poor. Didn't think much of the music&mdash;a
+fur monkey at the Digitorium, and a woolly lamb
+who brought his own bellows, make <i>rather</i> a feeble
+orchestra. Still, on the whole, enjoyed myself.
+Much admired. Several young Ninepins, who are
+considered stuck-up, and keep a good deal to their
+own set, begged to be introduced. Sat out one
+dance with a Dice-box, who rattled away most
+amusingly. I understand he is quite an authority
+on games, and anything that falls from his mouth
+is received with respect. He is a great sporting
+character, too, and arranges all the meetings on the
+Nursery Race-course, besides being much interested
+in Backgammon. I <i>do</i> like a Toy to have <i>manly</i>
+tastes!</p>
+
+<p>The Captain of a Wooden Marching Regiment
+quartered in the neighbourhood was there in full
+uniform, but not dancing. Told me they <i>didn't</i> in
+his regiment. As his legs are made in one piece and
+glued on to a yellow stand, inclined to think this was
+not mere military swagger. He seemed considerably
+struck with me. Made an impression, too, on a
+rather elderly India-rubber Ball. Snubbed him, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[ 205]</a></span>
+one of the Ninepins told me he was considered "a
+bit of a bounder."</p>
+
+<p>Some of the Composition Dolls, I could see, were
+perfectly <i>stiff</i> with spite and envy. Spent a very
+pleasant evening, not getting back to my drawer till
+daylight. Too tired to write more.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mem.</i>&mdash;Not to sit out behind the coal-scuttle
+another time!</p>
+
+<p><i>February 14.</i>&mdash;Amount of attention I receive really
+quite embarrassing. The Ninepins are too <i>absurdly</i>
+devoted. One of them (the nicest of all) told me to-day
+he had never been so completely bowled over in
+his whole existence! I manage to play them off
+against each other, however. The India-rubber Ball,
+too, is at my feet&mdash;and, naturally, I spurn him, but
+he is so short-winded that nothing will induce him to
+rise. Though naturally of an elastic temperament,
+he has been a good deal cast down of late. I smile
+on him occasionally&mdash;just to keep the Ball rolling;
+but it is becoming a frightful bore.</p>
+
+<p><i>March.</i>&mdash;Have been presented with a charming
+pony-carriage, with two piebald ponies that go by
+clock work. I wish, though, I was not expected to
+share it with a <i>live kitten</i>! The kitten has no idea
+of repose, and spoils the effect of the turn-out. Try
+not to seem aware of it&mdash;even when it claws my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[ 206]</a></span>
+frock. Rather interested in a young Skipjack, whom
+I see occasionally; he is quite good-looking, in a
+common sort of way. I talk to him now and then&mdash;it
+is something to do; and he is a new type, so
+different from the Ninepins!</p>
+
+<p><i>April 1.</i>&mdash;Have just heard the Skipjack is engaged
+to a plaster Dairy-maid. A little annoyed, because
+he really seemed&mdash;&mdash;Have been to see his <i>fiancée</i>,
+a common-place creature, with red cheeks, and a
+thick waist. Congratulate the Skipjack, with just a
+<i>hint</i> that he might have looked higher. Afraid that
+he misunderstood me, for he absolutely jumped.</p>
+
+<p><i>April 7.</i>&mdash;The Skipjack tells me he has <i>broken off
+his engagement</i>; he seems to think I shall guess the
+reason&mdash;but I don't, of <i>course</i>. Then he actually has
+the impertinence to (I can scarcely pen the words
+for indignation) to <i>propose</i>&mdash;to Me! I inform him, in
+the most <i>unmistakable</i> terms, that he has presumed
+on my good-nature, and that there are social barriers
+between us, which no Skipjack can ever surmount.
+He leaves me abruptly, after declaring that I have
+broken the spring of his existence.</p>
+
+<p><i>April 8.</i>&mdash;Much shocked and annoyed. The Skipjack
+found quite stiff and colourless this morning, in
+the water-jug! Must have jumped in last night. So
+<i>very</i> rash and silly of him! Am sure I gave him no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[ 207]</a></span>
+encouragement&mdash;or <i>next</i> to none. Hear that the
+Dairy-maid has gone off her head. Of course it will
+be put down to <i>grief</i>; but we all know how easily
+plaster heads get cracked. Feel really distressed
+about it all, for the blame is sure to fall on <i>me</i>.
+Those Composition Dolls will make a fine scandal
+out of it!</p>
+
+<p><i>May.</i>&mdash;The Ninepins are getting very difficult to
+manage; have to put them down as delicately as
+possible; but I am afraid, poor fellows, they are
+dreadfully upset. The Wooden Captain has challenged
+the Dice-box to a duel&mdash;I fear, on <i>my</i> account.
+However, as the officer's sword will not unglue, I
+<i>hope</i> nothing will come of it. All this <i>most</i> worrying,
+though, and gives me little <i>real</i> satisfaction. I find
+myself sighing for more <i>difficult</i> conquests.</p>
+
+<p><i>June.</i>&mdash;Went to afternoon tea with the biggest
+Dutch Doll. Rather a come-down, but now that
+there is this coolness between the Composition set
+and myself, I must go <i>somewhere</i>. I feel <i>so</i> bored at
+times! Can see the ridiculous Dutch thing is trying
+to <i>out-dress</i> me! She had a frock on that <i>must</i> have
+cost at <i>least</i> fifty beads, and I don't believe it will <i>ever</i>
+be paid for! Only made her look the bigger <i>guy,</i>
+though! Tea-party a stupid affair. Make-believe
+tea in pewter cups. Met the latest arrival, a really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[ 208]</a></span>
+nice-looking Gentleman Doll, introduced as "Mr.
+Joseph." Very innocent face, without any moustache,
+and the sweetest blue eyes (except mine) I think I
+<i>ever</i> saw! Seemed rather shy, but pleasant. Asked
+him to call.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 18.</i>&mdash;Mr. Joseph has not called <i>yet</i>. Very
+strange! Suspect those horrid Composition Dolls
+have been setting him against me. Met him by the
+back-board and scolded him. He seemed confused.
+By a little management, I got it all out of him. I
+was right. He <i>has</i> been told about the Skipjack.
+He has strict principles, and gave me to understand
+that he would prefer to decline my acquaintance&mdash;which
+was <i>like his impudence</i>! This is exciting,
+though. I intend to overcome these scruples; I
+mean him to be madly in love with me&mdash;then I
+shall scornfully reject him, which will serve him
+just <i>right</i>!</p>
+
+<p><i>July.</i>&mdash;My tactics have succeeded&mdash;<i>at last</i>! To-day
+Joseph called, <i>ostensibly</i> to beg me to go and see the
+unhappy Ball, who, it seems, is terribly collapsed,
+reduced to a <i>mere bowl</i>, and so exhausted that he
+cannot hold out much longer. However, in the
+course of the interview, I soon made him oblivious
+of the Ball. He fell at my feet. "Beautiful
+Gloriana," he cried, "with all your many and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[ 209]</a></span>
+glaring faults, I love you!" Then I carried out
+the <i>rest</i> of my programme&mdash;it was a painful scene,
+and I will only record that when he left me, he
+was completely <i>un-dolled</i>! I feel almost sorry for
+him&mdash;he had rather a nice face!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/p209.png" width="600" height="407" alt="&quot;I see him standing, on the very brink of the precipice.&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;I see him standing, on the very brink of the precipice.&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[ 211]</a></span></p>
+<p><i>July 4.</i>&mdash;I don't seem able to settle to anything.
+After all, I think I will go and see the poor Ball.
+It would comfort him, and I might see <i>him</i> there.
+I will order the pony-carriage.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p><i>August.</i>&mdash;What has happened to me? Where
+have I been all this time? Let me collect myself,
+and see how much I remember. My last clear
+recollection is of being in my carriage on my way
+to receive the departing Ball's last sigh.... Something
+has started the clockwork. My ponies are
+bolting, and I haven't the <i>slightest</i> control over them!
+We are rushing along the smooth plain of the chest
+of drawers, and rapidly nearing the edge. I try to
+scream for help, but all I can utter is, "Papa!" and
+"Mamma!" All at once I see <i>him</i> standing, calm
+and collected, on the very brink of the precipice.
+Is he strong enough to stop the ponies in their mad
+clockwork career, and save me, <i>even yet</i>? <i>How</i> I
+will love him if he does! An instant of sickening
+suspense ... we are <i>over</i>!&mdash;falling down, down,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[ 212]</a></span>
+down.... A crash, a whirr of clockwork, a rush of
+bran to my head&mdash;and I know no more. What
+follows is a dream&mdash;a horrible, confused nightmare&mdash;of
+lying among a heap of limp bodies&mdash;some armless,
+some legless, others (ah! the horror of it) <i>headless</i>!
+I grope blindly for my own limbs&mdash;they are intact;
+then I feel the place where I naturally expect to find
+my head&mdash;it is <i>gone</i>!... The shock is too much&mdash;I
+faint once more. And that is all.</p>
+
+<p>Thank goodness, it was only a dream&mdash;for here I
+am, in the same old nursery again! Not <i>all</i> a
+dream, either&mdash;or my pony-carriage would scarcely
+present such a damaged appearance. The <i>accident</i>
+was real. Then what&mdash;<i>what</i> has become of Joseph?
+I <i>must</i> find him&mdash;I must make him understand that
+I repent&mdash;that, for the future, I intend to be a
+changed doll!</p>
+
+<p><i>September.</i>&mdash;Still searching for Joseph. No trace
+of him. I seem to be a changed doll in more ways
+than one. My former set knows me not. The Ninepins
+do not stagger when I smile at them now; the
+Dice-box gapes open-mouthed at my greeting. I
+call upon the Composition Dolls&mdash;they are very
+polite; but it is quite clear that they don't remember
+me in the least! Alas! how soon one is forgotten
+in the world of Toys! Have no heart to recall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[ 213]</a></span>
+myself to them. I go, for the first time since my
+accident, to a convenient brass knob, in which I
+would once gaze at my reflected features by the hour.
+How indescribable are my sensations at the discovery
+that I have a <i>totally new head</i>&mdash;a china one! I, who
+used to look down on china dolls! It is a very
+decent head, in its way; quite neat and inoffensive,
+with smooth, shiny hair, which won't come down
+like the golden locks I <i>once</i> had. I am glad&mdash;yes,
+<i>glad</i> now&mdash;that Joseph has gone, and the home he
+used to occupy is deserted, and shut up. If he were
+here, <i>he</i> would not know me either. Now I can live
+single all my remaining days, in memory of him, and
+devote myself to doing good!</p>
+
+<p><i>October.</i>&mdash;Have entered on my new career. Am
+organising a Mission for Lost Toys, and a Clothing
+Club for Rag Dolls. To-day, while "slumming" in
+the lumber-closet, found my old acquaintance, the
+Dutch Doll in a <i>shocking</i> state of destitution&mdash;nothing
+on her but a piece of <i>tattered tissue-paper</i>! To think
+that my evil example and her own <i>senseless extravagance</i>
+have brought her to <i>this</i>! Gave her one of my old
+tea-gowns and a Sunday domino, but did not reveal
+myself. Feeling very sad and lonely: think I shall
+have to keep a mouse&mdash;I must have <i>something</i> to love
+me!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[ 214]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>October 15.</i>&mdash;Someone has taken poor dear Joseph's
+old house. I see a new doll, with a small but
+worldly black moustache and a very bad countenance,
+watching me as I pass the windows. Shall call and
+leave a scripture brick. It may do him good.</p>
+
+<p><i>October 16.</i>&mdash;Have called.... <i>Never</i> heard worse
+language from the lips of <i>any</i> doll! Came across
+my old admirer, the Ball, who is better, though still
+what I have heard the nursery governess describe as
+an "<i>oblate spheroid</i>." Of course, he did not recognise
+me.</p>
+
+<p><i>December.</i>&mdash;Have seen a good deal of the Doll
+with the worldly moustache lately. From certain
+symptoms, do not despair of reforming him&mdash;ultimately.
+He seems softening. Yesterday he told
+me he did not think he should live long. Yet he
+has a splendid constitution&mdash;the best porcelain. He
+is dreadfully cynical&mdash;seems so reckless about everything.
+If I could only reclaim him&mdash;for Joseph's
+sake!</p>
+
+<p>This afternoon I saw the yellow stand which the
+Wooden Captain used to occupy. What memories
+it recalled, ah me! Can he have disgraced himself
+and been "broke"? And am <i>I</i> responsible?</p>
+
+<p><i>Christmas Eve.</i>&mdash;Am sitting in my corner, my
+mouse curled comfortably at my feet, when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[ 215]</a></span>
+Walking Postman comes up with a letter&mdash;for <i>me</i>!
+It is from the Wicked Doll! He is very ill&mdash;<i>dying</i>,
+he thinks&mdash;and wishes to see me. How well I
+remember that <i>other</i> message which Joseph&mdash;but
+Joseph is taken, and the Ball still bounds! Well,
+I will go. It will be something to tell my Diary.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p><i>Christmas Day.</i>&mdash;Something <i>indeed</i>! How shall I
+begin my wondrous <i>incredible</i> tale? I reached the
+Doll's House, which looked gloomier and more
+deserted than ever, with the sullen glow of the
+dying fire reflected redly in its windows. The green
+door stood open&mdash;I went in. "Ha, ha! <i>trapped</i>!"
+cried a sneering voice behind me. It was the Wicked
+Doll! His letter was a <i>ruse</i>&mdash;he was as well as I
+was&mdash;and I&mdash;I was shut up there in that lonely
+house, entirely at his mercy!... It was a frightful
+position for any doll to be placed in; and yet,
+looking back on it now, I don't think I minded it
+so <i>very</i> much.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen!" he said, in response to my agonized
+entreaties. "Long, long ago, when I was young and
+innocent, a beautiful but heartless being bewitched
+me, kid and bran! I told my love&mdash;she mocked
+at me. Since then I have sworn, though she has
+escaped me, to avenge myself by sacrificing the life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[ 216]</a></span>
+of the first doll I could entice into my power. <i>You</i>
+are that doll. You must die!"... "I am quite
+prepared," I told him&mdash;"do your worst!" which
+seemed to confuse him very much. "I will," he
+said, "presently&mdash;presently; there is no hurry. You
+see," he explained, in a tone almost of apology,
+"in endeavouring to save her life (it was my last
+good action) I got my head smashed, and received
+the substitute I now wear, which, as you will observe,
+is that of an unmitigated villain. And it's no use
+having a head like that if you don't live <i>up</i> to it&mdash;<i>is</i>
+it, now? So&mdash;as I think I observed before&mdash;prepare
+for the worst!" "Don't talk about it any
+more&mdash;<i>do</i> it!" I said, and I breathed Joseph's name
+softly. But the Wicked Doll did nothing at all.
+I began to feel safer&mdash;it was so obvious that he
+hadn't the faintest notion <i>what</i> to do. "She treated
+me abominably," he said feebly; "<i>any</i> doll would
+have been annoyed at the heartless way in which
+Gloriana&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I could contain my feelings no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"Joseph!" I gasped (I had lost all fear of him),
+"you ridiculous old goose, don't you <i>know</i> me? <i>I</i>
+am Gloriana, and I have found you at last!" And
+with that I flung myself into his arms, and told
+him everything. I think he was more relieved than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[ 217]</a></span>
+anything. "So <i>you</i> are Gloriana!" he said. "It's
+dreadfully bewildering; but, to tell you the honest
+truth, I can't keep up this villainy business any
+longer. I haven't been brought up to it, and I
+don't understand how it's done. So I tell you what
+we'll do. If you'll leave off living up to <i>your</i> new
+head, I won't try to live up to <i>mine</i>!" And so we
+settled it.</p>
+
+<p><i>Postscript. December 31.</i>&mdash;We are to be married
+to-morrow. The Dutch Doll is to be my bridesmaid,
+and the Wooden Captain (who was only away on
+sick leave, after all) is coming up to be best man.
+I have seen the poor old Ball, and told him there
+will always be a corner for him in our new home.
+I am very, <i>very</i> happy. To think that Joseph should
+still care for his poor Gloriana, altered and homely
+as her once lovely features have now become! But
+Joseph (who is leaning over my shoulder and reading
+every word I write) stops me here to assure me that
+I am lovelier than ever in <i>his</i> eyes. And really&mdash;I
+don't know&mdash;perhaps I <i>am</i>. And in <i>other</i> persons'
+eyes, too, if it comes to that. I certainly don't
+intend to give up society just because I happen to
+be <i>married</i>!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[ 219]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[ 221]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>ELEVATING THE MASSES.</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">A Purely Imaginary Sketch.</span>)</h3>
+
+
+<p><i><span class="smcap">Argument</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Mrs. Flittermouse</span>, having got up a party to
+assist her in giving an Entertainment at the East End, has called
+a meeting for the purpose of settling the items in the programme.</i></p>
+
+<p><i><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flittermouse's</span> Drawing-room in Park Lane. Everybody
+discovered drinking tea, and chatting on matters totally
+unconnected with Philanthropy.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flittermouse</span> (<i>imploringly</i>). Now,
+<i>please</i>, everybody, <i>do</i> attend! It's quite impossible
+to settle anything while you're all
+talking about something else. (<i>Apologies, protests,
+constrained silence.</i>) Selina, dear, what do you think
+it would be best to begin with?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Dowager Lady Dampier</span>. My dear Fritilla,
+I have no suggestion to offer. You know my opinion
+about the whole thing. The people don't want to be
+elevated, and&mdash;if they did&mdash;entertaining them is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[ 222]</a></span>
+the proper means to set about it. But I don't wish
+to discourage you.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> Oh, but I think we could do so <i>much</i>
+to give them a taste for more rational and refined
+amusements, poor things, to wean them from the
+coarse pleasures which are all they have at present.
+Only we must really decide what each of us is going
+to do.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Perse-Weaver.</span> A violin solo is always
+popular. And my daughter Cecilia will be delighted
+to play for you. She has been taught by the
+best&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cecelia.</span> Oh, Mother, I couldn't, really! I've never
+played in public. I <i>know</i> I should break down!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Damp.</span> In that case, my dear, it would be
+certainly unwise on your part to attempt it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. P.-W.</span> Nonsense, Cecilia, nonsense. You
+<i>won't</i> break down, and it wouldn't matter in the least
+if you did. <i>They</i> wouldn't notice anything. And
+it will be such excellent practice for you to get
+accustomed to a platform, too. Of <i>course</i> she will
+play for you, dear Mrs. Flittermouse!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> It will be <i>so</i> good of you, Miss
+Weaver. And it won't be like playing to a <i>real</i>
+audience, you know&mdash;poor people are so easily pleased,
+poor dears. Then I will put that down to begin with.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[ 223]</a></span>
+(<i>She makes a note.</i>) Now we must have something
+quite different for the next&mdash;a reading or something.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Honor Hyndleggs.</span> A&mdash;nothin' <i>humorous</i>,
+I hope. I do think we ought to avoid anythin' like
+descendin' to their level, don't you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Lovegroove.</span> Might try something out of
+<i>Pickwick</i>. "<i>Bob Sawyer's Party</i>," you know. Can't
+go far wrong with anything out of Dickens.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Diova Rose.</span> Can't endure him myself. All
+his characters are so fearfully common; still&mdash;(<i>tolerantly</i>)
+I daresay it might amuse&mdash;a&mdash;that class of
+persons.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs Flitt.</span> I must say I agree with Lady Honor.
+We should try and aim as high as possible&mdash;and well,
+I think <i>not</i> Dickens, dear Mr. Lovegroove. <i>Tennyson</i>
+might do perhaps; he's written some charmin'
+pieces.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Lovegr.</span> Well, fact is, I don't go in for
+poetry much myself. But I'll read anythin' of his
+you think I'm equal to.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> Why&mdash;a&mdash;really, it's so long since I&mdash;and
+I'm afraid I haven't one of his poems in the
+house. I suppose they are down at Barn-end. But
+I could send to Cutt and Hawthorn's. I daresay <i>they</i>
+would have a copy somewhere.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Sibson-Gabler.</span> Surely Tennyson is rather<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[ 224]</a></span>
+&mdash;a&mdash;retrograde? Why not read them something to
+set them <i>thinking</i>? It would be an interesting experiment
+to try the effect of that marvellous Last Scene
+in the <i>Doll's House</i>. I'd love to read it. It would be
+like a breath of fresh air to them!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. P.-W.</span> Oh, I've seen that at the Langham
+Hall. You remember, Cecilia, my taking you there?
+And Corney Grain played <i>Noah</i>. To be sure&mdash;we
+were <i>quite</i> amused by it all.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss S.-G.</span> (<i>coldly</i>). This is <i>not</i> amusing&mdash;it's a play
+of Ibsen's.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> Is that the man who wrote the piece
+at the Criterion&mdash;what is it, <i>The Toy Shop</i>? Wyndham
+acted in it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Damp.</span> No, no; Ibsen is the person there's
+been all this fuss about in the papers&mdash;he goes in for
+unconventionality and all that. I may be wrong, but
+I think it is <i>such</i> a mistake to have anything unconventional
+in an Entertainment for the People.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> But if he's being <i>talked</i> about, dear
+Lady Dampier, people might like to know something
+about him. But perhaps we'd better leave Ibsen
+open, then. Now, what shall we have next?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Skipworth.</span> I tell you what would fetch them&mdash;a
+skirt-dance. I'll dance for you&mdash;like a shot. It
+would be no end of fun doin' it on a regular platform,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[ 225]</a></span>
+and I've been studyin' Flossie Frillington, at the
+Inanity, till I've caught her style exactly.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 398px;">
+<img src="images/p225.png" width="398" height="600" alt="&quot;To-night is ours!&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;To-night is ours!&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[ 227]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Kempton.</span> Oh, I say, you can give her a stone
+and a beatin' any day, give you my word you can.
+She doesn't put anythin' like the go into it you do.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i><span class="smcap">Miss S.</span> accepts this tribute with complacency.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> A skirt-dance will be the very thing.
+It's sure to please the people we shall bring over for
+it&mdash;and of course they'll be in the front rows. Yes,
+I must put <i>that</i> down. We ought to have a song
+next. Mrs. Tuberose, you promised to come and sing
+for us&mdash;you will, won't you?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Tuberose.</span> Delighted! I rather thought of
+doing a dear little song Stephan Otis has just brought
+out. It's called "<i>Forbidden Fruit</i>," and he wrote it
+expressly for me. It goes like this.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>She sits down at the piano, and sings, with infinite
+expression and tenderness.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>
+"Only the moon espies our bliss,<br />
+Through the conscious clusters of clematis,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shedding star-sweet showers.</span><br />
+To-morrow the world will have gone amiss&mdash;<br />
+Now I gaze in your eyes, love, I thrill to your kiss&mdash;<br />
+So let us remember naught but this:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That To-night is ours!</span><br />
+Yes, this passionate, perilous, exquisite night&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is Ours!"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[ 228]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Several Voices.</span> Charmin'.... Otis puts so
+much real feeling into all his songs ... quite a little
+gem! &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Damp.</span> I should have thought myself that it
+was rather advanced&mdash;for an East-End audience&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Tuberose</span> (<i>nettled</i>). Really, dear Lady
+Dampier, if people see nothing to object in it <i>here</i>, I
+don't see why they should be more particular at the
+East-End!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> Oh, no,&mdash;and as if it matters what
+the <i>words</i> are in the song. I daresay if one heard
+<i>their</i> songs&mdash;&mdash;Now we want another song&mdash;something
+as different as possible.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Gardinier.</span> Heard a capital song at the
+"Pav." the other night&mdash;something about a Cock-eyed
+Kipper. Just suit my voice. I could easily get
+the words and music, and do that for you&mdash;if you
+like.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Several Voices.</span> A Cock-eyed Kipper! It sounds
+too killing! Oh, we <i>must</i> have that!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Damp.</span> Might I ask what kind of creature
+a&mdash;a "Cock-eyed Kipper" may be?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Gard.</span> Oh, well, I suppose it's a sort of a
+dried herring&mdash;with a squint, don't you know.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Damp.</span> I see no humour in making light of
+a personal deformity, I must say.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[ 229]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Gard.</span> Oh, don't you? <i>They</i> will&mdash;it'll go
+with a scream there!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Miss Diova Rose.</span> Yes, poor dears&mdash;and we
+mustn't mind being just a little vulgar for once&mdash;to
+cheer them up.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Honor.</span> I have been to the Pavilion and the
+Tivoli myself, and I heard nothing to object to. I
+know I was much more amused than I ever am at
+theatres&mdash;<i>they</i> bore me to death.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Bagotrix.</span> We might finish up with <i>Mrs.
+Jarley's Waxworks</i>, you know. Some of you can be
+the figures, and I'll come on in a bonnet and shawl
+as <i>Mrs. Jarley</i>, and wind you up and describe you.
+I've done it at lots of places in the country; brought
+in personal allusions and all that sort of thing, and
+made everybody roar.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Damp.</span> But will the East-Enders understand
+your personal allusions?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Bag.</span> Well, you see, the people in the front
+rows will, which is all <i>I</i> want.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Honor</span> (<i>suspiciously</i>). Isn't <i>Mrs. Jarley</i> out
+of <i>Pickwick</i>, though? That's Dickens, surely!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Bag.</span> (<i>reassuringly</i>). Nothing but the name,
+Lady Honor. I make up all the patter myself, so
+that'll be all right&mdash;just good-natured chaff, you
+know; if anybody's offended&mdash;as I've known them
+to be&mdash;it's no fault of mine.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[ 230]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> Oh, I'm sure you will make it funny,&mdash;and
+about getting someone to preside&mdash;I suppose
+we ought to ask the Vicar of the nearest church?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lady Honor.</span> Wouldn't it be better to get somebody&mdash;a&mdash;more
+in Society, don't you know?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mrs. Flitt.</span> And he might offer to pay for hiring
+the Hall, and the other expenses. I never thought
+of that. I'll see whom I can get. Really I think it
+ought to be great fun, and we shall have the satisfaction
+of feeling we are doing real good, which is
+such a comfort!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[ 231]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[ 233]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BOOKMAKERS ON THE BEACH.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Sketch at a Sea-side Race Meeting.</span></h3>
+
+<p><i>The Sands at Baymouth, where some pony and horse races
+are being run. By the Grand Stand, and under the wall of
+the esplanade, about a dozen bookmakers, perched on old packing-cases,
+are clamouring with their customary energy. The public,
+however, for some reason seems unusually deaf to their blandishments
+and disinclined for speculation, and the bookmakers, after
+shouting themselves hoarse with little or no result, are beginning
+to feel discouraged.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bookmakers</span> (<i>antiphonally</i>). Evens on the
+field! Three to one bar one! Five to one
+bar two! Six to one bar one! Even money
+<i>Beeswing</i>! Six to one <i>Popgun</i>! Come on 'ere.
+Two to one on the field! What do you want
+to <i>do</i>?</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The public apparently want to look another way.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Bookmaker</span> (<i>to <span class="smcap">Second Bookmaker</span></i>). Not
+much 'ere to-day! Shawn't get no roast baked and
+biled this journey, eh?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[ 234]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second B.</span> (<i>with deep disgust</i>). They ain't <i>got</i> no
+money! Baymouth's going down. Why, this might
+be a bloomin' Sunday-school treat! Blest if I
+believe they know what we're 'ere <i>for</i>!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Third B.</span> (<i>after pausing to refresh himself, sardonically
+to <span class="smcap">Fourth Bookmaker</span></i>). De-lightful weather,
+William!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">William</span> (<i>in a similar tone of irony</i>). What a
+glorious day, Percy! Sech a treat to see all the
+people enjoyin' theirselves without any o' the silly
+speculation yer <i>do</i> find sometimes on occasions like
+this! (<i>He accepts the bottle his friend passes, and
+drinks.</i>) 'Ere's better luck to all!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fifth B.</span> (<i>pathetically</i>). Don't leave your little
+Freddy out! (<i>They don't leave their little <span class="smcap">Freddy</span> out.</i>)
+Cheer up, William, there's 'appier days in store;
+there'll be Jersey comin' soon. We'll be orf to the
+sunny south! (<i>To a stranger who comes up to him.</i>)
+Why, Uncle, you don't say it's you! How <i>well</i>
+you're looking! Shake 'ands and 'ave a bit on,
+jest for ole sake's sake! (<i>The stranger proceeds to
+introduce himself as the Secretary, and to demand a fee.</i>)
+What! pay you five shillins for standin' 'ere wastin'
+my time and voice like this? Not me! Why, I
+ain't took two blessed sorcepans since I bin 'ere!
+(<i>The Secretary remains firm.</i>) I won't do it, my boy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[ 235]</a></span>
+Not on <i>prinserple</i>, I won't. I wouldn't give you five
+shillins not if your tongue was 'anging down on to
+your boots&mdash;so there! (<i>The Secretary does not attempt
+so violent an appeal to his better nature, but calls a police-inspector.</i>)
+'Ere, I'd sooner git down and chuck the
+show altogether; jest to mark my contempt for such
+goings on! (<i>He descends from his box; takes down his
+sign, unscrews his pole, folds up his professional triptych,
+and departs in a state of virtuous indignation only to be
+expressed by extreme profanity, while the Secretary proceeds
+unmoved to collect payments from the others; who
+eventually compromise the claims for half-a-crown.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sam Satchell</span> (<i>"from Southampton"</i>). Now
+then, you gentlemen and aristocratic tradesmen,
+where <i>are</i> you all? Don't any o' you know <i>anything</i>?
+Come on 'ere. (<i>He stops an elderly rustic.</i>)
+You've got a fancy, I can see! (<i>The rustic denies the
+impeachment, grinning.</i>) Git along with yer, yer
+artful ole puss, then, and don't keep gentlemen away
+as wants to bet! (<i>To a Yeomanry trooper.</i>) Come
+along, my ole soldier-boy, give it a name! (<i>His
+old soldier-boy declines to give it any name, and
+passes on.</i>) Call yerself a warrior bold, and afraid
+o' riskin' 'alf-a-crown! Why, yer Queen and
+country orter be ashamed o' yer! (<i>As a young
+farmer in riding-gaiters comes up, with the evident</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[ 236]</a></span>
+<i>intention of business.</i>) Ah, <i>you</i> don't forget the old
+firm, I see.... What, four to one not good enough
+for you? You won't get no better odds, go where
+you <i>like</i>! I suppose you expeck me to make you
+a present o' the money? (<i>The farmer moves on.</i>)
+I dunno what's <i>come</i> to 'em all. <i>I</i> never see nothing
+like it in all <i>my</i> life!</p>
+
+
+<p><i>In the Grand Stand.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Glib Person</span>, <i>in a tall hat</i> (<i>as he picks his way
+up and down the benches, the occupants of which treat
+him with intolerant indifference</i>). I'm not a bookmaker,
+ladies and gentlemen; don't have that
+impression of me for a moment! I'm simply an
+amateur, and an independent gentleman o' means,
+like any of yourselves. You all know more than <i>I</i>
+do. I don't come 'ere with any intention o' winning
+your money&mdash;far from it. I'm wishful to settle and
+live among you. I may eventually put up as your
+member; and, if so, when I take my place in Parliament
+I shall be in a position to testify that the
+Baymouth people are extremely cautious as to the
+manner in which they invest their money on 'orse-racing'!
+Yes, I'm 'ere on beyarf of the Sporting
+League, just to prove how free a meeting like this
+is from the evils o' gambling. I don't come 'ere to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[ 237]</a></span>
+<i>rob</i> yer. I want yer all to win. I like to see yer
+bright and shining faces around me; I like the
+friverolity and reckereation and the conviverality of
+the thing, that's all. I'll tell yer how it is. I've a
+rich ole aunt, and she puts fifty pound into my 'ands,
+and sez, "Jacky," she sez, "I love those dear Baymouth
+people, and I want you to take this 'ere
+money and lay it out among 'em in moieties, and
+make 'em rich and 'appy." You can see for yourselves.
+I've no tickets and no parryfernalia, excep'
+this little pocket-book, where I enter any bets you
+honour me with. Come, Miss win a pair o' those
+three-and-sixpenny gloves at Chickerell's, the ex-Mayor's,
+to oblige <i>me</i>! Did I tread on your corn,
+Sir? I assure you it was the last thing I
+intended.... "You knew I'd do it afore I'd
+done?"... Well, Sir, if you've sech a gift o'
+seeing into futoority as that, why not make something
+out of it now? Three to one bar one.
+<i>Kitty I'm</i> barring. Thank <i>you</i>, Sir; 'alf-a-crown
+to seven and six on <i>Sportsman</i>. I tell you candidly&mdash;you've
+got the winner. The favourite won't win.
+Now, then, all you others, where's your Baymouth
+pluck? I orfered you thirty to one <i>Beeswing</i> last
+race; and you wouldn't take it. And <i>Beeswing</i> won,
+and you lost the chance o' making yer fortunes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[ 238]</a></span>
+Don't blame <i>me</i> if the same thing 'appens again.
+I'm on'y bettin', as I told you, for my own amusement,
+and to get rid o' the money! (<i>&amp;c.</i>, <i>&amp;c.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sam Satchell</span> (<i>whom the apathy of the public
+has apparently reduced to a state of defiant buffoonery</i>).
+Even money <i>Daredevil</i>, you rascals! And why the
+blazes don't ye take it? Come on. I'll take two
+little bits o' twos that <i>Kitty</i> don't win! Four to
+one against ole bread-and-butter <i>Tommy</i>, over there
+in the corner! Eleven and a 'alf to three quarters
+to two against <i>Kitty</i>. "What har the Wild Waves
+say-hay-ing?" Two <i>Kitties</i> to three <i>Daredevils</i>
+against a bloomin' goat-chaise? On the Baymouth
+Durby I'm bettin'!</p>
+
+
+<p><i>At the Close of the Last Race&mdash;Three horses have started;
+the favourite has led to the turn and then bolted up the
+shingle, but, as the tide has come in and almost covered the course,
+and the other two horses by declining to face the water have let him
+in again, he wins after an exciting finish, up to the girths in sea-water;
+and such bookmakers as have succeeded in obtaining
+patronage are paying up with as much cheerfulness as they can
+command.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Bookmaker</span> (<i>to eager backer</i>). "Wait a bit,
+my boy, wait <i>a bit</i>, the number hasn't gone up yet,
+my son. Where's your ticket&mdash;forty-two? (<i>His
+Clerk refers to book.</i>) That's <i>Squibbs</i>. I pay over
+<i>winners</i>&mdash;not losers. (<i>To the public.</i>) Come along<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[ 239]</a></span>
+and fetch your money, the bullion's 'ere! (<i>To
+another backer.</i>) What was yours&mdash;threes? ("Fours
+<i>I</i>'ve got," <i>from his Clerk.</i>) Why don't yer arst for
+what you're entitled to, instead o' makin' me arst my
+clurk what your bet was? There's your money&mdash;take
+it and go."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 435px;">
+<img src="images/p239.png" width="435" height="600" alt="&quot;Why the blazes don&#39;t ye take it?&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;Why the blazes don&#39;t ye take it?&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[ 241]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The backer departs wealthier but abashed.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second B.</span> I'm payin' over that 'ard-run race,
+gentlemen, men and 'orses exhorsted! I'm payin'
+over <i>Susan</i>&mdash;dear ole Susey-hanner! who wants their
+money? The Bank o' England's 'ere, gentlemen,
+Mr. Frankie Fairprice and his ole friend, who's
+always by his side and never looses 'im!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Third B.</span> (<i>who has had to borrow largely from his
+brethren to meet his engagements</i>). Are you all done
+now? (<i>To the crowd.</i>) Then I'll wish yer good
+afternoon, thank ye all for yer comp'ny, but you've
+bin bloomin' bad fun to-day, and you don't ketch me
+playin' Patience on a monument at any more o' yer
+blanky sand 'oppin' 'andicaps, that's all!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>However, the local newspapers report next day
+that "A number of the sporting fraternity were
+in attendance to do business and apparently
+carried on a brisk and profitable trade"&mdash;which
+only shows how difficult it is for the casual
+observer to form an accurate opinion.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[ 243]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>'IGHER UP!</h2>
+
+<h3>(<span class="smcap">A Sketch Outside an Omnibus.</span>)</h3>
+
+
+<p><i>The Omnibus is on its progress from Piccadilly to the Bank;
+the weather is raw and unpleasant, and the occupants of the
+garden-seats on the roof of the vehicle are&mdash;for once in a way&mdash;mostly
+men.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First Passenger</span> (<i>to <span class="smcap">Second</span>, an acquaintance</i>).
+I see young Bashaway the other day.
+(<i>Significantly.</i>) Jest been to see his father,
+so he told me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second Passenger</span> (<i>with interest</i>). <i>'Ad</i> he though?
+And 'ow did he <i>find</i> him?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First P.</span> Fustrate, young Jim said; didn't know
+when he'd seen him lookin' better&mdash;(<i>with sentiment</i>)&mdash;quite
+like his old self!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second P.</span> (<i>heartily</i>). That <i>is</i> good 'earin', that is!
+(<i>Reflectively.</i>) Seems <i>rum</i>, though, come to think
+of it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[ 246]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First P.</span> 'Ow d'yer <i>mean</i>&mdash;rum? It's no more
+than what yer'd expect, bein' where he is. Look at
+the <i>air</i> o' the place&mdash;there ain't a 'elthier situation
+all round London, to my mind!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second P.</span> No, that's right enough; and, from
+all I 'ear, the food's well cooked and served reg'lar,
+if it <i>is</i> plain.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First P.</span> Ah, and Bill <i>enjoys</i> his meals now, he
+does&mdash;the work gives him a appetite, and it's years,
+to my certain knowledge, since he done a stroke,
+and o' course he ain't allowed no drink&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second P.</span> And <i>that's</i> enough, of itself, to be the
+savin' of 'im, the way he was!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First P.</span> Then, yer see, there's the reg'lar hours,
+and the freedom from worry, and the like, and
+nothink on his mind, and the place with every
+sanitary improvement and that&mdash;why, he owns his
+own self it's bin the makin' of 'im. And from
+what young Jim was a tellin' me, it appears that
+if Bill goes on gittin' good-conduck marks at the
+rate he's doin', there'll be a nice little sum doo
+to 'im when he's done his time at Wormwood
+Scrubs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second P.</span> (<i>sympathetically</i>). Well, and that makes
+suthin' to look forward to, don't it, when he <i>does</i> git
+let out. Talkin' o' that, you've known 'im longer 'n<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[ 247]</a></span>
+what I 'ave. Do you 'appen to know what it was
+as he got inter trouble <i>for</i>?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">First P.</span> (<i>with the consciousness of superior delicacy</i>).
+Lor' bless yer, I never thought o' arskin' 'im the
+question.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Second P.</span> (<i>with feeble self-assertion under this
+implied rebuke</i>). Well, it all depends on 'ow yer <i>put</i>
+a question o' that sort.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He is silent for the remainder of the journey.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Chatty Passenger</span> (<i>to a <span class="smcap">Contradictious
+Passenger</span>, as the 'bus passes Trafalgar Square</i>).
+Pretty these 'ere fountains look, with the water
+playin', don't they?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Contradicious Passenger</span>. The fountings
+are well enough, if it wasn't fur the water&mdash;norsty
+messy stuff, I call it.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty P.</span> (<i>abandoning the fountains</i>). It's
+wonderful what an amount o' traffic there is in the
+Strand, ain't it?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Contrad. P.</span> Nothink to what it was forty years
+ago!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>His neighbour, not feeling in a position to deny it,
+subsides.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Driver</span> (<i>to a <span class="smcap">Passenger with a Badge</span>,
+immediately behind him</i>). 'Ow is it you're orf yer
+keb to-day, Bob? Taking a day orf, or what?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[ 248]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Passenger with a Badge</span>. Not much.
+Goin' up to Bow Street to gimmy evidence in a
+collision case&mdash;that's all.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Driver</span> (<i>dubiously</i>). Bow Street! Ain't that
+rorther shovin' yer 'ed in the lion's mouth, eh?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">P. with a B.</span> (<i>with virtuous serenity</i>). Not
+<i>it</i>! What ha' they got agen me all the time I bin
+licensed? Only three drunks and a loiter!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty P.</span> (<i>returning to the charge</i>). Orful
+state the roads are in with all this mud! I s'pose
+that's the London County Council, eh?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Contrad. P.</span> London Kayounty Kayouncil!
+No, it ain't&mdash;nothink o' the sort! I'll <i>tell</i> yer 'oo
+it is, if yer want to know; it's Gladstone!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty P.</span> (<i>mildly surprised, but glad to have
+discovered common ground</i>). I see you're a Conservative&mdash;like
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Contrad. P.</span> That's jest where you're
+<i>wrong</i>! I ain't no Conservative, nor yet I don't
+want none o' Gladstone neither. I'm a Radikil,
+<i>I</i> am. John Burns and Ben Tillett&mdash;that's <i>my</i>
+lot!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty P.</span> (<i>reluctantly relinquishing politics</i>).
+Ah, well, every man's got a right to form his own
+opinions, ain't he?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Contrad. P.</span> No, he <i>ain't</i>&mdash;not if he goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[ 249]</a></span>
+and forms <i>wrong</i> 'uns! (<i>A pause.</i>) 'Ave yer got
+the time about yer?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty P.</span> (<i>accepting this as a sign of
+softening</i>). I'm sorry to say I come out without my
+watch this morning, or else&mdash;&mdash;But there's plenty
+o' clocks about as'll tell yer.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Contrad. P.</span> (<i>with intense disdain</i>). Clocks!
+You don't ketch <i>me</i> trusting no clocks&mdash;with no
+two of 'em alike!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty P.</span> (<i>as they pass a well-known watchmaker's</i>).
+Well, 'ow about that clock with the
+figgers? Won't <i>that</i> do yer? They set it to
+Grinnidge time every hour, so it's bound to be
+right!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Contrad. P.</span> (<i>as descends</i>). There yer <i>are</i>!
+Think I'd put my faith in a clock as 'as to be set
+right every hour? 'Tain't <i>likely</i>! Good-day to
+yer!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Chatty P.</span> So long! (<i>To himself.</i>) A
+pleasant feller enough, I dessay, if you leave the
+subjec' to <i>'im</i>!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Driver</span> (<i>to smart <span class="smcap">Hansom Cabman</span></i>). Now then,
+outer the way with that 'ere 'Ackney keb o' yours!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Hansom Cabman</span> (<i>with hauteur</i>). As it 'appens,
+it <i>ain't</i> a 'Ackney cab&mdash;it's a private kerridge,
+this is!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[ 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Driver.</span> Ah, I might ha' known <i>you</i> was a
+hammytoor by yer silly hasslike method o' conducting
+yer business! [<i>Drives on triumphant.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Political Passenger</span> (<i>with a panacea&mdash;to a
+<span class="smcap">"Knowledgable" Passenger</span></i>). No, I don't want
+no 'Ome Rule, nor yet no Parish Counsels, nor
+nothink o' <i>that</i>. What <i>I</i> wanter see interdooced
+'ere is Tereenial Porliments.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Knowledgable Passenger</span> (<i>with respect</i>).
+Tereenial Parliments? I don't know as I've 'eard
+o' <i>them</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Pol. P.</span> Ain't yer? Well, they're what we
+<i>want</i>. Why, they've 'ad 'em in America, they've
+ad 'em in Ostralia, they've 'ad 'em in Orstria; and
+everywhere, mind yer, <i>everywhere</i> they've been in
+operation they've turned out a success!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Kn. P.</span> Then it's 'igh time <i>we</i> 'ad 'em.
+<i>What</i> is it they're called, again?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Pol. P.</span> Tee-reen-ial Porliments. It stands
+to <i>reason</i> they work well. There they <i>are</i>, a settin'
+eight months in the year fur seven year on end&mdash;somethink's
+<i>bound</i> to come of it! I'd like to see
+any o' <i>our</i> lot settin' like that! It's a pity we
+don't take more pattern by America in our law-makin'.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[ 251]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 457px;">
+<img src="images/p251.png" width="457" height="600" alt="&quot;Thash where &#39;tis, yer come on me too late!&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;Thash where &#39;tis, yer come on me too late!&quot;</span>
+</div><p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[ 252]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[ 253]</a></span></p><p>The <span class="smcap">Kn. P.</span> Except in our criminal law. Why,
+I've 'eard there's States out there where a man
+may go and commit a crime, d'ye see, and once he
+gits across the boundary from one State into another&mdash;like
+as it might be a line across this 'ere street
+like, d'ye see&mdash;once he's over that, they can't do
+nothink to 'im!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Pol. P.</span> (<i>thoughtfully</i>). Ah, that wouldn't
+never do '<i>ere</i>, that wouldn't!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The <span class="smcap">Conductor</span> comes up to collect fares.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Conductor</span> (<i>to a <span class="smcap">Sleepy Passenger</span> in a corner</i>).
+Now then, fare, please?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Sleepy Passenger</span> (<i>with manly regret</i>). I
+ain't gorrit, ole pal. If yer'd asht me jes' two
+minutes afore I gorrup, I could ha' done it for yer,
+but I took jes' anorrer glash an' blued th' lot. No
+man can say I don' part s'long's I gorrer <i>money</i>;
+no freehandeder man anywheresh'n wharri am; but
+yer come on me too late. (<i>Shaking his head reproachfully.</i>)
+Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cond.</span> 'Ere, I ain't goin' to stand no nonsense!
+If yer 'aven't got the money, git down orf o' my
+bus, and quick, too!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Sl. P.</span> Ged <i>down</i>? An' <i>quick</i>! You wouldn'
+tor' li' that if you'd sheen wharrer bloomin' 'ard job
+I 'ad to get <i>up</i>! [<i>He resumes his slumber.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cond.</span> (<i>passing on, softened</i>). I can't go and break<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[ 254]</a></span>
+the beggar's neck for tuppence, and he's got it
+somewhere about him, as likely as not. (<i>To a
+<span class="smcap">Litigious Passenger</span>.</i>) Tuppence is the fare, Sir,
+if <i>you</i> please.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Litigious Passenger</span>. One penny is the
+legal fare, and all I intend to pay. I know the law!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cond.</span> And so do I. It's wrote up tuppence
+inside the bus. If yer ain't going to pay more,
+yer'd better git down; ye've 'ad over your penn'orth
+a'ready!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Litig. P.</span> (<i>with spirit</i>). I decline to get down.
+I insist on being taken to the Bank for my penny.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cond.</span> Oh, <i>do</i> yer? We'll see about that.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>He stops the 'bus and calls a <span class="smcap">Constable</span>, to whom
+he briefly explains the situation.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Constable</span> (<i>pacifically, from below, to the <span class="smcap">Litig. P.</span></i>).
+Come, Sir, don't block the traffic, like this 'ere!
+Either pay the man his fare or get down&mdash;one of
+the two.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Litig. P.</span> (<i>from the roof</i>). I have a legal
+right to remain here if I like!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Const.</span> That may be, Sir; but if you do, this
+man can summons you that's all.</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Litig. P.</span> (<i>warming with the joy of battle</i>).
+That's just what I <i>want</i> him to do! Can't I <i>make</i>
+him summon me?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[ 255]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cond.</span> (<i>disgusted</i>). 'Ere, 'ang it all! <i>do</i> yer think
+I'm goin' to cart you 'arf over London fur a penny,
+and throw yer in the luxury of a lawsoot? 'Ere's
+yer penny back, and I give yer the ride free,
+<i>there</i>!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Litig. P.</span> (<i>accepting the penny, and descending
+with dignity</i>). Very well; and let me tell you this,
+it was just as well you gave way when you did, for
+I was quite prepared to carry the case to the House
+of Lords!</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cond.</span> Ah! and I s'pose yer think yer'd git <i>there</i>
+for a penny?</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i>The Omnibus goes on before the <span class="smcap">Litigious Person</span>
+has time to think over such an obvious repartee
+as asking the <span class="smcap">Constable</span> to take the man's
+number.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[ 257]</a></span>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>AT A HIGHLAND CATTLE AUCTION.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>A Yard. In the open space between the rows of pens the
+<span class="smcap">Auctioneer</span> is trying to dispose of some horses which are trotted
+out one by one in the usual fashion.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Auctioneer</span> (<i>spectacled, red-bearded,
+canny, slightly Arcadian touch imparted by straw
+hat, and a sprig of heather in his button-hole</i>).
+What'll I say for this, noo? (<i>A horse of a meditative
+mien is just brought in.</i>) Here's a beast, and a very
+good beast, from Lochaber! (<i>The bystanders remain
+unmoved.</i>) He was bred by Meester MacFarlane, o'
+Drumtappit, and ye'll all ha' haird on him as the
+biggest breeder in these pairts. (<i>Heads are shaken,
+so much as to intimate that this particular animal does
+not do Mr. MacFarlane justice.</i>) Trot him up an'
+doon a bit, boy, and show his action&mdash;stan' away
+back there! <i>(With affected concern</i>.) Don't curb him
+so tight&mdash;be careful now, or ye'll do meeschief to
+yourself an' others! (<i>As the horse trots past them,</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[ 260]</a></span>
+<i>several critics slap it disrespectfully on the hind-quarters&mdash;a
+liberty which it bears with meekness.</i>) There's a
+pace for ye&mdash;he's a guid woorker, a gran' beast&mdash;hoo
+much shall we say for him? (<i>Nobody seems able
+to express his appreciation of the grand beast in figures.</i>)
+Just to stairt ye then&mdash;twenty poon! (<i>Even the
+animal himself appears slightly staggered by this sum;
+bystanders are quietly derisive; <span class="smcap">Auctioneer</span> climbs
+rapidly down without interruption till he reaches six
+pounds, when he receives his first bid.</i>) Sex poon' is
+bed for 'm&mdash;is there ony advance on sex poon?
+(<i>Someone in the background:&mdash;"Fefteen shellin'!"</i>)
+Sex-fefteen&mdash;noo, Meester McRobbie, wull ye no
+luik this way? (<i><span class="smcap">Mr. McR.</span> responds by a decided
+negative.</i>) Ye won't? Ah, I never got ony guid
+from ye&mdash;'cept when I didn't meet ye. (<i>This piece
+of Scotch "wut" raises a laugh at <span class="smcap">Mr.McR.'s</span> expense,
+but does not affect the bidding, which still languishes.</i>)
+Then, he's going at sex-fefteen&mdash;for the last time.
+Whaur's my bedder at sex-fefteen? (<i>Repentance or
+modesty prevents the bidder from coming forward, and the
+<span class="smcap">Auctioneer</span> continues, more in grief than anger.</i>) Eh,
+this is too bad noo&mdash;I'll thank no man for making
+me a bed, 'cept those that are meant in airnest.
+No one bed onything for a beast like this! Then
+I hae to tell ye ye've not bed near up to the resairve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[ 261]</a></span>
+price on it. (<i>Suddenly becomes weary of the animal.</i>)
+Tak' it awa'. (<i>The next horse is led in.</i>) Now, here's
+a beast that's well-known, I'm thenkin'. (<i>The
+general expression signifies that its reputation is not
+altogether to its credit.</i>) There's a well-bred mare&mdash;open
+up, and let her show hersel'. (<i>The mare is
+shown, but fails to excite competition.</i>) Ah, ye'll ony
+buy screws to-day, an' not the nice things at a'&mdash;tak'
+her away. (<i>The mare is taken out ignominiously;
+<span class="smcap">Auctioneer</span>, followed by crowd, leads the way to where a
+pony and trap are standing harnessed.</i>) Noo, I'm gaun
+to pit up the pony an' van&mdash;just show them hoo she
+goes in hairness, boy. (<i>To intrusive collie.</i>) Out of
+the way, dug, in case ye get your feet smashed.
+(<i>Trap starts off, and is driven out of sight.</i>) Whaur's
+the laddie gaun ta? Thenks he'll show himsel' at
+Nairn, maybe! Ah, here she comes. (<i>Trap returns
+at a modest pace.</i>) Stan' back, noo, all of ye; give
+her room. I'll sell the mare first, and a beauty she
+is&mdash;what shell we say? Ten poons&mdash;and she's a
+nice one! Well, stairt her at five, she may get up.
+(<i>Bidding gets up to ten pounds, where it stops.</i>) Then
+she goes at ten, and I'm very glad she's gaun to a
+gude auld friend o' mine&mdash;Meester McKenzie, o'
+Glenbannock. Wull ye say five mair, and take the
+hairness, Meester McKenzie? It's <i>richt</i> hairness!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[ 262]</a></span>
+(<i><span class="smcap">Mr. McK.</span> declines to be tempted.</i>) Well, I'm sorry
+ye wull na, I'd ha liked (<i>sentimentally, as if it had been
+the dream of his life</i>) for the mare an' the hairness to
+go togither and no to pairt them&mdash;but as 'tis, it
+canna be helped. We'll pass on to the pegs, if you
+please. (<i>Passes to a row of pens containing pigs, and
+mounts some planks placed along the top.</i>) Now, these
+are some proper pegs. (<i>A rush is made for the rails
+enclosing the pigs, which instantly become self-conscious
+and redouble their grunts.</i>) Noo, laddies, laddies, it's
+no fair o' ye taking up a' the room i' that way. I'm
+quite sure there's a lot o' ye in front that's no buying
+pegs&mdash;ye hanna the luik o' pairsons that buy pegs.
+Stan' by for shame, and don't keep them that comes
+to buy, where they canna see sae much as a tail.
+Hoo much apiece for these palefaced pegs? Ye've
+an awfu' guid view o' them there, Mr. Ferguson,&mdash;-luik
+this way once again for forrty and threepence.
+(<i>Persuasively.</i>) It'll soun' better wi' the threepence.
+Gaun' for forty an' three. (<i>The owner of the pigs calls
+out "No!"</i>) I thocht I made a law here that people
+having pegs should gie me the resairve at the time&mdash;see
+what ye do now, Peter MacPhairson, make a
+fule of the buyers and a fule o' mysel'!&mdash;but (<i>with
+tolerant contempt</i>) Peter is not a strong man, we
+must no be haird on Peter. (<i>Roar from crowd;</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[ 263]</a></span>
+<i>disappearance of <span class="smcap">Mr. MacPh.</span></i>) I'll cancel no more
+sales that way, however, as I eentimate to ye once
+for a'.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">'Arry</span> (<i>on tour from Town&mdash;to his admiring friend</i>).
+I say, Charley, what d'yer bet I don't talk to some
+of these chaps in their own lingo?</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Charley.</span> What a fellow you are! Mind what
+you are about, that's all.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">'Arry</span> (<i>going up to an elderly person in the only Scotch
+cap visible</i>). Hech, Sair, but yon's a braw bonnie
+wee bit piggie fur a body to tak' a richt gude wullie
+waucht wi' gin ye meet him comin' thro' the rye!</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Person in the Scotch Cap</span> (<i>who happens to
+be a retired Colonel in a Highland Regiment, who is
+somewhat careless in his attire</i>). I think you will find
+that sort of thing better appreciated after you've
+got home.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">[<i><span class="smcap">'Arry</span> returns to <span class="smcap">Charley</span>, feeling much smaller
+than he allows his friend to perceive.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[ 265]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/3star.png" width="450" height="143" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE COUNTRY OF COCKAIGNE.</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Monologue&mdash;With a Moral.</span></h3>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>An airless Court in a London back Street. <span class="smcap">Time</span>&mdash;August.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Jimmy</span> (<i>aged eight, to Florrie, aged seven</i>). No, I
+ain't comin' to the Reckereation Groun', not
+jess yit, I carn't.... I'm goin' ter wyte about
+'ere till the lidy comes.... Why, 'er as is comin'
+to see my Muvver 'bout sendin' me fur a fortnight in
+the kerntry.... Yus, where I was larst year....
+It's settled as I'm ter go agine&mdash;leastways as <i>good</i> as
+settled. My Farver 'e've sent in a happlication to
+the K'mitty, and Teacher 'e sez 'e kin reckermend
+me, an' Mr. and Mrs. Delves&mdash;them as 'ad the cottidge
+where I went afore&mdash;they've arst fur to 'ave me
+agin&mdash;so you see, Florrie, it's all <i>right</i>. On'y I carn't
+settle to nuffink afore I know when I'm goin', an'
+about the trine an' that. Yer 'ave to roide in a trine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[ 268]</a></span>
+to git to the kerntry, yer know.... Wot, ain't yer
+never bin there?... Yer'd wanter fawst enough
+if yer knoo what it was loike.... There's grorss
+there, an' trees an' that.... Na-ow, a <i>lot</i> better 'n
+the Reckereation Groun'&mdash;that's all mide outer old
+grivestones as the deaders 'as done wiv. There's 'ills
+an' bushes an' 'edges where yer can pick flowers....
+There ain't no perlice to <i>git</i> yer locked up....
+An' everyfink smells so lovelly, kinder 'elthy like&mdash;it
+mikes yer feel 'ungry.... Not like sassages an' inions
+azackly&mdash;'tain't that sorter smell.... On'y 'ere and
+there, an' yer'd 'ardly tell they <i>was</i> shops, they
+kerry 'em on that quoiet.... Yer wouldn' call it poky
+if yer was there. Mr. Delves 'e <i>was</i> a kind man, 'e
+was; mide me a whistle out a sickermore brornch,
+'e did; and Mrs. Delves, she lemme help her feed
+the chickings.... They 'ad a garding beyind, an'
+there'd bin rasberries an' gooseberries a growin' on
+bushes&mdash;strite, there 'ad&mdash;I ain't tellin' yer no lies&mdash;on'y
+they was all gone by then. An' they 'ad a dog&mdash;Rover
+<i>'is</i> nime was&mdash;'e was a koind dog, lemme lay
+insoide of 'is kennel orfen, 'e would.... I'd like ter
+'ave a run over thet Common agen, too. I dessay
+as I shell&mdash;p'reps the d'y arter to-morrer....
+There's a pond on it, an' geese, an' they comes at
+yer a stritching out their necks an' a-'issin' thet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[ 269]</a></span>
+sevidge.... Na-ow, yer've on'y got ter walk up to
+'em, an' they goes orf, purtendin' they took yer fur
+somebody else, an' wasn't meanin' no offence. I
+ain't afride o' no geese, I ain't&mdash;nor yet Lily wasn't
+neither. We sor a pig 'aving a ring put froo 'is
+nose one day. 'E 'ollered out like 'e was bein'
+killed&mdash;but 'e wasn't. An' there was a blecksmiff's,
+where they put the 'orse's shoes on red 'ot, 'an the
+'orse 'e never took no notice. Me and Lily used ter
+go fur long walks, all under trees. Once she showed
+me a squill&mdash;"squerl" <i>she</i> kep' a-calling of it, till
+I tole 'er 'ow&mdash;an' it run up a tree zigzag, and
+jumped on to another ever so fur. That was when
+we was pickin' nuts. We went a blackberryin', too,
+one day.... Na-ow, there warn't nobody dead.
+An' Lily ... Lily Delves 'er nime was, b'longed
+to them I was stoppin' wiv.... I didn't notice
+partickler.... Older nor you, an' bigger, and lots
+redder 'bout the cheeks.... She wasn't a bad
+sort&mdash;fur a gal.... I dunno; I liked <i>all</i> on 'em....
+Well, there was Farmer Furrows, 'e was very
+familiar, said as 'ow I might go inter 'is horchard
+and pick the happles up as was layin' there jest fur
+the askin'. An' Bob Rumble, 'im as druv Mr.
+Kennister the grocer's cart, 'e used ter gimme a
+roide along of 'im when 'e was tikin' round porcels<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[ 270]</a></span>
+an' that. We'd go along lanes that 'igh yer couldn't
+see nuffink fur leaves; and once 'e druv along a
+Pork with tremenjus big trees in it, an' stagses
+walkin' about underneath with grite big 'orns....
+Suthink like 'im as is drawed outside the public
+round the corner&mdash;on'y they warn't none o' them
+gold. I 'speck them gold ones is furrin'.... An'
+the grub&mdash;we 'ad beekstike pudd'n o' Sundays, an'
+as much bread an' treacle every day as ever I could
+eat, and I <i>was</i> 'ungry when I was in the kerntry....
+An' when I come away Mrs. Delves, she gethered me
+a big noseguy fur to tike 'ome to Muvver&mdash;kissantimums,
+merrigoles, an' dyliers, all sorts there was&mdash;an'
+Murver she put 'em in a jug, and soon as ever
+I shet my eyes an' sniffed, I could see that garding
+and Rover and Lily as <i>pline</i>&mdash;but they went bad,
+an' 'ad to be froed aw'y at larst. I shall see 'em all
+agine very soon now, though, won't thet be proime,
+eh?... Whatsy? 'Ere, Florrie, you ain't <i>croying</i>,
+are yer?... Why don't yer arsk yer Farver if 'e
+won't let <i>you</i> go.... Oh, I thought as yer <i>wanted</i>
+to go. Then what <i>are</i> yer&mdash;&mdash;?... No, I ain't
+gled to git aw'y from you.... A-course I shell be
+gled to see 'er; but that ain't why, it's jest&mdash;&mdash;You
+ain't never bin in the kerntry, or you'd know
+'ow I'm feelin'.... There's the lidy comin' now.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[ 271]</a></span>
+I must cut across an' 'ear what she sez to Muvver.
+Don' tike on&mdash;'tain't o'ny fur a fortnight, anyway....
+Look 'ere, I got suthink' for yer, Florrie, bought it
+orf a man what 'ad a tray on 'em&mdash;it's a wornut,
+d'ye see? Now open it&mdash;ain't them two little
+choiner dolls noice, eh?... I'd rorther you 'ad
+it nor 'er, strite, I would!... I'll be back in a
+minnit.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 436px;">
+<img src="images/p271.png" width="436" height="600" alt="&quot;&#39;Ere, Florrie, you ain&#39;t croying, are yer?&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;Ere, Florrie, you ain&#39;t <i>croying</i>, are yer?&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[ 273]</a></span></p><p><i>After an Interval of Twenty-four Hours.</i></p>
+
+<p>No, <i>I</i> ain't bin nowhere particular.... Settled?
+yus, it's all settled 'bout me goin' ter the kerntry....
+To-morrer? no, I ain't goin' <i>to-morrer</i>....
+Nex' week? not as I <i>knows</i> on.... You wanter
+know sech a <i>lot</i>, you do!... If I <i>do</i> tell yer, you'll
+on'y go an' larf.... Well, I ain't goin' at all&mdash;<i>now</i>
+I 'ope you're pleased.... What's the good o' bein'
+<i>sorry</i>?... Oh, I don't keer much, I don't....
+Set down on this step alonger me, then, and don't
+you go saying nuffink, or I'll stop tellin' of yer....
+You remember me goin' in yes'day arternoon to 'ear
+what the lidy said? Well, when I got in, I 'eard 'er
+s'y, "Yus, it'll be a great disappintment for '<i>im</i>,
+pore boy," she sez, "arter lookin' forward to it an'
+all; but it can't be 'elped." And Muvver, she sez,
+"'Is Farver'll be sorry, too; it done Jimmy ser
+much good larst time. 'E can't pay not more nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[ 274]</a></span>
+'arf-a-crownd a week towards it, but he can manage
+that, bein' in work jess now." But the lidy sez,
+"It's this w'y," she sez, "it costis us neelly arf a
+suffering over what the parint pays fur each child,
+and we ain't got the fun's fur to send more 'n a few,
+cos the Public don' suscroibe ser much as they might,"
+she sez. "An' so this year we're on'y sending children
+as is delikit, an' reelly <i>wants</i> a chinge." So yer see,
+I ain't a goin'. I dunno as I'm delikit; but I <i>do</i>
+want the kerntry <i>orful</i> bad, I do. I wish I never
+'adn't bin there at all 'cos then preps I shouldn'
+mind. An' yit I'm gled I bin, too. I dreamt about
+it larst night, Florrie, I did. I was a-settin' on this
+'ere step, sime as I am now, an' it was 'ot an'
+stoiflin', like it is; an' all of a suddink I see Mr.
+Kennister's' cart wiv the grey 'orse turn into our
+court an' pull up hoppersite, an' Bob Rumble 'e was
+a-driving on it. An' 'e sez, "Jump up!" 'e sez, "an'
+I'll tike yer back to Mr. Delves's cottidge." And I
+sez, "May Florrie come too?" An' 'e sez, "Yus,
+both on yer." So up we gits, and we was droivin'
+along the lanes, and I was showin' yer the squills an'
+the stagses, an' jes as we come to the turn where
+yer kin see the cottidge&mdash;&mdash; Well, I don' remember
+no more on it. But it was a noice dream so far as I
+got wiv it, an' if I 'adn't never bin there, I couldn'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[ 275]</a></span>
+ha' dreamt it, <i>could</i> I, eh? An', like as not, I'll
+dream the rest on it anuvver night.... An' you
+must try an' dream your share, too, Florrie. It'll be
+a'most like bein' in the kerntry in a sort o' w'y fur
+both on us, won't it?</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Moral.</span></p>
+
+<p>(<i>The Offices of the Children's Country Holidays Fund
+are at 10, Buckingham Street, Strand, and contributions
+should be made payable to the Hon. Treasurer.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">THE END.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[ 276]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[ 277]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 5s.</p>
+<h3>PUPPETS AT LARGE.</h3>
+<p class="center">By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &amp;c.</p>
+<p class="center">Scenes and Sketches reprinted from "<span class="smcap">Punch</span>" with 16 page Illustrations by
+<span class="smcap">J. B. Partridge</span>.</p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 5s.</p>
+<h3>UNDER THE ROSE.</h3>
+<p class="center">A STORY IN SCENES.</p>
+<p class="center">By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &amp;c.</p>
+<p class="center">Reprinted from "<span class="smcap">Punch</span>" with 15 Illustrations by <span class="smcap">J. B. Partridge</span>.</p>
+<blockquote><p class="center">"Will provoke many a hearty laugh. From first to last the fun is legitimate."&mdash;<i>Morning
+Post.</i></p>
+<p class="center">"The fun of it never flags for a moment."&mdash;<i>St. James' Gazette.</i></p></blockquote>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d.</p>
+<h3><span class="smcap">Mr. Punch's</span> YOUNG RECITER.</h3>
+<p class="center">WITH INTRODUCTIONS, REMARKS, AND STAGE-DIRECTIONS.</p>
+<p class="center">By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &amp;c.</p>
+<p class="center">Reprinted from "<span class="smcap">Punch</span>" with Additions, and with 34 "<span class="smcap">Punch</span>" Illustrations.</p>
+<blockquote><p class="center">"Very well written, and any modern humorist might be proud of them."&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p></blockquote>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 4s. 6d.</p>
+<h3><span class="smcap">Mr. Punch's</span> MODEL MUSIC-HALL</h3>
+<p class="center">SONGS AND DRAMAS.</p>
+<p class="center">By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Mr. Punch's Young Reciter."</p>
+<p class="center">Collected, Improved, and Re-arranged from "<span class="smcap">Punch</span>" with 13 full-page and a
+number of other Illustrations.</p>
+<blockquote><p class="center">"This volume has caused us more laughter than anything else Mr. Anstey has
+written since 'Vice Versa.' Some of the songs and dances are screamingly funny."&mdash;<i>Review of Reviews.</i></p></blockquote>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 4s. 6d.</p>
+<h3><span class="smcap">Mr. Punch's</span> PRIZE NOVELS.</h3>
+<p class="center">By R. C. LEHMANN</p>
+<p class="center">With 24 Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Edward Reed</span>.</p>
+<blockquote><p class="center">"Some things here reprinted are nearly of the best of their kind. We should not
+like to take the authors' opinions, for your author almost always laughs on the wrong
+side of his mouth at caricatures of his work. But if the authors do not like it, their
+readers will; and even of the authors themselves we may trust that some will see the
+joke."&mdash;<i>Manchester Guardian.</i></p></blockquote>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">BRADBURY, AGNEW, &amp; <span class="smcap">Co.</span> <span class="smcap">Ld.</span>, 8, 9, 10, <span class="smcap">Bouverie Street</span>, E.C.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[ 278]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center"><i>THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN'S LIBRARY EDITION.</i></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p>Embellished with nearly 1,000 of <span class="smcap">John Leech's</span> best Sketches on Wood, and 100
+Hand-coloured Steel Engravings by <span class="smcap">John Leech</span> and <span class="smcap">H. K. Browne</span>. In six medium
+8vo volumes, large margin, cloth extra, price £4 4<i>s.</i>; and in half morocco, with
+panelled hunting adornments, gilt and finished, price £5 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<h3>"HANDLEY CROSS" SERIES OF
+SPORTING NOVELS.</h3>
+
+<p>This inimitable series of volumes is absolutely unique, there being nothing
+approaching to them in all the wide range of modern or ancient literature. Written
+by Mr. Surtees, a well-known country gentleman, who was passionately devoted to
+the healthy sport of fox-hunting, and gifted with a keen spirit of manly humour of a
+Rabelaisian tinge, they abound with incidents redolent of mirth and jollity. The
+artist, Mr. Leech, was himself also an enthusiast in the sport, and has reflected in his
+illustrations, with instinctive appreciation, the rollicking abandon of the author's
+stories.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>These volumes can be had separately as under:&mdash;</i></p>
+
+<h4>HANDLEY CROSS;</h4>
+<p class="center">or, Mr. Jorrock's<br />
+Hunt. Many Sketches on Wood,<br />
+and 17 Steel Engravings. Price 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<h4>ASK MAMMA;</h4>
+<p class="center">or, The Richest<br />
+Commoner In England. Many<br />
+Sketches on Wood, and 13 Steel<br />
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+
+<h4>SPONGE'S SPORTING TOUR.</h4>
+<p class="center">Many<br />
+Sketches on Wood, and 13 Steel<br />
+Engravings. Price 14<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<h4>PLAIN OR RINGLETS?</h4>
+<p class="center">Many<br />
+Sketches on Wood, and 13 Steel<br />
+Engravings. Price 14<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<h4>MR. FACEY ROMFORD'S HOUNDS.</h4>
+<p class="center">24 Steel Engravings. Price 14<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<h4>HAWBUCK GRANGE;</h4>
+<p class="center"> or, The Sporting<br />
+Adventures of Thomas Scott,<br />
+Esquire. With 8 Steel Engravings<br />
+by <span class="smcap">H. K. Browne</span> (Phiz). Price<br />
+12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<h3>HUNTING STORIES <span class="smcap">BY</span> "WANDERER."</h3>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Uniform with the</span> "HANDLEY CROSS SERIES." Medium 8vo.</p>
+
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+<p class="center"> With 22 Coloured Illustrations<br />
+and 70 Sketches in the Text.<br />
+By <span class="smcap">G. Bowers</span>. Price 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<h4>ACROSS COUNTRY.</h4>
+<p class="center">With 22 Coloured<br />
+Illustrations and numerous Sketches.<br />
+By <span class="smcap">G. Bowers</span>. Price 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<h4>A LOOSE REIN.</h4>
+<p class="center">With 22 Coloured Illustrations and numerous Sketches in the<br />
+Text. By <span class="smcap">G. Bowers</span>. Price 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<h3>G. BOWERS' ILLUSTRATIONS.</h3>
+<h4>A MONTH IN THE MIDLANDS:</h4>
+<p class="center">"a<br />
+Book for the Shires." Half-hunting<br />
+cloth, Coloured Plates. By<br />
+<span class="smcap">G. Bowers</span>. Price 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<h4>HOLLY BUSH HALL;</h4>
+<p class="center">or, "Open<br />
+House" in an "Open Country."<br />
+Half-hunting cloth, Coloured Plates.<br />
+By <span class="smcap">G. Bowers</span>. Price 15<i>s.</i></p>
+<h4>NOTES FROM A HUNTING BOX.</h4>
+<p class="center">Oblong folio, half-hunting cloth, with Illustrations<br />
+by G. Bowers. Price 15<i>s.</i></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">BRADBURY, AGNEW, &amp; CO. <span class="smcap">Ld.</span>, 8, 9, 10, <span class="smcap">Bouverie Street</span>, E.C.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[ 279]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<h4>The "Jorrocks" Edition</h4>
+<h5>OF THE</h5>
+<h3><span class="smcap">Handley Cross
+Sporting Novels.</span></h3>
+<p class="center">6 Volumes, Large Crown 8vo, with Illustrations, price 36s.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Books which have attained to the position of being perennial favourites
+with the audience to whom they appeal&mdash;living as if no rivalry could dislodge
+them&mdash;a foremost place has long been held by the <span class="smcap">Handley Cross</span>
+series of volumes, which are now just as much the favourite reading of those
+who are interested in the exploits of the hunting-field, as they have been since
+their first publication.</p>
+
+<p>The fictitious heroes, whose doings and sayings inspire these favourite
+volumes, provide a nomenclature which is as much imbedded in the
+phraseology of sport as those of Thackeray or Dickens are in our national
+literature. In what hunting circles may it not be said that the names of
+<span class="smcap">Jorrocks</span> and <span class="smcap">Soapey Sponge</span> and <span class="smcap">Facey Romford</span> are "familiar in their
+mouths as household words"?</p>
+
+<p>The <span class="smcap">Handley Cross</span> Sporting Novels have hitherto, by the form of their
+production, formed the enduring ornament of a Country Gentleman's Library,
+and, by reason of their price, have been somewhat beyond the attainment of
+that extensive and constantly enlarging section who have learned to take delight
+in the out-of-door amusements which brighten rural life.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone whose delight in a "finest run across country that ever was seen,"
+and whose ambition is "to be in at the finish," may now have as his abiding
+companions on his own book-case within reach of his easy-chair, the histories of
+<span class="smcap">Jorrocks</span> and <span class="smcap">Sponge</span> and <span class="smcap">Romford</span>, and others of the famous creation, in a
+handsome and handy form; having the pages brightened by a selection from
+the original illustrations to give an added vividness to the exhilarating raciness
+of the author's humour.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>The volumes are sold separately as under:&mdash;</i></p>
+
+<h4>HANDLEY CROSS;</h4>
+<p class="center">or, Mr. Jorrock's<br />
+Hunt. With 67 Text and 12 Page<br />
+Illustrations and Coloured Frontispiece.<br />
+Price 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<h4>ASK MAMMA;</h4>
+<p class="center">or, The Richest Commoner<br />
+In England. With 51 Text<br />
+and 8 Page Illustrations and Coloured<br />
+Frontispiece. Price 6<i>s.</i></p>
+<h4>SPONGE'S SPORTING TOUR.</h4>
+<p class="center">With<br />
+60 Text and 8 Page Illustrations and<br />
+Coloured Frontispiece. Price 6<i>s.</i></p>
+<h4>PLAIN OR RINGLETS?</h4>
+<p class="center">With 43<br />
+Text and 8 Page Illustrations and<br />
+Coloured Frontispiece. Price 6<i>s.</i></p>
+<h4>MR. FACEY ROMFORD'S HOUNDS.</h4>
+<p class="center">With 46 Text and 8 Page Illustrations<br />
+and Coloured Frontispiece.<br />
+Price 6<i>s.</i></p>
+<h4>HAWBUCK GRANGE;</h4>
+<p class="center">or, The Sporting<br />
+Adventures of Thomas Scott,<br />
+Esquire. With 28 Text and 8 Page<br />
+Illustrations and Coloured Frontispiece.<br />
+Price 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<p class="center">BRADBURY, AGNEW, &amp; <span class="smcap">Co.</span> <span class="smcap">Ld.</span> 8, 9, 10, <span class="smcap">Bouverie Street</span>, E.C.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[ 280]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<h3><span class="smcap">F. C. Burnand's
+Works</span>.</h3>
+<h5><span class="smcap">A Selected Collection from "PUNCH."</span></h5>
+<p class="center">5 Volumes, Large Crown 8vo, gilt top, price 25s.</p>
+<blockquote><p>"Mr. Burnand's Writings are well worth collecting. He has produced
+a very large body of comic writing of a high order of merit, and
+the amount of it that is first-rate is considerable. There is a perpetual
+gaiety and airiness about his work which makes it always pleasant to
+dip into, and few humorists have the power of making their readers laugh
+so agreeably, so innocently, so often, and so much."&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p></blockquote>
+<p class="center"><i>The Volumes are sold separately as under:</i></p>
+<p class="center">Price 5s. each.</p>
+<h4>1. VERY MUCH ABROAD.</h4>
+<p class="center"><i>With 160 "Punch" Illustrations</i>.</p>
+<h4>2. RATHER AT SEA.</h4>
+<p class="center"><i>With 116 "Punch" Illustrations</i>.</p>
+<h4>3. QUITE AT HOME.</h4>
+<p class="center"><i>With 108 "Punch" Illustrations</i>.</p>
+<h4>4. HAPPY THOUGHTS.</h4>
+<p class="center"><i>With 110 Illustrations</i>.</p>
+<h4>5. SOME OLD FRIENDS.</h4>
+<p class="center"><i>With 115 "Punch" Illustrations</i>.</p>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">BRADBURY, AGNEW, &amp; <span class="smcap">Co.</span> <span class="smcap">Ld.</span>, 8, 9, 10, <span class="smcap">Bouverie Street</span>, E.C.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Puppets at Large, by F. Anstey
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+</pre>
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Puppets at Large, by F. Anstey
+
+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: Puppets at Large
+ Scenes and Subjects from Mr Punch's Show
+
+Author: F. Anstey
+
+Illustrator: J. Bernard Partridge
+
+Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37449]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUPPETS AT LARGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Katie Hernandez and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Puppets at Large
+
+
+
+
+ Puppets at Large
+
+ Scenes and Subjects
+ From Mr. Punch's Show.
+
+ By F. Anstey
+ Author of "Vice Versa," "Voces Populi," &c., &c.
+
+ With Illustrations by
+ J. Bernard Partridge
+
+ London
+ Bradbury, Agnew, & Co. Ld., Bouverie St., E.C.
+ 1897
+
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD., PRINTERS,
+ LONDON AND TONBRIDGE.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PAGE
+ Doing a Cathedral 1
+ The Instantaneous Process 13
+ In the Cause of Charity 27
+ The Classical Scholar in Reduced Circumstances 43
+ Rus in Urbe 51
+ Catching the Early Boat 61
+ Society's Next Craze 71
+ An Ideal Interviewer 83
+ Saturday Night in the Edgware Road 91
+ The "Model Husband" Contest 101
+ The Courier of the Hague 109
+ Feeling their Way 119
+ A Testimonial Manque 131
+ The Model Democracy 145
+ By Parliamentary 159
+ The Farming of the Future 167
+ A Dialogue on Art 177
+ The Old Love and the New 189
+ A Doll's Diary 201
+ Elevating the Masses 219
+ Bookmakers on the Beach 231
+ 'Igher Up! 243
+ At a Highland Cattle Auction 257
+ The Country of Cockaigne 265
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ PAGE
+ "What did 'e want to go and git the fair 'ump about?" 11
+ "What's she got hold of now?" 21
+ "You have lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament" 37
+ "They ain't on'y a lot o' sheep! I thought it was reciters,
+ or somethink o' that" 55
+ "Mokestrians" 75
+ "Dear, dear! _not_ a county family!" 125
+ "Well, he's had a sharp lesson,--there's no denying that" 135
+ "None of your humour here, mind!" 155
+ "I cann't get nothen done to 'en till the weather's a bit
+ more hopen like" 171
+ "They haven't the _patiensh_ for it" 183
+ "It must be a sort of animal, I suppose" 193
+ "I see _him_ standing on the very brink of the precipice" 209
+ "To-night is ours!" 225
+ "Why the blazes don't ye take it?" 239
+ "Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!" 251
+ "'Ere, Florrie, you ain't _croying_, are yer?" 271
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+DOING A CATHEDRAL.
+
+(A SKETCH FROM THE PROVINCES.)
+
+
+_The interior of Dulchester Cathedral._ TIME--_About 12.30. The March
+sunshine slants in pale shafts through the clerestory windows, leaving
+the aisles in shadow. From without, the cawing of rooks and shouts of
+children at play are faintly audible. By the West Door, a party of
+Intending Sightseers have collected, and the several groups, feeling
+that it would be a waste of time to observe anything in the building
+until officially instructed to do so, are engaged in eyeing one another
+with all the genial antipathy and suspicion of true-born Britons._
+
+
+A Stodgy Sightseer (_to his friend_). Disgraceful, keeping us standing
+about like this! If I'd only known, I'd have told the head-waiter at the
+"Mitre" to keep back those chops till----
+
+ [_He breaks off abruptly, finding that the chops are
+ reverberating from column to column with
+ disproportionate solemnity; a white-haired and
+ apple-faced verger rustles down from the choir
+ and beckons the party forward benignantly, whereupon they
+ advance with a secret satisfaction at the prospect of "getting
+ the cathedral 'done' and having the rest of the day to
+ themselves;" they are conducted to a desk and requested, as a
+ preliminary, to put sixpence apiece in the Restoration Fund
+ box and inscribe their names in a book._
+
+_Confused Murmurs._ Would you put "Portico Lodge, Camden Road, or only
+London?"... Here, I'd better sign for the lot of you, eh?... They
+_might_ provide a better pen--in a _cathedral_, I _do_ think!... He
+might have given all our names in full instead of just "And party!"...
+Oh, I've been and made a blot--will it _matter_, should you think?... I
+never _can_ write my name with people looking on, can _you_?... I'm sure
+you've done it beautifully, dear!... Just hold my umbrella while I take
+off my glove, Maria.... Oh, why _don't_ they make haste? &c., &c.
+
+ [_The_ STODGY SIGHTSEER _fumes, feeling that, while they are
+ fiddling, his chops are burning._
+
+The VERGER. Now, ladies and gentlemen, if you will please to follow me,
+the portion of the building where we now are is part of the original
+hedifice founded by Ealfrytha, wife of Earl Baldric, in the year height
+'undred heighty-height, though we 'ave reason to believe that an even
+hearlier church was in existence 'ere so far back as the Roman
+occupation, as is proved by a hancient stone receptacle recently
+discovered under the crypt and hevidently used for baptismal purposes.
+
+A SPECTACLED S. (_who feels it due to herself to put an intelligent
+question at intervals._) What _was_ the method of baptism among the
+Early Christians?
+
+The VERGER. We believe it to 'ave been by total immersion, Ma'am.
+
+The SPECT. S. Oh? _Baptists!_
+
+ [_She sets down the Early Christians as Dissenters, and takes
+ no further interest in them._
+
+The VERGER. At the back of the choir, and immediately in front of you,
+is the shrine, formerly containing the bones of St. Chasuble, with
+relics of St. Alb. (_An_ EVANGELICAL SIGHTSEER _snorts in disapproval._)
+The 'ollow depressions in the steps leading up to the shrine, which are
+still visible, were worn away, as you see, by the pilgrims ascending on
+their knees. (_The party verify the depressions conscientiously, and
+click their tongues to express indulgent contempt._) The spaces between
+the harches of the shrine were originally enriched by valuable gems and
+mosaics, all of which 'ave now long since disappeared, 'aving been
+removed by the more devout parties who came 'ere on pilgrimages. In the
+chapel to your left a monument with recumbent heffigies of Bishop
+Buttress and Dean Gurgoyle, represented laying side by side with clasped
+'ands, in token of the lifelong affection between them. The late Bishop
+used to make a rather facetious remark about this tomb. He was in the
+'abit of observing that it was the honly instance in _his_ experience of
+a Bishop being on friendly terms with his Dean. (_He glances round for
+appreciation of this instance of episcopal humour, but is pained to find
+that it has produced a general gloom; the_ EVANGELICAL SIGHTSEER,
+_indeed, conveys by another and a louder snort, his sense that a Bishop
+ought to set a better example._) In the harched recess to your right, a
+monument in painted halibarster to Sir Ralph Ringdove and his lady,
+erected immediately after her decease by the disconsolate widower, with
+a touching inscription in Latin, stating that their ashes would shortly
+be commingled in the tomb. (_He pauses, to allow the ladies of the party
+to express a becoming sympathy--which they do, by clicks._) Sir Ralph
+himself, however, is interred in Ficklebury Parish Church, forty mile
+from this spot, along with his third wife, who survived him.
+
+ [_The ladies regard the image of Sir Ralph with
+ indignation, and pass on; the_ VERGER _chuckles faintly at
+ having produced his effect._
+
+The EVANGELICAL S. (_snuffing the air suspiciously_). I'm sorry to
+perceive that you are in the habit of burning _incense_ here!
+
+ [_He looks sternly at the_ VERGER, _as though to imply that it
+ is useless to impose upon him._
+
+The VERGER. No, Sir, what you smell ain't incense--on'y the vaults after
+the damp weather we've bin 'aving.
+
+ [_The_ EVANGELICAL SIGHTSEER _drops behind, divided between
+ relief and disappointment._
+
+A PLASTIC S. (_to the_ VERGER). What a perfectly _exquisite_ rose-window
+that is! For all the world like a kaleidoscope. I suppose it dates from
+the Norman period, at _least_?
+
+The VERGER (_coldly_). No, Ma'am, it was only put up about thirty year
+ago. _We_ consider it the poorest glass we 'ave.
+
+The PLAST. S. Oh, the glass, yes; _that's_ hideous, certainly. I meant
+the--the other part.
+
+The VERGER. The tracery, Ma'am? That was restored at the same time by a
+local man--and a shocking job he made of it, too!
+
+The PLAST. S. Yes, it _quite_ spoils the Cathedral, _doesn't_ it?
+Couldn't it be taken down?
+
+The VERGER (_in answer to another Inquirer_). Crowborough Cathedral
+finer than this, Sir? Oh, _dear_ me, no. I went over a-purpose to 'ave a
+look at it the last 'oliday I took, and I was quite surprised to find
+'ow very inferior it was. The spire? I don't say that mayn't be 'igher
+as a mere matter of feet, but our lantern-tower is so 'appily
+proportioned as to give the effect of being by far the 'ighest in
+existence.
+
+A TRAVELLED S. Ah, you should see the _continental_ cathedrals. Why,
+_our_ towers would hardly come up to the top of the naves of some of
+them!
+
+The VERGER (_loftily_). I don't take no notice of foreign cathedrals,
+Ma'am. If foreigners like to build so ostentatious, all I can say is,
+I'm sorry _for_ them.
+
+A LADY (_who has provided herself with a "Manual of Architecture" and an
+unsympathetic_ COMPANION). _Do_ notice the excessive use of the
+ball-flower as a decoration, dear. Parker says it is especially
+characteristic of this cathedral.
+
+UNSYMPATHETIC COMPANION. I don't see _any_ flowers myself. And if they
+like to decorate for festivals and that, where's the harm?
+
+ [_The_ LADY WITH THE MANUAL _perceives that it is hopeless to
+ explain_.
+
+The VERGER. The dog-tooth mouldings round the triforium harches is
+considered to belong to the best period of Norman work----
+
+The LADY WITH THE MANUAL. Surely not _Norman_? Dog-tooth is Saxon, _I_
+always understood.
+
+The VERGER (_indulgently_). You'll excuse _me_, Ma'am, but I fancy it's
+'erringbone as is running in _your_ 'ed.
+
+The LADY WITH THE M. (_after consulting "Parker" for corroboration, in
+vain_). Well, I'm sure dog-tooth is quite _Early English_, anyway. (_To
+her_ COMPANION.) Did you know it was the interlacing of the round arches
+that gave the first idea of the pointed arch, dear?
+
+Her COMP. No. But I shouldn't have thought there was so very much in the
+_idea_.
+
+The LADY WITH THE M. I do _wish_ you took more _interest_, dear. Look at
+those two young men who have just come in. They don't _look_ as if
+they'd care for carving; but they've been studying every one of the
+Miserere seats in the choir-stalls. That's what _I_ like to see!
+
+The VERGER. That concludes my dooties, ladies and gentlemen. You can go
+out by the South Transept door, and that'll take you through the
+Cloisters. (_The Party go out, with the exception of the two_ 'ARRIES,
+_who linger, expectantly, and cough in embarrassment._) Was there
+anything you wished to know?
+
+FIRST 'ARRY. Well, Mister, it's on'y--er--'aven't you got some old
+carving or other 'ere of a rather--well, _funny_ kind--sorter thing you
+on'y show to _gentlemen_, if you know what I mean?
+
+The VERGER (_austerely_). There's nothing in _this_ Cathedral for
+gentlemen o' _your_ sort, and I'm surprised at your expecting of it.
+
+[_He turns on his heel._
+
+FIRST 'ARRY (_to Second_). I spoke civil enough to _'im_, didn't I? What
+did 'e want to go and git the fair 'ump about?
+
+SECOND 'ARRY. Oh, _I_ dunno. But you don't ketch _me_ comin' over to no
+more cathedrils, and wastin' time and money all for nuthink--that's all.
+
+ [_They tramp out, feeling that their confidence has been
+ imposed upon._
+
+[Illustration: "What did 'e want to go and git the fair 'ump about?"]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE INSTANTANEOUS PROCESS;
+
+OR, FLUFF SITS FOR HIS PHOTOGRAPH.
+
+
+_A Photographer's Studio on the Seventh Floor. It is a warm afternoon._
+MR. STIPPLER, _Photographic Artist, is discovered alone._
+
+MR. STIPPLER (_to himself_). No appointments while this weather lasts,
+thank goodness! I shall be able to get ahead with those negatives now.
+(_Sharp whistle from speaking-tube, to which he goes._) Well?
+
+VOICE OF LADY ASSISTANT (_in shop below_). Lady just brought her dog in;
+wants to know if she can have it taken now.
+
+MR. STIP. (_to himself_). Oh, dash the dog and the lady too!
+
+THE VOICE. No, only the _dog_, the lady says.
+
+MR. STIP. (_confused_). Eh? Oh, exactly. Ask the lady to have the
+goodness to--ah--step up. (_He opens the studio door, and awaits the
+arrival of his client; interval, at the end of which sounds as of a
+female in distress about halfway down are distinctly audible._) She's
+_stepping_ up. (_Another interval. The head of a breathless_ ELDERLY
+LADY _emerges from the gloom._) This way, Madam.
+
+ELDERLY LADY (_entering and sinking into the first plush chair_). Oh,
+_dear_ me, I thought I should _never_ get to the top! Now _why_ can't
+you photographers have your studios on the ground floor? So _much_ more
+convenient!
+
+MR. STIP. No doubt, Madam, no doubt. But there is--ah--a prejudice in
+the profession in favah of the roof; possibly the light is considered
+somewhat superiah. I thought I understood there was--ah--a dog?
+
+The E. L. Oh, he'll be here presently. I think he saw something in one
+of the rooms on the way up that took his fancy, or very likely he's
+resting on one of the landing mats,--such an _intelligent_ dog! I'll
+call him. Fluffy, Fluffy, come along, my pet, nearly up now! Mustn't
+keep his missis waiting for him. (_A very long pause: presently a small
+rough-haired terrier lounges into the studio with an air of
+proprietorship_.) That's the dog; he's so small, he can't take _very_
+long to do, _can_ he?
+
+MR. STIP. The--ah--precise size of the animal does not signify, Madam;
+we do it by an instantaneous process. The only question is the precise
+pose you would prefer. I presume the dog is a good--ah--rattah?
+
+The E. L. Really, I've no idea. But he's _very_ clever at killing
+bluebottles; he _will_ smash them on the window-panes.
+
+MR. STIP. (_without interest_). I see, Madam. We have a speciality for
+our combination backgrounds, and you might like to have him represented
+on a country common, in the act of watching a hole in a bank.
+
+The E. L. (_impressed_). For bluebottles?
+
+MR. STIP. For--ah--rats. (_By way of concession._) _Or_ bluebottles, of
+course, if you prefer it.
+
+The E. L. I think I would rather have something more characteristic. He
+has such a pretty way of lying on his back with all his paws sticking
+straight up in the air. I never saw any _other_ dog do it.
+
+MR. STIP. Precisely. But I doubt whether that particulah pose would be
+effective--in a photograph.
+
+The E. L. You think not? Where _has_ he got to, now? Oh, _do_ just look
+at him going round, examining everything! He _quite_ understands what
+he's wanted to do; you've no idea what a clever dog he is!
+
+MR. STIP. Ray-ally? How would it do to have him on a rock in the middle
+of a salmon stream?
+
+The E. L. It would make me so uncomfortable to see it; he has a perfect
+_horror_ of wetting his little feet!
+
+MR. STIP. In _that_ case, no doubt----Then what do you say to posing
+him on an ornamental pedestal? We could introduce a Yorkshire moor, or a
+view of Canterbury Cathedral, as a background.
+
+The E. L. A pedestal seems _so_ suggestive of a cemetery, doesn't it?
+
+MR. STIP. Then we must try some other position. (_He resigns himself to
+the commonplace._) Can the dog--ah--sit up?
+
+The E. L. Bee-yutifully! Fluffy, come and show how nicely you can sit
+up!
+
+FLUFF (_to himself_). Show off for this fellow? Who pretends he's got
+rats--and hasn't! Not if _I_ know it!
+
+ [_He rolls over on his back with a well-assumed air of
+ idiotcy_.
+
+The E. L. (_delighted_). There, _that's_ the attitude I told you of. But
+perhaps it _would_ come out rather too leggy?
+
+MR. STIP. It is--ah--open to that objection, certainly, Madam. Perhaps
+we had better take him on a chair sitting up. (FLUFF is, _with infinite
+trouble, prevailed upon to mount an arm-chair, from which he growls
+savagely whenever_ MR. STIPPLER _approaches_.) You will probably be more
+successful with him than I, Madam.
+
+The E. L. I could make him sit up in a _moment_, if I had any of his
+biscuits with me. But I forgot to bring them.
+
+MR. STIP. There is a confectionah next door. We could send out a lad for
+some biscuits. About how much would you requiah--a quartah of a pound?
+_He goes to the speaking tube._
+
+The E. L. He won't eat _all_ those; he's a _most_ abstemious dog. But
+they must be _sweet_, tell them. (_Delay. Arrival of the biscuits. The_
+ELDERLY LADY _holds one up, and_ FLUFF _leaps, barking frantically,
+until he succeeds in snatching it; a manoeuvre which he repeats with
+each successive biscuit_.) Do you know, I'm afraid he really _mustn't_
+have any more--biscuits always _excite_ him so. Suppose you take him
+lying on the chair, much as he is now? (MR. STIPPLER _attempts to place
+the dog's paws, and is snapped at_.) Oh, _do_ be careful!
+
+MR. STIP. (_heroically_). Oh, it's of no consequence, Madam. I
+am--ah--_accustomed_ to it.
+
+The E. L. Oh, yes; but _he_ isn't, you know; so please be _very_ gentle
+with him! And could you get him a little water first? I'm sure he's
+thirsty. (MR. STIPPLER _brings water in a developing dish, which_ FLUFF
+_empties promptly_.) Now he'll be as _good_----!
+
+MR. STIP. (_after wiping_ FLUFF'S _chin and arranging his legs_). If we
+can only keep him like that for one second.
+
+The E. L. But he ought to have his ears pricked. (MR. STIPPLER _makes
+weird noises behind the camera, resembling demon cats in torture_; FLUFF
+_regards him with calm contempt_.) Oh, and his hair is all in his eyes,
+and they're his best feature!
+
+ [MR. STIPPLER _attempts to part_ FLUFF'S _fringe; snarls_.
+
+MR. STIP. I have not discovered his eyes at present, Madam; but he
+appears to have excellent--ah--_teeth_.
+
+The E. L. _Has_n't he! Now, couldn't you catch him like _that_?
+
+MR. STIP. _(to himself_). He's more likely to catch _me_ like that!
+(_Aloud; as he retreats under a hanging canopy._) I think we shall get a
+good one of him as he is. (_Focussing_.) Yes, that will do very nicely.
+(_He puts in the plate, and prepares to release the shutter, whereupon_
+FLUFF _deliberately rises and presents his tail to the camera_.) I
+presume you do not desiah a _back_ view of the dog, Madam!
+
+[Illustration: "What's she got hold of _now_."]
+
+The E. L. Certainly not! Oh, Fluffy, naughty--naughty! Now lie down
+again, like a good dog. Oh, I'm afraid he's going to sleep!
+
+MR. STIP. If you would kindly take this--ah--toy in your hand, Madam, it
+might rouse him a little.
+
+The E. L. (_exhibiting a gutta-percha rat_). Here, Fluffy, Fluffy,
+_here's_ a pitty sing! What _is_ it, eh!
+
+FLUFF (_after opening one eye_). The old fool fancies she's got a rat!
+Well, she may _keep_ it!
+
+[_He curls himself up again_.
+
+MR. STIP. We must try to obtain more--ah--animation than that.
+
+[_He hands the_ ELDERLY LADY _a jingling toy_.
+
+The E. L. (_shaking it vigorously_). Fluffy, see what Missis has got!
+
+FLUFF _(by a yawn of much eloquence_). At _her_ age, too! Wonderful how
+she can _do_ it!
+
+[_He closes his eyes wearily._
+
+MR. STIP. Perhaps you may produce a better effect with this. [_He hands
+her a stuffed stoat._
+
+FLUFF (_to himself_). What's she got hold of _now_? Hul-lo! (_He rises,
+and inspects the stoat with interest._) I'd no idea the old girl was so
+"varmint"!
+
+MR. STIP. Capital! Now, if he'll stay like that another----(FLUFF
+_jumps down, and wags his tail with conscious merit._) Oh, _dear_ me. I
+never saw such a dog!
+
+The E. L. He's tired out, poor doggie, and no wonder. But he'll be all
+the _quieter_ for it, _won't_ he? (_After restoring_ FLUFF _to the
+chair._) Now, couldn't you take him panting, like that?
+
+MR. STIP. I must wait till he's got a little less tongue out, Madam.
+
+The E. L. Must you? Why? _I_ should have thought it was a capital
+opportunity.
+
+MR. STIP. For a physician, Madam, _not_ a photographer. If I were to
+take him now the result would be an--ah--enormous tongue, with a dog in
+the remote distance.
+
+The E. L. And he's putting out more and more of it! Perhaps he's thirsty
+again. Here, Fluffy, water--water! [_She produces the developing dish._
+
+FLUFF (_in barks of unmistakable significance_). Look here, I've had
+about enough of this tomfoolery. Let's go. _Come_ on!
+
+MR. STIP. (_seconding the motion with relief_). I'm _afraid_ we're not
+likely to do better with him to-day. Perhaps if you could look in some
+othah afternoon?
+
+The E. L. Why, we've only been an hour and twenty minutes as yet! But
+what would be the best time to bring him?
+
+MR. STIP. I should say the light and the temperatuah would probably be
+more favourable by the week aftah next--(_to himself_) when I shall be
+taking my holiday!
+
+The E. L. Very well, I'll come then. Oh, Fluffy, Fluffy, what a silly
+little dog you are to give all this trouble!
+
+FLUFF (_to himself, as he makes a triumphant exit_). Not half so silly
+as some people think! I _must_ tell the cat about this; she'll go into
+fits! I will say she has a considerable sense of humour--for a cat.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+IN THE CAUSE OF CHARITY.
+
+
+_Mona House, the Town Mansion of the Marquis of Manx, which has been
+lent for a Sale of Work in aid of the "Fund for Super-annuated
+Skirt-dancers," under the patronage of Royalty and other distinguished
+personages_.
+
+_In the Entrance Hall._
+
+MRS. WYLIE DEDHEAD (_attempting to insinuate herself between the
+barriers_). Excuse me; I only wanted to pop in for a moment, just to see
+if a lady friend of mine is in there, that's _all_!
+
+The LADY MONEY-TAKER (_blandly_). If you will let me know your friend's
+name--?
+
+MRS. W. D. (_splendide mendax_). She's assisting the dear Duchess.
+_Now_, perhaps, you will allow me to pass!
+
+The L. M. Afraid I can't, really. But if you mean Lady Honor
+Hyndlegges--_she_ is the only lady at the Duchess's stall--I could send
+_in_ for her. Or of course, if you like to pay half-a-crown----
+
+MRS. W. D. (_hastily_). Thank you, I--I won't disturb her
+ladyship. I had no _idea_ there was any charge for admission,
+and--(_bristling_)--allow me to say I consider such regulations _most_
+absurd.
+
+The L. M. (_sweetly, with a half glance at the bowl of coins on the
+table_). Quite _too_ ridiculous, ain't they? _Good_ afternoon!
+
+MRS. W. D. (_audibly, as she flounces out_). If they suppose _I'm_ going
+to pay half-a-crown for the privilege of being _fleeced_----!
+
+FOOTMAN (_on steps, sotto voce, to confrere_). "Fleeced"! that's a good
+'un, eh? _She_ ain't brought much wool in with _her_!
+
+His CONFRERE. On'y what's stuffed inside of her ear. [_They resume their
+former impassive dignity._
+
+_In the Venetian Gallery--where the Bazaar is being held._
+
+A LOYAL OLD LADY (_at the top of her voice--to_ STALL-KEEPER). Which of
+'em's the Princess, my dear, eh? It's her I paid _my_ money to see.
+
+The STALL-KEEPER (_in a dismayed whisper_). Ssh! Not _quite_ so loud!
+There--just opposite--petunia bow in her bonnet--selling kittens.
+
+The L. O. L. (_planting herself on a chair_). So _that's_ her! Well, she
+_is_ dressed plain--for a Royalty--but looks _pleasant_ enough. I
+wouldn't mind taking one o' them kittens off her Royal 'Ighness myself,
+if they was going at all reasonable. But there, I expect, the cats
+_'ere_ is meat for my masters, so to speak; and you see, my dear, 'aving
+the promise of a tortoise-shell Tom from the lady as keeps the Dairy
+next door, whenever----
+
+[_She finds, with surprise, that her confidences are not encouraged_.
+
+MISS ST. LEGER DE MAYNE (_persuasively to_ MRS. NIBBLER). Do let me show
+you some of this exquisite work, all embroidered entirely by hand, you
+see!
+
+MRS. NIBBLER (_edging away_). Lovely--_quite_ lovely; but I
+think--a--I'll just take a look round before I----
+
+MISS DE M. If there is any _particular_ thing you were looking for,
+perhaps _I_ could----
+
+MRS. N. (_becoming confidential_). Well, I _did_ think if I could come
+across a nice _sideboard-cloth_----
+
+MISS DE M. (_to herself_). What on earth's a sideboard-cloth? (_Aloud._)
+Why, I've the very _thing_! See--all worked in Russian stitch!
+
+MRS. N. (_dubiously_). I thought they were always quite plain. And
+what's that queer sort of flap-thing for?
+
+MISS DE M. Oh, _that_? That's--a--to cover up the spoons, and forks,
+and things; quite the latest fashion, _now_, you know.
+
+MRS. N. (_with self-assertion_). I _have_ noticed it at several dinner
+parties I've been to in society lately, certainly. Still I am not sure
+that----
+
+MISS DE M. I always have them on my _own_ sideboard now--my husband
+won't _hear_ of any others.... Then, I _may_ put this one in paper for
+you? fifteen-and-sixpence--thanks _so_ much! (_To her colleague, as_
+Mrs. N. _departs_). Connie, I've got rid of that awful nightgown case at
+_last_!
+
+MRS. MAYCUP. A--you _don't_ happen to have a small bag to hold a
+powder-puff, and so on, you know?
+
+MISS DE M. I _had_ some very pretty ones; but I'm afraid they're
+all--oh, no, there's just _one_ left--crimson velvet and real
+_passementerie_. (_She produces a bag_). Too trotty for words, isn't it?
+
+MRS. MAYCUP (_tacitly admitting its trottiness_). But then--that sort of
+purse shape----Could I get a small pair of folding curling-irons into
+it, should you think, at a pinch?
+
+MISS DE M. You could get _anything_ into it--at a pinch. I've one myself
+which will hold--well, I can't tell you what it _won't_ hold!
+Half-a-guinea--so _many_ thanks! (_To herself, as_ MRS. MAYCUP _carries
+off her_ _bag_.) What _would_ the vicar's wife say if she knew I'd sold
+her church collection bag for _that_! But it's all in a good cause!
+(_An_ ELDERLY LADY _comes up_.) May I show you some of these----?
+
+The ELDERLY LADY. Well, I was wondering if you had such a thing as a
+good warm pair of sleeping socks; because, these bitter nights, I do
+find I suffer so from cold in my feet.
+
+MISS DE M. (_with effusion_). Ah, then I can _feel_ for you--so do _I_!
+At least, I _used_ to before I tried--(_To herself._) Where _is_ that
+pair of thick woollen driving-gloves? Ah, _I_ know. (_Aloud._)--these.
+I've found them _such_ a comfort!
+
+The E. L. (_suspiciously_). They have rather a queer----And then they
+are divided at the ends, too.
+
+MISS DE M. Oh, haven't you seen _those_ before? Doctors consider them so
+much healthier, don't you know.
+
+The E. L. I daresay they are, my dear. But aren't the--(_with delicate
+embarrassment_)--the separated parts rather long?
+
+MISS DE M. Do you _think_ so? They allow so much more freedom, you see;
+and then, of course, they'll shrink.
+
+The E. L. That's true, my dear. Well, I'll take a pair, as you recommend
+them so strongly.
+
+MISS DE M. I'm quite _sure_ you'll never regret it!
+
+(_To herself, as the_ E. L. _retires, charmed_.) I'd give _anything_ to
+see the poor old thing trying to put them on!
+
+MISS MIMOSA TENDRILL (_to herself_). I do so _hate_ hawking this horrid
+old thing about! (_Forlornly, to_ MRS. ALLBUTT-INNETT.) I--I beg your
+pardon; but _will_ you give me ten-and-sixpence for this lovely
+work-basket?
+
+MRS. ALLBUTT-INNETT. My good girl, let me tell you I've been pestered to
+buy that identical basket at every bazaar I've set foot in for the last
+twelve-month, and how you can have the face to ask ten-and-six for
+it--you must think I've more money than wit!
+
+MISS TENDR. (_abashed_). Well--_eighteenpence_ then? (_To herself, as_
+Mrs. A. I. _closes promptly_.) There, I've sold _something_, anyhow!
+
+The HON. DIANA D'AUTENBAS (_to herself_). It's rather fun selling at a
+Bazaar; one can let oneself _go_ so much more! (_To the first man she
+meets._) I'm sure you'll buy one of my buttonholes--now _won't_ you? If
+I fasten it in for you myself?
+
+MR. CADNEY ROWSER. A button'ole, eh? Think I'm not classy enough as I
+am?
+
+MISS D'AUT. I don't think _anyone_ could accuse you of not being
+"_classy_;" still a flower would just give the finishing-touch.
+
+MR. C. R. (_modestly_). Rats!--if you'll pass the reedom. But you've
+such a way with you that--there--'ow much.
+
+MISS D'AUT. Only five shillings. Nothing to _you_!
+
+MR. C. R. Five bob? You're a artful girl, _you_ are! "_Fang de
+Seakale_," and no error! But I'm _on_ it; it's worth the money to 'ave a
+flower fastened in by such fair 'ands. I won't 'owl--not even if you
+_do_ run a pin into me.... What? You ain't done a'ready! No _'urry_, yer
+know.... 'Ere, won't you come along to the refreshment-stall, and 'ave a
+little something at my expense. Do!
+
+MISS D'AUT. I think you must imagine you are talking to a barmaid!
+
+MR. C. R. (_with gallantry_). I on'y wish barmaids was 'alf as pleasant
+and sociable as _you_, Miss. But they're a precious stuck-up lot, _I_
+can assure you!
+
+MISS D'AUT. (_to herself as she escapes_). I suppose one ought to put up
+with this sort of thing--for a charity!
+
+MRS. BABBICOMBE (_at the Toy Stall, to the Belle of the Bazaar, aged
+three-and-a-half_). You _perfect_ duck! You're simply too _sweet_! I
+_must_ find you something. (_She tempers generosity with discretion by
+presenting her with a small pair of knitted doll's socks_.) There,
+darling!
+
+The BELLE'S MOTHER. What do you say to the kind lady _now_, Marjory?
+
+MARJORY (_a practical young person, to the donor_). Now div me a dolly
+to put ve socks on.
+
+[MRS. B. _finds herself obliged to repair this omission_.
+
+A YOUNG LADY RAFFLER (_to a_ YOUNG MAN). Do take a ticket for this
+charmin' _sachet_. Only half-a-crown!
+
+The YOUNG MAN. Delighted! If you'll put in for this _splendid_ cigar
+cabinet. Two shillin's!
+
+[_The_ YOUNG LADY _realises that she has encountered an Augur, and
+passes on_.
+
+MISS DE. M. (_to_ MR. ISTHMIAN GATWICK). Can't I tempt you with this
+tea-cosy? It's so absurdly cheap!
+
+MR. ISTHMIAN GATWICK (_with dignity_). A-thanks; I think not. Never
+_take_ tea, don't you know.
+
+MISS DE M. (_with her characteristic adaptability_). Really? No more do
+_I_. But you _could_ use it as a _smoking-cap_, you know. _I_ always----
+
+[_Recollects herself, and breaks off in confusion_.
+
+[Illustration: "You have lofty ambitions and the artistic
+temperament."]
+
+MISS OPHELIA PALMER (_in the "Wizard's Cave"--to_ MR. CADNEY ROWSER).
+Yes, your hand indicates an intensely refined and spiritual nature; you
+are perhaps a _little_ too indifferent to your personal comfort where
+that of others is concerned; sensitive--too much so for your own
+happiness, perhaps--you feel things keenly when you _do_ feel them. You
+have lofty ambitions and the artistic temperament--seven-and-sixpence,
+please.
+
+MR. C. R. (_impressed_). Well, Miss, if you can read all that for
+seven-and-six on the palm of my 'and, I wonder what you _wouldn't_ see
+for 'alf a quid on the sole o' my boot!
+
+[MISS P.'S _belief in Chiromancy sustains a severe shock_.
+
+BOBBIE PATTERSON (_outside tent, as Showman_). This way to the
+Marvellous Jumping Bean from Mexico! Threepence!
+
+VOICE FROM TENT. Bobbie! Stop! The Bean's _lost_! Lady Honor's horrid
+Thought-reading Poodle has just stepped in and swallowed it.
+
+BOBBIE. Ladies and Gentlemen, owing to sudden domestic calamity, the
+Bean has been unavoidably compelled to retire, and will be unable to
+appear till further notice.
+
+MISS SMYLIE (_to_ MR. OTIS BARLEYWATER, _who--in his own set--is
+considered "almost equal to Corney Grain"_). I thought you were giving
+your entertainment in the library? Why _aren't_ you?
+
+MR. OTIS BARLEYWATER (_in a tone of injury_). Why? Because I can't give my
+imitations of Arthur Roberts and Yvette Guilbert with anything _like_
+the requisite "go," unless I get a better audience than three
+programme-sellers, all under ten, and the cloak-room maid--_that's_ why!
+
+MRS. ALLBUTT-INNETT (_as she leaves, for the benefit of bystanders_). I
+must say, the house is _most_ disappointing--not at _all_ what I should
+expect a _Marquis_ to live in. Why, my _own_ reception-rooms are very
+nearly as large, and decorated in a much more modern style!
+
+BOBBIE PATTERSON (_to a_ "DOOSID GOOD-NATURED FELLOW, _who doesn't care
+what he does," and whom he has just discovered inside a case got up to
+represent an automatic sweetmeat machine_). Why, my dear old _chap_! No
+idea it was _you_ inside that thing! Enjoying yourself in there, eh?
+
+The DOOSID GOOD-NATURED FELLOW (_fluffily, from the interior_). Enjoying
+myself! With the beastly pennies droppin' down into my boots, and the
+kids howlin' because all the confounded chocolates have worked up
+between my shoulder-blades, and I can't shake 'em out of the slit in my
+arm? I'd like to see _you_ tryin' it!
+
+The L. O. L. (_to a stranger, who is approaching the_ _Princess's
+stall_). 'Ere, Mister, where are your manners? 'Ats off in the presence
+o' Royalty!
+
+[_She pokes him in the back with her umbrella; the stranger turns,
+smiles slightly, and passes on._
+
+A WELL-INFORMED BYSTANDER. You are evidently unaware, Madam, that the
+gentleman you have just addressed is His Serene Highness the Prince of
+Potsdam!
+
+The L. O. L. (_aghast_). Her '_usban_'! And me a jobbin' of 'im with my
+umbrella! 'Ere, let me get out!
+
+[_She staggers out, in deadly terror of being sent to the Tower on the
+spot._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE CLASSICAL SCHOLAR IN REDUCED CIRCUMSTANCES.
+
+
+You are, let us say, a young professional man in chambers or offices,
+incompetently guarded by an idiot boy whom you dare not trust with the
+responsibility of denying you to strangers. You hear a knock at your
+outer door, followed by conversation in the clerk's room, after which
+your salaried idiot announces "A Gentleman to see you." Enter a dingy
+and dismal little man in threadbare black, who advances with an air of
+mysterious importance. "I think," he begins, "I 'ave the pleasure of
+speaking to Mr.----" (_whatever your name is_.) "I take the liberty of
+calling, Mr.----, to consult you on a matter of the utmost importance,
+and I shall feel personally obliged if you will take precautions for our
+conversation not being over'eard."
+
+He looks grubby for a client--but appearances are deceptive, and you
+offer him a seat, assuring him that he may speak with perfect
+security--whereupon he proceeds in a lowered voice.
+
+"The story I am about to reveal," he says, smoothing a slimy tall hat,
+"is of a nature so revolting, so 'orrible in its details, that I can
+'ardly bring myself to speak it to any 'uming ear!" (_Here you will
+probably prepare to take notes._) "You see before you one who is of 'igh
+birth but low circumstances!" (_At this you give him up as a possible
+client, but a mixture of diffidence and curiosity compels you to
+listen._) "Yes, Sir, I was '_ fruges consumeary nati_.' I 'ave received
+a neducation more befitting a dook than my present condition. Nursed in
+the lap of haffluence, I was trained to fill the lofty position which
+was to have been my lot. But, '_necessitas_,' Sir, as you are aware,
+'_necessitas non abat lejim_,' and such I found it. While still
+receiving a classical education at Cambridge College--(praps you are
+yourself an alumbus of _Halma Mater_? No? I apologise, Sir, I'm
+sure)--but while preparing to take my honorary degree, my father
+suddenly enounced the horful news that he was a bankrup'. Stript of all
+we possessed, we were turned out of our sumchuous 'ome upon the cold
+world, my father's grey 'airs were brought down sorrowing to sangwidge
+boards, though he is still sangwin of paying off his creditors in time
+out of what he can put by from his scanty hearnings. My poor dear
+Mother--a lady born and bred--sank by slow degrees to a cawfy-stall,
+which is now morgidged to the 'ilt, and my eldest Sister, a lovely and
+accomplished gairl, was 'artlessly thrown over by a nobleman, to 'oom
+she was engaged to be married, before our reverses overtook us. His name
+the delikit hinstinks of a gentleman will forbid you to inquire, as
+likewise me to mention--enough to 'int that he occupies a prominent
+position amongst the hupper circles of Society, and is frequently to be
+met with in the papers. His faithlessness preyed on my Sister's mind to
+that degree, that she is now in the Asylum, a nopeless maniac! My honely
+Brother was withdrawn from 'Arrow, and now 'as the 'yumiliation of
+selling penny toys on the kerbstone to his former playfellers. '_Tantee
+nannymice salestibus hirae_,' indeed, Sir!
+
+"But you ask what befell myself." (_You have not--for the simple reason
+that, even if you desired information, he has given you no chance, as
+yet, of putting in a word._) "Ah, Sir, there you 'ave me on a tender
+point. '_Hakew tetigisti_,' if I may venture once more upon a scholarly
+illusion. But I 'ave resolved to conceal nothing--and you shall 'ear.
+For a time I obtained employment as Seckertary and Imanuensis to a
+young baranit, 'oo had been the bosom friend of my College days. He
+would, I know, have used his influence with Goverment to obtain me a
+lucritive post; but, alas, ere he could do so, unaired sheets, coupled
+with deliket 'elth, took him off premature, and I was once more thrown
+on my own resources.
+
+"In conclusion, Sir, you 'ave doubtless done me the hinjustice to
+expect, from all I 'ave said, that my hobjick in obtaining this
+interview was to ask you for pecuniary assistance?" (_Here you reflect
+with remorse that a suspicion to this effect has certainly crossed your
+mind._) "Nothing of the sort or kind, I do assure you. A little 'uming
+sympathy, the relief of pouring out my sorrers upon a feeling 'art, a
+few kind encouraging words, is all I arsk, and that, Sir, the first
+sight of your kind friendly face told me I should not lack. Pore as I
+am, I still 'ave my pride, the pride of a English gentleman, and if you
+was to orfer me a sovereign as you sit there, I should fling it in the
+fire--ah, I _should_--'urt and indignant at the hinsult!" (_Here you
+will probably assure him that you have no intention of outraging his
+feelings in any such manner._) "No, and _why_, Sir? Because you 'ave a
+gentlemanly 'art, and if you were to make sech a orfer, you would do it
+in a kindly Christian spirit which would rob it of all offence. There's
+not many as I would bring myself to accept a paltry sovereign from, but
+I dunno--I might from one like yourself--I _might_. _Ord hignara mali,
+miseris succur-reary disco_, as the old philosopher says. You 'ave that
+kind of _way_ with you." (_You mildly intimate that he is mistaken here,
+and take the opportunity of touching the bell_.) "No, Sir, don't be
+untrue to your better himpulses. '_Ave_ a feelin 'art, Sir! Don't send
+me away, after allowing me to waste my time 'ere--which is of value _to
+me_, let me tell yer, whatever _yours_ is!--like this!.... Well, well,
+there's 'ard people in this world? I'm _going_, Sir ... I 'ave
+sufficient dignity to take a'int.... You 'aven't got even a trifle to
+spare an old University Scholar in redooced circumstances then?... Ah,
+it's easy to see you ain't been at a University yourself--you ain't got
+the _hair_ of it! Farewell, Sir, and may your lot in life be 'appier
+than----All right, don't _hexcite_ yourself. I've bin mistook in yer,
+that's all. I thought you was as soft-edded a young mug as you look.
+Open that door, will yer; I want to get out of this 'ole!"
+
+Here he leaves you with every indication of disgust and disappointment,
+and you will probably hear him indulging in unclassical vituperation on
+the landing.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+RUS IN URBE.
+
+(A SKETCH IN REGENT'S PARK.)
+
+
+_A railed-in corner of the Park. TIME--About 7 p.m. Inside the enclosure
+three shepherds are engaged in shearing the park sheep. The first
+shepherd has just thrown his patient on its back, gripped its shoulders
+between his knees, and tucked its head, as a tiresome and obstructive
+excrescence, neatly away under one of his arms, while he reaches for the
+shears. The second is straddled across his animal, which is lying with
+its hind legs hobbled on a low stage under an elm, in a state of stoical
+resignation, as its fleece is deftly nipped from under its chin. The
+third operator has almost finished his sheep, which, as its dark grey
+fleece slips away from its pink-and-white neck and shoulders, suggests a
+rather decolletee dowager in the act of removing her theatre-cloak in
+the stalls. Sheep, already shorn, lie and pant in shame and shivering
+bewilderment, one or two nibble the blades of grass, as if to assure
+themselves that that resource is still open to them. Sheep whose turn is
+still to come are penned up at the back, and look on, scandalised, but
+with an air which seems to express that their own superior
+respectability is a sufficient protection against similar outrage. The
+shearers appear to take a humorous view of their task, and are watched
+by a crowd which has collected round the railings, with an agreeable
+assurance that they are not expected to contribute towards the
+entertainment._
+
+FIRST WORK-GIRL (_edging up_). Whatever's goin' on inside 'ere? (_After
+looking--disappointed._) Why they ain't on'y a lot o' sheep! I thought
+it was Reciters, or somethink o' that.
+
+SECOND WORK-GIRL (_with irony_). They _look_ like Reciters, don't they!
+It do seem a shime cuttin' them poor things as close as convicks, that
+it do!
+
+FIRST W.-G. They don't mind it partickler; you'd 'ear 'em 'oller fast
+enough if they did.
+
+SECOND W.-G. I expeck they feel so redic'lus, they 'aven't the 'art to
+'oller.
+
+LUCILLA (_to GEORGE_). Do look at that one going up and sniffing at the
+bundle of fleeces, trying to find out which is his. _Isn't_ it pathetic?
+
+GEORGE. H'm--puts one in mind of a shy man in a cloak-room after a
+party, saying feebly, "I rather think that's _my_ coat, and there's a
+crush hat of mine _somewhere_ about," eh?
+
+LUCILLA (_who is always wishing that GEORGE would talk more sensibly_).
+Considering that sheep don't _wear_ crush hats, I hardly see how----
+
+GEORGE. My dear, I bow to your superior knowledge of natural history.
+Now you mention it, I believe it _is_ unusual. But I merely meant to
+suggest a general resemblance.
+
+[Illustration: "They ain't on'y a lot o' sheep! I thought it was
+Reciters, or somethink o' that."]
+
+LUCILLA (_reprovingly_). I know. And you've got into such a silly habit
+of seeing resemblances in things that are perfectly different. I'm sure
+I'm _always_ telling you of it.
+
+GEORGE. You are, my dear. But I'm not nearly so bad as I _was_. Think of
+all the things I used to compare _you_ to before we were married!
+
+SARAH JANE (_to her TROOPER_). I could stand an' look at 'em hours, I
+could. I was born and bred in the country, and it do seem to bring back
+my old 'ome that plain.
+
+Her TROOPER. I'm country bred too, though yer mightn't think it. But
+there ain't much in sheep shearin' to _my_ mind. If it was _pig
+killin'_, now!
+
+SARAH JANE. Ah, that's along o' your bein' in the milingtary, I expect.
+
+Her TROOPER. No, it ain't that. It's the reckerlections it 'ud call up.
+I 'ad a 'ole uncle a pork-butcher, d'ye see, and (_with sentiment_) many
+and many a 'appy hour I've spent as a boy----[_He indulges in tender
+reminiscences._
+
+A YOUNG CLERK (_who belongs to a Literary Society, to his FIANCEE_). It
+has a wonderfully rural look--quite like a scene in 'Ardy, isn't it?
+
+His FIANCEE (_who has "no time for reading rubbish"_). I daresay; though
+I've never been there myself.
+
+The CLERK. Never been? Oh, I see. _You_ thought I said _Arden_--the
+Forest of Arden, in Shakspeare, didn't you?
+
+His FIANCEE. Isn't that where Mr. Gladstone lives, and goes cutting down
+the trees in?
+
+The CLERK. No; At least it's spelt different. But it was 'Ardy _I_
+meant. _Far from the Madding Crowd_, you know.
+
+His FIANCEE (_with a vague view to the next Bank Holiday_). What do you
+_call_ "far"--farther than _Margate_?
+
+ [_Her companion has a sense of discouragement._
+
+An ARTISAN (_to a neighbour in broadcloth and a white choker_). It's
+wonderful 'ow they can go so close without 'urtin' of 'em, ain't it?
+
+His NEIGHBOUR (_with unction_). Ah, my friend, it on'y shows 'ow true it
+is that 'eving tempers the shears for the shorn lambs!
+
+A GOVERNESS (_instructively, to her charge_). Don't you think you ought
+to be very grateful to that poor sheep, Ethel, for giving up her nice
+warm fleece on purpose to make a frock for _you_?
+
+ETHEL (_doubtfully_). Y--yes, Miss Mavor. But (_with a fear that some
+reciprocity may be expected of her_) she's too big for any of my _best_
+frocks, _isn't_ she?
+
+FIRST URCHIN (_perched on the railings_). Ain't that 'un a-kicking? 'E
+don't like 'aving _'is_ 'air cut, 'e don't, no more shouldn't I if it
+was me.... 'E's bin an' upset 'is bloke on the grorss, now! Look at the
+bloke layin' there larfin'.... 'E's ketched 'im agin now. See 'im
+landin' 'im a smack on the 'ed; that'll learn 'im to stay quiet, eh?
+'E's strong, ain't 'e?
+
+SECOND URCHIN. Rams is the wust, though, 'cause they got 'orns, rams
+'ave.
+
+FIRST URCH. What, same as goats?
+
+SECOND URCH. (_emphatically_). Yuss! Big crooked 'uns. And runs at yer,
+they do.
+
+FIRST URCH. I wish they was rams in 'ere. See all them sheep waitin' to
+be done. I wonder what they're finkin' of.
+
+SECOND URCH. Ga-arn! They _don't_ fink, sheep don't.
+
+FIRST URCH. Not o' anyfink?
+
+SECOND URCH. Na-ow! They ain't got nuffink to fink _about_, sheep ain't.
+
+FIRST URCH. I lay they _do_ fink, 'orf and on.
+
+SECOND URCH. Well, I lay _you_ never see 'em doin' of it!
+
+ [_And so on. The first Shepherd disrobes his sheep, and
+ dismisses it with a disrespectful spank. After which he
+ proceeds to refresh himself from a brown jar, and hands it to
+ his comrades. The spectators look on with deeper interest, and
+ discuss the chances of the liquid being beer, cider, or cold
+ tea, as the scene closes._
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CATCHING THE EARLY BOAT.
+
+
+_In Bed; At the Highland Hotel, Oban._
+
+What an extraordinary thing is the mechanism of the human mind! Went to
+sleep last night impressed with vital importance of waking at six, to
+catch early steamer to Gairloch. And here I am--broad awake--at exactly
+5.55! Is it automatic action, or what? Like setting clockwork for
+explosive machine. When the time comes, I blow up--I mean, _get_ up.
+Think out this simile--rather a good one.... Need not have been so
+particular in telling Boots to call me, after all. Shall I get up
+_before_ he comes? He'll be rather surprised when he knocks at the door,
+and hears me singing inside like a lark. But, on reflection, isn't it
+rather _petty_ to wish to astonish an hotel Boots? And why on earth
+should I get up myself, when I've tipped another fellow to get me up?
+But suppose he forgets to call me. I've no right, as yet, to _assume_
+that he will. To get up now would argue want of confidence in
+him--might hurt his feelings. I will give him another five minutes, poor
+fellow....
+
+_Getting up._--No actual necessity to get up yet, but, to make assurance
+doubly--something or other, forget what--I will ... I do. Portmanteau
+rather refractory; retreats under bed--quite ten minutes before I can
+coax it out.... When I have, it won't let me pack it. That's the worst
+of this breed of brown portmanteaus--they're always nasty-tempered.
+However, I am getting a few things into it now, by degrees. Very
+annoying--as fast as I put them in, this confounded portmanteau shoots
+them out again! If I've put in that pair of red and white striped
+pyjamas once, I've done it twenty times--and they always come twisting
+and rolling out of the back, somehow. Fortunate I left myself ample
+time.
+
+Man next door to me is running it rather fine. _He_ has to catch the
+boat, too, and he's not up yet! Hear the Boots hammering away at his
+door. How _can_ a fellow, just for the sake of a few more minutes in
+bed--which he won't even know he's _had_!--go and risk losing his
+steamer in that way? I'll do him a good turn--knock at the wall myself.
+"Hi! get up, you lazy beggar. Look sharp--you'll be late!" He thanks
+me, in a muffled tone, through the wall. He is a remarkably quick
+dresser, he tells me--it won't take him thirty-five seconds to pack,
+dress, pay his bill, and get on board. If that's the case, I don't see
+why _I_ should hurry. I've got much more than that _already_.
+
+_At the Quay._--People in Oban stare a good deal. Can't quite make out
+reason, unless they're surprised to find me up so early. Explain that I
+got up without having even been called. Oban populace mildly surprised,
+and offer me neckties--_Why?_
+
+Fine steamer this; has a paddle-wheel at _both_ ends--"because," the
+Captain explains, "she has not only to _go_ to Gairloch--but come back
+as well."
+
+First-rate navigator, the Captain; he has written my weight, the date of
+my last birthday, and the number of the house I live in, down in a sort
+of ledger he keeps. He does this with all his passengers, he tells me,
+reduces the figures to logarithms, and works out the ship's course in
+decimals. No idea there was so much science in modern seamanship.
+
+_On Board._--Great advantage of being so early is that you can breakfast
+quietly on deck before starting. Have mine on bridge of steamer, under
+awning; everything very good--ham-meringues _excellent_. No coffee,
+but, instead, a capital brand of dry, sparkling marmalade, served,
+sailor-fashion, in small pomatum-pots.
+
+What a small world we live in! Of all people in the world, who should be
+sitting next to me but my Aunt Maria! I was always under the impression
+that she had died in my infancy. Don't like to mention this, because if
+I am _wrong_, she might be offended. But if she _did_ die when I was a
+child, she ought to be a much older woman than she looks. I _do_ tell
+her this--because it is really a compliment.
+
+My Aunt, evidently an experienced traveller, never travels, she informs
+me, without a pair of globes and a lawn-mower. She offers, very kindly,
+to lend me the Celestial globe, if the weather is at all windy. This is
+behaving _like_ an Aunt!
+
+We are taking in live-stock; curious-looking creatures, like spotted
+pug-dogs (only bigger and woollier, of course) and without horns.
+Somebody leaning over the rail next to me (I _think_ he is the Public
+Prosecutor, but am not quite sure), tells me they are "Scotch
+Shortbreads." Agreeable man, but rather given to staring.
+
+Didn't observe it before, but my Aunt is really amazingly like Mr.
+Gladstone. Ask her to explain this. She is much distressed that I have
+noticed it; says she has felt it coming on for some time; it is not, as
+she justly complains, as if she took any interest in politics either.
+She has consulted every doctor in London, and they all tell her it is
+simply weakness, and she will outgrow it with care. Singular case--must
+find out (delicately) whether it's catching.
+
+We ought to be starting soon; feel quite fresh and lively, in spite of
+having got up so early. Mention this to Captain. Wish he and the Public
+Prosecutor wouldn't stare at me so. Just as if there was something
+singular in my appearance!
+
+They're embarking my portmanteau now. Knew they would have a lively time
+of it! It takes at least four sailors, in kilts, to manage it. Ought I
+to step ashore and quiet it down? Stay where I am. Don't know why, but
+feel a little afraid of it when it's like this. Shall exchange it for a
+quiet hand-bag when I get home.
+
+Captain busy hammering at a hole in the funnel--dangerous place to
+spring a leak in--hope he is making it water-tight. The hammering
+reminds me of that poor devil in the bedroom next to mine at the hotel.
+_He_ won't catch the boat now--he _can't_! My Aunt (who has left off
+looking like Mr. Gladstone) asks me why I am laughing. I tell her about
+that unfortunate man and his "thirty-five seconds." She screams with
+laughter. Very humorous woman, my Aunt.
+
+Deck crowded with passengers now: all pointing and staring ... at whom?
+Ask Aunt Maria. She declines to tell me: says, severely, that "If I
+don't know, I ought to."
+
+Great Heavens! It's at _me_ they're staring! And no wonder--in the hurry
+I was in, I must have packed _everything_ up!... I've come away just as
+I was! _Now_ I understand why someone offered me a necktie. Where shall
+I go and hide myself? Shall I ever persuade that beast of a portmanteau
+to give me out one or two things to put on--because I really _can't_ go
+about like this! Captain still hammering at funnel--but he can't wake
+that sleepy-headed idiot in the next room. "Louder--knock _louder_, or
+the boat will go without him! Tell him there isn't another for two days.
+He's said good-bye to everybody he knows at Oban--he will look such an
+ass if he doesn't go, after all!"... Not the least use! Wonder what his
+name is. My Aunt says _she_ knows, only she won't tell me--she'll
+whisper it, as a great secret. She is just about to disclose the name,
+which, somehow, I am extremely curious to know--when ...
+
+Where am I? Haven't they got that unhappy fellow up _yet_? Why the
+dickens are they knocking at _my_ door? I've been on board the steamer
+for hours, I tell you? Eh? _what?_ Five minutes to eight! And the
+Gairloch boat? "Sailed at usual time--seven. Tried to make you hear--but
+couldn't."... Confound it all! Good mind not to get up all day--now!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+SOCIETY'S NEXT CRAZE.
+
+(AS FORESEEN BY MR. PUNCH'S SECOND-SIGHTED CLAIRVOYANT.)
+
+
+_It is the summer of 189-. The scene is a road skirting Victoria Park,
+Bethnal Green, which Society's leaders have recently discovered and
+appointed as the rendez-vous for the Season, and where it is now the
+correct thing for all really smart people to indulge, between certain
+prescribed hours, in sports and pastimes that have hitherto been more
+characteristic of the masses than the classes. The only permissible
+mount now is the donkey, which must be ridden close to the tail, and
+referred to as a "moke." A crowd of well-turned-out spectators arrives
+from the West End every morning about eleven to watch the brilliant
+parade of "Mokestrians" (as the Society journalist will already have
+decided to call them). Some drive slowly up and down on coster-barrows,
+attended by cockaded and disgusted grooms. About twelve, they break up
+into light luncheon parties; after which they play democratic games for
+half an hour or so, and drive home on drags._
+
+MR. WOODBY-INNETT (_to the DONKEY PROPRIETOR_). Kept a moke for me? I
+told you I should be wantin' one every mornin' now.
+
+The DONKEY PROPRIETOR (_after consulting engagement book_). I've not got
+it down on my list, Sir. Very sorry, but the Countess of Cumberback has
+just booked the last for the 'ole of this week. Might let you 'ave one
+by-and-by, if Sir Hascot Goodwood brings his in punctual, but I can't
+promise it.
+
+MR. WOODBY-INN. That's no good; no point in ridin' after the right time.
+(_To himself, as he turns away._) Nuisance! Not that I'm so keen about a
+moke. Not a patch on a bike!--though it don't do to say so. Only if I'd
+known this, I'd have turned up in a tall hat and frock coat; and then I
+could have taken a turn on the steam-circus. Wonder if it would be any
+sort of form shyin' at cocoa-nuts in tweeds and a straw hat. Must ask
+some chap who knows. More puzzlin' what to put on this year than ever!
+
+LADY RANELA HURLINGHAM (_breathlessly to DONKEY PROPRIETOR_). That's
+mine, isn't it? Will you please put me up, and _promise_ me you'll keep
+close behind and make him run. (_Suppliantly._) You will, _won't_ you?
+
+The DONKEY PROPRIETOR (_with a due sense of his own value_). Well, I
+dessay I can come along presently, Lady 'Urlingham, and fetch 'im a
+whack or two; jest now I can't, having engaged to come and 'old the
+Marshiness of 'Ammercloth on _'er_ moke; but there, you orter be able
+to git along well enough by yourself now--_you_ ought!
+
+[Illustration: "Mokestrians."]
+
+CAPTAIN SONBYRNE (_just home on leave from India--to MRS.
+CHESHAM-LOWNDES_). Rather an odd sort of idea this--I mean, coming all
+the way out here to ride a lot of donkeys, eh?
+
+MRS. CHESHAM-LOWNDES. It used to be rather amusing a month ago, before
+they all got used to riding so near the tail; but now they're all so
+good at it, don't you know.
+
+CAPT. SONB. I went down to Battersea Park yesterday to see the
+bicyclists. Not a soul there, give you my word!
+
+MRS. C.-L. No; there _wouldn't_ be _this_ season. You see, all sorts and
+conditions of people began to take it up, and it got too fearfully
+common. And now moke-riding has quite cut it out.
+
+CAPT. SONB. But why ride donkeys when you can get gees?
+
+MRS. C.-L. Oh, well, they're democratic, and cheap, and all that, don't
+you know. And one really can't be _seen_ on a horse this year--in town,
+at least. In the country it don't matter so much.
+
+FIRST MOKESTRIAN (_to second ditto_). Hullo, old chap, so _you_'ve taken
+to a moke at last, eh? How are you gettin' on?
+
+SECOND MOKESTRIAN. Pretty well. I can sit on his tail all right now, but
+I can't get into the way of keepin' my heels off the ground yet, it's so
+beastly difficult.
+
+_Fragments from_ SPECTATORS. That's rather a smart barrow Lady
+Barinrayne's drivin' to-day.... Who's the fellow with her, with the
+paper feather in his pot-hat? Bad style, _I_ call it.... That's Lord
+Freddy Fugleman--best dressed man in London. You'll see everybody
+turnin' up in a paper feather in a day or two.... Lot of men seem to be
+using a short clay as a cigarette-holder now, don't they?... Yes, Roddie
+Rippingill introduced the idea last week, and it seems to have caught
+on. [_&c._, _&c._]
+
+
+_After Luncheon; at the Steam-Circus and other Sports._
+
+_Scraps of Small-talk._ No end sorry, Lady Gwendolen; been tryin' to get
+you a scent-squirt everywhere; but they're all gone; such a run on 'em
+for Ascot, don't you know.... Thanks; it doesn't matter; only dear Lady
+Buckram has just thrown some red ochre down the back of my neck, and
+Algy Vere came and shot out a coloured paper thing right in my face, and
+I shouldn't like to seem uncivil.... Suppose I shall see you at Lady
+Brabazon's "Kiss in the Ring" at Bethnal Green to-morrow afternoon?...
+I believe she _did_ send us cards, but we promised to look in at a
+friendly lead the Duchess of Dillwater is giving at such a dear little
+public she's discovered in Whitechapel, so we may be rather late....
+You'll keep a handkerchief-throw for me if you _do_ come on, won't
+you?... It will have to be an _extra_, then, I'm afraid.... Are you
+goin' to Lord Balmisyde's eight o'clock breakfast to-morrow? _So_ glad;
+I hear he's engaged five coffee-stalls, and we're all to stand up and
+eat saveloys and trotters and thick bread and butter.... Oh, I wanted to
+ask you, my girls have got an invitation to a hoky-poky party the
+Vavasours are giving after the moke-ridin' next Thursday, and I'm told
+it's quite wrong to eat hoky-poky with a spoon--do you know how that
+is?... The only _correct_ way, Caroline, is to lick it out of the glass,
+which requires practice before it can be _attempted_ in public. But I
+hear there's quite a pleasant boy-professor somewhere in the Mile End
+Road who teaches it in a single lesson; he's _very_ moderate; his terms
+are only half a guinea, which includes the hoky-poky. I'll send you his
+address if I can find it.... Thanks _so_ much; the dear girls _will_ be
+so grateful to you.... I _do_ think it's _quite_ too bad of Lady
+Geraldine Grabber, she goes and sticks her card on the only decent
+wooden horse in the steam-circus and says she's engaged it for the whole
+time, though she hardly ever takes a round! And so many girls standing
+out who can ride without getting in the _least_ giddy!... Rathah a
+boundah, that fellow, if you ask me; I've _seen_ him pullin' a swing
+boat in brown boots and ridin'-breeches!... How wonderfully well your
+daughter throws the rings, dear Lady Cornelia, I hear she's won three
+walking-sticks and five clasp knives.... You're very kind. She is quite
+clever at it; but then she's had some private coaching from a gipsy,
+don't you know.... What are you going to do with yourself this
+afternoon?... Oh, I'm going to the People's Palace to see the finals
+played off for the Skittles Championship; bound to be a closish thing;
+rather excitin', don't you know.... Ah, Duchess, you've been in form
+to-day, I see, five cocoa-nuts! Can I relieve you of some of them?...
+Thanks, they _are_ rather tiresome to carry; if you _could_ find my
+carriage and tell the footman to keep his eye on them. [_&c._, _&c._]
+
+LADY ROSEHUGH (_to MR. LUKE WALMER, on the way home_). You know I _do_
+think it's _such_ a cheering sign of the times, Society getting simpler
+in its tastes, and sharing the pleasures of the Dear People, and all
+that; it must tend to bring all classes more _together_, don't you know!
+
+MR. LUKE WALMER. Perhaps. Only I was thinking, I don't remember seeing
+any of the Dear People _about_.
+
+LADY ROSEHUGH. No; somebody was telling me they had taken to playing
+Polo on bicycles in Hyde Park. So extraordinary of them--such a pity
+they haven't some higher form of amusement, you know!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+AN IDEAL INTERVIEWER.
+
+
+_Den of Latest Lion._
+
+LATEST LION (_perusing card with no visible signs of gratification_).
+Confound it! don't remember telling the Editor of _Park Lane_ I'd let
+myself be interviewed. Suppose I must have, though. (_Aloud to SERVANT,
+who is waiting._) You can show the Gentleman up.
+
+SERVANT (_returning_). Mr. Walsingham Jermyn!
+
+ [_A youthful Gentleman is shown in; he wears a pink-striped
+ shirt-front, an enormous buttonhole, and a woolly frock-coat,
+ and is altogether most expensively and fashionably attired,
+ which, however, does not prevent him from appearing somewhat
+ out of countenance after taking a seat._
+
+The L. L. (_encouragingly_). I presume, Mr. Jermyn, you're here to ask
+me some questions about the future of the British East African Company,
+and the duty of the Government in the matter?
+
+MR. JERMYN (_gratefully_). Er--yes, that's what I've come about, don't
+you know--that sort of thing. Fact is (_with a burst of confidence_),
+this isn't exactly my line--I've been rather let in for this. You see,
+I've not been by way of doin' this long--but what's a fellow to do when
+he's stony-broke? Got to do _somethin'_, don't you know. So I thought
+I'd go in for journalism--I don't mean the drudgery of it,
+leader-writin' and that--but the light part of it, _Society_, you know.
+But the other day, man who does the interviews for _Park Lane_ (that's
+the paper I'm on) jacked up all of a sudden, and my Editor said I'd
+better take on his work for a bit, and see what I made of it. I wasn't
+particular. You see, I've always been rather a dead hand at drawin'
+fellows out, leadin' them on, you know, and all that, so I knew it would
+come easy enough to me, for all you've got to do is to sit tight and let
+the other chap--I mean to say, the man you're interviewin'--do all the
+talking, while you--I mean to say, myself--keep, keeps--hullo, I'm
+getting my grammar a bit mixed; however, it don't signify--_I_ keep
+quiet and use my eyes and ears like blazes. Talking of grammar, I
+thought when I first started that I should get in a regular hat over the
+grammar, and the spellin', and that--_you_ write, don't you, when you're
+not travellin'? So you know what a grind it is to spell right. But I
+soon found they kept a Johnny at the office with nothing to do but put
+all your mistakes right for you, so, soon as I knew that, I went ahead
+gaily.
+
+The L. L. Exactly, and now, perhaps, you will let me know what
+particular information you require?
+
+MR. J. Oh, _you_ know the sort of thing the public likes--they'll want
+to know what sort of diggings you've got, how you dress when you're at
+home, and all that, how you write your books, now--you do write books,
+don't you? Thought so. Well, that's what the public likes. You see, your
+name's a good deal up just now--no humbug, it _is_ though! Between
+ourselves, you know, I think the whole business is the balliest kind of
+rot, but they've got to have it, so there you are, don't you see. I
+don't pretend to be a well-read sort of fellow, never was particularly
+fond of readin' and that; no time for it, and besides, I've always said
+_Books_ don't teach you knowledge of the world. I know the world fairly
+well--but I didn't learn it from books--ah, you agree with me
+there--_you_ know what skittles all that talk is about education and
+that. Well, as I was sayin', I don't read much, I see the _Field_ every
+week, and a clinkin' good paper it is, tells you everythin' worth
+knowin', and I read the _Pink Un_, too. Do you know any of the fellows
+on it? Man I know is a great friend of one of them, he's going to
+introduce me some day, I like knowin' literary chaps, don't you? You've
+been about a good deal, haven't you? I expect you must have seen a lot,
+travellin' as you do. I've done a little travellin' myself, been to
+Monte Carlo, you know, and the Channel Islands--_you_ ever been to the
+Channel Islands? Oh, you ought to go, it's a very cheery place. Talkin'
+of Monte Carlo, I had a rattlin' good time at the tables there; took out
+a hundred quid, determined I would have a downright good flutter, and
+Jove! I made that hundred last me over five days, and came away in
+nothing but my lawn-tennis flannels. That's what I _call_ a flutter,
+don't you know! Er--beastly weather we're havin'! You have pretty good
+weather where you've been? A young brother of mine has been out for a
+year in Texas--he said _he'd_ very good weather--of course that's some
+way off where _you_'ve come from--Central Africa, isn't it? Talkin' of
+my brother, what do you think the young ass did?--went out there with a
+thousand pounds, and paid it all down to some sportsmen who took him to
+see some stock they said belonged to them--of course he found out after
+they'd off'd it that they didn't own a white mouse among 'em! But then,
+Dick's one of those chaps, you know, that think themselves so uncommon
+knowing, they _can't_ be had. I always told him he'd be taken in some
+day if he let his tongue wag so much--too fond of hearing himself talk,
+don't you know, great mistake for a young fellow; sure to say somethin'
+you'd better have let alone. I suppose you're getting rather sick of all
+these banquets, receptions, and that? They do you very well, certainly.
+I went to one of these Company dinners some time ago, and they did me as
+well as I've ever been done in my life, but when you've got to sit still
+afterwards and listen to some chap who's been somewhere and done
+somethin' jawin' about it by the hour together without a check, why,
+it's not _good_ enough, I'm hanged if it is! Well, I'm afraid I can't
+stay any longer--my time's valuable now, don't you know. I daresay yours
+is, too. I'm awfully glad to have had a chat with you, and all that. I
+expect you could tell me a lot more interestin' things, only of course
+you've got to keep the best of 'em to put in your book--you _are_
+writin' a book or somethin', ain't you? Such heaps of fellows are
+writin' books nowadays, the wonder is how any of 'em get read. I shall
+try and get a look at yours, though, if I come across it anywhere; hope
+you'll put some amusin' things in,--nigger stories and that, don't make
+it too bally scientific, you know. Directly I get back, I shall sit
+down, slick off, and write off all you've told me. I shan't want any
+notes, I can carry it all in my head, and of course I shan't put in
+anything you'd rather I didn't, don't you know.
+
+The L. L. (_solemnly_). Mr. Jermyn, I place implicit confidence in your
+discretion. I have no doubt whatever that your head, Sir, is more than
+capable of containing such remarks as I have found it necessary to make
+in the course of our interview. I like your system of extracting
+information, Sir, very much. Good morning.
+
+Mr. J. (_outside_). Nice pleasant-spoken fellow--trifle long-winded,
+though! Gad, I was so busy listenin' I forgot to notice what his rooms
+were like or anythin'! How would it do to go back? No, too much of a
+grind. Daresay I can manage to fox up somethin'. I shall tell the Chief
+what he said about my system. Chief don't quite know what I _can_ do
+yet--this will open his eyes a bit.
+
+ [_And it does._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+SATURDAY NIGHT IN THE EDGWARE ROAD.
+
+
+_For over half-a-mile the pavement on the East side of the road is
+thronged with promenaders, and the curbstone lined with stalls and
+barrows, and hawkers of various wares. Marketing housewives with covered
+baskets oscillate undecidedly from stalls to shops, and put off
+purchasing to the last possible moment. Maids-of-all-work perambulate
+arm-in-arm, exchanging airy badinage with youths of their acquaintance,
+though the latter seem to prefer the society of their own sex. A man
+with a switchback skittle-board plays gloomy games by himself to an
+unspeculative group of small boys. The tradesmen stand outside their
+shops and conduct their business with a happy blend of the methods of a
+travelling showman and a clown._
+
+BURLESQUE BUTCHER. Now then, all o' _you_ there! Buy, buy, buy! Just
+give yer minds to spendin' yer money! (_In a tone of artless wonder._)
+Where _does_ the Butcher git this _luverly_ meat? What can I do fur
+_you_ now, Marm? (_Triumphantly, after selling the scrag-end of a neck
+of mutton._) _Now_ we're busy!
+
+FARCICAL FISHMONGER (_with two Comic Assistants_). Ahar! (_To crowd._)
+Come 'ere, you silly young snorkers! I've the quali_tee_! I've the
+quali_tay_! _Keep_ takin' money!
+
+FIRST COMIC ASSISTANT. Ahye! Foppence a pound nice plaice! Kippers two
+fur three 'apence. _We're_ the Perfeshnul Curers! What are yer all goin'
+to _do_? Sort 'em out cheap!
+
+SECOND C. A. I don't mind! What care I? (_Bursting into song._) "'Ow,
+she rowled me 'ed, and rumbled in the 'ay!" On me word, she did, ladies!
+
+ [_He executes a double shuffle, and knocks over several boxes
+ of bloaters in the gaiety of his heart._
+
+A HAWKER OF PENNY MEMORANDUM BOOKS (_to an audience of small boys_).
+Those among you 'oo are not mechanics, decidedly you 'ave mechanical
+_hideers_!
+
+ [_He enlarges upon the convenience of having a notebook in
+ which to jot down any inspirations of this kind; but his
+ hearers do not appear to agree with him._
+
+A LUGUBRIOUS VENDOR. One penny for six comic pypers. Hevery one
+different!
+
+A RUDE BOY. You ain't bin _readin'_ o' any on 'em, 'ave yer, guv'nor?
+
+A CROCKERY MERCHANT (_as he unpacks a variety of vases of appalling
+hideousness_). _I_ don't care--it's self-sacrifice to give away!
+Understand, you ain't buyin' _common_ things, you're buyin' suthin'
+_good_! It 'appens to be my buthday to-night, so I'm goin' to let you
+people 'ave the benefit of the doubt. Come on 'ere. I don't ask you to
+b'lieve _me_--on'y to jedge fur yerselves. I'm not 'ere to tell you no
+fairy tales; and the reason why I'm in a position to orfer up these
+vawses--all richly gilt, and decorated in three colours, the most
+expensive ever made--the reason I'm able to sell them so cheap as I'm
+doin' is this--(_he lowers his voice mysteriously_)--'arf the stuff I
+'ave 'ere we git _in very funny ways_!
+
+ [_This ingeniously suggestive hint enhances the natural charm
+ of his ware to such a degree that the vases are bought up
+ briskly, as calculated to brighten the humblest home._
+
+A SANCTIMONIOUS YOUNG MAN (_with a tongue too large for his mouth, who
+has just succeeded in collecting a circle round him_). I am only 'ere
+to-night, my friends, as a paid servant--for the purpose of deciding a
+wager. Some o' you may have noticed an advertisement lately in the
+_Daily Telegrawf_, asking for men to stand on Southwark Bridge and orfer
+arf-suverings for a penny apiece. You are equally well aware that it is
+illegal to orfer the Queen's coinage for money: and that is _not_ my
+intention this evening. _But_ I 'ave 'ere several pieces of gold,
+guaranteed to be of the exact weight of arf a suvering, and 'all-marked,
+which, in order to decide the wager I 'ave spoken of, I shall now
+perceed to charge you the sum of one penny for, and no more. I am not
+allowed to sell _more_ than one to each person----
+
+ [_Here a constable comes up, and the decision of the wager is
+ postponed until a more favourable opportunity._
+
+FIRST "GENERAL" (_looking into a draper's window_). Look at them
+coloured felt 'ats--all shades, and on'y sixpence three-fardens!
+
+SECOND "G." They _are_ reasonable; but I've 'eard as felt 'ats is gone
+out of fashion now.
+
+FIRST "G." Don't you believe it, Sarah. Why, my married sister bought
+one on'y last week!
+
+COSTER (_to an old lady who has repudiated a bunch of onions after a
+prolonged scrutiny_). Frorsty? So would _you_ be if _your_ onion 'ad bin
+layin' out in the fields all night as long as these 'ave!
+
+FIRST ITINERANT PHYSICIAN (_as he screws up fragments of candy in pieces
+of newspaper_). That is Frog in your Froat what I'm doin' up now. I arsk
+you to try it. It's given to me to give away, and I'm goin' to _give_
+it away--you understand?--that's all. And now I'm going to tork to you
+about suthink else. You see this small bottle what I 'old up. I tell you
+there's 'undreds layin' in bed at this present moment as 'ud give a
+shillin' fur one of these--and I offer it to you at one penny! It
+corrects all nerve-pains connected with the 'ed, cures earache,
+toothache, neuralgy, noomonia, 'art-complaint, fits, an' syhatica. Each
+bottle is charged with helectricity, forming a complete
+galvanic-battery. Hall _you_ 'ave to do is to place the bottle to one o'
+your nawstrils, first closing the other with your finger. You will find
+it compels you to sniff. The moment you _tyke_ that sniff, you'll find
+the worter comin' into your heyes--and that's the helectricity. You'll
+say, "_I_ always 'eard helectricity was a _fluid_." (_With withering
+scorn._) Very _likely_! You _'ave_? An' _why_? Be-cawse o' the hignirant
+notions prevailin' about scientific affairs! Hevery one o' these bottles
+contains a battery, and to each purchaser I myke 'im a present--a
+_present_, mind yer--of Frog in 'is Froat!
+
+SUSAN JANE (_to LIZERANN, before a stall where "Novelettes, three a
+penny," are to be procured by the literary_). Shall we 'ave a penn'orth,
+an' you go 'alves along o' me?
+
+LIZERANN. Not _me_. I ain't got no time to go improvin' o' _my_ mind,
+whatever _you_ 'ave!
+
+A VENDOR OF "'ORE'OUND TABLETS" (_he is a voluble young man, with
+considerable lung-power, and a tendency to regard his cough lozenges as
+not only physical but moral specifics_). I'm on'y a young feller, as you
+see, and yet 'ere I _am_, with my four burnin' lamps, and a lassoo-soot
+as belonged to my Uncle Bill, doin' _wunnerful_ well. Why, I've took
+over two pound in coppers a'ready! Mind you, I don't deceive you; you
+may all on you do as well as me; on'y you'll 'ave to get two good
+ref'rences fust, _and_ belong to a temp'rance society, like I do. This
+is the badge as I've got on me at this minnit. I ain't always bin like I
+am now. I started business four year ago, and was doin' wunnerful well,
+too, till I got among 'orse-copers an' dealers and went on the booze,
+and lost the lot. Then I turned up the drink and got a berth sellin'
+these 'ere Wangoo Tablets--and now I've got a neat little missus, and a
+nice 'ome, goin' on wunnerful comfortable. Never a week passes but what
+I buy myself something. Last week it was a pair o' noo socks. Soon as
+the sun peeps out and the doo dries up, I'm orf to Yarmouth. And what's
+the reason? I've _enjoyed_ myself there. My Uncle Bill, as lives at
+Lowestoft, and keeps six fine 'orses and a light waggon, _he's_ doin'
+wunnerful well, and he'd take me into partnership to-morrow, he would.
+But no--I'm 'appier as I am. What's the reason I kin go on torkin' to
+you like this night after night, without injury to my voice? Shall I
+tell yer? Because, every night o' my life, afore I go to bed, I take
+four o' these Wangoo Tablets--compounded o' the purest 'erbs. You take
+them to the nearest doctor's and arsk 'im to analyse an' test them as he
+_will_, and you 'ear what _he_ says of them! Take one o' them
+tablets--after your pipe; after your cigaw; after your cigarette. You
+won't want no more drink, you'll find them make you come 'ome reglar
+every evening, and be able to buy a noo 'at every week. You've ony to
+persevere for a bit with these 'ere lawzengers to be like I am myself,
+doin' _wunnerful_ well! You see this young feller 'ere? (_Indicating a
+sheepish head in a pot-hat, which is visible over the back of his
+stall._) Born and bred in Kenada, _'e_ was. And quite _right_! Bin over
+'ere six year, so, o' course he speaks the lengwidge. And _quite_ right.
+Now I'm no Amerikin myself, but they're a wunnerful clever people, the
+Amerikins are, allays inventin' or suthink o' that there. And you're at
+liberty to go and arsk 'im for yourselves whether this is a real
+Amerikin invention or not--as he'll tell yer it _is_--and quite right,
+too! An' it stands to reason as _he_ orter know, seein' he introdooced
+it 'imself and doin' wunnerful well with it ever since. I ain't come
+'ere to _rob_ yer. Lady come and give me a two-shillin' piece just now.
+I give it her back. _She_ didn't know--thort it was a penny, till I told
+her. Well, that just shows you what these 'ere Wangoo 'Ore'ound Tablets
+_are_!
+
+ [_After this practical illustration of their efficacy, he
+ pauses for oratorical effect, and a hard-worked-looking matron
+ purchases three packets, in the apparent hope that a similar
+ halo of the best horehound will shortly irradiate the head of
+ her household._
+
+LIZERANN (_to SUSAN JANE, as they walk homewards_). On'y fancy--the
+other evenin', as I was walkin' along this very pavement, a cab-'orse
+come up beyind me, unbeknown like, and put 'is 'ed over my shoulder and
+breathed right in my ear!
+
+SUSAN JANE (_awestruck_). You _must_ ha' bin a bad gell!
+
+ [_LIZERANN is clearly disquieted by so mystical an
+ interpretation, even while she denies having done anything
+ deserving of a supernatural rebuke._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE "MODEL HUSBAND" CONTEST.
+
+
+_Scene the First--At the GALAHAD-GREEN'S._
+
+MRS. G.-G. Galahad!
+
+MR. G.-G. (_meekly_). My love?
+
+MRS. G.-G. I see that the proprietors of _All Sorts_ are going to follow
+the American example, and offer a prize of L20 to the wife who makes out
+the best case for her husband as a Model. It's just as well, perhaps,
+that you should know that I've made up my mind to enter _you_!
+
+MR. G.-G. (_gratified_). My dear Cornelia! really, I'd no idea you had
+such a----
+
+MRS. G.-G. Nonsense! The drawing-room carpet is a perfect disgrace, and,
+as you can't, or won't, provide the money in any _other_ way,
+why----Would you like to hear what I've said about you?
+
+MR. G.-G. Well, if you're sure it wouldn't be troubling you too much, I
+_should_, my dear.
+
+MRS. G.-G. Then sit where I can see you, and listen. (_She reads._)
+"Irreproachable in all that pertains to morality"--(and it would be a
+bad day indeed for you, Galahad, if I ever had cause to think
+_otherwise_!)--"morality; scrupulously dainty and neat in his
+person"--(ah, you may well blush, Galahad, but fortunately, they won't
+want me to _produce_ you!)--"he imports into our happy home the delicate
+refinement of a _preux chevalier_ of the olden time." (Will you kindly
+take your dirty boots off the steel fender!) "We rule our little kingdom
+with a joint and equal sway, to which jealousy and friction are alike
+unknown; he, considerate and indulgent to my womanly weakness"--(You
+need not stare at me in that perfectly idiotic fashion!)--"I, looking to
+him for the wise and tender support which has never yet been denied. The
+close and daily scrutiny of many years has discovered"--(What are you
+shaking like _that_ for?)--"discovered no single weakness; no taint or
+flaw of character; no irritating trick of speech or habit." (How often
+have I told you that I will _not_ have the handle of that paper-knife
+sucked? Put it down; do!) "His conversation--sparkling but ever
+spiritual--renders our modest meals veritable feasts of fancy and flows
+of soul.... _Well_, Galahad?"
+
+MR. G.-G. Nothing, my dear; nothing. It struck me as, well,--a trifle
+_flowery_, that last passage, that's all!
+
+MRS. G.-G. (_severely_). If I cannot expect to win the prize without
+descending to floweriness, whose fault is _that_, I should like to know?
+If you can't make sensible observations, you had better not speak at
+all. (_Continuing._) "Over and over again, gathering me in his strong,
+loving arms, and pressing fervent kisses upon my forehead, he has cried,
+'Why am I not a Monarch that so I could place a diadem upon that brow?
+With such a Consort am I not doubly crowned?'" Have you anything to say
+to _that_, Galahad?
+
+MR. G.-G. Only, my love, that I--I don't seem to remember having made
+that particular remark.
+
+MRS. G.-G. Then make it _now_. I'm sure I wish to be as accurate as I
+_can_.
+
+ [_MR. G.-G. makes the remark--but without fervour._
+
+
+_Scene the Second--At the MONARCH-JONES'._
+
+MR. M.-J. Twenty quid would come in precious handy just now, after all
+I've dropped lately, and I mean to pouch that prize if I can--so just
+you sit down, Grizzle, and write out what I tell you; do you hear?
+
+MRS. M.-J. (_timidly_). But, Monarch, dear, would that be quite _fair_?
+No, don't be angry, I didn't mean that--I'll write whatever you please!
+
+MR. M.-J. You'd _better_, that's all! Are you ready? I must screw myself
+up another peg before I begin. (_He screws._) Now, then. (_Stands over
+her and dictates._) "To the polished urbanity of a perfect gentleman he
+unites the kindly charity of a true Christian." (Why the devil don't you
+learn to write decently, eh?) "Liberal, and even lavish, in all his
+dealings, he is yet a stern foe to every kind of excess"--(Hold on a
+bit, I must have another nip after that)--"every kind of excess. Our
+married life is one long dream of blissful contentment, in which each
+contends with the other in loving self-sacrifice." (Haven't you corked
+all that down _yet_!) "Such cares and anxieties as he has he conceals
+from me with scrupulous consideration as long as possible"--(Gad, I
+should be a fool if I _didn't_!)--"while I am ever sure of finding in
+him a patient and sympathetic listener to all my trifling worries and
+difficulties."--(_Two_ f's in difficulties, you little fool--can't you
+even _spell_?) "Many a time, falling on his knees at my feet, he has
+rapturously exclaimed, his accents broken by manly emotion, 'Oh, that I
+were more worthy of such a pearl among women! With such a helpmate, I
+am indeed to be envied!'" That _ought_ to do the trick. If I don't romp
+in after that!----(_Observing that MRS. M.-J.'S shoulders are
+convulsed._) What the dooce are you giggling at _now_?
+
+MRS. M.-J. I--I wasn't giggling, Monarch dear, only----
+
+MR. M.-J. Only _what_?
+
+MRS. M.-J. Only crying!
+
+
+_The Sequel._
+
+"The judges appointed by the spirited proprietors of _All Sorts_ to
+decide the 'Model Husband Contest'--which was established on lines
+similar to one recently inaugurated by one of our New York
+contemporaries--have now issued their award. Two competitors have sent
+in certificates which have been found equally deserving of the prize;
+viz., Mrs. Cornelia Galahad-Green, Graemair Villa, Peckham, and Mrs.
+Griselda Monarch-Jones, Aspen Lodge, Lordship Lane. The sum of twenty
+pounds will consequently be divided between these two ladies, to whom,
+with their respective spouses, we beg to tender our cordial
+felicitations."--(_Extract from Daily Paper, some six months hence._)
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE COURIER OF THE HAGUE.
+
+
+He is an elderly amiable little Dutchman in a soft felt hat; his name is
+BOSCH, and he is taking me about. _Why_ I engaged him I don't quite
+know--unless from a general sense of helplessness in Holland, and a
+craving for any kind of companionship. Now I have got him, I feel rather
+more helpless than ever--a sort of composite of SANDFORD and MERTON,
+with a didactic, but frequently incomprehensible Dutch BARLOW. My
+SANDFORD half would like to exhibit an intelligent curiosity, but is
+generally suppressed by MERTON, who has a morbid horror of useful
+information. Not that BOSCH is remarkably erudite, but nevertheless he
+contrives to reduce me to a state of imbecility, which I catch myself
+noting with a pained surprise. There is a statue in the Plein, and the
+SANDFORD element in me finds a satisfaction in recognising it aloud as
+William the Silent. It is--but, as my MERTON part thinks, a fellow
+_would_ be a fool if he didn't recognise William after a few hours in
+Holland--his images, in one form or another, are tolerably numerous.
+Still BOSCH is gratified. "Yass, dot is ole Volliam," he says,
+approvingly, as to a precocious infant just beginning to take notice.
+"Lokeer," he says, "you see dot Apoteek?" He indicates a chemist's shop
+opposite, with nothing remarkable about it externally, except a Turk's
+head with his tongue out over the door.
+
+"Yes, I (speaking for SANDFORD and MERTON) see it--has it some
+historical interest--did Volliam get medicine there, or what?"
+
+"Woll, dis mornin dare vas two sairvans dere, and de von cot two blaces
+out of de odder's haid, and afderwarts he go opstairs and vas hang
+himself mit a pedbost."
+
+BOSCH evidently rather proud of this as illustrating the liveliness of
+The Hague.
+
+"Was he mad?"
+
+"Yass, he vas mard, mit a vife and seeks childrens."
+
+"No, but was he out of his senses?"
+
+"I tink it was oud of Omsterdam he vas com," says BOSCH.
+
+"But how did it happen?"
+
+"Wol-sare, de broprietor vas die, and leaf de
+successor de pusiness, and he dells him in von mons he will go, begause
+he nod egsamin to be a Chimigal--so he do it, and dey dake him to de
+hosbital, and I tink _he_ vas die too by now!" adds BOSCH, cheerfully.
+
+Very sad affair evidently--but a little complicated. SANDFORD would like
+to get to the bottom of it, but MERTON convinced there is _no_ bottom.
+So, between us, subject allowed to drop.
+
+SANDFORD (now in the ascendant again) notices, as the clever boy,
+inscription on house-front, "Hier woonden Groen Van Prinsterer,
+1838-76."
+
+"I suppose that means Van Prinsterer lived here, Bosch?"
+
+"Yass, dot vas it."
+
+"And who was he?"
+
+"He vas--wol, he vos a Member of de Barliaments."
+
+"Was he celebrated?"
+
+"Celebrated? oh, yaas!"
+
+"What did he _do_?" (I think MERTON gets this in.)
+
+"Do?" says BOSCH, quite indignantly, "he nefer do _nodings_!"
+
+BOSCH takes me into the Fishmarket, when he directs my attention to a
+couple of very sooty live storks, who are pecking about at the refuse.
+
+"Dose pirts are shtorks; hier dey vas oblige to keep alvays two shtorks
+for de arms of de Haag. Vhen de yong shtorks porn, de old vons vas
+kill."
+
+SANDFORD shocked--MERTON sceptical.
+
+"Keel dem? Oh, yaas, do anytings mit dem ven dey vas old," says BOSCH,
+and adds:--"Ve haf de breference mit de shtorks, eh?"
+
+What _is_ he driving at?
+
+"Yaas--ven _ve_ vas old ve vas nod kill."
+
+This reminds BOSCH--BARLOW-like--of an anecdote.
+
+"Dere vas a vrent to me," he begins, "he com and say to me, 'Bosch, I am
+god so shtout and my bark is so dick, I can go no more on my lacks--vat
+vas I do?' To him I say, 'Wol, I dell you vat I do mit you--I dake you
+at de booshair to be cot op; I tink you vas make vary goot shdeak-meat!"
+
+Wonder whether this is a typical sample of BOSCH'S _badinage_.
+
+"What did he say to that, Bosch?"
+
+"Oh, he vas vair moch loff, a-course!" says BOSCH, with the natural
+complacency of a successful humorist.
+
+We go into the Old Prison, and see some horrible implements of torture,
+which seem to exhilarate BOSCH.
+
+"Lokeer!" he says, "Dis vas a pinition" (BOSCH for "punishment") "mit a
+can. Dey lie de man down and vasten his foots, and efery dime he vas
+shdrook mit de can, he jomp op and hit his vorehaid.... Hier dey lie
+down de beoples on de back, and pull dis shdring queeck, and all dese
+tings go roundt, and preak deir bones. Ven de pinition was feenish you
+vas det." He shows where the Water-torture was practised. "Nottice 'ow
+de vater vas vork a 'ole in de tile," he chuckles, "I tink de tile vas
+vary hardt det, eh?" Then he points out a pole with a spiked prong.
+"Tief-catcher--put 'em in de tief's nack--and get 'im!" Before a
+grim-looking cauldron he halts appreciatively. "You know vat dat vas
+for?" he says. "Dat vas for de blode-foots; put 'em in dere, yaas, and
+light de vire onderneat."
+
+No idea what "_blode-foots_" may be, but from the relish in BOSCH'S
+tone, evidently something very unpleasant, so don't press him for
+explanations. We go upstairs, and see some dark and very mouldy
+dungeons, which BOSCH is very anxious that I should enter. Make him go
+in _first_, for the surroundings seem to have excited his sense of the
+humorous to such a degree, that he might be unable to resist locking me
+in, and leaving me, if I gave him a chance.
+
+Outside at last, thank goodness! The Groote Kerk, according to BOSCH,
+"is not vort de see," so we don't see it. SANDFORD has a sneaking
+impression that I ought to go in, but MERTON glad to be let off. We go
+to see the pictures at the Mauritshuis instead. BOSCH exchanges
+greetings with the attendants in Dutch. "Got _another_ of 'em in tow,
+you see--and collar-work, _I_ can tell you!" would be a free
+translation, I suspect, of his remarks. Must say that, in a
+Picture-gallery, BOSCH is a superfluous luxury. He _does_ take my
+ignorance just a trifle too much for granted. He _might_ give me credit
+for knowing the story of Adam and Eve, at all events! "De Sairpan gif
+Eva de opple, an' Eva gif him to Adam," BOSCH carefully informs me,
+before a "_Paradise_," by Rubens and Brueghel.
+
+This rouses my MERTON half to inquire what Adam did with it.
+
+"Oh, _he_ ead him too!" says BOSCH in perfect good faith.
+
+I do wish, too, he wouldn't lead me up to Paul Potter's "_Bull_," and
+ask me enthusiastically if it isn't "real meat." I shouldn't mind it so
+much if there were not several English people about, without
+couriers--but there _are_. My only revenge is (as MERTON) to carefully
+pick out the unsigned canvases and ask BOSCH who painted them; whereupon
+BOSCH endeavours furtively to make out the label on the frames, and then
+informs me in desperation, "it vas '_School_,'--yass, _he_ baint him!"
+BOSCH kindly explains the subject of every picture in detail. He tells
+me a Droochsloot represents a "balsham pedder." I suppose I look
+bewildered, for he adds--"oppen air tance mit a village." "Hier dey vas
+haf a tispute; dis man say de ham vas more value as de cheese--dere is
+de cheese, and dere is de ham." "Hier is an old man dot marry a yong
+vife, and two tevils com in, and de old man he ron avay." "Hier he dress
+him in voman, and de vife is vrighten." "Hier is Jan Steen himself as a
+medicine, and he veel de yong voman's polse, and say dere is nodings de
+madder, and the modder ask him to trink a glass of vine." "Hier is de
+beach at Skavening--now dey puild houses on de dunes--bot de beach is
+schdill dere."
+
+Such are BOSCH'S valuable and instructive comments, to which, as
+representing SANDFORD and MERTON, I listen with depressed docility. All
+the same, can't help coming to the conclusion that Art is _not_ BOSCH'S
+strong point. Shall come here again--alone. We go on to the Municipal
+Museum, where he shows me what _he_ considers the treasures of the
+collection--a glass goblet, engraved "mit dails of tobaggo bipes," and
+the pipes themselves; a painting of a rose, "mit ade beople's faces in
+de leafs;" and a drawing of "two pirts mit only von foots."
+
+Outside again. BOSCH shows me a house.
+
+"Lokeer. In dot house leef an oldt lady all mit herself and ade
+sairvans. She com from Friesland, yassir."
+
+Really, I think BOSCH is going to be interesting--at last. There is a
+sly twinkle in his eye, denoting some story of a scandalous but
+infinitely humorous nature.
+
+"Well, Bosch, go on--what about the old lady?" I ask eagerly, as MERTON.
+
+"Wol, Sir," says BOSCH, "she nefer go noveres."...
+
+That's _all_! "A devilish interesting story, _Sumph_, indeed!" to quote
+Mr. Wagg.
+
+But, as BOSCH frequently reminds me, "It vas pedder, you see, as a
+schendlemans like you go apout mit me; I dell you tings dot vas not in
+de guide-books." Which I am not in a position to deny.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+FEELING THEIR WAY.
+
+(A STUDY IN THE ART OF GENTEEL CONVERSATION.)
+
+
+_The Drawing-room of a Margate Hotel. TIME--Evening. MRS. ARDLEIGH (of
+Balham), and MRS. ALLBUTT (of Brondesbury), are discovered in the midst
+of a conversation, in which each is anxious both to impress the other,
+and ascertain how far she is a person to be cultivated. At present, they
+have not got beyond the discovery of a common bond in Cookery._
+
+MRS. ALLBUTT. You have the yolks of two eggs, I must tell you; squeeze
+the juice of half a lemon into it, and, when you boil the butter in the
+pan, make a paste of it with _dry_ flour.
+
+MRS. ARDLEIGH. It sounds delicious--but you never can trust a Cook to
+carry out instructions exactly.
+
+MRS. ALL. I never _do_. Whenever I want to have anything specially nice
+for my husband, I make a point of seeing to it myself. He appreciates
+it. Now _some_ men, if you cook for them, never notice whether it's you
+or the Cook. My husband _does_.
+
+MRS. ARD. I wonder how you find time to do it. I'm sure _I_ should
+never----
+
+MRS. ALL. Oh, it takes time, of course--but what does that matter when
+you've nothing to do? Did I mention just a small pinch of Cayenne
+pepper?--because that's a _great_ improvement!
+
+MRS. ARD. I tell you what I like Cayenne pepper with, better than
+anything--and that's eggs.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_with elegant languor_). I hardly ever eat an egg. Oysters,
+now, I'm _very_ fond of--_fried_, that is.
+
+MRS. ARD. They're very nice done in the real shells. Or on scollops. We
+have silver--or rather--(_with a magnanimous impulse to tone down her
+splendour_), silver-plated ones.
+
+MRS. ALL. How funny--so have we! (_Both women feel an increase of liking
+for one another._) I like them cooked in milk, too.
+
+ [_The first barrier being satisfactorily passed, they proceed,
+ as usual, to the subject of ailments._
+
+MRS. ARD. My doctor _does_ do me good, I must say--he never lets me get
+ill. He just sees your liver's all right, and then he feeds you up.
+
+MRS. ALL. That's like _my_ doctor; he always tells me, if he didn't keep
+on constantly building me up, I should go all to pieces in no time.
+That's how I come to be here. I always run down at the end of every
+Season.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_feeling that MRS. ALLBUTT can't be "anybody very particular"
+after all_). What--to Margate? Fancy! Don't you find you get tired of
+it? _I_ should.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_with dignity_). I didn't say I always went to Margate. On
+the contrary, I have never been here before, and shouldn't be here now,
+if my doctor hadn't told me it was my only chance.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_reassured_). I only came down here on my little girl's
+account. One of those nasty croupy coughs, you know, and hoops with it.
+But she's almost well already. I will say it's a wonderful air. Still,
+the worst of Margate is, one isn't likely to meet a soul one knows!
+
+MRS. ALL. Well, that's the charm of it--to me. One has enough of that
+during the Season.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_recognising the superiority of this view_). Indeed one has.
+What a whirl it has been to be sure!
+
+MRS. ALL. The Season? Why, I never remember one with so little doing.
+Most of the best houses closed--hardly a single really smart party--one
+or two weddings--and that's positively all!
+
+MRS. ARD. (_slightly crushed, in spite of a conviction_ _that--socially
+speaking--Balham has been rather more brilliant than usual this year_).
+Yes, that's very true. I suppose the Elections have put a stop to most
+things?
+
+MRS. ALL. There never was much going on. _I_ should rather have said it
+was Marlborough House being shut up that made everything so dull from
+the first.
+
+MRS. ARD. Ah, that _does_ make such a difference, doesn't it? (_She
+feels she must make an effort to recover lost ground._) I fully expected
+to be at Homburg this year.
+
+MRS. ALL. Then you would have met Lady Neuraline Menthol. She _was_
+ordered there, I happen to know.
+
+MRS. ARD. Really, you don't say so? Lady Neuraline! Well, that's the
+first _I've_ heard of it. (_It is also the first time she has heard of
+her, but she trusts to be spared so humiliating an admission._)
+
+MRS. ALL. It's a fact, I can assure you. You know her, perhaps?
+
+MRS. ARD. (_who would dearly like to say she does, if she only dared_).
+Well, I can hardly say I exactly _know_ her. I know _of_ her. I've met
+her about, and so on. (_She tells herself this is quite as likely to be
+true as not._)
+
+[Illustration: "Dear, dear! _not_ a county family!"]
+
+MRS. ALL. (_who of course does not know Lady Neuraline either_). Ah, she
+is a most delightful person--requires _knowing_, don't you know.
+
+MRS. ARD. So many in her position do, don't they? (_So far as she is
+concerned--they all do._) You'd think it was haughtiness--but it's
+really only _manner_.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_feeling that she can go ahead with safety now_). I have
+never found anything of _that_ sort in Lady Neuraline myself (_which is
+perfectly true._) She's rather odd and flighty, but _quite_ a dear. By
+the way, _how_ sad it is about those poor dear Chutneys--the Countess,
+don't you know!
+
+MRS. ARD. Ah (_as if she knew all the rest of the family_), I don't know
+_her_ at all.
+
+MRS. ALL. Such a sweet woman--but the trouble she's had with her eldest
+boy, Lord Mango! He married quite beneath him, you know, some girl from
+the provinces--not a county-family girl even.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_shocked_). Dear, dear! _not_ a county family!
+
+MRS. ALL. No; somebody quite common--I forget the name, but it was
+either Gherkin or Onion, or something of that sort. I was told they had
+been in Chili a good while. Poor Mango never had much taste, or he would
+never have got mixed up with such a set. Anyway, he's got himself into
+a terrible pickle. I hear Capsicums is actually to be sold to pay his
+debts.
+
+MRS. ALL. You don't say so! Capsicums! Gracious!
+
+MRS. ALL. Yes, _isn't_ it a pity! Such a lovely old place as it was,
+too--_the_ most comfortable house to stay at in all England; so
+beautifully _warm_! But it's dreadful to think of how the aristocracy
+are taking to marry out of their own set. Look at the Duke of
+Dragnet--married a Miss Duckweed--goodness only knows where he picked
+her up! but he got entangled somehow, and now his people are trying to
+get rid of her. I see so many of these cases. Well, I'm afraid I must
+wish you good evening--it's my time for retiring. (_Patronisingly._)
+I've quite enjoyed the conversation--such a pleasure in a place like
+this to come across a genial companion!
+
+MRS. ARD. (_fluttered and flattered_). I'm sure you're exceedingly kind
+to say so, and I can say the same for myself. I hope we may become
+better acquainted. (_To herself, after MRS. ALLBUTT has departed._) I've
+quite taken to that woman--she's so thoroughly the lady, and moves in
+very high society, too. You can tell that from the way she talks. What's
+that paper on the table? (_She picks up a journal in a coloured
+wrapper._) "_Society Snippets, the Organ of the Upper Ten. One Penny._"
+The very thing I wanted. It's such a comfort to know who's who. (_She
+opens it and reads sundry paragraphs headed "Through the Keyhole."_) Now
+how funny this is! Here's the very same thing about the dulness of the
+Season that she said. That shows she must be really in it. And a note
+about Lady Neuraline being about to recruit at Homburg. And another
+about her reputation or eccentricity, and her "sweetness to the select
+few privileged to be her intimates." And here's all about Lord Mango,
+and what a pleasant house Capsicums is, and his marriage, and the Duke
+of Dragnet's, too. Her information was very correct, I must say! (_A
+light begins to break in upon her._) I wonder whether----but
+there--people of her sort wouldn't require to read the papers for such
+things.
+
+ [_Here the door opens, and MRS. ALLBUTT appears, in some
+ embarrassment._
+
+MRS. ALL. (_scrutinising the tables_). Oh, it's nothing. I thought I'd
+left something of mine here; it was only a paper--I see I was mistaken,
+don't trouble.
+
+MRS. ARD. (_producing Society Snippets_). I expect it will be this.
+(_MRS. ALLBUTT'S face reveals her ownership._) I took it up, not knowing
+it was yours. (_Meaningly_.) It has some highly interesting
+information, I see.
+
+MRS. ALL. (_slightly demoralised_). Oh, has it? I--I've not had time to
+glance at it yet. Pray don't let me deprive you of it. I dare say
+there's very little in it I don't know already.
+
+MRS. ARD. So I should have thought. (_To herself, after MRS. ALLBUTT has
+retired in disorder._) Fancy that woman trying to take me in like that,
+and no more in Society than I am--if so much! However, I've found her
+out before going too far--luckily. And I've a good mind to take in this
+_Society Snippets_ myself--it certainly does improve one's conversation.
+She won't have it _all_ her own way _next_ time!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+A TESTIMONIAL MANQUE.
+
+(A SKETCH FROM THE SUBURBS.)
+
+
+_THE ARGUMENT.--Mr. Hotspur Porpentine, a distinguished resident in the
+rising suburb of Jerrymere, has recently been awarded fourteen days'
+imprisonment, without the option of a fine, for assaulting a
+ticket-collector, who had offered him the indignity of requiring him to
+show his season-ticket at the barrier. The scene is a Second-Class
+Compartment, in which four of Mr. Porpentine's neighbours are discussing
+the affair during their return from the City._
+
+MR. COCKCROFT (_warmly_). I say, Sir--and I'm sure all here will bear me
+out--that such a sentence was a scandalous abuse of justice. As a near
+neighbour, and an intimate friend of Porpentine's, I don't 'esitate to
+assert that he has done nothing whatever to forfeit our esteem. He's a
+quick-tempered man, as we're all aware, and to be asked by some
+meddlesome official to show his season, after travelling on the line
+constantly for years, and leaving it at home that morning--why--_I_
+don't blame him if he _did_ use his umbrella!
+
+MR. BALCH (_sympathetically_). Nor I. Porpentine's a man I've always had
+a very 'igh respect for ever since I came into this neighbourhood. I've
+always found him a good feller, and a good neighbour.
+
+MR. FILKINS (_deferentially_). I can't claim to be as intimate with him
+as some here; but, if it isn't putting myself too far forward to say so,
+I very cordially beg to say ditto to those sentiments.
+
+MR. SIBBERING (_who has never "taken to" Porpentine_). Well, he's had a
+sharp lesson,--there's no denying that.
+
+MR. COCKCR. Precisely, and it occurs to me that when he--ah--returns to
+public life, it would be a kind thing, and a graceful thing, and a thing
+he would--ah--appreciate in the spirit it was intended, if we were to
+present him with some little token of our sympathy and unabated
+esteem--what do you fellers think?
+
+MR. FILK. A most excellent suggestion, if my friend here will allow me
+to say so. I, for one, shall be proud to contribute to so worthy an
+object.
+
+MR. BALCH. I don't see why we shouldn't present him with an
+address--'ave it illuminated, and framed and glazed; sort of thing he
+could 'ang up and 'and down to his children after him as an _heirloom_,
+yi-know.
+
+[Illustration: "Well, he's had a sharp lesson,--there's no denying
+that."]
+
+MR. SIBB. I don't like to throw cold water on any proposition, but if
+you want _my_ opinion, I must say I see no necessity for making a public
+thing out of it in that way.
+
+MR. COCKCR. I'm with Sibbering there. The less fuss there is about it,
+the better Porpentine'll be pleased. My idea is to give him something of
+daily use--a _useful_ thing, yi-know.
+
+MR. BALCH. Useful _or_ ornamental. Why not his own portrait? There's
+many an artist who would do him in oils, and guarantee a likeness, frame
+included, for a five-pound note.
+
+MR. SIBB. If it's to be like Porpentine, it certainly won't be
+_ornamental_, whatever else it is.
+
+MR. FILK. It can't be denied that he is remarkably plain in the face.
+We'd better, as our friend Mr. Cockcroft here proposes, make it
+something of daily use--a good serviceable silk umbrella now--that's
+_always_ appropriate.
+
+MR. SIBB. To make up for the one he broke over the collector's head,
+eh?--that's _appropriate_ enough!
+
+MR. COCKCR. No, no; you mean well, Filkins, but you must see yourself,
+on reflection, that there would be a certain want of--ah--good taste in
+giving him a thing like that under the circumstances. I should suggest
+something like a hatstand--a handsome one, of course. I happen to know
+that he has nothing in the passage at present but a row of pegs.
+
+MR. SIBB. I should have thought he'd been taken down enough pegs
+already.
+
+MR. FILK. (_who resents the imputation upon his taste_). I can't say
+what the width of Mr. Porpentine's passage may be, never having been
+privileged with an invitation to pass the threshold, but unless it's
+wider than ours is, he couldn't get a hatstand in if he tried, and if my
+friend Cockcroft will excuse the remark, I see no sense--to say nothing
+of good taste, about which perhaps I mayn't be qualified to pass an
+opinion--in giving him an article he's got no room for.
+
+MR. COCKCR. (_with warmth_). There's room enough in Porpentine's passage
+for a whole host of hatstands, if that's all, and I know what I'm
+speaking about. I've been in and out there often enough. I'm--ah--a
+regular tame cat in that house. But if you're against the 'atstand, I
+say no more--we'll waive it. How would it do if we gave him a nice
+comfortable easy-chair--something he could sit in of an evening,
+yi-know?
+
+MR. SIBB. A touchy chap like Porpentine would be sure to fancy we
+thought he wanted something soft after a hard bench and a plank
+bed--you can't go and give him _furniture_!
+
+MR. COCKCR. (_with dignity_). There's a way of doing all things. I
+wasn't proposing to go and chuck the chair _at_ him--he's a sensitive
+feller in many respects, and he'd feel _that_, I grant you. He can't
+object to a little present of that sort just from four friends like
+ourselves.
+
+MR. BALCH (_with a falling countenance_). Oh! I thought it was to be a
+general affair, limited to a small sum, so that all who liked could join
+in. I'd no notion you meant to keep it such a private matter as all
+that.
+
+MR. FILK. Nor I. And, knowing Mr. Porpentine so slightly as I do, he
+might consider it presumption in me, making myself so prominent in the
+matter--or else I'm sure----
+
+MR. COCKCR. There's no occasion for anyone to be prominent, except
+myself. You leave it entirely in my 'ands. I'll have the chair taken up
+some evening to Porpentine's house on a 'andcart, and drop in, and just
+lead up to it carelessly, if you understand me, then go out and wheel
+the chair in, make him try it--and there you _are_.
+
+MR. BALCH. There _you_ are, right enough; but I don't see where _we_
+come in, exactly.
+
+MR. FILLK. If it's to be confined to just us four, I certingly think we
+ought _all_ to be present at the presentation.
+
+MR. COCKCR. That would be just the very thing to put a man like
+Porpentine out--a crowd dropping in on him like that! I know his ways,
+and, seeing I'm providing the chair----
+
+MR. BALCH (_relieved_). _You_ are? That's different, of course; but I
+thought you said that we four----
+
+MR. COCKCR. I'm coming to that. As the prime mover, and a particular
+friend of Porpentine's, it's only right and fair I should bear the chief
+burden. There's an easy-chair I have at home that only wants re-covering
+to be as good as new, and all you fellers need do is to pay for 'aving
+it nicely done up in velvet, or what not, and we'll call it quits.
+
+MR. BALCH. I daresay; but I like to know what I'm letting myself in for;
+and there's upholsterers who'll charge as much for doing up a chair as
+would furnish a room.
+
+MR. FILK. I--I shouldn't feel justified, with my family, and, as,
+comparatively speaking, a recent resident, in going beyond a certain
+limit, and unless the estimate could be kep' down to a moderate sum, I
+really-----
+
+MR. SIBB. (_unmasking_). After all, you know, I don't see why we should
+go to any expense over a stuck-up, cross-grained chap like Porpentine.
+It's well-known he hasn't a good word to say for us Jerrymere folks, and
+considers himself above the lot of us!
+
+MR. BALCH and MR. FILK. I'm bound to say there's a good deal in what
+Sibbering says. Porpentine's never shown himself what _I_ should call
+sociable.
+
+MR. COCKCR. I've never found him anything but pleasant myself, whatever
+he may be to others. I'm not denying he's an _exclusive_ man, and a
+_fastidious_ man, but he's been 'arshly treated, and _I_ should have
+thought this was an occasion--if ever there was one--for putting any
+private feelings aside, and rallying round him to show our respect and
+sympathy. But of course if you're going to let petty jealousies of this
+sort get the better of you, and leave me to do the 'ole thing myself,
+_I've_ no objection. I daresay he'll value it all the more coming from
+me.
+
+MR. SIBB. Well, he _ought_ to, after the shameful way he's spoken of you
+to a friend of mine in the City, who shall be nameless. You mayn't know,
+and if not, it's only right I should mention it, that he complained
+bitterly of having to change his regular train on your account, and said
+(I'm only repeating his words, mind you), that Jerrymere was entirely
+populated by bores, but you were the worst of the lot, and your jabber
+twice a day was more than he _could_ stand. He mayn't have _meant_
+anything by it, but it was decidedly uncalled for.
+
+MR. COCKCR. (_reddening_). I 'ope I'm above being affected by the
+opinion any man may express of my conversation--especially a
+cantankerous feller, who can't keep his temper under decent control. A
+feller who goes and breaks his umbrella over an unoffending official's
+'ead like that, and gets, very properly, locked up for it! Jerrymere
+society isn't good enough for him, it seems. He won't be troubled with
+much of it in future--_I_ can assure him! Upon my word, now I come to
+think of it, I'm not sure he shouldn't be called upon for an explanation
+of how he came to be travelling without a ticket; it looks very much to
+me as if he'd been systematically defrauding the Company!
+
+MR. FILK. Well, I didn't like to say so before; but that's been _my_
+view all along!
+
+MR. BALCH. And mine.
+
+MR. SIBB. Now perhaps you understand why we'd rather leave it to you to
+give him the arm-chair.
+
+MR. COCKCR. I give a man an arm-chair for bringing disgrace on the 'ole
+of Jerrymere! I'd sooner break it up for firewood! Whoever it was that
+first started all this tomfoolery about a testimonial, I'm not going to
+'ave _my_ name associated with it, and if you'll take _my_ advice,
+you'll drop it once and for all, for it's only making yourselves
+ridiculous!
+
+ [_His companions, observing that he is in a somewhat excited
+ condition, consider it advisable to change the subject._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE MODEL DEMOCRACY.
+
+
+"I think you left directions that you were to be thawed in 199--
+precisely?" said the stranger politely. "Allow me to introduce
+myself--NUMBER SEVEN MILLION AND SIX. If you feel equal to the effort,
+and would care to see the vast improvements in our social condition
+since the close of the benighted Nineteenth Century, I shall be pleased
+to conduct you."
+
+MR. PUNCH then began to realise that he had had himself frozen by a
+patent process just a hundred years ago, and that he had returned to
+animation in time for the close of the marvellous Twentieth Century; so
+he prepared, in much curiosity and excitement, to accompany his guide.
+
+"By the way," observed the latter, "you must not be annoyed if
+your--hem--habiliments, which we are unaccustomed to nowadays, should
+attract some attention."
+
+Singularly enough, MR. PUNCH had just begun to feel a certain
+embarrassment at the prospect of being seen in Piccadilly or Regent
+Street in the company of a person attired in grey cellular pyjamas, a
+drab blanket, and a glazed pot hat. However, on reaching the street, he
+found that every man he met was similarly clad, while his own
+costume--which, in his original century, would only have been remarkable
+for its unimpeachable taste--was, in this, the subject of universal and
+invidious comment.
+
+"You'll have your regulation pot hat and pyjamas served out to you in
+time!" said MR. SEVEN MILLION AND SIX encouragingly. "Then no one will
+say anything to you. In these days we resent anything that tends to
+confer an artificial distinction on any man. Surnames, for example,
+which occasionally suggested superiority of birth, have long been
+abolished, and official numbers substituted. You seem to be looking for
+something you do not see?" he added, noting a certain blankness and
+disappointment in MR. PUNCH'S expressive countenance.
+
+"I was only wondering why I saw no signs of any new and marvellous
+inventions at present," said MR. PUNCH. "I rather expected to see the
+air full of electric trains, manageable balloons, or coveys of citizens
+darting about on mechanical pinions. But I see none, and even more
+people go on foot than in my own time."
+
+"Inventions, I take it," was the reply, "only served to enrich the
+Capitalist, and save time or labour. Now we have no Capitalists and no
+riches, and no reason for hurrying anywhere, while it would be absurd
+and useless to lessen the amount of manual labour when, even as it is,
+there is scarcely enough to keep everyone employed for six hours a day."
+
+"Why are all the women I see dressed exactly alike in navy-blue woollen
+frocks and coal-scuttle bonnets?" MR. PUNCH inquired presently. "Surely
+they can't _all_ be members of the Sal----"
+
+"A uniform costume was decreed by plebiscite some years ago," replied
+his mentor, promptly. "Any real equality amongst women was found
+hopeless so long as some were able to render themselves exceptionally
+attractive by a distinctive toilette."
+
+"What!" exclaimed MR. PUNCH, "did all the pretty women consent to such a
+sacrifice?"
+
+"They were in a very decided minority, even then," said MR. SEVEN
+MILLION AND SIX; "and it is not our way to think much of minorities. At
+present, owing no doubt to an enactment which penalised every pretty
+woman by compelling her to wear blue goggles and a respirator, feminine
+beauty is practically extinct."
+
+MR. PUNCH could not restrain a sigh. They were now entering a somewhat
+gloomy thoroughfare, between massive blocks of buildings, with large
+doors and innumerable small windows, which towered into the sky on
+either hand.
+
+"I seem to miss the shop-fronts," he said aloud, "with their
+plate-glass, and all their glitter and luxury. What has become of them
+all?"
+
+"Such necessaries as the citizen requires," said his companion, "are
+procured at the Public Storehouses, which you see around you, by the
+simple method of presenting a ticket. The luxuries you refer to were
+only procurable by the rich, and nobody is rich now. If you will come
+with me, I will take you over one of the State Dwelling-houses, and show
+you one of the suites of rooms. Every citizen has a room; or, if
+married, a couple of rooms, exactly the same shape and size as those of
+his fellows.... Beautifully clean, you see!" he remarked, complacently,
+as he threw open one of the doors. "Neat whitewashed walls, plain deal
+furniture, nice holland blinds--what more can any reasonable citizen
+want in the way of comfort?"
+
+"There used to be a celebrated poet in my time," said MR. PUNCH,
+with some hesitation, "Who designed and sold very beautiful
+upholster--tapestry, wall-papers, curtains, and so on. I fancy _he_
+held socialistic views. But I see no trace of his work _here_."
+
+"I think I know whom you refer to," was the reply. "The community would
+doubless have been glad of his company's services if they would only
+have contracted to supply every citizen with precisely the same pattern
+and quality of their manufactures at, say, a pork-pie a yard, but, for
+some reason, the firm could not see their way to it, and the industry
+declined; which is not to be regretted, for it certainly tended to
+foster individualism."
+
+"It is curious," said MR. PUNCH, when they were outside again, "that I
+have not as yet seen a single policeman."
+
+"Not at all curious. We _have_ none. Crime simply proceeded from the
+galling sense of social inequality. Consequently, as soon as that was
+removed, Justice, with all its machinery, became an anachronism."
+
+"I think," said MR. PUNCH, presently, "I should like to take a stroll in
+Hyde Park."
+
+"That," said his guide, "has not been possible for at least fifty years.
+All the parks are now cut up into three-acre allotments, where every
+able-bodied citizen does an hour's compulsory spade-work once a
+fortnight. A most admirable reform, as you will agree!"
+
+"Capital!" gasped MR. PUNCH, with an anticipatory pain in his back.
+"Then I am curious to see what strides have been made by your modern
+painters. Could you take me to a picture-gallery?"
+
+"There are _no_ modern painters. It is perhaps a pity--but quite
+unavoidable. It was an obvious injustice that, when all citizens had to
+perform their share of more or less distasteful manual labour, there
+should be any one class that earned a living by work in which they took
+a positive pleasure. So that every artist had to do his six hours'
+stone-breaking or brick-making; or what not, as an antecedent condition
+of being permitted to paint at all, and naturally the State declined to
+provide him with paints and brushes at the expense of the community. A
+few artists persisted for a while, from sheer love of the thing; but as
+no picture fetched more than a pound of sausages, and the average price
+was a bowl of porridge, they found it expedient to turn to some more
+useful occupation. And it is undeniable that they contribute more to the
+resources of the commonwealth by wielding a trowel or a broom than by
+messing about with brushes and paint. As a concession to hereditary
+instinct, however, their descendants are still set apart as State
+white-washers."
+
+"And the drama?" MR. PUNCH inquired next. "How is _that_ getting on? Has
+the New Dramatist made his appearance at last?"
+
+"On the contrary, I am glad to say he has disappeared--let us hope for
+ever. For, the essence of Drama, as I understand, was Emotion--Passion,
+Jealousy, Marital and Parental relations, and so on. Now that marriages
+are the subject of State regulation, and extend only for a limited
+period, Passion, of course is obsolete; Jealousy, too, is recognised as
+merely Selfishness in disguise, and we have grown too altruistic to
+desire the exclusive possession of anything. While as the offspring of
+every union are removed at birth to a communal _creche_, and brought up
+and educated by the State, there are no longer any opportunities for
+filial or parental affection."
+
+"Then I presume Fiction is equally----?"
+
+"Just so. Fiction depended on Contrast. When everybody is on precisely
+the same level, the novelist is, happily, unnecessary. What are you
+looking for _now_?"
+
+"I was wondering if I could buy an evening paper anywhere," said MR.
+PUNCH, wistfully. "But perhaps Journalism is also----?"
+
+"Of course. Everyone is so contentedly and peacefully absorbed in
+contributing his share of work to the State, that he has no desire to
+read about the doings of other persons, even if there was anything of
+interest to be told, which there isn't. We produce just sufficient for
+our own wants, so there is no commerce; we have no Army or Navy, since
+we don't desire to conquer, and are not worth conquering. No Politics,
+because we govern ourselves by our own consent and co-operation; no
+Science, as inventors only benefited capital at the expense of labour;
+and, this being so, what _is_ there to put into a newspaper, if we had
+one?"
+
+"Haven't you even a--a _humorous_ paper?" said MR. PUNCH. "I used to do
+a little in that way once."
+
+"You had better not do it _here_. Humour, I believe, consisted in
+representing Humanity under ridiculous aspects. _We_'re Humanity, and we
+don't see any fun in being laughed at. None of your humour here, mind!"
+
+"But the citizens have a certain amount of leisure, I suppose," said MR.
+PUNCH. "How _do_ they amuse themselves? For I can discover no
+libraries, no circuses, nor concert-rooms, nor anything!"
+
+[Illustration: "None of your humour here, mind!"]
+
+"It was seen to be invidious to furnish any entertainment at the public
+expense which did not give equal amusement to all, and so the idea was
+gradually dropped. When our citizens have finished their daily task,
+they find their relaxation, in the intervals of eating and sleeping, in
+the harmless and soothing practice of chewing gum. They can all do
+_that_, and the State provides each with a weekly supply for the
+purpose. Now tell me--is there anything _more_ I can do for you?"
+
+"Yes," murmured MR. PUNCH; "if you would be so very kind as to freeze me
+again for five hundred years or so, I should be exceedingly obliged. I
+don't feel quite at home in _this_ century!"
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+BY PARLIAMENTARY.
+
+
+_On the Platform._
+
+A LADY OF FAMILY. Oh, yes, I do travel third-class sometimes, my dear. I
+consider it a duty to try to know something of the lower orders.
+
+ [_Looks out for an empty third-class compartment._
+
+ _In the Carriage._--_The seats are now occupied: the LADY OF
+ FAMILY is in one corner, next to a CHATTY WOMAN with a basket,
+ and opposite to an ECCENTRIC-LOOKING MAN with a flighty
+ manner._
+
+The ECCENTRIC MAN (_to the LADY OF FAMILY_). Sorry to disturb you, Mum,
+but you're a-setting on one o' my 'am sandwiches.
+
+The _L. of F._???!!!
+
+The E. M. (_considerately_). Don't trouble yourself, Mum, it's of no
+intrinsic value. I on'y put it there to keep my seat.
+
+The CHATTY W. (_to the L. OF F._). I think I've seen you about
+Shinglebeach, 'ave I not?
+
+The L. OF F. It is very possible. I have been staying with some friends
+in the neighbourhood.
+
+The C. W. It's a nice cheerful place is Shinglebeach; but
+(_confidentially_) don't you think it's a very singler thing that in a
+place like that--a fash'nable place, too--there shouldn't be a single
+'am an' beef shop?
+
+The L. OF F. (_making a desperate effort to throw herself into the
+question_). What a very extraordinary thing to be sure. Dear, _dear_ me!
+No ham and beef shop!
+
+The C. W. It's so indeed, Mum; and what's more, as I daresay you have
+noticed for yourself, if you 'appen to want a snack o' fried fish ever
+so, there isn't a place you could go to--leastways, at a moment's
+notice. Now, 'ow do you explain such a thing as that?
+
+The L. OF F. (_faintly_). I'm afraid I can't suggest any explanation.
+
+A SENTENTIOUS MAN. Fried fish is very sustaining.
+
+ [_Relapses into silence for remainder of journey._
+
+The ECCENTRIC MAN. Talking of sustaining, I remember, when we was kids,
+my father ud bring us home two pennorth o' ches'nuts, and we 'ad 'em
+boiled, and they'd last us days. (_Sentimentally._) He was a kind man,
+my father (_to the L. OF F., who bows constrainedly_), though you
+wouldn't ha' thought it, to look at him. I don't know, mind yer, that he
+wasn't fond of his bit o' booze--(_the L. OF F. looks out of
+window_)--like the best of us. I'm goin' up to prove his will now, I
+am--if you don't believe me, 'ere's the probate. (_Hands that document
+round for inspection._) That's all reg'lar enough, I 'ope. (_To the L.
+OF F._) Don't give it back before you've done with it--I'm in no 'urry,
+and there's good reading in it. (_Points out certain favourite passages
+with a very dirty forefinger._) Begin there--_that's_ my name.
+
+ [_The L. OF F. peruses the will with as great a show of
+ interest as she can bring herself to assume._
+
+The ECCENTRIC MAN. D'ye see that big 'andsome building over there?
+That's the County Lunatic Asylum--where my poor wife is shut up. I went
+to see her last week, I did. (_Relates his visit in detail to the L. OF
+F., who listens unwillingly._) It's wonderful how many of our family
+have been in that asylum from first to last. I 'ad a aunt who died
+cracky; and my old mother, she's very peculiar at times. There's days
+when I feel as if I was a little orf my own 'ed, so if I say anything
+at all out of the way, you'll know what it is.
+
+[_L. OF F. changes carriages at the next station. In the second carriage
+are two Men of seafaring appearance, and a young Man who is parting from
+his FIANCEE as the L. OF F. takes her seat._
+
+The FIANCE. Excuse me one moment, Ma'am.
+
+(_Leans across the L. OF F. and out of the window._) Well, good-bye, my
+girl; take care of yourself.
+
+The FIANCEE (_with a hysterical giggle._) Oh, I'll take care o' _my_
+self.
+
+ [_Looks at the roof of the carriage._
+
+HE (_with meaning_). No more pickled onions, eh?
+
+SHE. What a one you are to remember things! (_After a pause._) Give my
+love to Joe.
+
+HE. All right. Well, Jenny, just one, for the last. (_They embrace
+loudly, after which the F. resumes his seat with an expression of
+mingled sentiment and complacency._) Oh (_to L. OF F._), if you don't
+mind my stepping across you again, Mum. Jenny, if you see Dick between
+this and Friday, just tell him as----
+
+ [_Prolonged whispers; sounds of renewed kisses; final parting
+ as train starts with a jerk, which throws the FINACE upon the
+ L. OF F.'S lap. After the train is started a gleam of peculiar
+ significance is observable in the eyes of one of the Seafaring_
+ _Men, who is reclining in an easy attitude on the seat. His
+ companion responds with a grin of intelligence, and produces a
+ large black bottle from the rack. They drink, and hand the
+ bottle to the FIANCE._
+
+The F. Thankee, I don't mind if I do. Here's wishing you----
+
+ [_Remainder of sentiment drowned in sound of glug-glug-glug; is
+ about to hand back bottle when the first SEAFARER intimates
+ that he is to pass it on. The L. OF F. recoils in horror._
+
+BOTH SEAFARERS. It's _wine_, Mum!
+
+ [_Tableau. The LADY OF FAMILY realises that the study of
+ third-class humanity has its drawbacks._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE FARMING OF THE FUTURE; OR, WHAT BRITISH AGRICULTURE IS COMING TO.
+
+
+_A Car on the Electric Light Railway. TIME.--Twentieth Century._
+
+FIRST FARMER (_recognising Second Farmer_). Why, 'tis Muster Fretwail,
+surelie! didn't see it was you afore. And how be things gettin' along
+with _you_, Sir, eh?
+
+FARMER FRETWAIL (_lugubriously_). 'Mong the middlin's, Muster Lackaday;
+'mong the middlin's! Nothen doin' just now--nothen 't all!
+
+THIRD FARMER (_enviously_). Well, _you_ hevn't no call fur to cry out,
+neighbour. I see you've got a likely lot o' noo 'oardins comin' up all
+along your part o' the line. I wish mine wur arf as furrard, I know
+thet!
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Ah, them "Keep yer 'air on"'s, _you_ mean, Ryemouth. I
+don't deny as they was lookin' tidy enough a week back. But just as I
+was makin' ready fur to paint up "Try it on a Billiard Ball," blamed if
+this yere frost didn't set in, and now theer's everything at a
+standstill, wi' the brushes froze 'ard in the pots!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. 'Tis the same down with me. Theer's a acre o' "Bunyan's
+Easy Boots" as must hev a noo coat, and I cann't get nothen done to 'en
+till the weather's a bit more hopen like. Don' keer _'ow_ soon we hev a
+change, myself, I don't!
+
+F. LACKADAY. Nor yet me, so long as we don't 'ave no gales with it.
+Theer was my height acre pasture as I planted only las' Candlemas wi'
+"Roopy's Lung Tonics"--wunnerful fine and tall they was, too--and ivery
+one on 'en blowed down the next week!
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Well I 'ope theer wun't be no rain, neither, come to that.
+I know I had all the P's of my "Piffler's Persuasive Pillules" fresh
+gold-leaved at Michaelmas, and it come on wet directly arter I done it,
+and reg'lar washed the gilt out o' sight an' knowledge, it did. Theer
+ain't no standin' up agen rain!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. I dunno as I wouldn't as lief hev rain as sun. My
+"Hanti-Freckle Salves" all blistered up and peeled afore the summer was
+'ardly begun a'most.
+
+[Illustration: "I cann't get nothen done to 'en till the weather's a bit
+more hopen like."]
+
+F. LACKADAY. 'Tis a turr'ble hard climate to make 'ead against, is
+ourn. I've 'eard tell as some farmers are takin' to they enamelled hiron
+affairs, same as they used to hev when I wur a lad. I mind theer wur a
+crop o' "Read Comic Cagmag" as lingered on years arter the paper itself.
+Not as I hold with enamelling, myself--'tain't what I call 'igh
+farmin'--takes too much outer the land in _my_ 'pinion.
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Aye, aye. "Rotation o' boards." Say, "Spooner's Sulphur
+Syrup" fur a spring crop, follered with some kind o' soap or candles,
+and p'raps cough lozengers, or hembrocation, or bakin' powder, if the
+soil will bear it, arterwards--that's the system _I_ wur reared on, and
+there ain't no better, 'pend upon it!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. I tell 'ee what 'tis; it's time we 'ad some protection agen
+these yere furrin advartisements. I was travellin' along the Great
+Northern t'other day, an' I see theer wos two or three o' them French
+boards nigh in ivery field, a downright shame and disgrace I call it,
+disfigurin' the look of the country and makin' it that ontidy--let alone
+drivin' honest British boards off the land. Government ought to put a
+stop to it; that's what _I_ say!
+
+F. LACKADAY. They Parliment chaps don't keer _what_ becomes of us poor
+farmers, they don't. Look at last General Election time. They might ha'
+given our boards a turn; but not they. Most o' they candidates did all
+their 'tisin' with rubbishy flags and balloons--made in Japan, Sir,
+every blamed one o' them! And they wonder British Agriculture don't
+prosper more!
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. Speaking o' queer ways o' hadvertisin', hev any of ye set
+eyes on that farm o' young Fullacrank's? Danged if ever _I_ see sech
+tomfool notions as he's took up with in all _my_ born days.
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Why, what hev he been up to _now_, eh?
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. Well, I thought I shud ha' bust myself larfin' when I see
+it fust. Theer ain't not a board nor a sky sign; no, nor yet a 'oarding,
+on the 'ole of his land!
+
+F. LACKADAY. Then how do he expect to get a profit out of it?--that's
+what _I_ want to year.
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. You'll 'ardly credit it, neighbours, but he's been buryin'
+some o' they furrin grains, hoats and barley, an' I dunno what not, in
+little holes about his fields, so as to make the words, "Use Faddler's
+Non-Farinaceous Food"--and the best of it is the darned young fool
+expecks as 'ow it'll all sprout come next Aperl--he do indeed, friends!
+
+F. FRETWAIL. Flying in the face o' Providence, I calls it. He must ha'
+gone clean out of his senses!
+
+F. LACKADAY. Stark starin' mad. I never heerd tell o' such extravagance.
+Why, as likely as not, 'twill all die off o' the land afore the year's
+out--and wheer wull he be _then_?
+
+F. RYEMOUTH. Azactly what I said to 'en myself. "You tek my word for
+it," I sez, "'twun't never come to no good. The nateral crop for these
+yere British Hiles," I told 'en, "is good honest Henglish hoak an'
+canvas," I sez, "and 'tain't the action of no sensible man, nor yet no
+Christian," sez I, "to go a-drillin' 'oles and a-droppin' in houtlandish
+seeds from Canada an' Roosha, which the sile wasn't never intended to
+bear!"
+
+FARMERS FRETWELL and LACKADAY. Rightly spoke, neighbour Ryemouth, 'twas
+a true word! But theer'll be a jedgment on sech new-fangled doin's, and,
+what's moor, you and I will live fur to see it afore we're very much
+older!
+
+ [_They all shake their heads solemnly as scene closes in._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+A DIALOGUE ON ART.
+
+(A STUDY IN SPIRITS AND WATERS.)
+
+
+_The Smoke-room of a Provincial Hotel. TIME--Towards midnight.
+CHARACTERS--MR. LUCESLIPP-BLETHERON, a middle-aged Art Patron and
+Dilettante. He has arrived at his third tumbler of whiskey and water,
+and the stage at which a man alludes freely before strangers to his
+"poor dear father." MR. MILBOARD, a Painter, on a sketching tour. He is
+enduring MR. L.-B. with a patience which will last for just one more
+pipe. FIRST COMMERCIAL, who considers Mr. L.-B. a highly agreeable and
+well-informed gentleman, and is anxious to be included in his audience.
+SECOND COMMERCIAL, who doesn't intend to join in the conversation until
+he feels he can do so with crushing effect._
+
+MR. LUCESLIPP-BLETHERON. Yes, I assure you, I never come acrosh a David
+Cox but I say to myself, "_There_'sh a Bit!" (_Here he fixes his
+eye-glass, sips whiskey and water, and looks at MR. MILBOARD as if he
+expected him to express admiration at this evidence of penetration. The
+only tribute he extorts, however, is a grunt._) Now, we've a Cornelius
+Janssen at home. Itsh only hishtory is--my dear father bought it. He was
+an artist himself, painted a bit, travelled man, an' all that short o'
+thing. Well, _he_ picked it up for ten pounds!
+
+FIRST COMMERCIAL (_deferentially_). Did he reelly now? A Johnson for ten
+pounds! Did he get a warranty with it, Sir?
+
+MR. L.-B. (_after bringing the eye-glass to bear on the intruder for a
+second_). Then I've a Mieris--at leasht, _shome_ clever f'ler painted
+it, and it'sh a pleashure to look at it, and you can't get over _that_,
+can you?
+
+MR. MILBOARD. I don't intend to _try_ to get over it.
+
+MR. L.-B. You're qui' right. Now I'm the lasht man in the world to
+shwagger; shtill, I'm goin' to ashk you to lemme have my lil' shwagger
+now. I happened to be at Rome shor' time ago, and I met Middleman there.
+We had our lil' chat together and what not--he'sh no pershonal friend o'
+mine. Well; I picked up a lil' drawing by a Roman chap; worth nothing
+more than what I got it for, or _anything_, as you may shay. Middleman
+had the whole run of this chap's studio. I saw this drawing--didn't care
+mush about it--but thought it wash a gem, and gave the modesh shum of a
+hundred an' fifty _lire_ for it. Put it in my portmanteau between a
+couple o' shirts----
+
+FIRST COMM. (_still pining for notice_). When you say shirts, Sir, I
+presume you mean _clean_ ones?
+
+MR. L.-B. No man with the shlightest feelin' or reverence for Art would
+_put_ sush a queshtion! (_The FIRST COMM. collapses._) Between a couple
+of--(_underlining the word_) Shirts, and brought it home. Now I'm comin'
+to my point. One afternoon after my return, I wash walking down Bond
+Street, when I saw a sketch exhibited in a window by the shame f'ler. I
+went in and shaid, "What are you asking for thish? Mind I don' wanter
+_buy_ it; ashk me any price yer like!" And they shaid forty guineash.
+
+MR. MILB. Apparently they availed themselves of your permission, and
+_did_ ask you any price they liked.
+
+MR. L.-B. No doubt; but wait till I've _done_. I saw another--a finished
+drawing not qui' so good as mine, there. Then I shaid to them quietly,
+"Now, look _here_, why don' you go an' buy 'em for yourshelves in the
+artist's own shtudio?" It shtruck me as sho odd, a man like Middleman,
+being there, and having the pick, shouldn' buy _more_ of 'em!
+
+MR. MILB. Wasn't worth his while; he can't buy _everything_!
+
+MR. L.-B. (_after considering this impartially with some more whiskey_).
+No; your ansher is a very _good_ one, and a very _fair_ one. He _can't_
+buy everything. I _did_ pick, however, an' I gorrit. I said to him, "How
+mush?" an' he tol' me, and there wash an end of it, do you shee?
+
+MR. MILB. It's the ordinary course of business, isn't it?
+
+MR. L.-B. Egshackly. But how few _do_ it! Now, I'll tell you 'nother
+shtory 'bout my poo' dear father. He came 'pon a sculpture in a
+curioshity shop; it wash very dirty and used up, but my dear father saw
+it was worth shpotting, and a thing to _be_ shpotted, and sho he put
+hish _finger_ on it!
+
+FIRST COMM. (_undaunted by past failure_). And was it antique, Sir?
+
+MR. L.-B. That'sh more'n I can tell you; it wash very dirty, at any
+rate, and he only gave fifty guineash for it. Wasn't a _great_ shum----
+
+FIRST COMM. (_encouraged by his affability_). No, indeed; a mere
+nothing, so to speak, Sir!
+
+MR. L.-B. (_annoyed_). Will you have the goodnesh to lemme finish what I
+was telling thish gentleman? When my poo' father got that busht home, it
+was the mos' perfect likenesh o' Napoleon!
+
+[Illustration: "They haven't the _patiensh_ for it."]
+
+MR. MILB. Ha! puts me in mind of the old story of the man who picked up
+a dingy panel somewhere or other, took it home, cleaned it, and found a
+genuine Morland; went on cleaning and discovered an undoubted Rembrandt;
+cleaned _that_, and came to a Crivelli; couldn't stop, kept on cleaning,
+and was rewarded by a portrait of George the Fourth!
+
+FIRST COMM. (_deeply impressed_). And all of them genuine? How _very_
+extraordinary, to be sure!
+
+MR. L.-B. (_wagging his head sapiently_). I could tell you shtranger
+things than _that_. But as I was shaying, here was this busht of
+Napoleon, by some French chap--which _you_ would tell me was _against_
+it.
+
+MR. MILB. Why? The French are the best sculptors in the world.
+
+MR. L.-B. The Frensh! I can _not_ bring myshelf to believe that, if only
+for thish shimple reashon, they haven't the _patiensh_ for it.
+
+FIRST COMM. So _I_ should have said. For my own part--not knowing much
+_about_ it, very likely--I should have put the _Italians_ first.
+
+MR. MILB. If you are talking of all time----
+
+FIRST COMM. (_feeling at last at his ease_). I should say, even _now_.
+Why, there was a piece of statuary in the Italian Exhibition at Earl's
+Court some years back that took _my_ fancy and took my _wife's_ fancy
+very much. It was a representation in marble of a 'en and chickens, all
+so natural, and with every individual feather on the birds done to such
+a nicety----!
+
+MR. MILB. I was hardly referring to the skill with which the Italians
+carve--ah--_poultry_.
+
+MR. L.-B. Ridic'lous! Great mishtake to talk without unnershtanding
+shubject. (_The FIRST COMMERCIAL retires from the room in disorder._)
+One thing I should like to ashk is thish. Why are sculptors at present
+day so inferior to the antique? Ishn't the human form divine ash noble
+and ash shymmetrical ash formerly? Why can't they _reproduce_ it then?
+
+MR. MILB. You must first find your sculptor. Providence doesn't see fit
+to create a Michael Angelo or a Praxiteles every five minutes, any more
+than a Shakspeare.
+
+MR. L.-B. (_wavering between piety and epigram_). Thank the Lord for
+_that_! Now there'sh Florensh. Shome of us who have had the _run_
+there--well, there you see all the original thingsh--all the
+_originalsh_. And yet, if you'll believe me (_dreamily_), with all my
+love and charm for Art, gimme the Capitoline Venush living and breathing
+in _flesh and blood_, Sir, not in cold lifelesh marble!
+
+MR. MILB. That of course is a matter of taste. But we are talking about
+Art, not women.
+
+MR. L.-B. (_profoundly_). Unforsh'nately, women are the _shubjects_ of
+Art. You've got to find out your client's shtyle of Art firsht, and then
+carry it out in the besht possible manner.
+
+MR. MILB. (_rising, and knocking his pipe out_). Have I? But I'm going
+to bed now, so you'll excuse me.
+
+MR. L.-B. (_detaining him_). But look here again. Take the Louvre. (_As
+MR. MILBOARD disclaims any desire to take it._) Now, nobody talksh about
+the Gallery _there_, and yet, if you only egshemp the thingsh that are
+rude and vulgar, and go quietly roun'----
+
+SECOND COMMERCIAL (_who sees a Socratic opening at last_). Might I ask
+you, Sir, to enumerate any pictures there, that, in your opinion, are
+"rude and vulgar"?
+
+ [_MR. MILBOARD avails himself of this diversion to escape._
+
+MR. L.-B. In the Grand Gallery of the Louvre there'sh an enormous amount
+of shtuff, as everybody who'sh an artisht and a lover of Art knowsh. If
+I had a friend who wash thinking of going to the Louvre (_here he looks
+round vaguely for MR. MILBOARD_), I should shay to him, "Do you _care_
+about pictursh at all? If you _don't_, don't borrer yourshelf 'bout it.
+If you _do_, drop in shome day with Me, and I'll give you a hint what
+to shee." (_As he cannot make out what has become of MR. MILBOARD, he
+has to content himself with the SECOND COMMERCIAL._) If you were _my_
+boy, I should shay to you----
+
+SECOND COMM. (_at the door_). Pardon me for remarking that, if I was
+your boy, I should probably prefer to take my own opinion. (_With
+dignified independence._) I never follow other persons' taste in Art!
+
+ [_He goes out as the Smoke-room Page enters._
+
+MR. L.-B. (_hazily with half-closed eyes_). If you wash _my_ boy, I
+should shay to you, very quietly, very sherioushly, and without
+'tempting to dictate----(_Perceives that he is addressing the Page._)
+Jus' bring me 'nother glash whiskey an' warrer.
+
+ [_He is left sitting._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE OLD LOVE AND THE NEW.
+
+A CONTRAST.
+
+
+_The Stables at Saddlesprings, the Wheelers' Country House near
+Bykersall. MISS DIANA'S Horse BAYARD discovered in his Stall._
+
+BAYARD (_talking to himself, as is the habit of some horses when
+alone_). I can't make it out. She's here. All the family came down
+yesterday--I heard the omnibus start for the station to meet them. And
+yet she hasn't sent for me; hasn't even been near me! She always used to
+rush in here and kiss me on the nose the very first--She's ill--that's
+it of course--sprained her fetlock or something. If she was well, she'd
+have had me saddled as soon as she'd had her morning feed, and we'd have
+gone for a canter together somewhere.... I hope she'll get well soon.
+I'm sick of being taken out by the stable-man; he's so dull--no notion
+of conversation beyond whistling! Now, Miss Diana would talk to me the
+whole way.... Perhaps her hands and seat might have been----But what did
+_that_ matter? I liked to feel she was on my back, I liked the sound of
+her pretty voice, and the touch of her hand when she patted me after her
+ride.... (_He pricks his ears._) Why, that's her voice outside now!
+She's all right, after all. She's coming in to see me!... I _knew_ she
+couldn't have forgotten!
+
+MISS DIANA'S VOICE (_outside_). Yes, you might put it in here for the
+present, Stubbs. I suppose it will be quite safe?
+
+STUBBS' VOICE. Safe enough, Miss, there's plenty o' empty stalls this
+side. Nothing _in_ 'ere just now, except----
+
+MISS D.'S VOICE. Very well, then. Just wipe some of the dust off the
+mud-guards, because I shall want it again after lunch. And mind you
+don't scratch the enamel taking it in.
+
+STUBBS. Very good, Miss. I'll be keerful.
+
+ [_MISS DIANA'S steps die away upon the cobbles._
+
+BAYARD (_to himself_). She's gone--without even asking after me! What
+has she been out in--a bath chair? I'm sure she _must_ be ill.
+
+STUBBS (_to the Bicycle, as he wheels it in_). 'Ere, steady now, 'old
+up, can't ye? And keep that blarsted near pedal o' yourn off o' _my_
+enamel. Blest if I wouldn't rather rub down arf a dozen 'unters nor one
+o' them yere bloomin' bi-cycles. I know where I _am_ with a 'orse; but
+these 'ere little, twisty, spidery wheels----Come _over_, will ye. I'll
+lean ye up agen 'ere till I've 'ad my dinner.
+
+[Illustration: "It must be a sort of animal, I suppose."]
+
+ [_He places the machine against a partition next to BAYARD'S
+ stall, and goes out._
+
+BAYARD (_to himself, as he inspects his neighbour with the corner of his
+eye_). It's _not_ a bath-chair; it's one of these bicycles. It must be a
+sort of animal, I suppose, or Stubbs wouldn't have spoken to it. I
+should like to ask it one or two questions. (_He gets his neck over the
+partition, and breathes gently through his nostrils upon the
+handle-bars._) Excuse me, but do you understand horse-language at all?
+
+The BICYCLE (_answering by a succession of saddle-creaks_). Perfectly.
+I'm a kind of horse myself, I believe, only greatly _improved_, of
+course. _Would_ you mind not breathing on my handle-bars like that? It
+tarnishes the plating so. The saddle is the seat of _my_ intelligence,
+if you will kindly address your remarks here.
+
+BAYARD. I beg your pardon. I will in future. I don't creak myself, but
+I've been closely connected with saddles ever since I was a
+two-year-old, so I can follow you fairly well. Didn't I hear my
+mistress's voice outside just now?
+
+The BICYCLE. No; _my_ mistress's, Miss Diana's. I'd just taken her out
+for a short spin--not far, only fifteen miles or so.
+
+BAYARD. Then, she--she's quite well?
+
+The BICYCLE. Thanks, she's pedalling pretty strong just now. I'm going
+out with her again this afternoon.
+
+BAYARD. Again! You will have had a hard day of it altogether, then. But
+I suppose you'll get a day or two's rest afterwards? I know _I_ should
+want it.
+
+The BICYCLE. Bless you, _I_ never want rest. Why, I've been forty miles
+with her, and come home without clanking a link! _She_ was knocked up,
+if you like--couldn't go out for days!
+
+BAYARD. Ah, she was never knocked up after riding _me_!
+
+The BICYCLE. Because--it's no fault of yours, of course, but the way
+you've been constructed--you couldn't go far enough to knock _anybody_
+up. And she doesn't get tired now, either. I'm not the kind of bicycle
+to boast; but I've often heard her say that she much prefers her "bike"
+(she always calls me her "bike"--very nice and friendly of her, isn't
+it?) to any mere _horse_.
+
+BAYARD. To any mere horse! And does she--give any reasons?
+
+The BICYCLE. Lots. For one thing, she says she feels so absolutely safe
+on me; she knows that, whatever she meets, I shall never start, or shy,
+or rear, or anything of that sort.
+
+BAYARD. I don't remember playing any of those tricks with her, however
+hard she pulled the curb.
+
+The BICYCLE. Then she says she never has to consider whether any
+distance will be too much for me.
+
+BAYARD. As for _that_----But the longer I was out with her, the better I
+was pleased; she might have brought me home as lame as a tree all round,
+and _I_ shouldn't have cared!
+
+The BICYCLE. Perhaps not. But _she_ would; so inconvenient, you see. Now
+_my_ strong point is, I _can't_ go lame--in good hands, of course, and
+she knows exactly how to manage me, I will say that for her!
+
+BAYARD. Does she give you carrots or sugar after a ride? she did _me_.
+
+THE BICYCLE (_with a creak of contempt_). Now what _do_ you suppose I
+could do with sugar or a carrot if I had it? No, a drop or two of oil
+now and then is all I take in the way of sustenance. That's _another_
+point in my favour, I cost little or nothing to keep. Now, your oats and
+hay and stuff, I daresay, cost more in a year than I'm worth altogether!
+
+BAYARD.. I must admit that you have the advantage of me in cheapness. If
+I thought she grudged me my oats----But I'm afraid I couldn't manage on
+a drop or two of oil.
+
+The BICYCLE. You'd want buckets of it to oil _your_ bearings. No, she
+wouldn't save by that! (_STUBBS re-enters._) Ah, here comes my man. I
+must be going; got to take her over to Pineborough, rather a bore this
+dusty weather, but when a lady's in the case, eh?
+
+BAYARD. There's a nasty hill going into Pineborough; do be careful how
+you take her down it!
+
+The BICYCLE. You forget, my friend, I'm not a Boneshaker, I'm a Safety.
+Why, she'll just put her feet up on the rests, fold her arms, and leave
+the rest to me. She knows _I_ can be trusted.
+
+BAYARD. Just tell me this before you go. Does--she doesn't pat you, or
+kiss you on your--er--handle-bar after a run, does she?
+
+The BICYCLE (_turning its front wheel to reply, as STUBBS wheels it
+out_). You don't imagine I should stand any sentimental rot of that
+sort, do you? She knows better than to try it on!
+
+BAYARD (_to himself_). I'm glad she doesn't kiss it. I don't think I
+_could_ have stood that!
+
+
+_Same Scene. Some Hours Later._
+
+STUBBS (_enters, carrying a dilapidated machine with crumpled handles, a
+twisted saddle, and a front wheel distorted into an irregular pentagon_).
+Well, I 'ope as 'ow this'll sarve as a lesson to 'er, I dew; a marcy she
+ain't broke her blessed little neck! (_To the Bicycle._) No need to be
+hover and above purtickler 'bout scratchin' your enamel _now_, any'ow!
+(_He pitches it into a corner, and goes._)
+
+BAYARD (_after reconnoitring_). You don't mean to say it's _you_!
+
+The BICYCLE. Me? of course it's me! A nice mess I'm in, too, entirely
+owing to her carelessness. Never put the brake on down that infernal
+hill, lost all control over me, and here I am, a wreck, Sir! Why, I had
+to be driven home, by a grinning groom, in a beastly dog-cart! Pleasant
+that!
+
+BAYARD. But she--Miss Diana--was she hurt? Not--not _seriously_, eh?
+
+The BICYCLE. Oh, of course you don't care what becomes of _me_ so long
+as----_She's_ all right enough--fell in a ditch, luckily for her, _I_
+came down on a heap of stones. It'll be weeks before I'm out of the
+repairer's hands.
+
+BAYARD (_to himself_). I _oughtn't_ to be glad; but I am--I _am_! She's
+safe, and--and she'll come back to me after this! (_To the Bicycle._)
+Wasn't she sorry for you?
+
+The BICYCLE. Not she! These women have no feeling in them. Why, what do
+you suppose she said when they told me it would take weeks to tinker me
+up?
+
+BAYARD (_to himself--with joy_). I think I can guess! (_To the
+Bicycle._) What _did_ she say?
+
+The BICYCLE (_rattling with indignation_). Why, all _she_ said was: "How
+tiresome! I wonder if I can hire a decent bike here without having to
+send to town for one." There's gratitude for you! But _you_ can't enter
+into my feelings about it.
+
+BAYARD. Pardon me--I fancy I can. And, after all, your day will come,
+when the Vet has set you up again. _Mine's_ over for ever. (_To
+himself._) Oh, why, _why_ wasn't I born a bicycle!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+A DOLL'S DIARY.
+
+
+_January 1._--Just had a brilliant idea--_quite_ original. I don't
+believe even any human person ever _thought_ of such a thing, but
+then,--besides being extremely beautiful and expensive, with refined wax
+features and golden hair--I am a very clever doll indeed. Frivolous, no
+doubt; heartless, so they tell me--but the very reverse of a _fool_. I
+flatter myself that if _anybody_ understands the nature of toys,
+especially _male_ toys--but I am forgetting my idea--which is this. I am
+going this year to write down--the little girl I belong to has no idea I
+can write, but I _can_--and better than _she_ does, too!--to write down
+every event of importance that happens, _with the dates_. There! I fancy
+_that_ is original enough. It will be a valuable dollian document when
+it is done, and _most_ interesting to look back upon. Now I must wait
+for something to happen.
+
+_January 6._--Went to Small Dance given by the Only Other Wax Doll (a
+dreadful old frump!) on the Nursery Hearthrug. Room rather nicely
+illuminated by coloured fire from grate, and a pyramid nightlight, but
+floor poor. Didn't think much of the music--a fur monkey at the
+Digitorium, and a woolly lamb who brought his own bellows, make _rather_
+a feeble orchestra. Still, on the whole, enjoyed myself. Much admired.
+Several young Ninepins, who are considered stuck-up, and keep a good
+deal to their own set, begged to be introduced. Sat out one dance with a
+Dice-box, who rattled away most amusingly. I understand he is quite an
+authority on games, and anything that falls from his mouth is received
+with respect. He is a great sporting character, too, and arranges all
+the meetings on the Nursery Race-course, besides being much interested
+in Backgammon. I _do_ like a Toy to have _manly_ tastes!
+
+The Captain of a Wooden Marching Regiment quartered in the neighbourhood
+was there in full uniform, but not dancing. Told me they _didn't_ in his
+regiment. As his legs are made in one piece and glued on to a yellow
+stand, inclined to think this was not mere military swagger. He seemed
+considerably struck with me. Made an impression, too, on a rather
+elderly India-rubber Ball. Snubbed him, as one of the Ninepins told me
+he was considered "a bit of a bounder."
+
+Some of the Composition Dolls, I could see, were perfectly _stiff_ with
+spite and envy. Spent a very pleasant evening, not getting back to my
+drawer till daylight. Too tired to write more.
+
+_Mem._--Not to sit out behind the coal-scuttle another time!
+
+_February 14._--Amount of attention I receive really quite embarrassing.
+The Ninepins are too _absurdly_ devoted. One of them (the nicest of all)
+told me to-day he had never been so completely bowled over in his whole
+existence! I manage to play them off against each other, however. The
+India-rubber Ball, too, is at my feet--and, naturally, I spurn him, but
+he is so short-winded that nothing will induce him to rise. Though
+naturally of an elastic temperament, he has been a good deal cast down
+of late. I smile on him occasionally--just to keep the Ball rolling; but
+it is becoming a frightful bore.
+
+_March._--Have been presented with a charming pony-carriage, with two
+piebald ponies that go by clock work. I wish, though, I was not expected
+to share it with a _live kitten_! The kitten has no idea of repose, and
+spoils the effect of the turn-out. Try not to seem aware of it--even
+when it claws my frock. Rather interested in a young Skipjack, whom I
+see occasionally; he is quite good-looking, in a common sort of way. I
+talk to him now and then--it is something to do; and he is a new type,
+so different from the Ninepins!
+
+_April 1._--Have just heard the Skipjack is engaged to a plaster
+Dairy-maid. A little annoyed, because he really seemed----Have been to
+see his _fiancee_, a common-place creature, with red cheeks, and a thick
+waist. Congratulate the Skipjack, with just a _hint_ that he might have
+looked higher. Afraid that he misunderstood me, for he absolutely
+jumped.
+
+_April 7._--The Skipjack tells me he has _broken off his engagement_; he
+seems to think I shall guess the reason--but I don't, of _course_. Then
+he actually has the impertinence to (I can scarcely pen the words for
+indignation) to _propose_--to Me! I inform him, in the most
+_unmistakable_ terms, that he has presumed on my good-nature, and that
+there are social barriers between us, which no Skipjack can ever
+surmount. He leaves me abruptly, after declaring that I have broken the
+spring of his existence.
+
+_April 8._--Much shocked and annoyed. The Skipjack found quite stiff and
+colourless this morning, in the water-jug! Must have jumped in last
+night. So _very_ rash and silly of him! Am sure I gave him no
+encouragement--or _next_ to none. Hear that the Dairy-maid has gone off
+her head. Of course it will be put down to _grief_; but we all know how
+easily plaster heads get cracked. Feel really distressed about it all,
+for the blame is sure to fall on _me_. Those Composition Dolls will make
+a fine scandal out of it!
+
+_May._--The Ninepins are getting very difficult to manage; have to put
+them down as delicately as possible; but I am afraid, poor fellows, they
+are dreadfully upset. The Wooden Captain has challenged the Dice-box to
+a duel--I fear, on _my_ account. However, as the officer's sword will
+not unglue, I _hope_ nothing will come of it. All this _most_ worrying,
+though, and gives me little _real_ satisfaction. I find myself sighing
+for more _difficult_ conquests.
+
+_June._--Went to afternoon tea with the biggest Dutch Doll. Rather a
+come-down, but now that there is this coolness between the Composition
+set and myself, I must go _somewhere_. I feel _so_ bored at times! Can
+see the ridiculous Dutch thing is trying to _out-dress_ me! She had a
+frock on that _must_ have cost at _least_ fifty beads, and I don't
+believe it will _ever_ be paid for! Only made her look the bigger _guy,_
+though! Tea-party a stupid affair. Make-believe tea in pewter cups. Met
+the latest arrival, a really nice-looking Gentleman Doll, introduced as
+"Mr. Joseph." Very innocent face, without any moustache, and the
+sweetest blue eyes (except mine) I think I _ever_ saw! Seemed rather
+shy, but pleasant. Asked him to call.
+
+_June 18._--Mr. Joseph has not called _yet_. Very strange! Suspect those
+horrid Composition Dolls have been setting him against me. Met him by
+the back-board and scolded him. He seemed confused. By a little
+management, I got it all out of him. I was right. He _has_ been told
+about the Skipjack. He has strict principles, and gave me to understand
+that he would prefer to decline my acquaintance--which was _like his
+impudence_! This is exciting, though. I intend to overcome these
+scruples; I mean him to be madly in love with me--then I shall
+scornfully reject him, which will serve him just _right_!
+
+_July._--My tactics have succeeded--_at last_! To-day Joseph called,
+_ostensibly_ to beg me to go and see the unhappy Ball, who, it seems, is
+terribly collapsed, reduced to a _mere bowl_, and so exhausted that he
+cannot hold out much longer. However, in the course of the interview, I
+soon made him oblivious of the Ball. He fell at my feet. "Beautiful
+Gloriana," he cried, "with all your many and glaring faults, I love
+you!" Then I carried out the _rest_ of my programme--it was a painful
+scene, and I will only record that when he left me, he was completely
+_un-dolled_! I feel almost sorry for him--he had rather a nice face!
+
+[Illustration: "I see _him_ standing, on the very brink of the
+precipice."]
+
+_July 4._--I don't seem able to settle to anything. After all, I think I
+will go and see the poor Ball. It would comfort him, and I might see
+_him_ there. I will order the pony-carriage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_August._--What has happened to me? Where have I been all this time? Let
+me collect myself, and see how much I remember. My last clear
+recollection is of being in my carriage on my way to receive the
+departing Ball's last sigh.... Something has started the clockwork. My
+ponies are bolting, and I haven't the _slightest_ control over them! We
+are rushing along the smooth plain of the chest of drawers, and rapidly
+nearing the edge. I try to scream for help, but all I can utter is,
+"Papa!" and "Mamma!" All at once I see _him_ standing, calm and
+collected, on the very brink of the precipice. Is he strong enough to
+stop the ponies in their mad clockwork career, and save me, _even yet_?
+_How_ I will love him if he does! An instant of sickening suspense ...
+we are _over_!--falling down, down, down.... A crash, a whirr of
+clockwork, a rush of bran to my head--and I know no more. What follows
+is a dream--a horrible, confused nightmare--of lying among a heap of
+limp bodies--some armless, some legless, others (ah! the horror of it)
+_headless_! I grope blindly for my own limbs--they are intact; then I
+feel the place where I naturally expect to find my head--it is
+_gone_!... The shock is too much--I faint once more. And that is all.
+
+Thank goodness, it was only a dream--for here I am, in the same old
+nursery again! Not _all_ a dream, either--or my pony-carriage would
+scarcely present such a damaged appearance. The _accident_ was real.
+Then what--_what_ has become of Joseph? I _must_ find him--I must make
+him understand that I repent--that, for the future, I intend to be a
+changed doll!
+
+_September._--Still searching for Joseph. No trace of him. I seem to be
+a changed doll in more ways than one. My former set knows me not. The
+Ninepins do not stagger when I smile at them now; the Dice-box gapes
+open-mouthed at my greeting. I call upon the Composition Dolls--they are
+very polite; but it is quite clear that they don't remember me in the
+least! Alas! how soon one is forgotten in the world of Toys! Have no
+heart to recall myself to them. I go, for the first time since my
+accident, to a convenient brass knob, in which I would once gaze at my
+reflected features by the hour. How indescribable are my sensations at
+the discovery that I have a _totally new head_--a china one! I, who used
+to look down on china dolls! It is a very decent head, in its way; quite
+neat and inoffensive, with smooth, shiny hair, which won't come down
+like the golden locks I _once_ had. I am glad--yes, _glad_ now--that
+Joseph has gone, and the home he used to occupy is deserted, and shut
+up. If he were here, _he_ would not know me either. Now I can live
+single all my remaining days, in memory of him, and devote myself to
+doing good!
+
+_October._--Have entered on my new career. Am organising a Mission for
+Lost Toys, and a Clothing Club for Rag Dolls. To-day, while "slumming"
+in the lumber-closet, found my old acquaintance, the Dutch Doll in a
+_shocking_ state of destitution--nothing on her but a piece of _tattered
+tissue-paper_! To think that my evil example and her own _senseless
+extravagance_ have brought her to _this_! Gave her one of my old
+tea-gowns and a Sunday domino, but did not reveal myself. Feeling very
+sad and lonely: think I shall have to keep a mouse--I must have
+_something_ to love me!
+
+_October 15._--Someone has taken poor dear Joseph's old house. I see a
+new doll, with a small but worldly black moustache and a very bad
+countenance, watching me as I pass the windows. Shall call and leave a
+scripture brick. It may do him good.
+
+_October 16._--Have called.... _Never_ heard worse language from the
+lips of _any_ doll! Came across my old admirer, the Ball, who is better,
+though still what I have heard the nursery governess describe as an
+"_oblate spheroid_." Of course, he did not recognise me.
+
+_December._--Have seen a good deal of the Doll with the worldly
+moustache lately. From certain symptoms, do not despair of reforming
+him--ultimately. He seems softening. Yesterday he told me he did not
+think he should live long. Yet he has a splendid constitution--the best
+porcelain. He is dreadfully cynical--seems so reckless about everything.
+If I could only reclaim him--for Joseph's sake!
+
+This afternoon I saw the yellow stand which the Wooden Captain used to
+occupy. What memories it recalled, ah me! Can he have disgraced himself
+and been "broke"? And am _I_ responsible?
+
+_Christmas Eve._--Am sitting in my corner, my mouse curled comfortably
+at my feet, when the Walking Postman comes up with a letter--for _me_!
+It is from the Wicked Doll! He is very ill--_dying_, he thinks--and
+wishes to see me. How well I remember that _other_ message which
+Joseph--but Joseph is taken, and the Ball still bounds! Well, I will go.
+It will be something to tell my Diary.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Christmas Day._--Something _indeed_! How shall I begin my wondrous
+_incredible_ tale? I reached the Doll's House, which looked gloomier and
+more deserted than ever, with the sullen glow of the dying fire
+reflected redly in its windows. The green door stood open--I went in.
+"Ha, ha! _trapped_!" cried a sneering voice behind me. It was the Wicked
+Doll! His letter was a _ruse_--he was as well as I was--and I--I was
+shut up there in that lonely house, entirely at his mercy!... It was a
+frightful position for any doll to be placed in; and yet, looking back
+on it now, I don't think I minded it so _very_ much.
+
+"Listen!" he said, in response to my agonized entreaties. "Long, long
+ago, when I was young and innocent, a beautiful but heartless being
+bewitched me, kid and bran! I told my love--she mocked at me. Since then
+I have sworn, though she has escaped me, to avenge myself by sacrificing
+the life of the first doll I could entice into my power. _You_ are that
+doll. You must die!"... "I am quite prepared," I told him--"do your
+worst!" which seemed to confuse him very much. "I will," he said,
+"presently--presently; there is no hurry. You see," he explained, in a
+tone almost of apology, "in endeavouring to save her life (it was my
+last good action) I got my head smashed, and received the substitute I
+now wear, which, as you will observe, is that of an unmitigated villain.
+And it's no use having a head like that if you don't live _up_ to
+it--_is_ it, now? So--as I think I observed before--prepare for the
+worst!" "Don't talk about it any more--_do_ it!" I said, and I breathed
+Joseph's name softly. But the Wicked Doll did nothing at all. I began to
+feel safer--it was so obvious that he hadn't the faintest notion _what_
+to do. "She treated me abominably," he said feebly; "_any_ doll would
+have been annoyed at the heartless way in which Gloriana----"
+
+I could contain my feelings no longer.
+
+"Joseph!" I gasped (I had lost all fear of him), "you ridiculous old
+goose, don't you _know_ me? _I_ am Gloriana, and I have found you at
+last!" And with that I flung myself into his arms, and told him
+everything. I think he was more relieved than anything. "So _you_ are
+Gloriana!" he said. "It's dreadfully bewildering; but, to tell you the
+honest truth, I can't keep up this villainy business any longer. I
+haven't been brought up to it, and I don't understand how it's done. So
+I tell you what we'll do. If you'll leave off living up to _your_ new
+head, I won't try to live up to _mine_!" And so we settled it.
+
+_Postscript. December 31._--We are to be married to-morrow. The Dutch
+Doll is to be my bridesmaid, and the Wooden Captain (who was only away
+on sick leave, after all) is coming up to be best man. I have seen the
+poor old Ball, and told him there will always be a corner for him in our
+new home. I am very, _very_ happy. To think that Joseph should still
+care for his poor Gloriana, altered and homely as her once lovely
+features have now become! But Joseph (who is leaning over my shoulder
+and reading every word I write) stops me here to assure me that I am
+lovelier than ever in _his_ eyes. And really--I don't know--perhaps I
+_am_. And in _other_ persons' eyes, too, if it comes to that. I
+certainly don't intend to give up society just because I happen to be
+_married_!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+ELEVATING THE MASSES.
+
+(A PURELY IMAGINARY SKETCH.)
+
+
+_ARGUMENT--MRS. FLITTERMOUSE, having got up a party to assist her in
+giving an Entertainment at the East End, has called a meeting for the
+purpose of settling the items in the programme._
+
+_MRS. FLITTERMOUSE'S Drawing-room in Park Lane. Everybody discovered
+drinking tea, and chatting on matters totally unconnected with
+Philanthropy._
+
+MRS. FLITTERMOUSE (_imploringly_). Now, _please_, everybody, _do_
+attend! It's quite impossible to settle anything while you're all
+talking about something else. (_Apologies, protests, constrained
+silence._) Selina, dear, what do you think it would be best to begin
+with?
+
+The DOWAGER LADY DAMPIER. My dear Fritilla, I have no suggestion to
+offer. You know my opinion about the whole thing. The people don't want
+to be elevated, and--if they did--entertaining them is not the proper
+means to set about it. But I don't wish to discourage you.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Oh, but I think we could do so _much_ to give them a taste
+for more rational and refined amusements, poor things, to wean them from
+the coarse pleasures which are all they have at present. Only we must
+really decide what each of us is going to do.
+
+MRS. PERSE-WEAVER. A violin solo is always popular. And my daughter
+Cecilia will be delighted to play for you. She has been taught by the
+best----
+
+CECELIA. Oh, Mother, I couldn't, really! I've never played in public. I
+_know_ I should break down!
+
+LADY DAMP. In that case, my dear, it would be certainly unwise on your
+part to attempt it.
+
+MRS. P.-W. Nonsense, Cecilia, nonsense. You _won't_ break down, and it
+wouldn't matter in the least if you did. _They_ wouldn't notice
+anything. And it will be such excellent practice for you to get
+accustomed to a platform, too. Of _course_ she will play for you, dear
+Mrs. Flittermouse!
+
+MRS. FLITT. It will be _so_ good of you, Miss Weaver. And it won't be
+like playing to a _real_ audience, you know--poor people are so easily
+pleased, poor dears. Then I will put that down to begin with. (_She
+makes a note._) Now we must have something quite different for the
+next--a reading or something.
+
+LADY HONOR HYNDLEGGS. A--nothin' _humorous_, I hope. I do think we ought
+to avoid anythin' like descendin' to their level, don't you know.
+
+MR. LOVEGROOVE. Might try something out of _Pickwick_. "_Bob Sawyer's
+Party_," you know. Can't go far wrong with anything out of Dickens.
+
+MISS DIOVA ROSE. Can't endure him myself. All his characters are so
+fearfully common; still--(_tolerantly_) I daresay it might
+amuse--a--that class of persons.
+
+MRS FLITT. I must say I agree with Lady Honor. We should try and aim as
+high as possible--and well, I think _not_ Dickens, dear Mr. Lovegroove.
+_Tennyson_ might do perhaps; he's written some charmin' pieces.
+
+MR. LOVEGR. Well, fact is, I don't go in for poetry much myself. But
+I'll read anythin' of his you think I'm equal to.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Why--a--really, it's so long since I--and I'm afraid I
+haven't one of his poems in the house. I suppose they are down at
+Barn-end. But I could send to Cutt and Hawthorn's. I daresay _they_
+would have a copy somewhere.
+
+MISS SIBSON-GABLER. Surely Tennyson is rather--a--retrograde? Why not
+read them something to set them _thinking_? It would be an interesting
+experiment to try the effect of that marvellous Last Scene in the
+_Doll's House_. I'd love to read it. It would be like a breath of fresh
+air to them!
+
+MRS. P.-W. Oh, I've seen that at the Langham Hall. You remember,
+Cecilia, my taking you there? And Corney Grain played _Noah_. To be
+sure--we were _quite_ amused by it all.
+
+MISS S.-G. (_coldly_). This is _not_ amusing--it's a play of Ibsen's.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Is that the man who wrote the piece at the Criterion--what
+is it, _The Toy Shop_? Wyndham acted in it.
+
+LADY DAMP. No, no; IBSEN is the person there's been all this fuss about
+in the papers--he goes in for unconventionality and all that. I may be
+wrong, but I think it is _such_ a mistake to have anything
+unconventional in an entertainment for the people.
+
+MRS. FLITT. But if he's being _talked_ about, dear Lady Dampier, people
+might like to know something about him. But perhaps we'd better leave
+Ibsen open, then. Now, what shall we have next?
+
+MISS SKIPWORTH. I tell you what would fetch them--a skirt-dance. I'll
+dance for you--like a shot. It would be no end of fun doin' it on a
+regular platform, and I've been studyin' Flossie Frillington, at the
+Inanity, till I've caught her style exactly.
+
+[Illustration: "To-night is ours!"]
+
+MR. KEMPTON. Oh, I say, you can give her a stone and a beatin' any day,
+give you my word you can. She doesn't put anythin' like the go into it
+you do.
+
+ [_MISS S. accepts this tribute with complacency._
+
+MRS. FLITT. A skirt-dance will be the very thing. It's sure to please
+the people we shall bring over for it--and of course they'll be in the
+front rows. Yes, I must put _that_ down. We ought to have a song next.
+Mrs. Tuberose, you promised to come and sing for us--you will, won't
+you?
+
+MRS. TUBEROSE. Delighted! I rather thought of doing a dear little song
+Stephan Otis has just brought out. It's called "_Forbidden Fruit_," and
+he wrote it expressly for me. It goes like this.
+
+ [_She sits down at the piano, and sings, with infinite
+ expression and tenderness._
+
+ "Only the moon espies our bliss,
+ Through the conscious clusters of clematis,
+ Shedding star-sweet showers.
+ To-morrow the world will have gone amiss--
+ Now I gaze in your eyes, love, I thrill to your kiss--
+ So let us remember naught but this:
+ That To-night is ours!
+ Yes, this passionate, perilous, exquisite night--
+ Is Ours!"
+
+SEVERAL VOICES. Charmin'.... Otis puts so much real feeling into all his
+songs ... quite a little gem! &c., &c.
+
+LADY DAMP. I should have thought myself that it was rather advanced--for
+an East-End audience--
+
+MRS. TUBEROSE (_nettled_). Really, dear Lady Dampier, if people see
+nothing to object in it _here_, I don't see why they should be more
+particular at the East-End!
+
+MRS. FLITT. Oh, no,--and as if it matters what the _words_ are in the
+song. I daresay if one heard _their_ songs----Now we want another
+song--something as different as possible.
+
+MR. GARDINIER. Heard a capital song at the "Pav." the other
+night--something about a Cock-eyed Kipper. Just suit my voice. I could
+easily get the words and music, and do that for you--if you like.
+
+SEVERAL VOICES. A Cock-eyed Kipper! It sounds too killing! Oh, we _must_
+have that!
+
+LADY DAMP. Might I ask what kind of creature a--a "Cock-eyed Kipper" may
+be?
+
+MR. GARD. Oh, well, I suppose it's a sort of a dried herring--with a
+squint, don't you know.
+
+LADY DAMP. I see no humour in making light of a personal deformity, I
+must say.
+
+MR. GARD. Oh, don't you? _They_ will--it'll go with a scream there!
+
+MISS DIOVA ROSE. Yes, poor dears--and we mustn't mind being just a
+little vulgar for once--to cheer them up.
+
+LADY HONOR. I have been to the Pavilion and the Tivoli myself, and I
+heard nothing to object to. I know I was much more amused than I ever am
+at theatres--_they_ bore me to death.
+
+MR. BAGOTRIX. We might finish up with _Mrs. Jarley's Waxworks_, you
+know. Some of you can be the figures, and I'll come on in a bonnet and
+shawl as _Mrs. Jarley_, and wind you up and describe you. I've done it
+at lots of places in the country; brought in personal allusions and all
+that sort of thing, and made everybody roar.
+
+LADY DAMP. But will the East-Enders understand your personal allusions?
+
+MR. BAG. Well, you see, the people in the front rows will, which is all
+_I_ want.
+
+LADY HONOR (_suspiciously_). Isn't _Mrs. Jarley_ out of _Pickwick_,
+though? That's Dickens, surely!
+
+MR. BAG. (_reassuringly_). Nothing but the name, Lady Honor. I make up
+all the patter myself, so that'll be all right--just good-natured chaff,
+you know; if anybody's offended--as I've known them to be--it's no fault
+of mine.
+
+MRS. FLITT. Oh, I'm sure you will make it funny,--and about getting
+someone to preside--I suppose we ought to ask the Vicar of the nearest
+church?
+
+LADY HONOR. Wouldn't it be better to get somebody--a--more in Society,
+don't you know?
+
+MRS. FLITT. And he might offer to pay for hiring the Hall, and the other
+expenses. I never thought of that. I'll see whom I can get. Really I
+think it ought to be great fun, and we shall have the satisfaction of
+feeling we are doing real good, which is such a comfort!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+BOOKMAKERS ON THE BEACH.
+
+A SKETCH AT A SEA-SIDE RACE MEETING.
+
+
+_The Sands at Baymouth, where some pony and horse races are being run.
+By the Grand Stand, and under the wall of the esplanade, about a dozen
+bookmakers, perched on old packing-cases, are clamouring with their
+customary energy. The public, however, for some reason seems unusually
+deaf to their blandishments and disinclined for speculation, and the
+bookmakers, after shouting themselves hoarse with little or no result,
+are beginning to feel discouraged._
+
+BOOKMAKERS (_antiphonally_). Evens on the field! Three to one bar one!
+Five to one bar two! Six to one bar one! Even money _Beeswing_! Six to
+one _Popgun_! Come on 'ere. Two to one on the field! What do you want to
+_do_?
+
+ [_The public apparently want to look another way._
+
+FIRST BOOKMAKER (_to SECOND BOOKMAKER_). Not much 'ere to-day! Shawn't
+get no roast baked and biled this journey, eh?
+
+SECOND B. (_with deep disgust_). They ain't _got_ no money! Baymouth's
+going down. Why, this might be a bloomin' Sunday-school treat! Blest if
+I believe they know what we're 'ere _for_!
+
+THIRD B. (_after pausing to refresh himself, sardonically to FOURTH
+BOOKMAKER_). De-lightful weather, William!
+
+WILLIAM (_in a similar tone of irony_). What a glorious day, Percy! Sech
+a treat to see all the people enjoyin' theirselves without any o' the
+silly speculation yer _do_ find sometimes on occasions like this! (_He
+accepts the bottle his friend passes, and drinks._) 'Ere's better luck
+to all!
+
+FIFTH B. (_pathetically_). Don't leave your little Freddy out! (_They
+don't leave their little FREDDY out._) Cheer up, William, there's
+'appier days in store; there'll be Jersey comin' soon. We'll be orf to
+the sunny south! (_To a stranger who comes up to him._) Why, Uncle, you
+don't say it's you! How _well_ you're looking! Shake 'ands and 'ave a
+bit on, jest for ole sake's sake! (_The stranger proceeds to introduce
+himself as the Secretary, and to demand a fee._) What! pay you five
+shillins for standin' 'ere wastin' my time and voice like this? Not me!
+Why, I ain't took two blessed sorcepans since I bin 'ere! (_The
+Secretary remains firm._) I won't do it, my boy. Not on _prinserple_, I
+won't. I wouldn't give you five shillins not if your tongue was 'anging
+down on to your boots--so there! (_The Secretary does not attempt so
+violent an appeal to his better nature, but calls a police-inspector._)
+'Ere, I'd sooner git down and chuck the show altogether; jest to mark my
+contempt for such goings on! (_He descends from his box; takes down his
+sign, unscrews his pole, folds up his professional triptych, and departs
+in a state of virtuous indignation only to be expressed by extreme
+profanity, while the Secretary proceeds unmoved to collect payments from
+the others; who eventually compromise the claims for half-a-crown._)
+
+MR. SAM SATCHELL (_"from Southampton"_). Now then, you gentlemen and
+aristocratic tradesmen, where _are_ you all? Don't any o' you know
+_anything_? Come on 'ere. (_He stops an elderly rustic._) You've got a
+fancy, I can see! (_The rustic denies the impeachment, grinning._) Git
+along with yer, yer artful ole puss, then, and don't keep gentlemen away
+as wants to bet! (_To a Yeomanry trooper._) Come along, my ole
+soldier-boy, give it a name! (_His old soldier-boy declines to give it
+any name, and passes on._) Call yerself a warrior bold, and afraid o'
+riskin' 'alf-a-crown! Why, yer Queen and country orter be ashamed o'
+yer! (_As a young farmer in riding-gaiters comes up, with the evident_
+_intention of business._) Ah, _you_ don't forget the old firm, I see....
+What, four to one not good enough for you? You won't get no better odds,
+go where you _like_! I suppose you expeck me to make you a present o'
+the money? (_The farmer moves on._) I dunno what's _come_ to 'em all.
+_I_ never see nothing like it in all _my_ life!
+
+
+_In the Grand Stand._
+
+A GLIB PERSON, _in a tall hat_ (_as he picks his way up and down the
+benches, the occupants of which treat him with intolerant
+indifference_). I'm not a bookmaker, ladies and gentlemen; don't have
+that impression of me for a moment! I'm simply an amateur, and an
+independent gentleman o' means, like any of yourselves. You all know
+more than _I_ do. I don't come 'ere with any intention o' winning your
+money--far from it. I'm wishful to settle and live among you. I may
+eventually put up as your member; and, if so, when I take my place in
+Parliament I shall be in a position to testify that the Baymouth people
+are extremely cautious as to the manner in which they invest their money
+on 'orse-racing'! Yes, I'm 'ere on beyarf of the Sporting League, just
+to prove how free a meeting like this is from the evils o' gambling. I
+don't come 'ere to _rob_ yer. I want yer all to win. I like to see yer
+bright and shining faces around me; I like the friverolity and
+reckereation and the conviverality of the thing, that's all. I'll tell
+yer how it is. I've a rich ole aunt, and she puts fifty pound into my
+'ands, and sez, "Jacky," she sez, "I love those dear Baymouth people,
+and I want you to take this 'ere money and lay it out among 'em in
+moieties, and make 'em rich and 'appy." You can see for yourselves. I've
+no tickets and no parryfernalia, excep' this little pocket-book, where I
+enter any bets you honour me with. Come, Miss win a pair o' those
+three-and-sixpenny gloves at Chickerell's, the ex-Mayor's, to oblige
+_me_! Did I tread on your corn, Sir? I assure you it was the last thing
+I intended.... "You knew I'd do it afore I'd done?"... Well, Sir, if
+you've sech a gift o' seeing into futoority as that, why not make
+something out of it now? Three to one bar one. _Kitty I'm_ barring.
+Thank _you_, Sir; 'alf-a-crown to seven and six on _Sportsman_. I tell
+you candidly--you've got the winner. The favourite won't win. Now, then,
+all you others, where's your Baymouth pluck? I orfered you thirty to one
+_Beeswing_ last race; and you wouldn't take it. And _Beeswing_ won, and
+you lost the chance o' making yer fortunes. Don't blame _me_ if the
+same thing 'appens again. I'm on'y bettin', as I told you, for my own
+amusement, and to get rid o' the money! (_&c._, _&c._)
+
+MR. SAM SATCHELL (_whom the apathy of the public has apparently reduced
+to a state of defiant buffoonery_). Even money _Daredevil_, you rascals!
+And why the blazes don't ye take it? Come on. I'll take two little bits
+o' twos that _Kitty_ don't win! Four to one against ole bread-and-butter
+_Tommy_, over there in the corner! Eleven and a 'alf to three quarters
+to two against _Kitty_. "What har the Wild Waves say-hay-ing?" Two
+_Kitties_ to three _Daredevils_ against a bloomin' goat-chaise? On the
+Baymouth Durby I'm bettin'!
+
+
+_At the Close of the Last Race--Three horses have started; the favourite
+has led to the turn and then bolted up the shingle, but, as the tide has
+come in and almost covered the course, and the other two horses by
+declining to face the water have let him in again, he wins after an
+exciting finish, up to the girths in sea-water; and such bookmakers as
+have succeeded in obtaining patronage are paying up with as much
+cheerfulness as they can command._
+
+FIRST BOOKMAKER (_to eager backer_). "Wait a bit, my boy, wait _a bit_,
+the number hasn't gone up yet, my son. Where's your ticket--forty-two?
+(_His Clerk refers to book._) That's _Squibbs_. I pay over
+_winners_--not losers. (_To the public._) Come along and fetch your
+money, the bullion's 'ere! (_To another backer._) What was
+yours--threes? ("Fours _I_'ve got," _from his Clerk._) Why don't yer
+arst for what you're entitled to, instead o' makin' me arst my clurk
+what your bet was? There's your money--take it and go."
+
+[Illustration: "Why the blazes don't ye take it?"]
+
+ [_The backer departs wealthier but abashed._
+
+SECOND B. I'm payin' over that 'ard-run race, gentlemen, men and 'orses
+exhorsted! I'm payin' over _Susan_--dear ole Susey-hanner! who wants
+their money? The Bank o' England's 'ere, gentlemen, Mr. Frankie
+Fairprice and his ole friend, who's always by his side and never looses
+'im!
+
+THIRD B. (_who has had to borrow largely from his brethren to meet his
+engagements_). Are you all done now? (_To the crowd._) Then I'll wish
+yer good afternoon, thank ye all for yer comp'ny, but you've bin
+bloomin' bad fun to-day, and you don't ketch me playin' Patience on a
+monument at any more o' yer blanky sand 'oppin' 'andicaps, that's all!
+
+ [_However, the local newspapers report next day that "A number
+ of the sporting fraternity were in attendance to do business
+ and apparently carried on a brisk and profitable trade"--which
+ only shows how difficult it is for the casual observer to form
+ an accurate opinion._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+'IGHER UP!
+
+(A SKETCH OUTSIDE AN OMNIBUS.)
+
+
+_The Omnibus is on its progress from Piccadilly to the Bank; the weather
+is raw and unpleasant, and the occupants of the garden-seats on the roof
+of the vehicle are--for once in a way--mostly men._
+
+FIRST PASSENGER (_to SECOND, an acquaintance_). I see young Bashaway the
+other day. (_Significantly._) Jest been to see his father, so he told
+me.
+
+SECOND PASSENGER (_with interest_). _'Ad_ he though? And 'ow did he
+_find_ him?
+
+FIRST P. Fustrate, young JIM said; didn't know when he'd seen him
+lookin' better--(_with sentiment_)--quite like his old self!
+
+SECOND P. (_heartily_). That _is_ good 'earin', that is!
+(_Reflectively._) Seems _rum_, though, come to think of it.
+
+FIRST P. 'Ow d'yer _mean_--rum? It's no more than what yer'd expect,
+bein' where he is. Look at the _air_ o' the place--there ain't a
+'elthier situation all round London, to my mind!
+
+SECOND P. No, that's right enough; and, from all I 'ear, the food's well
+cooked and served reg'lar, if it _is_ plain.
+
+FIRST P. Ah, and Bill _enjoys_ his meals now, he does--the work gives
+him a appetite, and it's years, to my certain knowledge, since he done a
+stroke, and o' course he ain't allowed no drink----
+
+SECOND P. And _that's_ enough, of itself, to be the savin' of 'im, the
+way he was!
+
+FIRST P. Then, yer see, there's the reg'lar hours, and the freedom from
+worry, and the like, and nothink on his mind, and the place with every
+sanitary improvement and that--why, he owns his own self it's bin the
+makin' of 'im. And from what young Jim was a tellin' me, it appears that
+if Bill goes on gittin' good-conduck marks at the rate he's doin',
+there'll be a nice little sum doo to 'im when he's done his time at
+Wormwood Scrubs.
+
+SECOND P. (_sympathetically_). Well, and that makes suthin' to look
+forward to, don't it, when he _does_ git let out. Talkin' o' that,
+you've known 'im longer 'n what I 'ave. Do you 'appen to know what it
+was as he got inter trouble _for_?
+
+FIRST P. (_with the consciousness of superior delicacy_). Lor' bless
+yer, I never thought o' arskin' 'im the question.
+
+SECOND P. (_with feeble self-assertion under this implied rebuke_).
+Well, it all depends on 'ow yer _put_ a question o' that sort.
+
+ [_He is silent for the remainder of the journey._
+
+A CHATTY PASSENGER (_to a CONTRADICTIOUS PASSENGER, as the 'bus passes
+Trafalgar Square_). Pretty these 'ere fountains look, with the water
+playin', don't they?
+
+The CONTRADICIOUS PASSENGER. The fountings are well enough, if it wasn't
+fur the water--norsty messy stuff, I call it.
+
+The CHATTY P. (_abandoning the fountains_). It's wonderful what an
+amount o' traffic there is in the Strand, ain't it?
+
+CONTRAD. P. Nothink to what it was forty years ago!
+
+ [_His neighbour, not feeling in a position to deny it,
+ subsides._
+
+The DRIVER (_to a PASSENGER WITH A BADGE, immediately behind him_). 'Ow
+is it you're orf yer keb to-day, Bob? Taking a day orf, or what?
+
+The PASSENGER WITH A BADGE. Not much. Goin' up to Bow Street to gimmy
+evidence in a collision case--that's all.
+
+DRIVER (_dubiously_). Bow Street! Ain't that rorther shovin' yer 'ed in
+the lion's mouth, eh?
+
+The P. WITH A B. (_with virtuous serenity_). Not _it_! What ha' they got
+agen me all the time I bin licensed? Only three drunks and a loiter!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_returning to the charge_). Orful state the roads are in
+with all this mud! I s'pose that's the London County Council, eh?
+
+The CONTRAD. P. London Kayounty Kayouncil! No, it ain't--nothink o' the
+sort! I'll _tell_ yer 'oo it is, if yer want to know; it's Gladstone!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_mildly surprised, but glad to have discovered common
+ground_). I see you're a Conservative--like myself.
+
+The CONTRAD. P. That's jest where you're _wrong_! I ain't no
+Conservative, nor yet I don't want none o' Gladstone neither. I'm a
+Radikil, _I_ am. John Burns and Ben Tillett--that's _my_ lot!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_reluctantly relinquishing politics_). Ah, well, every
+man's got a right to form his own opinions, ain't he?
+
+The CONTRAD. P. No, he _ain't_--not if he goes and forms _wrong_ 'uns!
+(_A pause._) 'Ave yer got the time about yer?
+
+The CHATTY P. (_accepting this as a sign of softening_). I'm sorry to
+say I come out without my watch this morning, or else----But there's
+plenty o' clocks about as'll tell yer.
+
+The CONTRAD. P. (_with intense disdain_). Clocks! You don't ketch _me_
+trusting no clocks--with no two of 'em alike!
+
+The CHATTY P. (_as they pass a well-known watchmaker's_). Well, 'ow
+about that clock with the figgers? Won't _that_ do yer? They set it to
+Grinnidge time every hour, so it's bound to be right!
+
+The CONTRAD. P. (_as descends_). There yer _are_! Think I'd put my faith
+in a clock as 'as to be set right every hour? 'Tain't _likely_! Good-day
+to yer!
+
+The CHATTY P. So long! (_To himself._) A pleasant feller enough, I
+dessay, if you leave the subjec' to _'im_!
+
+DRIVER (_to smart HANSOM CABMAN_). Now then, outer the way with that
+'ere 'Ackney keb o' yours!
+
+HANSOM CABMAN (_with hauteur_). As it 'appens, it _ain't_ a 'Ackney
+cab--it's a private kerridge, this is!
+
+DRIVER. Ah, I might ha' known _you_ was a hammytoor by yer silly
+hasslike method o' conducting yer business! [_Drives on triumphant._
+
+A POLITICAL PASSENGER (_with a panacea--to a "KNOWLEDGABLE" PASSENGER_).
+No, I don't want no 'Ome Rule, nor yet no Parish Counsels, nor nothink
+o' _that_. What _I_ wanter see interdooced 'ere is Tereenial Porliments.
+
+The KNOWLEDGABLE PASSENGER (_with respect_). Tereenial Parliments? I
+don't know as I've 'eard o' _them_.
+
+The POL. P. Ain't yer? Well, they're what we _want_. Why, they've 'ad
+'em in America, they've ad 'em in Ostralia, they've 'ad 'em in Orstria;
+and everywhere, mind yer, _everywhere_ they've been in operation they've
+turned out a success!
+
+The KN. P. Then it's 'igh time _we_ 'ad 'em. _What_ is it they're
+called, again?
+
+The POL. P. Tee-reen-ial Porliments. It stands to _reason_ they work
+well. There they _are_, a settin' eight months in the year fur seven
+year on end--somethink's _bound_ to come of it! I'd like to see any o'
+_our_ lot settin' like that! It's a pity we don't take more pattern by
+America in our law-makin'.
+
+[Illustration: "Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!"]
+
+The KN. P. Except in our criminal law. Why, I've 'eard there's States
+out there where a man may go and commit a crime, d'ye see, and once he
+gits across the boundary from one State into another--like as it might
+be a line across this 'ere street like, d'ye see--once he's over that,
+they can't do nothink to 'im!
+
+The POL. P. (_thoughtfully_). Ah, that wouldn't never do '_ere_, that
+wouldn't!
+
+ [_The CONDUCTOR comes up to collect fares._
+
+CONDUCTOR (_to a SLEEPY PASSENGER in a corner_). Now then, fare, please?
+
+The SLEEPY PASSENGER (_with manly regret_). I ain't gorrit, ole pal. If
+yer'd asht me jes' two minutes afore I gorrup, I could ha' done it for
+yer, but I took jes' anorrer glash an' blued th' lot. No man can say I
+don' part s'long's I gorrer _money_; no freehandeder man anywheresh'n
+wharri am; but yer come on me too late. (_Shaking his head
+reproachfully._) Thash where 'tis, yer come on me too late!
+
+COND. 'Ere, I ain't goin' to stand no nonsense! If yer 'aven't got the
+money, git down orf o' my bus, and quick, too!
+
+The SL. P. Ged _down_? An' _quick_! You wouldn' tor' li' that if you'd
+sheen wharrer bloomin' 'ard job I 'ad to get _up_! [_He resumes his
+slumber._
+
+COND. (_passing on, softened_). I can't go and break the beggar's neck
+for tuppence, and he's got it somewhere about him, as likely as not.
+(_To a LITIGIOUS PASSENGER._) Tuppence is the fare, Sir, if _you_
+please.
+
+The LITIGIOUS PASSENGER. One penny is the legal fare, and all I intend
+to pay. I know the law!
+
+COND. And so do I. It's wrote up tuppence inside the bus. If yer ain't
+going to pay more, yer'd better git down; ye've 'ad over your penn'orth
+a'ready!
+
+The LITIG. P. (_with spirit_). I decline to get down. I insist on being
+taken to the Bank for my penny.
+
+COND. Oh, _do_ yer? We'll see about that.
+
+ [_He stops the 'bus and calls a CONSTABLE, to whom he briefly
+ explains the situation._
+
+CONSTABLE (_pacifically, from below, to the LITIG. P._). Come, Sir,
+don't block the traffic, like this 'ere! Either pay the man his fare or
+get down--one of the two.
+
+The LITIG. P. (_from the roof_). I have a legal right to remain here if
+I like!
+
+CONST. That may be, Sir; but if you do, this man can summons you that's
+all.
+
+The LITIG. P. (_warming with the joy of battle_). That's just what I
+_want_ him to do! Can't I _make_ him summon me?
+
+COND. (_disgusted_). 'Ere, 'ang it all! _do_ yer think I'm goin' to cart
+you 'arf over London fur a penny, and throw yer in the luxury of a
+lawsoot? 'Ere's yer penny back, and I give yer the ride free, _there_!
+
+The LITIG. P. (_accepting the penny, and descending with dignity_). Very
+well; and let me tell you this, it was just as well you gave way when
+you did, for I was quite prepared to carry the case to the House of
+Lords!
+
+COND. Ah! and I s'pose yer think yer'd git _there_ for a penny?
+
+ [_The Omnibus goes on before the LITIGIOUS PERSON has time to
+ think over such an obvious repartee as asking the CONSTABLE to
+ take the man's number._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+AT A HIGHLAND CATTLE AUCTION.
+
+
+_A Yard. In the open space between the rows of pens the AUCTIONEER is
+trying to dispose of some horses which are trotted out one by one in the
+usual fashion._
+
+THE AUCTIONEER (_spectacled, red-bearded, canny, slightly Arcadian touch
+imparted by straw hat, and a sprig of heather in his button-hole_).
+What'll I say for this, noo? (_A horse of a meditative mien is just
+brought in._) Here's a beast, and a very good beast, from Lochaber!
+(_The bystanders remain unmoved._) He was bred by Meester MacFarlane, o'
+Drumtappit, and ye'll all ha' haird on him as the biggest breeder in
+these pairts. (_Heads are shaken, so much as to intimate that this
+particular animal does not do Mr. MacFarlane justice._) Trot him up an'
+doon a bit, boy, and show his action--stan' away back there! _(With
+affected concern_.) Don't curb him so tight--be careful now, or ye'll do
+meeschief to yourself an' others! (_As the horse trots past them,_
+_several critics slap it disrespectfully on the hind-quarters--a liberty
+which it bears with meekness._) There's a pace for ye--he's a guid
+woorker, a gran' beast--hoo much shall we say for him? (_Nobody seems
+able to express his appreciation of the grand beast in figures._) Just
+to stairt ye then--twenty poon! (_Even the animal himself appears
+slightly staggered by this sum; bystanders are quietly derisive;
+AUCTIONEER climbs rapidly down without interruption till he reaches six
+pounds, when he receives his first bid._) Sex poon' is bed for 'm--is
+there ony advance on sex poon? (_Someone in the background:--"Fefteen
+shellin'!"_) Sex-fefteen--noo, Meester McRobbie, wull ye no luik this
+way? (_MR. MCR. responds by a decided negative._) Ye won't? Ah, I never
+got ony guid from ye--'cept when I didn't meet ye. (_This piece of
+Scotch "wut" raises a laugh at MR. MCR.'S expense, but does not affect
+the bidding, which still languishes._) Then, he's going at
+sex-fefteen--for the last time. Whaur's my bedder at sex-fefteen?
+(_Repentance or modesty prevents the bidder from coming forward, and the
+AUCTIONEER continues, more in grief than anger._) Eh, this is too bad
+noo--I'll thank no man for making me a bed, 'cept those that are meant
+in airnest. No one bed onything for a beast like this! Then I hae to
+tell ye ye've not bed near up to the resairve price on it. (_Suddenly
+becomes weary of the animal._) Tak' it awa'. (_The next horse is led
+in._) Now, here's a beast that's well-known, I'm thenkin'. (_The general
+expression signifies that its reputation is not altogether to its
+credit._) There's a well-bred mare--open up, and let her show hersel'.
+(_The mare is shown, but fails to excite competition._) Ah, ye'll ony
+buy screws to-day, an' not the nice things at a'--tak' her away. (_The
+mare is taken out ignominiously; AUCTIONEER, followed by crowd, leads
+the way to where a pony and trap are standing harnessed._) Noo, I'm gaun
+to pit up the pony an' van--just show them hoo she goes in hairness,
+boy. (_To intrusive collie._) Out of the way, dug, in case ye get your
+feet smashed. (_Trap starts off, and is driven out of sight._) Whaur's
+the laddie gaun ta? Thenks he'll show himsel' at Nairn, maybe! Ah, here
+she comes. (_Trap returns at a modest pace._) Stan' back, noo, all of
+ye; give her room. I'll sell the mare first, and a beauty she is--what
+shell we say? Ten poons--and she's a nice one! Well, stairt her at five,
+she may get up. (_Bidding gets up to ten pounds, where it stops._) Then
+she goes at ten, and I'm very glad she's gaun to a gude auld friend o'
+mine--Meester McKenzie, o' Glenbannock. Wull ye say five mair, and take
+the hairness, Meester McKenzie? It's _richt_ hairness! (_MR. MCK.
+declines to be tempted._) Well, I'm sorry ye wull na, I'd ha liked
+(_sentimentally, as if it had been the dream of his life_) for the mare
+an' the hairness to go togither and no to pairt them--but as 'tis, it
+canna be helped. We'll pass on to the pegs, if you please. (_Passes to a
+row of pens containing pigs, and mounts some planks placed along the
+top._) Now, these are some proper pegs. (_A rush is made for the rails
+enclosing the pigs, which instantly become self-conscious and redouble
+their grunts._) Noo, laddies, laddies, it's no fair o' ye taking up a'
+the room i' that way. I'm quite sure there's a lot o' ye in front that's
+no buying pegs--ye hanna the luik o' pairsons that buy pegs. Stan' by
+for shame, and don't keep them that comes to buy, where they canna see
+sae much as a tail. Hoo much apiece for these palefaced pegs? Ye've an
+awfu' guid view o' them there, Mr. Ferguson,---luik this way once again
+for forrty and threepence. (_Persuasively._) It'll soun' better wi' the
+threepence. Gaun' for forty an' three. (_The owner of the pigs calls out
+"No!"_) I thocht I made a law here that people having pegs should gie me
+the resairve at the time--see what ye do now, Peter MacPhairson, make a
+fule of the buyers and a fule o' mysel'!--but (_with tolerant contempt_)
+Peter is not a strong man, we must no be haird on Peter. (_Roar from
+crowd;_ _disappearance of MR. MACPH._) I'll cancel no more sales that
+way, however, as I eentimate to ye once for a'.
+
+'ARRY (_on tour from Town--to his admiring friend_). I say, Charley,
+what d'yer bet I don't talk to some of these chaps in their own lingo?
+
+CHARLEY. What a fellow you are! Mind what you are about, that's all.
+
+'ARRY (_going up to an elderly person in the only Scotch cap visible_).
+Hech, Sair, but yon's a braw bonnie wee bit piggie fur a body to tak' a
+richt gude wullie waucht wi' gin ye meet him comin' thro' the rye!
+
+The PERSON IN THE SCOTCH CAP (_who happens to be a retired Colonel in a
+Highland Regiment, who is somewhat careless in his attire_). I think you
+will find that sort of thing better appreciated after you've got home.
+
+ [_'ARRY returns to CHARLEY, feeling much smaller than he allows
+ his friend to perceive._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE COUNTRY OF COCKAIGNE.
+
+A MONOLOGUE--WITH A MORAL.
+
+
+_An airless Court in a London back Street. TIME--August._
+
+JIMMY (_aged eight, to Florrie, aged seven_). No, I ain't comin' to the
+Reckereation Groun', not jess yit, I carn't.... I'm goin' ter wyte about
+'ere till the lidy comes.... Why, 'er as is comin' to see my Muvver
+'bout sendin' me fur a fortnight in the kerntry.... Yus, where I was
+larst year.... It's settled as I'm ter go agine--leastways as _good_ as
+settled. My Farver 'e've sent in a happlication to the K'mitty, and
+Teacher 'e sez 'e kin reckermend me, an' Mr. and Mrs. Delves--them as
+'ad the cottidge where I went afore--they've arst fur to 'ave me
+agin--so you see, Florrie, it's all _right_. On'y I carn't settle to
+nuffink afore I know when I'm goin', an' about the trine an' that. Yer
+'ave to roide in a trine to git to the kerntry, yer know.... Wot, ain't
+yer never bin there?... Yer'd wanter fawst enough if yer knoo what it
+was loike.... There's grorss there, an' trees an' that.... Na-ow, a
+_lot_ better 'n the Reckereation Groun'--that's all mide outer old
+grivestones as the deaders 'as done wiv. There's 'ills an' bushes an'
+'edges where yer can pick flowers.... There ain't no perlice to _git_
+yer locked up.... An' everyfink smells so lovelly, kinder 'elthy
+like--it mikes yer feel 'ungry.... Not like sassages an' inions
+azackly--'tain't that sorter smell.... On'y 'ere and there, an' yer'd
+'ardly tell they _was_ shops, they kerry 'em on that quoiet.... Yer
+wouldn' call it poky if yer was there. Mr. Delves 'e _was_ a kind man,
+'e was; mide me a whistle out a sickermore brornch, 'e did; and Mrs.
+Delves, she lemme help her feed the chickings.... They 'ad a garding
+beyind, an' there'd bin rasberries an' gooseberries a growin' on
+bushes--strite, there 'ad--I ain't tellin' yer no lies--on'y they was
+all gone by then. An' they 'ad a dog--Rover _'is_ nime was--'e was a
+koind dog, lemme lay insoide of 'is kennel orfen, 'e would.... I'd like
+ter 'ave a run over thet Common agen, too. I dessay as I shell--p'reps
+the d'y arter to-morrer.... There's a pond on it, an' geese, an' they
+comes at yer a stritching out their necks an' a-'issin' thet
+sevidge.... Na-ow, yer've on'y got ter walk up to 'em, an' they goes
+orf, purtendin' they took yer fur somebody else, an' wasn't meanin' no
+offence. I ain't afride o' no geese, I ain't--nor yet Lily wasn't
+neither. We sor a pig 'aving a ring put froo 'is nose one day. 'E
+'ollered out like 'e was bein' killed--but 'e wasn't. An' there was a
+blecksmiff's, where they put the 'orse's shoes on red 'ot, 'an the 'orse
+'e never took no notice. Me and Lily used ter go fur long walks, all
+under trees. Once she showed me a squill--"squerl" _she_ kep' a-calling
+of it, till I tole 'er 'ow--an' it run up a tree zigzag, and jumped on
+to another ever so fur. That was when we was pickin' nuts. We went a
+blackberryin', too, one day.... Na-ow, there warn't nobody dead. An'
+Lily ... Lily Delves 'er nime was, b'longed to them I was stoppin'
+wiv.... I didn't notice partickler.... Older nor you, an' bigger, and
+lots redder 'bout the cheeks.... She wasn't a bad sort--fur a gal.... I
+dunno; I liked _all_ on 'em.... Well, there was Farmer Furrows, 'e was
+very familiar, said as 'ow I might go inter 'is horchard and pick the
+happles up as was layin' there jest fur the askin'. An' Bob Rumble, 'im
+as druv Mr. Kennister the grocer's cart, 'e used ter gimme a roide along
+of 'im when 'e was tikin' round porcels an' that. We'd go along lanes
+that 'igh yer couldn't see nuffink fur leaves; and once 'e druv along a
+Pork with tremenjus big trees in it, an' stagses walkin' about
+underneath with grite big 'orns.... Suthink like 'im as is drawed
+outside the public round the corner--on'y they warn't none o' them gold.
+I 'speck them gold ones is furrin'.... An' the grub--we 'ad beekstike
+pudd'n o' Sundays, an' as much bread an' treacle every day as ever I
+could eat, and I _was_ 'ungry when I was in the kerntry.... An' when I
+come away Mrs. Delves, she gethered me a big noseguy fur to tike 'ome to
+Muvver--kissantimums, merrigoles, an' dyliers, all sorts there was--an'
+Murver she put 'em in a jug, and soon as ever I shet my eyes an'
+sniffed, I could see that garding and Rover and Lily as _pline_--but
+they went bad, an' 'ad to be froed aw'y at larst. I shall see 'em all
+agine very soon now, though, won't thet be proime, eh?... Whatsy? 'Ere,
+Florrie, you ain't _croying_, are yer?... Why don't yer arsk yer Farver
+if 'e won't let _you_ go.... Oh, I thought as yer _wanted_ to go. Then
+what _are_ yer----?... No, I ain't gled to git aw'y from you....
+A-course I shell be gled to see 'er; but that ain't why, it's
+jest----You ain't never bin in the kerntry, or you'd know 'ow I'm
+feelin'.... There's the lidy comin' now. I must cut across an' 'ear
+what she sez to Muvver. Don' tike on--'tain't o'ny fur a fortnight,
+anyway.... Look 'ere, I got suthink' for yer, Florrie, bought it orf a
+man what 'ad a tray on 'em--it's a wornut, d'ye see? Now open it--ain't
+them two little choiner dolls noice, eh?... I'd rorther you 'ad it nor
+'er, strite, I would!... I'll be back in a minnit.
+
+[Illustration: "'Ere, Florrie, you ain't _croying_, are _yer_?"]
+
+_After an Interval of Twenty-four Hours._
+
+No, _I_ ain't bin nowhere particular.... Settled? yus, it's all settled
+'bout me goin' ter the kerntry.... To-morrer? no, I ain't goin'
+_to-morrer_.... Nex' week? not as I _knows_ on.... You wanter know sech
+a _lot_, you do!... If I _do_ tell yer, you'll on'y go an' larf....
+Well, I ain't goin' at all--_now_ I 'ope you're pleased.... What's the
+good o' bein' _sorry_?... Oh, I don't keer much, I don't.... Set down on
+this step alonger me, then, and don't you go saying nuffink, or I'll
+stop tellin' of yer.... You remember me goin' in yes'day arternoon to
+'ear what the lidy said? Well, when I got in, I 'eard 'er s'y, "Yus,
+it'll be a great disappintment for '_im_, pore boy," she sez, "arter
+lookin' forward to it an' all; but it can't be 'elped." And Muvver, she
+sez, "'Is Farver'll be sorry, too; it done Jimmy ser much good larst
+time. 'E can't pay not more nor 'arf-a-crownd a week towards it, but he
+can manage that, bein' in work jess now." But the lidy sez, "It's this
+w'y," she sez, "it costis us neelly arf a suffering over what the parint
+pays fur each child, and we ain't got the fun's fur to send more 'n a
+few, cos the Public don' suscroibe ser much as they might," she sez.
+"An' so this year we're on'y sending children as is delikit, an' reelly
+_wants_ a chinge." So yer see, I ain't a goin'. I dunno as I'm delikit;
+but I _do_ want the kerntry _orful_ bad, I do. I wish I never 'adn't bin
+there at all 'cos then preps I shouldn' mind. An' yit I'm gled I bin,
+too. I dreamt about it larst night, Florrie, I did. I was a-settin' on
+this 'ere step, sime as I am now, an' it was 'ot an' stoiflin', like it
+is; an' all of a suddink I see Mr. Kennister's' cart wiv the grey 'orse
+turn into our court an' pull up hoppersite, an' Bob Rumble 'e was
+a-driving on it. An' 'e sez, "Jump up!" 'e sez, "an' I'll tike yer back
+to Mr. Delves's cottidge." And I sez, "May Florrie come too?" An' 'e
+sez, "Yus, both on yer." So up we gits, and we was droivin' along the
+lanes, and I was showin' yer the squills an' the stagses, an' jes as we
+come to the turn where yer kin see the cottidge----Well, I don'
+remember no more on it. But it was a noice dream so far as I got wiv it,
+an' if I 'adn't never bin there, I couldn' ha' dreamt it, _could_ I,
+eh? An', like as not, I'll dream the rest on it anuvver night.... An'
+you must try an' dream your share, too, Florrie. It'll be a'most like
+bein' in the kerntry in a sort o' w'y fur both on us, won't it?
+
+
+THE MORAL.
+
+(_The Offices of the Children's Country Holidays Fund are at 10,
+Buckingham Street, Strand, and contributions should be made payable to
+the Hon. Treasurer._)
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 5s.
+
+PUPPETS AT LARGE.
+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &c.
+
+Scenes and Sketches reprinted from "PUNCH" with 16 page Illustrations by
+J. B. PARTRIDGE.
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 5s.
+
+UNDER THE ROSE.
+
+A STORY IN SCENES.
+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &c.
+
+Reprinted from "PUNCH" with 15 Illustrations by J. B. PARTRIDGE.
+
+ "Will provoke many a hearty laugh. From first to last the fun
+ is legitimate."--_Morning Post._
+
+ "The fun of it never flags for a moment."--_St. James'
+ Gazette._
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d.
+
+MR. PUNCH'S YOUNG RECITER.
+
+WITH INTRODUCTIONS, REMARKS, AND STAGE-DIRECTIONS.
+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Vice Versa," &c.
+
+Reprinted from "PUNCH" with Additions, and with 34 "PUNCH"
+Illustrations.
+
+ "Very well written, and any modern humorist might be proud of
+ them."--_Athenaeum._
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 4s. 6d.
+
+MR. PUNCH'S MODEL MUSIC-HALL
+
+SONGS AND DRAMAS.
+
+By F. ANSTEY, Author of "Mr. Punch's Young Reciter."
+
+Collected, Improved, and Re-arranged from "PUNCH" with 13 full-page and
+a number of other Illustrations.
+
+ "This volume has caused us more laughter than anything else Mr.
+ Anstey has written since 'Vice Versa.' Some of the songs and
+ dances are screamingly funny."--_Review of Reviews._
+
+
+In Crown 8vo, cloth, price 4s. 6d.
+
+MR. PUNCH'S PRIZE NOVELS.
+
+By R. C. LEHMANN
+
+With 24 Illustrations by EDWARD REED.
+
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+ your author almost always laughs on the wrong side of his mouth
+ at caricatures of his work. But if the authors do not like it,
+ their readers will; and even of the authors themselves we may
+ trust that some will see the joke."--_Manchester Guardian._
+
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+
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+
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+with a keen spirit of manly humour of a Rabelaisian tinge, they abound
+with incidents redolent of mirth and jollity. The artist, Mr. Leech, was
+himself also an enthusiast in the sport, and has reflected in his
+illustrations, with instinctive appreciation, the rollicking abandon of
+the author's stories.
+
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+
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+ Adventures of Thomas Scott,
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+
+The fictitious heroes, whose doings and sayings inspire these favourite
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+
+The HANDLEY CROSS Sporting Novels have hitherto, by the form of their
+production, formed the enduring ornament of a Country Gentleman's
+Library, and, by reason of their price, have been somewhat beyond the
+attainment of that extensive and constantly enlarging section who have
+learned to take delight in the out-of-door amusements which brighten
+rural life.
+
+Everyone whose delight in a "finest run across country that ever was
+seen," and whose ambition is "to be in at the finish," may now have as
+his abiding companions on his own book-case within reach of his
+easy-chair, the histories of JORROCKS and SPONGE and ROMFORD, and others
+of the famous creation, in a handsome and handy form; having the pages
+brightened by a selection from the original illustrations to give an
+added vividness to the exhilarating raciness of the author's humour.
+
+_The volumes are sold separately as under:--_
+
+ HANDLEY CROSS; or, Mr. Jorrock's
+ Hunt. With 67 Text and 12 Page
+ Illustrations and Coloured Frontispiece.
+ Price 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+ ASK MAMMA; or, The Richest Commoner
+ In England. With 51 Text
+ and 8 Page Illustrations and Coloured
+ Frontispiece. Price 6_s._
+
+ SPONGE'S SPORTING TOUR. With
+ 60 Text and 8 Page Illustrations and
+ Coloured Frontispiece. Price 6_s._
+
+ PLAIN OR RINGLETS? With 43
+ Text and 8 Page Illustrations and
+ Coloured Frontispiece. Price 6_s._
+
+ MR. FACEY ROMFORD'S HOUNDS.
+ With 46 Text and 8 Page Illustrations
+ and Coloured Frontispiece.
+ Price 6_s._
+
+ HAWBUCK GRANGE; or, The Sporting
+ Adventures of Thomas Scott,
+ Esquire. With 28 Text and 8 Page
+ Illustrations and Coloured Frontispiece.
+ Price 4_s._ 6_d._
+
+BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD. 8, 9, 10, BOUVERIE STREET, E.C.
+
+
+F. C. BURNAND'S WORKS.
+
+A SELECTED COLLECTION FROM "PUNCH."
+
+5 Volumes, Large Crown 8vo, gilt top, price 25s.
+
+ "Mr. Burnand's Writings are well worth collecting. He has
+ produced a very large body of comic writing of a high order of
+ merit, and the amount of it that is first-rate is considerable.
+ There is a perpetual gaiety and airiness about his work which
+ makes it always pleasant to dip into, and few humorists have
+ the power of making their readers laugh so agreeably, so
+ innocently, so often, and so much."--_Athenaeum._
+
+_The Volumes are sold separately as under:_
+
+Price 5s. each.
+
+ 1. VERY MUCH ABROAD.
+
+ _With 160 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+ 2. RATHER AT SEA.
+
+ _With 116 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+ 3. QUITE AT HOME.
+
+ _With 108 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+ 4. HAPPY THOUGHTS.
+
+ _With 110 Illustrations_.
+
+ 5. SOME OLD FRIENDS.
+
+ _With 115 "Punch" Illustrations_.
+
+
+BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD., 8, 9, 10, BOUVERIE STREET, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Puppets at Large, by F. Anstey
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUPPETS AT LARGE ***
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