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+ <head>
+ <meta content="pg2html (binary v0.17)" name="linkgenerator" />
+ <title>
+ The Hohenzollerns in America, by Stephen Leacock
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Project Gutenberg's The Hohenzollerns in America, by Stephen Leacock
+#8 in our series by Stephen Leacock
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Hohenzollerns in America
+ With the Bolsheviks in Berlin and other impossibilities
+
+Author: Stephen Leacock
+
+Release Date: December, 2003 [Etext #4781]
+[This file was last updated on May 20, 2004]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXT THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA ***
+
+
+
+
+This etext was produced by Gardner Buchanan
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ With The Bolsheviks In Berlin And Other Impossibilities
+ </h3>
+ <h2>
+ By Stephen Leacock
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> I.&mdash;<b>THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA</b>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I &mdash; On Board the S.S. America.
+ Wednesday </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II &mdash; City New York. 2nd Avenue </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> II.&mdash;WITH THE BOLSHEVIKS IN BERLIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> III.&mdash;AFTERNOON TEA WITH THE SULTAN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> IV.&mdash;ECHOES OF THE WAR </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> 1.&mdash;The Boy Who Came Back </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> 2.&mdash;The War Sacrifices of Mr. Spugg </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> 3.&mdash;If Germany Had Won </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> 4.&mdash;War and Peace at the Galaxy Club </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> 5.&mdash;The War News as I Remember it </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> I&mdash;THE CABLE NEWS FROM RUSSIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> II&mdash;SAMPLE OF SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> III&mdash;THE TECHNICAL WAR DESPATCHES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> IV&mdash;THE WAR PROPHECIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> V&mdash;DIPLOMATIC REVELATIONS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> VI&mdash;A NEW GERMAN PEACE FORMULA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> VII&mdash;THE FINANCIAL NEWS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> 6.&mdash;Some Just Complaints About the War </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> 7.&mdash;Some Startling Side Effects of the War
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"><br /> V.&mdash;<b>OTHER IMPOSSIBILITIES</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> 1.&mdash;The Art of Conversation </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> Introduction to H.E. the Viceroy of India, K.C.B.,
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> II&mdash;HOW TO OPEN A CONVERSATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> 2.&mdash;Heroes and Heroines </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> 3.&mdash;The Discovery of America; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> 4.&mdash;Politics from Within </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> 5.&mdash;The Lost Illusions of Mr. Sims </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> 6.&mdash;Fetching the Doctor: From Recollections
+ of Childhood in the Canadian Countryside </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I.&mdash;The Hohenzollerns in America
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The proper punishment for the Hohenzollerns, and the Hapsburgs, and the
+ Mecklenburgs, and the Muckendorfs, and all such puppets and princelings,
+ is that they should be made to work; and not made to work in the
+ glittering and glorious sense, as generals and chiefs of staff, and
+ legislators, and land-barons, but in the plain and humble part of laborers
+ looking for a job; that they should carry a hod and wield a trowel and
+ swing a pick and, at the day's end, be glad of a humble supper and a
+ night's rest; that they should work, in short, as millions of poor
+ emigrants out of Germany have worked for generations past; that there
+ should be about them none of the prestige of fallen grandeur; that, if it
+ were possible, by some trick of magic, or change of circumstance, the
+ world should know them only as laboring men, with the dignity and divinity
+ of kingship departed out of them; that, as such, they should stand or
+ fall, live or starve, as best they might by the work of their own hands
+ and brains. Could this be done, the world would have a better idea of the
+ thin stuff out of which autocratic kingship is fashioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a favourite fancy of mine to imagine this transformation actually
+ brought about; and to picture the Hohenzollerns as an immigrant family
+ departing for America, their trunks and boxes on their backs, their
+ bundles in their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fragments of a diary that here follow present the details of such a
+ picture. It is written, or imagined to be written, by the (former)
+ Princess Frederica of Hohenzollern. I do not find her name in the Almanach
+ de Gotha. Perhaps she does not exist. But from the text below she is to be
+ presumed to be one of the innumerable nieces of the German Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I &mdash; On Board the S.S. America. Wednesday
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At last our embarkation is over, and we are at sea. I am so glad it is
+ done. It was dreadful to see poor Uncle William and Uncle Henry and Cousin
+ Willie and Cousin Ferdinand of Bulgaria, coming up the gang-plank into the
+ steerage, with their boxes on their backs. They looked so different in
+ their rough clothes. Uncle William is wearing an old blue shirt and a red
+ handkerchief round his neck, and his hair looks thin and unkempt, and his
+ moustache draggled and his face unshaved. His eyes seem watery and
+ wandering, and his little withered arm so pathetic. Is it possible he was
+ always really like that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the top of the gang-plank he stood still a minute, his box still on his
+ back, and said, "This then is the pathway to Saint Helena." I heard an
+ officer down on the dock call up, "Now then, my man, move on there
+ smartly, please." And I saw some young roughs pointing at Uncle and
+ laughing and saying, "Look at the old guy with the red handkerchief. Is he
+ batty, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The forward deck of the steamer, the steerage deck, which is the only
+ place that we are allowed to go, was crowded with people, all poor and
+ with their trunks and boxes and paper bags all round them. When Uncle set
+ down his box, there was soon quite a little crowd around him, so that I
+ could hardly see him. But I could hear them laughing, and I knew that they
+ were "taking a rise out of him," as they call it,&mdash;just as they did
+ in the emigration sheds on shore. I heard Uncle say, "Let wine be brought:
+ I am faint;" and some one else said, "Yes, let it," and there arose a big
+ shout of laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Willie had sneaked away with his box down to the lower deck. I
+ thought it mean of him not to stay with his father. I never noticed till
+ now what a sneaking face Cousin Willie has. In his uniform, as Crown
+ Prince, it was different. But in his shabby clothes, among these rough
+ people, he seems so changed. He walks with a mean stoop, and his eyes look
+ about in such a furtive way, never still. I saw one of the ship's officers
+ watching him, very closely and sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Karl of Austria, and Cousin Ruprecht of Bavaria, are not here. We
+ thought they were to come on this ship, but they are not here. We could
+ hardly believe that the ship would sail without them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I managed to get Uncle William out of the crowd and down below. He was
+ glad to get off the deck. He seemed afraid to look at the sea, and when we
+ got into the big cabin, he clutched at the cover of the port and said,
+ "Shut it, help me shut it, shut out the sound of the sea;" and then for a
+ little time he sat on one of the bunks all hunched up, and muttering,
+ "Don't let me hear the sea, don't let me hear it." His eyes looked so
+ queer and fixed, that I thought he must be in a sort of fit, or seizure.
+ But Uncle Henry and Cousin Willie and Cousin Ferdinand came into the cabin
+ and he got better again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Ferdinand has got hold of a queer long overcoat with the sleeves
+ turned up, and a little round hat, and looks exactly like a Jew. He says
+ he traded one of our empty boxes for the coat and hat. I never noticed
+ before how queer and thick Cousin Ferdinand's speech is, and how much he
+ gesticulates with his hands when he talks. I am sure that when I visited
+ at Sofia nobody ever noticed it. And he called Uncle William and Uncle
+ Henry "Mister," and said that on the deck he had met two "fine gentlemen,"
+ (that's what he called them), who are in the clothing trade in New York.
+ It was with them he traded for the coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Ferdinand, who is very clever at figures, is going to look after
+ all our money, because the American money is too difficult for Uncle
+ William and Cousin Willie to understand. We have only a little money, but
+ Cousin Ferdinand said that we would put it all together and make it a
+ pool. But when Uncle Henry laughed, and turned his pockets out and had no
+ money at all, Cousin Ferdinand said that it would NOT be a pool. He said
+ he would make it "on shares" and explained it, but I couldn't understand
+ what it meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was talking I saw Cousin Willie slip one of the pieces of money
+ out of the pile into his pocket: at least I think I saw it; but he did it
+ so quickly that I was not sure, and didn't like to say anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a bell rang and we went to eat in a big saloon, all crowded with
+ common people, and very stuffy. The food was wretched, and I could not
+ eat. I suppose Uncle was famished from the long waiting and the bad food
+ in the emigrant shed. It was dreadful to see the hungry way that he ate
+ the greasy stew they gave us, with his head down almost in his plate and
+ his moustache all unkempt. "This ragout is admirable," he said. "Let the
+ chef be informed that I said it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Ferdinand didn't sit with us. He sat beside his two new friends and
+ they had their heads all close together and talked with great excitement.
+ I never knew before that Cousin Ferdinand talked Yiddish. I remember him
+ at Sofia, on horseback addressing his army, and I don't think he talked to
+ his troops in Yiddish. He was telling them, I remember, how sorry he was
+ that he couldn't accompany them to the front. But for "business in Sofia,"
+ he said, he would like to be in the very front trenches, the foremost of
+ all. It was thought very brave of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we got up from supper, the ship was heaving and rolling quite a bit.
+ A young man, a steward, told us that we were now out of the harbor and in
+ the open sea. Uncle William told him to convey his compliments to the
+ captain on his proper navigation of the channel. The young man looked very
+ closely at Uncle and said, "Sure, I'll tell him right away," but he said
+ it kindly. Then he said to me, when Uncle couldn't hear, "Your pa ain't
+ quite right, is he, Miss Hohen?" I didn't know what he meant, but, of
+ course, I said that Uncle William was only my uncle. Hohen is, I should
+ explain, the name by which we are known now. The young man said that he
+ wasn't really a steward, only just for the trip. He said that, because I
+ had a strange feeling that I had met him before, and asked him if I hadn't
+ seen him at one of the courts. But he said he had never been "up before
+ one" in his life. He said he lives in New York, and drives an ice-wagon
+ and is an ice-man. He said he was glad to have the pleasure of our
+ acquaintance. He is, I think, the first ice-man I have ever met. He
+ reminds me very much of the Romanoffs, the Grand Dukes of the younger
+ branch, I mean. But he says he is not connected with them, so far as he
+ knows. He said his name is Peters. We have no Almanach de Gotha here on
+ board the steamer, so I cannot look up his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S.S. America. Thursday
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had a dreadful experience last night. In the middle of the night Uncle
+ Henry came and called me and said that Uncle William was ill. So I put on
+ an old shawl and went with him. The ship was pitching and heaving with a
+ dreadful straining and creaking noise. A dim light burned in the cabin,
+ and outside there was a great roaring of the wind and the wild sound of
+ the sea surging against the ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle William was half sitting up in his rough bunk, with the tattered
+ gray blankets over him, one hand was clutched on the side of the bed and
+ there was a great horror in his eyes. "The sea; the sea," he kept saying,
+ "don't let me hear it. It's THEIR voices. Listen! They're beating at the
+ sides of the ship. Keep them from me, keep them out!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was quiet for a minute, until there came another great rush of the sea
+ against the sides of the ship, and a roar of water against the port. Then
+ he broke out, almost screaming&mdash;"Henry, brother Henry, keep them
+ back! Don't let them drag me down. I never willed it. I never wanted it.
+ Their death is not at my door. It was necessity. Henry! Brother Henry!
+ Tell them not to drag me below the sea!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like that he raved for perhaps an hour and we tried to quiet him. Cousin
+ Willie had slipped away, I don't know where. Cousin Ferdinand was in his
+ bunk with his back turned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do I slip to-night, at all," he kept growling "or do I not? Say, mister,
+ do I get any slip at all?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no one minded him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then daylight came and Uncle fell asleep. His face looked drawn and gray
+ and the cords stood out on his withered hand, which was clutched against
+ his shirt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he slept. It seemed so strange. There was no court physician, no
+ bulletins to reassure the world that he was sleeping quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later in the morning I saw the ship's doctor and the captain, all in
+ uniform, with gold braid, walking on their inspection round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had some trouble here last night," I heard the captain say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, nothing," the doctor answered, "only one of the steerage passengers
+ delirious in the night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later in the morning the storm had gone down and the sea was calm as
+ glass, and Uncle Henry and I got Uncle William up on deck. Mr. Peters, the
+ steward that I think I spoke about before, got us a steamer chair from the
+ first class that had been thrown away&mdash;quite good except for one leg,&mdash;and
+ Uncle William sat in it with his face away from the sea. He seemed much
+ shaken and looked gray and tired, but he talked quite quietly and
+ rationally about our going to America, and how we must all work, because
+ work is man's lot. He himself, he says, will take up the presidency of
+ Harvard University in New York, and Uncle Henry, who, of course, was our
+ own Grand Admiral and is a sailor, will enter as Admiral of the navy of
+ one of the states, probably, Uncle says, the navy of Missouri, or else
+ that of Colorado.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was pleasant to hear Uncle William talk in this way, just as quietly
+ and rationally as at Berlin, and with the same grasp of political things.
+ He only got excited once, and that was when he was telling Uncle Henry
+ that it was his particular wish that Uncle should go to the captain and
+ offer to take over the navigation of the vessel. Uncle Henry is a splendid
+ sailor, and in all our cruises in the Baltic he used to work out all the
+ navigation of the vessel, except, of course, the arithmetic&mdash;which
+ was beneath him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Henry laughed (he is always so good natured) and said that he had
+ had enough of being Admiral to last him all his life. But when Uncle
+ William insisted, he said he would see what he could do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S.S. America. Friday
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All yesterday and to-day the sea was quite calm, and we could sit on deck.
+ I was glad because, in the cabin where I am, there are three other women,
+ and it is below the water-line, and is very close and horrid. So when it
+ is rough, I can only sit in the alley-way with my knitting. There the
+ light is very dim and the air bad. But I do not complain. It is woman's
+ lot. Uncle William and Cousin Willie have both told me this&mdash;that it
+ is woman's lot to bear and to suffer; and they said it with such complete
+ resignation that I feel I ought to imitate their attitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Ferdinand, too, is very brave about the dirt and the discomfort of
+ being on board the ship. He doesn't seem to mind the dirt at all, and his
+ new friends (Mr. Sheehan and Mr. Mosenhammer) seem to bear it so well,
+ too. Uncle Henry goes and washes his hands and face at one of the ship's
+ pumps before every meal, with a great noise and splashing, but Cousin
+ Ferdinand says, "For me the pump, no." He says that nothing like that
+ matters now, and that his only regret is that he did not fall at the head
+ of his troops, as he would have done if he had not been detained by
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I caught sight of Cousin Karl of Austria! So it seems he is on the ship
+ after all. He was up on the promenade deck where the first class
+ passengers are, and of which you can just see one end from down here in
+ the steerage. Cousin Karl had on a waiter's suit and was bringing
+ something to drink to two men who were in steamer chairs on the deck. I
+ don't know whether he saw me or not, but if he did he didn't give any sign
+ of recognizing me. One of the men gave Cousin Karl a piece of money and I
+ was sure it was he, from the peculiar, cringing way in which he bowed. It
+ was just the manner that he used to have at Vienna with his cousin, Franz
+ Ferdinand, and with dear old Uncle Franz Joseph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We always thought, we girls I mean, that it was Cousin Karl who had Cousin
+ Franz Ferdinand blown up at Serajevo. I remember once we dared Cousin
+ Zita, Karl's wife, to ask Uncle William if it really was Karl. But Uncle
+ William spoke very gravely, and said that it was not a thing for us to
+ discuss, and that if Karl did it, it was an "act of State," and no doubt
+ very painful to Cousin Karl to have to do. Zita asked Uncle if Karl
+ poisoned dear old Uncle Franz Joseph, because some of Karl's best and most
+ intimate friends said that he did. But Uncle said very positively, "No,"
+ that dear old Uncle Franz Joseph had not needed any poison, but had died,
+ very naturally, under the hands of Uncle William's own physician, who was
+ feeling his wind-pipe at the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, all these things seem very far away now. But seeing Cousin Karl
+ on the upper deck, reminded me of all the harmless gossip and tattle that
+ used to go on among us girls in the old days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friday afternoon
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw Cousin Willie on the deck this afternoon. I had not seen him all day
+ yesterday as he seems to keep out of sight. His eyes looked bloodshot and
+ I was sure that he had been drinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I asked him where he had been in the storm while Uncle William was ill. He
+ gave a queer sort of leering chuckle and said, "Over there," and pointed
+ backwards with his thumb towards the first class part of the ship. Then he
+ said, "Come here a minute," and he led me round a corner to where no one
+ could see, and showed me a gold brooch and two diamond rings. He told me
+ not to tell the others, and then he tried to squeeze my hand and to pull
+ me towards him, in such a horrid way, but I broke away and went back.
+ Since then I have been trying to think how he could have got the brooch
+ and the rings. But I cannot think.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S.S. America. Saturday
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day when I went up on deck, the first thing I saw was Uncle Henry. I
+ hardly recognized him. He had on an old blue sailor's jersey, and was
+ cleaning up a brass rail with a rag. I asked him why he was dressed like
+ that and Uncle Henry laughed and said he had become an admiral. I couldn't
+ think what he meant, as I never guess things with a double meaning, so he
+ explained that he has got work as a sailor for the voyage across. I
+ thought he looked very nice in his sailor's jersey, much nicer than in the
+ coat with gold facings, when he was our High Admiral. He reminded me very
+ much of those big fair-haired Norwegian sailors that we used to see when
+ we went on the Meteor to Flekkefyord and Gildeskaale. I am sure that he
+ will be of great service to this English captain, in helping to work the
+ ship across.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Cousin Ferdinand came up on deck with his two friends, Mr.
+ Mosenhammer and Mr. Sheehan, he was very much interested in Uncle Henry's
+ having got work. He made an arrangement right away that he would borrow
+ Uncle Henry's wages, and that Mr. Sheehan would advance them, and he would
+ then add it to our capital, and then he would take it and keep it. Uncle
+ Henry is to get what is called, in the new money, one seventy-five a day,
+ and to get it for four days, and Cousin Ferdinand says that comes to four
+ dollars and a quarter. Cousin Ferdinand is very quick with figures. He
+ says that he will have to take out a small commission for managing the
+ money for Uncle Henry, and that later on he will tell Uncle Henry how much
+ will be left after taking it out. Uncle Henry said all right and went on
+ with his brass work. It is strange how his clothes seem to change him. He
+ looks now just like a rough, common sailor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S.S. America. Tuesday
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day our voyage is to end. I am so glad. When we came on deck Mr. Peters
+ told me that we were in sight of land. He told me the names of the places,
+ but they were hard and difficult to remember, like Long Island and Sandy
+ Hook; not a bit like our dear old simple German names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we were all told to put our things together and get ready to land. I
+ got, out of one of our boxes, an old frock coat for Uncle William. It is
+ frayed at the ends of the sleeves and it shines a little, but I had
+ stitched it here and there and it looked quite nice. He put it on with a
+ pair of gray trousers that are quite good, and not very much bagged, and I
+ had knitted for him a red necktie that he wears over his blue shirt with a
+ collar, called a celluloid collar, that American gentlemen wear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sea is so calm that Uncle doesn't mind being on deck now, and he even
+ came close to the bulwarks, which he wouldn't do all the way across. He
+ stood there in quite an attitude with his imperfect hand folded into his
+ coat. He looked something, but not quite, as he used to look on the deck
+ of the Meteor in the Baltic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he said, "Henry, your arm!" and walked up and down with Uncle
+ Henry. I could see that the other passengers were quite impressed with the
+ way Uncle looked, and it pleased him. I heard some rough young loafers
+ saying, "Catch on to the old Dutch, will you? Eh, what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Henry is going ashore just as he is, in his blue jersey. But Cousin
+ Ferdinand has put on a bright red tie that Mr. Mosenhammer has loaned to
+ him for three hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Willie only came on deck at the very last minute, and he seemed
+ anxious to slink behind the other passengers and to keep out of sight. I
+ think it must have something to do with the brooch that he showed me, and
+ the rings. His eyes looked very red and bloodshot and his face more
+ crooked and furtive than ever. I am sure that he had been drinking again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have written the last lines of this diary sitting on the deck. We have
+ just passed a huge statue that rises out of the water, the name of which
+ they mentioned but I can't remember, as it was not anything I ever heard
+ of before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just think&mdash;in a little while we shall land in America!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II &mdash; City New York. 2nd Avenue
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We came off the steamer late yesterday afternoon and came across the city
+ to a pension on Second Avenue where we are now. Only here they don't call
+ it a pension but a boarding house. Cousin Ferdinand and Cousin Willie
+ drove across in the cart with our boxes, and Uncle William and Uncle Henry
+ and I came on a street car. It cost us fifteen cents. A cent is four and
+ one-sixth pfennigs. We tried to reckon what it came to, but we couldn't;
+ but Uncle Henry thinks it could be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This house is a tall house in a mean street, crowded and noisy with carts
+ and street-sellers. I think it would be better to have all the boarding
+ houses stand far back from the street with elm trees and fountains and
+ lawns where peacocks could walk up and down. I am sure it would be MUCH
+ better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have taken a room for Uncle William and Uncle Henry on the third floor
+ at the back and a small room in the front for me of the kind called a hall
+ bedroom, which I don't ever remember seeing before. There were none at
+ Sans Souci and none, I think, at any of the palaces. Cousin Willie has a
+ room at the top of the house, and Cousin Ferdinand in the basement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The landlady of this house is very stout and reminds me very much of the
+ Grand Duchess of Sondersburg-Augustenburg: her manner when she showed us
+ the rooms was very like that of the Grand Duchess; only perhaps a little
+ firmer and more authoritative. But it appears that they are probably not
+ related, as the landlady's name is Mrs. O'Halloran, which is, I think,
+ Scotch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we arrived it was already time for dinner so we went downstairs to it
+ at once. The dining-room was underground in the basement. It was very
+ crowded and stuffy, and there was a great clatter of dishes and a heavy
+ smell of food. Most of the people were already seated, but there was an
+ empty place at the head of one of the tables and Uncle William moved
+ straight towards that. Uncle was wearing, as I said, his frock coat and
+ his celluloid collar and he walked into the room with quite an air, in
+ something of the way that he used to come into the great hall of the Neues
+ Palais at Potsdam, only that in these clothes it looked different. As
+ Uncle entered the room he waved his hand and said, "Let no one rise!" I
+ remember that when Uncle said this at the big naval dinner at Kiel it made
+ a great sensation as an example of his ready tact. He realised that if
+ they had once risen there would have been great difficulty in their order
+ of procedure for sitting down again. He was afraid that the same
+ difficulty might have been felt here in the boarding house. But I don't
+ think it would, and I don't think that they were going to stand up,
+ anyway. They just went on eating. I noticed one cheap-looking young man
+ watching Uncle with a sort of half smile as he moved towards his seat. I
+ heard him say to his neighbour, "Some scout, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The food was so plain and so greasy that I could hardly eat it. But I have
+ noticed that it is a strange thing about Uncle that he doesn't seem to
+ know what he eats at all. He takes all this poor stuff that they put
+ before him to be the same delicacies that we had at the Neues Palais and
+ Sans Souci. "Is this a pheasant?" he asked when the servant maid passed
+ him his dish of meat. I heard the mean young man whisper, "I guess not."
+ Presently some hash was brought in and Uncle said, "Ha! A Salmi! Ha!
+ excellent!" I could see that Mrs. O'Halloran, the landlady, who sat at the
+ other end of the table, was greatly pleased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was surprised to find&mdash;because it is so hard to get used to the
+ change of things in our new life&mdash;that all the people went on talking
+ just the same after Uncle sat down. At the palace at Potsdam nobody ever
+ spoke at dinner unless Uncle William first addressed him, and then he was
+ supposed to give a sort of bow and answer as briefly as possible so as not
+ to interrupt the flow of Uncle William's conversation. Generally Uncle
+ talked and all the rest listened. His conversation was agreed by everybody
+ to be wonderful. Princes, admirals, bishops, artists, scholars and
+ everybody united in declaring that Uncle William showed a range of
+ knowledge and a brilliance of language that was little short of
+ marvellous. So naturally it was a little disappointing at first to find
+ that these people just went on talking to one another and didn't listen to
+ Uncle William at all, or merely looked at him in an inquisitive sort of
+ way and whispered remarks to one another. But presently, I don't just know
+ how, Uncle began to get the attention of the table and one after the other
+ the people stopped talking to listen to him. I was very glad of this
+ because Uncle was talking about America and I was sure that it would
+ interest them, as what he said was very much the same as the wonderful
+ speech that he made to the American residents of Berlin at the time when
+ the first exchange professor was sent over to the University. I remember
+ that all the Americans who heard it said that Uncle told them things about
+ their own country that they had never known, or even suspected, before. So
+ I was glad when I heard Uncle explaining to these people the wonderful
+ possibilities of their country. He talked of the great plains of
+ Connecticut and the huge seaports of Pittsburg and Colorado Springs, and
+ the tobacco forests of Idaho till one could just see it all. He said that
+ the Mississippi, which is a great river here as large as the Weser, should
+ be dammed back and held while a war of extermination was carried on
+ against the Indians on the other side of it with a view to Christianizing
+ them. The people listened, their faces flushed with eating and with the
+ close air. Here and there some of them laughed or nudged one another and
+ said, "Get on to this, will you?" But I remember that when Uncle William
+ made this speech in Berlin the Turkish ambassador said after it that he
+ now knew so much about America that he wanted to die, and that the Shah of
+ Persia wrote a letter to Uncle, all in his own writing, except the longest
+ words, and said that he had ordered Uncle's speech on America to be
+ printed and read aloud by all the schoolmasters in Persia under penalty of
+ decapitation. Nearly all of them read it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wednesday
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This morning we had a great disappointment. It had been pretty well
+ arranged on board the ship that Uncle would take over the presidency of
+ Harvard University. Uncle Henry and Cousin Ferdinand and Cousin Willie had
+ all consented to it, and we looked upon it as done. Now it seems there is
+ a mistake. First of all Harvard University is not in New York, as we had
+ always thought in Germany that it was. I remember that when Uncle Henry
+ came home from his great tour in America, in which he studied American
+ institutions so profoundly, and made his report he said that Harvard
+ University was in New York. Uncle had this information filed away in our
+ Secret Service Department.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it seems that it is somewhere else. The University here is called
+ Columbia, so Uncle decided that he would be president of that. In the old
+ days all the great men of learning used to assure Uncle that if fate had
+ not made him an emperor he would have been better fitted than any living
+ man to be the head of a great university. Uncle admitted this himself,
+ though he resented being compared only to the living ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was a great disappointment to-day when they refused to give him the
+ presidency. I went with him to the college, but I cannot quite understand
+ what happened or why they won't give it to him. We walked all the way up
+ and I carried a handbag filled with Uncle's degrees and diplomas from
+ Oxford and all over the world. All the way up Uncle talked about the
+ majesty and the freedom of learning and what he would do to the college
+ when he was made president, and how all the professors should sit up and
+ obey him. At times he got so excited that he would stop on the street and
+ wave his hands and gesticulate so that people turned and looked at him. At
+ Potsdam we never realized that Uncle was excited all the time, and, in any
+ case, with his uniform on and his sabre clattering as he walked, it all
+ seemed different. But here in the street, in his faded frock coat and
+ knitted tie, and with his face flushed and his eyes rambling, people
+ seemed to mistake it and thought that his mind was not quite right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I think he made a wrong impression when we went into the offices of the
+ college. Uncle was still quite excited from his talking. "Let the trustees
+ be brought," he said in a peremptory way to the two young men in black
+ frock coats, secretaries of some sort, I suppose, who received us. Then he
+ turned to me. "Princess," he said, "my diplomas!" He began pulling them
+ out of the bag and throwing them on the table in a wild sort of way. The
+ other people waiting in the room were all staring at him. Then the young
+ men took Uncle by the arm and led him into an inner room and I went out
+ into the corridor and waited. Presently one of the young men came out and
+ told me not to wait, as Uncle had been sent home in a cab. He was very
+ civil and showed me where to go to get the elevated railroad. But while I
+ was waiting I had overheard some of the people talking about Uncle. One
+ said, "That's that same old German that was on board our ship last week in
+ the steerage&mdash;has megalomania or something of the sort, they say, and
+ thinks he's the former Emperor: I saw the Kaiser once at a review in
+ Berlin,&mdash;not much resemblance, is there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For weeks and weeks I have written nothing in my diary because it has been
+ so discouraging. After Uncle William's offer to take over the presidency
+ of Columbia University had been refused, he debated with Uncle Henry and
+ with Cousin Ferdinand of Bulgaria (who is not living in our boarding house
+ now but who comes over quite often in the evenings) whether he would
+ accept the presidency of Harvard. Cousin Ferdinand looked up the salary in
+ a book and told him not to take it. Cousin Ferdinand has little books with
+ all the salaries of people in America and he says that these books are
+ fine and much better than the Almanach de Gotha which we used to use in
+ Europe to hunt people up. He says that if he ever goes back to be King of
+ Bulgaria again he is going to introduce books like these. Cousin Ferdinand
+ is getting very full of American ideas and he says that what you want to
+ know about a man is not his line of descent but his line of credit. And he
+ says that the whole King business in Europe has been mismanaged. He says
+ that there should have been millions in it. I forgot to say in my diary
+ sooner that Cousin Ferdinand's two friends, Mr. Mosenhammer and Mr.
+ Sheehan, took him into their clothing business at once as a sort of
+ partner. The reason was that they found that he could wear clothes; the
+ effect on the customers when they see Cousin Ferdinand walking up and down
+ in front of the store is wonderful. Of course all kings can wear clothes
+ and in the old days in the Potsdam palace we thought nothing of it. But
+ Cousin Ferdinand says that the kings should have known enough to stop
+ trying to be soldiers and to put themselves at the head of the export
+ clothing trade. He wishes, he says, that he had some of his Bulgarian
+ generals here now in their blue coats trimmed with black fur; he says that
+ with a little alteration, which he showed us how to do, he could have sent
+ them out "on the road," wherever that is, and have made the biggest boom
+ in gentlemen's winter fur trimmings that the trade ever saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cousin Ferdinand, when he comes over in the evenings now, is always
+ beautifully dressed and I can notice that Mrs. O'Halloran, the landlady,
+ is much impressed with him. I am glad of this because we have not yet been
+ able to pay her any money and I was afraid she might say something about
+ it. But what is stranger is that now that Cousin Ferdinand has good
+ clothes, Uncle William and Uncle Henry seem much impressed too. Uncle
+ Henry looks so plain and common in his sailor's jersey, and Uncle William
+ in his old frock coat looks faded and shabby and his face always vacant
+ and wondering. So now when Cousin Ferdinand comes in they stand up and get
+ a chair for him and listen to his advice on everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, as I said, Cousin Ferdinand looked up the salary of the President of
+ Harvard in a book and he was strongly against Uncle William's taking the
+ position. But Uncle William says this kind of position is the nearest
+ thing in this country to what he had in Germany. He thinks that he could
+ do for Harvard what he did for Germany. He has written out on a big sheet
+ of paper all the things that he calls the Chief Needs of America, because
+ he is always busy like this and never still. I forget the whole list,
+ especially as he changes it every day according to the way that people
+ treat Uncle William on the street, but the things that he always puts
+ first are Culture, Religion, and Light. These he says he can supply, and
+ he thought that the presidency of Harvard would be the best place to do it
+ from. In the end he accepted the position against Cousin Ferdinand's
+ advice, or at least I mean he said that he would be willing to take it and
+ he told Uncle Henry to pack up all his degrees and diplomas and to send
+ them to Harvard and say that he was coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was dreadfully disappointing when all the diplomas came back again
+ by the next post. There was a letter with them but I didn't see it, as
+ Uncle William tore it into fragments and stamped on it. He said he was
+ done with American universities for ever: I have never seen him so
+ furious: he named over on his fingers all the American professors that he
+ had fed at Berlin, one meal each and sometimes even two,&mdash;Uncle has a
+ wonderful memory for things like that,&mdash;and yet this was their
+ gratitude. He walked up and down his room and talked so wildly and
+ incoherently that if I had not known and been told so often by our
+ greatest authorities in Germany how beautifully balanced Uncle William's
+ brain is, I should have feared that he was wandering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But presently he quieted down and said with deep earnestness that the
+ American universities must now go to ruin in their own way. He was done
+ with them. He said he would go into a cloister and spend his life in quiet
+ adoration, provided that he could find anything to adore, which, he said,
+ in his station was very doubtful. But half an hour later he was quite
+ cheerful again,&mdash;it is wonderful how quickly Uncle William's brain
+ recovers itself,&mdash;and said that a cloister was too quiet and that he
+ would take a position as Governor of a State; there are a great many of
+ these in this country and Uncle spent days and days writing letters to
+ them and when the answers came in&mdash; though some never answered at all&mdash;Uncle
+ William got into the same state of fury as about the Presidency of
+ Harvard. So, naturally, each day seemed more disappointing than the last,
+ especially with the trouble that we have been having with Cousin Willie,
+ of which I have not spoken yet, and I was getting quite disheartened until
+ last evening, when everything seemed to change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all knew, of course, that Uncle William is the greatest artist in the
+ world, but no one liked to suggest that he should sell his pictures for
+ money, a thing that no prince was ever capable of doing. Yet I could not
+ but feel glad when Uncle decided yesterday that he would stoop to make his
+ living by art. It cost him a great struggle to make this decision, but he
+ talked it over very fully last night with Uncle Henry, after Uncle Henry
+ came home from work, and the resolution is taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, Uncle always had a wonderful genius for painting. I remember
+ how much his pictures used to be admired at the court at Berlin. I have
+ seen some of the best painters stand absolutely entranced,&mdash;they said
+ so themselves,&mdash;in front of Uncle's canvasses. I remember one of the
+ greatest of our artists saying one day to Uncle in the Potsdam Gallery,
+ "Now, which of these two pictures is yours and which is Michel Angelo's: I
+ never can tell you two apart." Uncle gave him the order of the Red Swan.
+ Another painter once said that if Uncle's genius had been developed he
+ would have been the greatest painter of modern times. Uncle William, I
+ remember, was dreadfully angry. He said it WAS developed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it seemed only natural that Uncle should turn to Art to make our
+ living. But he hesitated because there is some doubt whether a person of
+ noble birth can sell anything for money. But Uncle says Tintoretto the
+ great Italian artist had two quarterings of nobility, and Velasquez had
+ two and a half.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luckily we have with us among our things Uncle's easel and his paints that
+ he used in Berlin. He had always to have special things because he doesn't
+ use little brushes and tubes of colour as ordinary artists do, but had a
+ big brush and his paint in a tin can, so that he can work more quickly.
+ Fortunately we have with us three of Uncle's pictures rolled up in the
+ bottom of our boxes. He is going to sell these first and after that he
+ says that he will paint one or two every day. One of the three canvasses
+ that we have is an allegorical picture called "Progress" in which Progress
+ is seen coming out of a cloud in the background with Uncle William
+ standing in the foreground. Another is called "Modern Science" and in this
+ Science is seen crouched in the dark in the background and Uncle William
+ standing in the light in the foreground. The other is called "Midnight in
+ the Black Forest." Uncle William did it in five minutes with a pot of
+ black paint. They say it is impressionistic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So all the evening Uncle William and Uncle Henry talked about the new
+ plan. It is wonderful how Uncle William enters into a thing. He got me to
+ fetch him his old blue blouse, which was with the painting things, and he
+ put it on over his clothes and walked up and down the room with a long
+ paint-brush in his hand. "We painters, my dear Henry," he said, "must not
+ be proud. America needs Art. Very good. She shall have it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could see, of course, that Uncle William did not like the idea of
+ selling pictures for money. But he is going to make that side of it less
+ objectionable by painting a picture, a very large picture, for nothing and
+ giving it to the big Metropolitan Art Gallery which is here. Uncle has
+ already partly thought it out. It is to be called the "Spirit of America"
+ and in it the Spirit of America will be seen doubled up in the background:
+ Uncle has not yet fully thought out the foreground, but he says he has an
+ idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In any case he is going to refuse to take anything more than a modest
+ price for his pictures. Beyond that, he says, not one pfennig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So this morning Uncle rolled up his three canvasses under his arm and has
+ gone away to sell them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am very glad, as we have but little money, indeed hardly any except
+ Uncle Henry's wages. And I have been so worried, too, and surprised since
+ we came here about Cousin Willie. He hardly is with the rest of us at all.
+ He is out all night and sleeps in the day time, and often I am sure that
+ he has been drinking. One morning when he came back to the house at about
+ breakfast time he showed me quite a handful of money, but wouldn't say
+ where he got it. He said there was lots more where it came from. I asked
+ him to give me some to pay Mrs. O'Halloran, but he only laughed in his
+ leering way and said that he needed it all. At another time when I went up
+ to Cousin Willie's room one day when he was out, I saw quite a lot of
+ silver things hidden in a corner of the cupboard. They looked like goblets
+ and silver dinner things, and there was a revolver and a sheath-knife
+ hidden with them. I began to think that he must have stolen all these
+ things, though it seemed impossible for a prince. I have spoken to Uncle
+ William several times about Cousin Willie, but he gets impatient and does
+ not seem to care. Uncle never desires very much to talk of people other
+ than himself. I think it fatigues his mind. In any case, he says that he
+ has done for Willie already all that he could. He says he had him confined
+ to a fortress three times and that four times he refused to have him in
+ his sight for a month, and that twice he banished him to a country estate
+ for six weeks. His duty, he says, is done. I said that I was afraid that
+ Cousin Willie had been stealing and told him about the silver things
+ hidden in the cupboard. But Uncle got very serious and read me a very
+ severe lecture. No prince, he said, ever stole. His son, he explained,
+ might very well be collecting souvenirs as memorials of his residence in
+ America: all the Hohenzollerns collected souvenirs: some of our most
+ beautiful art things at Potsdam and Sans Souci were souvenirs collected by
+ our ancestors in France fifty years ago. Uncle said that if the Great War
+ had turned out as it should and if his soldiers had not betrayed him by
+ getting killed, we should have had more souvenirs than ever. After that he
+ dismissed the subject from his mind. Uncle William can dismiss things from
+ his mind more quickly than anybody I ever knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Same Day. Later
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was so surprised this afternoon, when I happened to go down to the door,
+ to see Mr. Peters, the ice gentleman that was on the ship, with his ice
+ cart delivering ice into the basement. I knew that he delivered ice in
+ this part of the city because he said so, and I think he had mentioned
+ this street, and two or three times I thought I had seen him from the
+ window. But it did seem surprising to happen to go down to the door (I
+ forget what I went for) at the moment that he was there. He looked very
+ fine in his big rough suit of overalls. It is not quite like a military
+ uniform, but I think it looks better. Mr. Peters knew me at once. "Good
+ afternoon, Miss Hohen," he said (that is the name, as I think I said, that
+ we have here), "how are all the folks?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we talked for quite a little time, and I told him about Uncle trying to
+ get work and how hard it was and how at last he had got work, or at least
+ had gone out to get it, as a painter. Mr. Peters said that that was fine.
+ He said that painters do well here: he has a lot of friends who are
+ painters and they get all the way from sixty to seventy-five cents an
+ hour. It seems so odd to think of them being paid by the hour. I don't
+ think the court artists at home were paid like that. It will be very nice
+ if Uncle William can mingle with Mr. Peters's artist friends. Mr. Peters
+ asked if he might take me out some Sunday, and I said that I would ask
+ Uncle William and Uncle Henry and Cousin Ferdinand and Cousin Willie and
+ if they all consented to come I would go. I hope it was not a forward
+ thing to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I forgot when I was talking of work to say that Uncle Henry got work the
+ very second day that we were here. He works down at the docks where the
+ ships are. I think he supervises the incoming and outgoing of the American
+ navy. It is called being a stevedore, and no doubt his being an Admiral
+ helped him to get it. He hopes to get a certificate presently to be a
+ Barge Master, which will put him in charge of the canals. But there is a
+ very difficult examination to go through and Uncle Henry is working for it
+ at night out of a book. He has to take up Vulgar Fractions which, of
+ course, none of our High Seas Command were asked to learn. But Uncle Henry
+ is stooping to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So now, I think, everything will go well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Uncle's art has failed. It was only yesterday that I was writing in my
+ memoirs of how cheerful and glad I felt to think that Uncle William was
+ going to be able to make his living by art, and now everything is changed
+ again. All the time that Uncle was out on his visit to the picture
+ dealers, I was making plans and thinking what we would do with the money
+ when it came in, so it is very disappointing to have it all come to
+ nothing. I don't know just what happened because Uncle William never gives
+ any details of things. His mind moves too rapidly for that. But he came
+ home with his pictures still under his arm in a perfect fury and raged up
+ and down his room, using very dreadful language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But after a little while when he grew calmer he explained to me that the
+ Americans are merely swineheads and that art, especially art such as his,
+ is wasted on them. Uncle says that he has no wish to speak harshly of the
+ Americans, but they are pig-dogs. He bears them no ill-will, he says, for
+ what they have done and his heart is free of any spirit of vengeance, but
+ he wishes he had his heel on their necks for about half a minute. He said
+ this with such a strange dreadful snarl that for the moment his face
+ seemed quite changed. But presently when he recovered himself he got quite
+ cheerful again, and said that it was perhaps unseemly in him, as the guest
+ of the American people, to say anything against them. It is strange how
+ Uncle always refers to himself as the guest of the American people. Living
+ in this poor place, in these cheap surroundings, it seems so odd. Often at
+ our meals in the noisy dining-room down in the basement, in the speeches
+ that he makes to the boarders, he talks of himself as the guest of America
+ and he says, "What does America ask in return? Nothing." I can see that
+ Mrs. O'Halloran, the landlady, doesn't like this, because we have not paid
+ her anything for quite a long time, and she has spoken to me about it in
+ the corridor several times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when Uncle William makes speeches in the dining-room I think the whole
+ room becomes transformed for him into the banquet room of a palace, and
+ the cheap bracket lamps against the wall turn into a blaze of light and
+ the boarders are all courtiers, and he becomes more and more
+ grandiloquent. He waves his hand towards Uncle Henry and refers to him as
+ "my brother the Admiral," and to me as "the Princess at my side." Some of
+ the people, the meaner ones, begin to laugh and to whisper, and others
+ look uncomfortable and sorry. And it is always on these occasions that
+ Uncle William refers to himself as America's guest, and refers to the
+ Americans as the hospitable nation who have taken him to their heart. I
+ think that when Uncle says this he really believes it; Uncle can believe
+ practically anything if he says it himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, as I say, when he came home yesterday, after failing to sell his
+ pictures, he was at first furious and then he fell into his other mood and
+ he said that, as the guest of a great people, he had found out at last the
+ return he could make to them. He said that he would organise a School of
+ Art, and as soon as he had got the idea he was carried away with it at
+ once and seized a pencil and paper and began making plans for the school
+ and drawing up a list of the instructors needed. He asked first who could
+ be Principal, or President, of the School, and decided that he would have
+ to be that himself as he knew of no one but himself who had the peculiar
+ power of organisation needed for it. All the technical instructors, he
+ said, must be absolutely the best, each one a master in his own line. So
+ he wrote down at the top of his list, Instructor in Oils, and reflected a
+ little, with his head in his hand, as to who could do that. Presently he
+ sighed and said that as far as he knew there was no one; he'd have to do
+ that himself. Then he wrote down Instructor in Water Colour, and as soon
+ as he had written it he said right off that he would have to take that
+ over too; there was no one else that he could trust it to. Then he said,
+ "Now, let me see, Perspective, Freehand, and Crayon Work. I need three
+ men: three men of the first class. Can I get them? I doubt it. Let me
+ think what can be done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He walked up and down the room a little with his hands behind his back and
+ his head sunk in thought while he murmured, "Three men? Three men? But Ha!
+ why THREE? Why not, if sufficiently gifted, ONE man?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just when he was saying this there was a knock at the door and Mrs.
+ O'Halloran came in. I knew at once what she had come for, because she had
+ been threatening to do it, and so I felt dreadfully nervous when she began
+ to say that our bill at the house had gone unpaid too long and that we
+ must pay her at once what we owed her. It took some time before Uncle
+ William understood what she was talking about, but when he did he became
+ dreadfully frigid and polite. He said, "Let me understand clearly, madame,
+ just what it is that you wish to say: do I apprehend that you are saying
+ that my account here for our maintenance is now due and payable?" Mrs.
+ O'Halloran said yes, she was. And Uncle said, "Let me endeavour to grasp
+ your meaning exactly: am I correct in thinking that you mean I owe you
+ money?" Mrs. O'Halloran said that was what she meant. Uncle said, "Let me
+ try to apprehend just as accurately as possible what it is that you are
+ trying to tell me: is my surmise correct that you are implying that it is
+ time that I settled up my bill?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. O'Halloran said, "Yes," but I could see that by this time she was
+ getting quite flustered because there was something so dreadfully chilling
+ in Uncle's manner: his tone in a way was courtesy itself, but there was
+ something in it calculated to make Mrs. O'Halloran feel that she had
+ committed a dreadful breach in what she had done. Uncle William told me
+ afterwards that to mention money to a prince is not a permissible thing,
+ and that no true Hohenzollern has ever allowed the word "bill" to be said
+ in his presence, and that for this reason he had tried, out of courtesy,
+ to give the woman every chance to withdraw her words and had only
+ administered a reprimand to her when she failed to do so. Certainly it was
+ a dreadful rebuke that he gave her. He told her that he must insist on
+ this topic being dismissed and never raised again: that he could allow no
+ such discussion: the subject was one, he said, that he must absolutely
+ refuse to entertain: he did not wish, he said, to speak with undue
+ severity, but he had better make it plain that if there were any renewal
+ of this discussion he should feel it impossible to remain in the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Uncle William was saying all this Mrs. O'Halloran was getting more
+ and more confused and angry, and when Uncle finally opened the door for
+ her with cold dignity, she backed out of it and found herself outside the
+ room without seeming to know what she was doing. Presently I could hear
+ her down in the scullery below, rattling dishes and saying that she was
+ just as good as anybody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Uncle William seemed to be wonderfully calmed and elevated after this
+ scene, and said, "Princess, bring me my flute." I brought it to him and he
+ sat by the window and leaned his head out over the back lane and played
+ our dear old German melodies, till somebody threw a boot at him. The
+ people about here are not musical. But meantime Uncle William had
+ forgotten all about the School of Art, and he said no more about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next Day
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day a dreadful thing has happened. The police have come into the house
+ and have taken Cousin Willie away. He is now in a place called The Tombs,
+ and Mr. Peters says that he will be sent to the great prison at Sing-Sing.
+ He is to be tried for robbery and for stabbing with intent to kill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was very dreadful when they came to take him. I was so glad that Uncle
+ William was not here to see it all. But it was in the morning and he had
+ gone out to see a steamship company about being president of it, and I was
+ tidying up our rooms, because Mrs. O'Halloran won't tidy them up any more
+ or let the coloured servant tidy them up until we pay her more money. She
+ said that to me, but I think she is afraid to say it to Uncle William. So
+ I mean to do the work now while Uncle is out and not let him know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This morning, in the middle of the morning, while I was working, all of a
+ sudden I heard the street door open and slam and some one rushing up the
+ stairway: and then Cousin Willie broke into the room, all panting and
+ excited, and his face grey with fright and gasping out, "Hide me, hide
+ me!" He ran from room to room whining and hysterical, and his breath
+ coming in a sort of sob, but he seemed incapable of deciding what to do. I
+ would have hidden him if I could, but at the very next moment I heard the
+ policemen coming in below, and the voice of the landlady. Then they came
+ upstairs, big strong-looking men in blue, any one of whom could have
+ choked Cousin Willie with one hand. Cousin Willie ran to and fro like a
+ cornered rat, and two of the men seized him and then I think he must have
+ been beside himself with fear for I saw his teeth bite into the man's hand
+ that held him, and one of the policemen struck him hard with his wooden
+ club across the head and he fell limp to the floor. They dragged him down
+ the stairway like that and I followed them down, but there was nothing
+ that I could do. I saw them lift Cousin Willie into a closed black wagon
+ that stood at the street door with quite a little crowd of people gathered
+ about it already, all excited and leering as if it were a show. And then
+ they drove away with him and I came in and went upstairs and sat down in
+ Uncle's room but I could not work any more. A little later on Mr. Peters
+ came to the house,&mdash;I don't know why, because it was not for the ice
+ as he had his other clothes on,&mdash;and he came upstairs and sat down
+ and told me about what had happened. It seemed a strange thing to receive
+ him upstairs in Uncle's bedroom like that, but I was so upset that I did
+ not think about it at the time. Mr. Peters had been on our street with his
+ ice wagon when the police came, though I did not see him. But he saw me,
+ he said, standing at the door. And I think he must have gone home and
+ changed his things and come back again, but I did not ask him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told me that Cousin Willie had stabbed a man, or at least a boy, that
+ was in charge of a jewelry shop, and that the boy might die. Cousin
+ Willie, Mr. Peters says, has been stealing jewelry nearly ever since we
+ came here and the police have been watching him but he did not know this
+ and so he had grown quite foolhardy, and this morning in broad daylight he
+ went into some sort of jewelry or pawn shop where there was only a boy
+ watching the shop, and the boy was a cripple. Cousin Willie had planned to
+ hide the things under his coat and to sneak out but the boy saw what he
+ was doing and cried out, and when Cousin Willie tried to break out of the
+ shop he hobbled to the door and threw himself in the way. And then it was
+ that Cousin Willie stabbed him with his sheath-knife,&mdash;the one that I
+ had seen in his room,&mdash;and ran. But already there was a great outcry
+ and the people followed on his tracks and shouted to the police, and so
+ they easily ran him down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of this Mr. Peters told me, but he couldn't stay very long and had to
+ go again. He says he is going to see what can be done for Cousin Willie
+ but I am afraid that he doesn't feel very sorry for him; but after Mr.
+ Peters had gone I could not help going on thinking about it all and it
+ seemed to me as if Cousin Willie had not altogether had a fair chance in
+ life. Common people are brought up in fear of prison and punishment and
+ they learn to do what they should. But Cousin Willie was brought up as a
+ prince and was above imprisonment and things like that. And in any case he
+ seemed, when the big men seized hold of him, such a paltry and miserable
+ thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later on in the day Uncle William came home and I had to tell him all
+ about Cousin Willie. I had feared that he would be dreadfully upset, but
+ he was much less disturbed than I had thought. Indeed it is quite
+ wonderful the way in which Uncle can detach his mind from things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him that Mr. Peters had said that Cousin Willie must go to
+ Sing-Sing, and Uncle said, "Ha! a fortress?" So I told him that I thought
+ it was. After that he asked if Cousin Willie was in his uniform at the
+ time, and when I said that he was not, Uncle said "That may make it more
+ difficult." Of course Cousin Willie has no uniform here in America and
+ doesn't wear any, but I notice that Uncle William begins to mix up our old
+ life with our life here and seems sometimes quite confused and wandering;
+ at least other people would think him so. He went on talking quite a long
+ time about what had happened and he said that there is an almost exact
+ precedent for the "incident" (that's what he calls it) in the Zabern Case.
+ I don't remember much about that, as it was years ago, before the war, but
+ Uncle William said that it was a similar case of an officer finding
+ himself compelled to pass his sword once through a cripple (only once,
+ Uncle says) in order to clear himself a way on the sidewalk. Uncle quoted
+ a good many other precedents for passing swords through civilians, but he
+ says that this is the best one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening Cousin Ferdinand and Uncle Henry came over. Uncle Henry
+ seemed very gloomy and depressed about what had happened and said very
+ little, but Cousin Ferdinand was very much excited and angry. He said what
+ is the good of all his honesty and his industry if he is to be disgraced
+ like this: he asked of what use is his uprightness and business integrity
+ if he is to have a first cousin in Sing-Sing. He said that if it was known
+ that he had a cousin there it would damage him with his best trade to an
+ incalculable extent. But later on he quieted down and said that perhaps
+ with a certain part of his trade it would work the other way. Uncle
+ Ferdinand has grown to be much interested in what is called here
+ "advertising,"&mdash;a thing that he says all kings ought to study&mdash;and
+ he decided, after he had got over his first indignation, that Cousin
+ Willie being in Sing-Sing would be a very good advertisement for him. It
+ might bring him, he said, quite a lot of new business; especially if it
+ was known that he refused to help Cousin Willie in any way or to have
+ anything more to do with any of the rest of us, and not to give us any
+ money. He said that this was a point of view which people could respect
+ and admire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So before he went home he said that we must not expect to see or hear from
+ him any more, unless, of course, things should in some way brighten up, in
+ which case he would come back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is a long time&mdash;nearly three months&mdash;since I have added
+ anything to my memoirs. The truth is I find it very hard to write memoirs
+ here. For one thing nobody else seems to do it. Mrs. O'Halloran tells me
+ that she never thinks of writing memoirs at all. At the Potsdam palace it
+ was different. We all wrote memoirs. Eugenia of Pless did, and Cecilia
+ did, and I did, and all of us. We all had our memoir books with little
+ silver padlocks and keys. We were brought up to do it because it helped us
+ to realise how important everything was that we did and how important all
+ the people about us were. It was wonderful to realise that in the old life
+ one met every day great world figures like Prince Rasselwitz-Windischkopf,
+ the Grand Falconer of Reuss, and the Grand Duke of Schlitzin-Mein, and
+ Field Marshall Topoff, General-in-Chief of the army of
+ Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt. There are no such figures as these in America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But another reason for not writing has been that things have been going so
+ badly with us. Uncle William still has no work and he seems to be getting
+ older and more broken and stranger in his talk every day. He is very
+ shabby now in spite of all I can do with my needle, but he becomes more
+ grandiloquent and consequential all the time. Some of the mean looking
+ young men at this boarding house have christened him "The Emperor"&mdash;which
+ seems a strange thing for them to have picked upon, and they draw him out
+ in his talk, and when they meet him they make mock salutes to him which
+ Uncle returns with very great dignity. Quite a lot of the people on the
+ nearby streets have taken it up and when they see Uncle come along they
+ make him military salutes. Uncle gets quite pleased and flushed as he goes
+ along the street and answers the salutes with a sort of military bow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is quite happy when he is out of doors explaining to me with his stick
+ the plans he has for rebuilding New York and turning the Hudson River to
+ make it run the other way. But when he comes in he falls into the most
+ dreadful depression and sometimes at night I hear him walking up and down
+ in his room far into the night. Two or three times he has had the same
+ dreadful kind of seizures that he had on board the ship when we came over,
+ and this is always when there is a great wind blowing from the ocean and a
+ storm raging out at sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course as Uncle has not any work or any position, we are getting poorer
+ and poorer. Cousin Willie has been sent to the fortress at Sing-Sing and
+ Cousin Ferdinand of Bulgaria refuses to know us any more, though, from
+ what we hear, he is getting on wonderfully well in the clothing business
+ and is very soon to open a big new store of which he is to be the general
+ manager. Cousin Karl is now the Third Assistant Head-Waiter at the King
+ George Hotel, and in the sphere in which he moves it is impossible for him
+ to acknowledge any relationship with us. I don't know what we should do
+ but that Uncle Henry manages to give us enough of his wages to pay for our
+ board and lodging. Uncle Henry has passed his Naval Examination and is now
+ appointed to a quite high command. It is called a Barge Master. They
+ refused to accept his certificate of a German Admiral, so he had to study
+ very hard, but at last he got his qualification and is now in charge of
+ long voyages on the canals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am very glad that Uncle Henry's command turned out to be on canals
+ instead of on the high seas, as it makes it so much more German. Of course
+ Uncle Henry had splendid experience in the Kiel Canal all through the four
+ years of the war, and it is bound to come in. So he goes away now on quite
+ long voyages, often of two or three weeks at a time, and for all this time
+ he is in chief charge of his barge and has to work out all the navigation.
+ Sometimes Uncle Henry takes bricks and sometimes sand. He says it is a
+ great responsibility to feel oneself answerable for the safety of a whole
+ barge-full of bricks or sand. It is quite different from what he did in
+ the German navy, because there it was only a question of the sailors and
+ for most of the time, as I have heard Uncle William and Uncle Henry say,
+ we had plenty of them, but here with bricks and sand it is different.
+ Uncle Henry says that if his barge was wrecked he would lose his job. This
+ makes it a very different thing from being a royal admiral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Uncle William all through the last three months has failed first at
+ one thing and then at another. After all his plans for selling pictures
+ had come to nothing he decided, very reluctantly that he would go into
+ business. He only reached this decision after a great deal of anxious
+ thought because, of course, business is a degradation. It involves taking
+ money for doing things and this, Uncle William says, no prince can consent
+ to do. But at last, after deep thought, Uncle said, "The die is cast," and
+ sat down and wrote a letter offering to take over the presidency of the
+ United States Steel Corporation. We spent two or three anxious days
+ waiting for the answer. Uncle was very firm and kept repeating, "I have
+ set my hand to it, and I will do it," but I was certain that he was sorry
+ about it and it was a great relief when the answer came at last&mdash;it
+ took days and days, evidently, for them to decide about it&mdash;in which
+ the corporation said that they would "worry along" as they were. Uncle
+ explained to me what "worrying along" meant and he said that he admired
+ their spirit. But that ended all talk of his going into business and I am
+ sure that we were both glad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that Uncle William decided that it was necessary for me to marry in
+ a way to restore our fortunes and he decided to offer me to a State
+ Governor. He asked me if I had any choice of States, and I said no. Of
+ course I should not have wished to marry a state governor, but I knew my
+ duty towards Uncle William and I said nothing. So Uncle got a map of the
+ United States and he decided to marry me to the Governor of Texas. He told
+ me that I could have two weeks to arrange my supply of household linen and
+ my trousseau to take to Texas, and he wrote at once to the Governor. He
+ showed me what he wrote and it was a very formal letter. I think that
+ Uncle's mind gets more and more confused as to where he is and what he is
+ and he wrote in quite the old strain and I noticed that he signed himself,
+ "Your brother, William." Perhaps it was on that account that we had no
+ answer to the letter. Uncle seemed to forget all about it very soon and I
+ was glad that it was so, and that I had escaped going to the court of
+ Texas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time Mr. Peters has been very kind. He comes to the house with
+ his ice every day and sometimes when Uncle Henry is here he comes in with
+ him and smokes in the evenings. One day he brought a beautiful bunch of
+ chrysanthemums for Uncle William, and another day a lovely nosegay of
+ violets for Uncle Henry. And one Sunday he took us out for a beautiful
+ drive with one of his ice-horses in a carriage called a buggy, with three
+ seats. Uncle William sat with Mr. Peters in the front seat, and Uncle
+ Henry and Cousin Ferdinand (it was the last time he came to see us) sat
+ behind them and there was a little seat at the back in which I sat. It was
+ a lovely drive and Uncle William pointed out to Mr. Peters all the things
+ of interest, and Cousin Ferdinand smoked big cigars and told Uncle Henry
+ all about the clothing trade, and I listened to them all and enjoyed it
+ very much indeed. But I was afraid afterwards that it was a very bold and
+ unconventional thing to do, and perhaps Mr. Peters felt that he had asked
+ too much because he did not invite me to drive again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he is always very kind and thoughtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One Sunday afternoon he came to see us, thinking by mistake that Uncle
+ William and Uncle Henry were there, but they weren't, and his manner
+ seemed so strange and constrained that I was certain that there was
+ something that he was trying to say and it made me dreadfully nervous and
+ confused. And at last quite suddenly he said that there was something that
+ he wanted to ask me if I wouldn't think it a liberty. My breath stopped
+ and I couldn't speak, and then he went on to ask if he might lend us
+ twenty-five dollars. He got very red in the face when he said it and he
+ began counting out the money on the sofa, and somehow I hadn't expected
+ that it was money and began to cry. But I told Mr. Peters that of course
+ we couldn't think of taking any money, and I begged him to pick it up
+ again and then I began to try to tell him about how hard it was to get
+ along and to ask him to get work for Uncle William, but I started to cry
+ again. Mr. Peters came over to my chair and took hold of the arm of it and
+ told me not to cry. Somehow his touch on the arm of the chair thrilled all
+ through me and though I knew that it was wrong I let him keep it there and
+ even let him stroke the upholstery and I don't know just what would have
+ happened but at that very minute Uncle William came in. He was most
+ courteous to Mr. Peters and expressed his apologies for having been out
+ and said that it must have been extremely depressing for Mr. Peters to
+ find that he was not at home, and he thanked him for putting himself to
+ the inconvenience of waiting. And a little while after that Mr. Peters
+ left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Next Day
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Peters came back this morning and said that he had got work for Uncle
+ William. So I was delighted. He said that Uncle will make a first class
+ "street man," and that he has arranged for a line of goods for him and
+ that he has a "territory" that Uncle can occupy. He showed me a flat
+ cardboard box filled with lead pencils and shoe-strings and little badges
+ and buttons with inscriptions on them, and he says these are what is
+ called a "line," and that Uncle can take out this line and do splendidly.
+ I don't quite understand yet who makes the appointment to be a street man
+ or what influence it takes or what it means to have a territory, but Mr.
+ Peters explained that there is a man who is retiring from being a street
+ man and that Uncle can take his place and can have both sides of the
+ Bowery, which sounds very pretty indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first I didn't understand&mdash;because Mr. Peters hesitated a good
+ deal in telling me about it&mdash;that if Uncle gets this appointment, it
+ will mean that he will sell things in the street. But as soon as I
+ understood this I felt that Uncle William would scorn to do anything like
+ this, as the degradation would be the same as being President of the Steel
+ Corporation. So I was much surprised to find that when Uncle came in he
+ didn't look at it that way at all. He looked at the box of badges and
+ buttons and things, and he said at once, "Ha! Orders of Distinction! An
+ excellent idea." He picked up a silly little white button with the motto
+ "Welcome to New York," and he said "Admirable! That shall be the first
+ class." And there was a little lead spoon with "Souvenir of the Bowery"
+ that he made the second class. He started arranging and rearranging all
+ the things in the box, just as he used to arrange the orders and
+ decorations at the Palace. Only those were REAL things such as the Order
+ of the Red Feather, and The Insignia of the Black Duck, and these were
+ only poor tin baubles. But I could see that Uncle no longer knows the
+ difference, and as his fingers fumbled among these silly things he was
+ quite trembling and eager to begin, like a child waiting for to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is a year or nearly a year since I wrote in my memoirs, and I only add
+ to them now because things have happened which mean that I shall never
+ write any more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Peters and I were married last autumn. He asked me if I would marry
+ him the day that he held the arm of my chair in the boarding house where
+ we used to live. At first I never thought that Uncle William would permit
+ it, because of the hopeless difference of birth. But it turned out that
+ there was no difficulty at all. Uncle's mind was always so wonderful that
+ he could find a way out of anything provided that he wanted to. So he
+ conferred on Mr. Peters an Order that raised him right up in birth so that
+ he came level with me. Uncle said that he could have lifted him higher
+ still if need be but that as I was only, in our old life, of a younger
+ branch of the family, it was not necessary to lift Mr. Peters to the very
+ top. He takes precedence, Uncle said, just below Uncle Henry of Prussia
+ and just above an Archbishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is so pleasant to think&mdash;now that poor Uncle William is gone&mdash;that
+ my marriage was with his full consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even after Uncle William had given his formal consent, I didn't want
+ to get married till I could leave him safely. Only he got along so well in
+ his "territory" of the Bowery from the very start that he was soon quite
+ all right. He used to go out every morning with his trayful of badges and
+ pencils and shoe-strings and he was a success at once. All the people got
+ to know him by sight and they would say when they saw him, "Here comes the
+ Emperor," or "Here comes Old Dutch," and very often there would be quite a
+ little crowd round him buying his things. Uncle regarded himself always as
+ conferring a great dignity on any one that he sold a badge to, but he was
+ very capricious and he had certain buttons and badges that he would only
+ part with as a very special favour and honour. Uncle got on so fast that
+ presently Cousin Ferdinand decided that it would be all right to know him
+ again and so he came over and made a reconciliation and took away Uncle's
+ money,&mdash;it was all in small coins,&mdash;in a bag to invest for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when everything was all right with Uncle William, Mr. Peters and I were
+ married and it was on our wedding morning that Uncle conferred the Order
+ on my husband which made me very proud. That was a year ago, and since
+ then we have lived in a very fine place of our own with four rooms, all to
+ ourselves, and a gallery at the back. I have cooked all the meals and done
+ all the work of our apartment, except just at the time when our little boy
+ was born. We both think he is a very wonderful child. At first I wanted to
+ call him after the Hohenzollerns and to name him William Frederick Charles
+ Mary Augustus Francis Felix, but somehow it seemed out of place and so we
+ have called him simply Joe Peters. I think it sounds better. Uncle William
+ drew up an act of abnegation of Joe, whereby he gives up all claim to a
+ reversion of the throne of Prussia, Brunswick and Waldeck. I was sorry for
+ this at first but Uncle said that all the Hohenzollerns had done it and
+ had made just as great a sacrifice as Joe has in doing it. But my husband
+ says that under the constitution of the United States, Joe can be
+ President, which I think I will like better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was one day last week that Uncle William met with the accident that
+ caused his death. He had walked far away from his "territory" up to where
+ the Great Park is, because in this lovely spring weather he liked to
+ wander about. And he came to where there was a great crowd of people
+ gathered to see the unveiling of a new monument. It is called the
+ Lusitania Monument and it is put up in memory of the people that were lost
+ when one of our war boats fought the English cruiser Lusitania. There were
+ a lot of soldiers lining the streets and regiments of cavalry riding
+ between. And it seems that when Uncle William saw the crowd and the
+ soldiers he was drawn nearer and nearer by a sort of curiosity, and when
+ he saw the great white veil drawn away from the monument, and read the
+ word "Lusitania" that is carved in large letters across the base, he
+ screamed out in a sudden fear, and clashed among the horses of the cavalry
+ and was ridden down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They carried him to the hospital, but he never spoke again, and died on
+ the next day but one. My husband would not let me go to see him, as he was
+ not conscious and it could do no good, but after Uncle William was dead
+ they let me see him in his coffin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lying there he seemed such a pitiful and ghastly lump of clay that it
+ seemed strange that he could, in his old life, have vexed the world as he
+ did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had thought that when Uncle William died there would have been long
+ accounts of him in the papers; at least I couldn't help thinking so, by a
+ sort of confusion of mind, as it is hard to get used to things as they are
+ and to remember that our other life is unknown here and that we are known
+ only as ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though I looked in all the papers I could find nothing except one
+ little notice, which I cut out of an evening paper and which I put in here
+ as a conclusion to my memoirs.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE "EMPEROR" DEAD
+
+ Unique Character of the East Side Passes Away
+
+ A unique and interesting character, a familiar figure
+ of the East Side of the City, has been lost from our
+ streets with the death of William Hohen lost Thursday
+ in the Pauper Hospital, to which he had been brought
+ as the result of injuries sustained in a street accident
+ at the Lusitania celebration. Hohen, who was about
+ sixty-five years of age, was an immigrant out of
+ Germany after the troubles of the Great War. He had
+ been for a year or more a street pedler on the Bowery,
+ where he sold souvenir buttons and various little
+ trinkets. The old man appears to have been the victim
+ of a harmless hallucination whereby he thought himself
+ a person of Royal distinction and in his fancy converted
+ the box of wares that he carried into Orders of Chivalry
+ and decorations of Knighthood. The effect of this
+ strange fancy was heightened by an attempt at military
+ bearing which, comic though it was in so old and ragged
+ a figure, was not without a touch of pathos. Some
+ fancied resemblance to the former Kaiser had earned
+ for Hohen the designation of the "Emperor," of which
+ he appeared inordinately proud. But those who knew
+ Hohen by sight assure us that the resemblance to the
+ former ruler of Germany, who with all his faults made
+ a splendid and imposing appearance, was of a purely
+ superficial character. It would, alas! have been well
+ for the world if the lot of William Hohenzollern had
+ fallen on the lines of the simple and pathetic "Emperor"
+ of the Bowery.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II.&mdash;With the Bolsheviks in Berlin
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Two years ago as my readers will remember,&mdash;but of course they don't,&mdash;I
+ made a secret visit to Germany during the height of the war. It was
+ obviously quite impossible at that time to disclose the means whereby I
+ made my way across the frontier. I therefore adopted the familiar literary
+ device of professing to have been transported to Germany in a dream. In
+ that state I was supposed to be conducted about the country by my friend
+ Count Boob von Boobenstein, whom I had known years before as a waiter in
+ Toronto, to see GERMANY FROM WITHIN, and to report upon it in the Allied
+ press.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What I wrote attracted some attention. So the German Government&mdash;feeling,
+ perhaps, that the prestige of their own spy system was at stake&mdash;published
+ a white paper, &mdash;or a green paper,&mdash;I forget which,&mdash;in
+ denial of all my adventures and disclosures. In this they proved (1) that
+ all entry into Germany by dreams had been expressly forbidden of the High
+ General Command; (2) that astral bodies were prohibited and (3) that
+ nobody else but the Kaiser was allowed to have visions. They claimed
+ therefore (1) that my article was a fabrication and (2) that for all they
+ knew it was humorous. There the matter ended until it can be taken up at
+ the General Peace Table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as soon as I heard that the People's Revolution had taken place in
+ Berlin I determined to make a second visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time I had no difficulty about the frontier whatever. I simply put on
+ the costume of a British admiral and walked in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three Cheers for the British Navy!" said the first official whom I met.
+ He threw his hat in the air and the peasants standing about raised a
+ cheer. It was my first view of the marvellous adaptability of this great
+ people. I noticed that many of them were wearing little buttons with
+ pictures of Jellicoe and Beatty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At my own request I was conducted at once to the nearest railway station.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So your Excellency wishes to go to Berlin?" said the stationmaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," I replied, "I want to see something of the people's revolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stationmaster looked at his watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That Revolution is over," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Too bad!" I exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all. A much better one is in progress, quite the best Revolution
+ that we have had. It is called&mdash;Johann, hand me that proclamation of
+ yesterday&mdash;the Workmen and Soldiers Revolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's it about?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The basis of it," said the stationmaster, "or what we Germans call the
+ Fundamental Ground Foundation, is universal love. They hanged all the
+ leaders of the Old Revolution yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When can I get a train?" I inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Excellency shall have a special train at once, Sir," he continued
+ with a sudden burst of feeling, while a tear swelled in his eye. "The
+ sight of your uniform calls forth all our gratitude. My three sons
+ enlisted in our German Navy. For four years they have been at Kiel,
+ comfortably fed, playing dominos. They are now at home all safe and happy.
+ Had your brave navy relaxed its vigilance for a moment those boys might
+ have had to go out on the sea, a thing they had never done. Please God,"
+ concluded the good old man, removing his hat a moment, "no German sailor
+ now will ever have to go to sea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pass over my journey to Berlin. Interesting and varied as were the
+ scenes through which I passed they gave me but little light upon the true
+ situation of the country: indeed I may say without exaggeration that they
+ gave me as little&mdash;or even more so&mdash;as the press reports of our
+ talented newspaper correspondents. The food situation seemed particularly
+ perplexing. A well-to-do merchant from Bremen who travelled for some
+ distance in my train assured me that there was plenty of food in Germany,
+ except of course for the poor. Distress, he said, was confined entirely to
+ these. Similarly a Prussian gentleman who looked very like a soldier, but
+ who assured me with some heat that he was a commercial traveller, told me
+ the same thing: There were no cases of starvation, he said, except among
+ the very poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aspect of the people too, at the stations and in the towns we passed,
+ puzzled me. There were no uniforms, no soldiers. But I was amazed at the
+ number of commercial travellers, Lutheran ministers, photographers, and so
+ forth, and the odd resemblance they presented, in spite of their innocent
+ costumes, to the arrogant and ubiquitous military officers whom I had
+ observed on my former visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I was too anxious to reach Berlin to pay much attention to the details
+ of my journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even when I at last reached the capital, I arrived as I had feared, too
+ late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Excellency," said a courteous official at the railway station, to
+ whom my naval uniform acted as a sufficient passport. "The Revolution of
+ which you speak is over. Its leaders were arrested yesterday. But you
+ shall not be disappointed. There is a better one. It is called the
+ Comrades' Revolution of the Bolsheviks. The chief Executive was installed
+ yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would it be possible for me to see him?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing simpler, Excellency," he continued as a tear rose in his eye. "My
+ four sons,&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know," I said; "your four sons are in the German Navy. It is enough.
+ Can you take me to the Leader?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can and will," said the official. "He is sitting now in the Free Palace
+ of all the German People, once usurped by the Hohenzollern Tyrant. The
+ doors are guarded by machine guns. But I can take you direct from here
+ through a back way. Come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We passed out from the station, across a street and through a maze of
+ little stairways, and passages into the heart of the great building that
+ had been the offices of the Imperial Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Enter this room. Do not knock," said my guide. "Good bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another moment I found myself face to face with the chief comrade of
+ the Bolsheviks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave a sudden start as he looked at me, but instantly collected
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was sitting with his big boots up on the mahogany desk, a cigar at an
+ edgeways angle in his mouth. His hair under his sheepskin cap was shaggy,
+ and his beard stubbly and unshaven. His dress was slovenly and there was a
+ big knife in his belt. A revolver lay on the desk beside him. I had never
+ seen a Bolshevik before but I knew at sight that he must be one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You say you were here in Berlin once before?" he questioned, and he added
+ before I had time to answer: "When you speak don't call me 'Excellency' or
+ 'Sereneness' or anything of that sort; just call me 'brother' or
+ 'comrade.' This is the era of freedom. You're as good as I am, or nearly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't be so damn polite," he snarled. "No good comrade ever says 'thank
+ you.' So you were here in Berlin before?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," I answered, "I was here writing up Germany from Within in the
+ middle of the war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The war, the war!" he murmured, in a sort of wail or whine. "Take notice,
+ comrade, that I weep when I speak of it. If you write anything about me be
+ sure to say that I cried when the war was mentioned. We Germans have been
+ so misjudged. When I think of the devastation of France and Belgium I
+ weep."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew a greasy, red handkerchief from his pocket and began to sob. "To
+ think of the loss of all those English merchant ships!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, you needn't worry," I said, "it's all going to be paid for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh I hope so, I do hope so," said the Bolshevik chief. "What a regret it
+ is to us Germans to think that unfortunately we are not able to help pay
+ for it; but you English&mdash;you are so generous&mdash;how much we have
+ admired your noble hearts&mdash;so kind, so generous to the vanquished..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His voice had subsided into a sort of whine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at this moment there was a loud knocking at the door. The Bolshevik
+ hastily wiped the tears from his face and put away his handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How do I look?" he asked anxiously. "Not humane, I hope? Not soft?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, no," I said, "quite tough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's good," he answered. "That's good. But am I tough ENOUGH?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hastily shoved his hands through his hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quick," he said, "hand me that piece of chewing tobacco. Now then. Come
+ in!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door swung open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man in a costume much like the leader's swaggered into the room. He had
+ a bundle of papers in his hands, and seemed to be some sort of military
+ secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ha! comrade!" he said, with easy familiarity. "Here are the death
+ warrants!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Death warrants!" said the Bolshevik. "Of the leaders of the late
+ Revolution? Excellent! And a good bundle of them! One moment while I sign
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He began rapidly signing the warrants, one after the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Comrade," said the secretary in a surly tone, "you are not chewing
+ tobacco!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes I am, yes I am," said the leader, "or, at least, I was just going
+ to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bit a huge piece out of his plug, with what seemed to me an evident
+ distaste, and began to chew furiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is well," said the other. "Remember comrade, that you are watched. It
+ was reported last night to the Executive Committee of the Circle of the
+ Brothers that you chewed no tobacco all day yesterday. Be warned, comrade.
+ This is a free and independent republic. We will stand for no aristocratic
+ nonsense. But whom have you here?" he added, breaking off in his speech,
+ as if he noticed me for the first time. "What dog is this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush," said the leader, "he is a representative of the foreign press, a
+ newspaper reporter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your pardon," said the secretary. "I took you by your dress for a prince.
+ A representative of the great and enlightened press of the Allies, I
+ presume. How deeply we admire in Germany the press of England! Let me kiss
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, don't trouble," I said, "it's not worth while."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say, at least, when you write to your paper, that I offered to kiss you,
+ will you not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, the leader had finished signing the papers. The secretary took
+ them and swung on his heels with something between a military bow and a
+ drunken swagger. "Remember, comrade," he said in a threatening tone as he
+ passed out, "you are watched."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bolshevik leader looked after him with something of a shudder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Excuse me a moment," he said, "while I go and get rid of this tobacco."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He got up from his chair and walked away towards the door of an inner
+ room. As he did so, there struck me something strangely familiar in his
+ gait and figure. Conceal it as he might, there was still the stiff wooden
+ movement of a Prussian general beneath his assumed swagger. The poise of
+ his head still seemed to suggest the pointed helmet of the Prussian. I
+ could without effort imagine a military cloak about his shoulders instead
+ of his Bolshevik sheepskin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, all in a moment, as he re-entered the room, I recalled exactly who
+ he was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My friend," I said, reaching out my hand, "pardon me for not knowing you
+ at once. I recognize you now..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush," said the Bolshevik. "Don't speak! I never saw you in my life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense," I said, "I knew you years ago in Canada when you were
+ disguised as a waiter. And you it was who conducted me through Germany two
+ years ago when I made my war visit. You are no more a Bolshevik than I am.
+ You are General Count Boob von Boobenstein."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general sank down in his chair, his face pale beneath its plaster of
+ rouge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush!" he said. "If they learn it, it is death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear Boob," I said, "not a word shall pass my lips."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general grasped my hand. "The true spirit," he said, "the true English
+ comradeship; how deeply we admire it in Germany!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure you do," I answered. "But tell me, what is the meaning of all
+ this? Why are you a Bolshevik?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We all are," said the count, dropping his assumed rough voice, and
+ speaking in a tone of quiet melancholy. "It's the only thing to be. But
+ come," he added, getting up from his chair, "I took you once through
+ Berlin in war time. Let me take you out again and show you Berlin under
+ the Bolsheviks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be only too happy," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall leave my pistols and knives here," said Boobenstein, "and if you
+ will excuse me I shall change my costume a little. To appear as I am would
+ excite too much enthusiasm. I shall walk out with you in the simple
+ costume of a gentleman. It's a risky thing to do in Berlin, but I'll
+ chance it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The count retired, and presently returned dressed in the quiet bell-shaped
+ purple coat, the simple scarlet tie, the pea-green hat and the white spats
+ that mark the German gentleman all the world over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless me, Count," I said, "you look just like Bernstorff."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush," said the count. "Don't mention him. He's here in Berlin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's he doing?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's a Bolshevik; one of our leaders; he's just been elected president of
+ the Scavengers Union. They say he's the very man for it. But come along,
+ and, by the way, when we get into the street talk English and only
+ English. There's getting to be a prejudice here against German."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We passed out of the door and through the spacious corridors and down the
+ stairways of the great building. All about were little groups of ferocious
+ looking men, dressed like stage Russians, all chewing tobacco and redolent
+ of alcohol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who are all these people?" I said to the count in a low voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bolsheviks," he whispered. "At least they aren't really. You see that
+ group in the corner?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The ones with the long knives," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes. They are, or at least they were, the orchestra of the Berlin Opera.
+ They are now the Bolshevik Music Commission. They are here this morning to
+ see about getting their second violinist hanged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not the first?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They had him hanged yesterday. Both cases are quite clear. The men
+ undoubtedly favoured the war: one, at least, of them openly spoke in
+ disparagement of President Wilson. But come along. Let me show you our new
+ city."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stepped out upon the great square which faced the building. How
+ completely it was changed from the Berlin that I had known! My attention
+ was at once arrested by the new and glaring signboards at the shops and
+ hotels, and the streamers with mottos suspended across the streets. I
+ realised as I read them the marvellous adaptability of the German people
+ and their magnanimity towards their enemies. Conspicuous in huge lettering
+ was HOTEL PRESIDENT WILSON, and close beside it CABARET QUEEN MARY:
+ ENGLISH DANCING. The square itself, which I remembered as the Kaiserplatz,
+ was now renamed on huge signboards GRAND SQUARE OF THE BRITISH NAVY. Not
+ far off one noticed the RESTAURANT MARSHAL FOCH, side by side with the
+ ROOSEVELT SALOON and the BEER GARDEN GEORGE V.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the change in the appearance and costume of the men who crowded the
+ streets was even more notable. The uniforms and the pointed helmets of two
+ years ago had vanished utterly. The men that one saw retained indeed their
+ German stoutness, their flabby faces, and their big spectacles. But they
+ were now dressed for the most part in the costume of the Russian Monjik,
+ while some of them appeared in American wideawakes and Kentucky frock
+ coats, or in English stove-pipe hats and morning coats. A few of the
+ stouter were in Highland costume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are amazed," said Boobenstein as we stood a moment looking at the
+ motley crowd. "What does it mean?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One moment," said the count. "I will first summon a taxi. It will be more
+ convenient to talk as we ride."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He whistled and there presently came lumbering to our side an ancient and
+ decrepit vehicle which would have excited my laughter but for the
+ seriousness of the count's face. The top of the conveyance had evidently
+ long since been torn off leaving, only the frame: the copper fastenings
+ had been removed: the tires were gone: the doors were altogether missing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our new 1919 model," said the count. "Observe the absence of the
+ old-fashioned rubber tires, still used by the less progressive peoples.
+ Our chemists found that riding on rubber was bad for the eye-sight. Note,
+ too, the time saved by not having any doors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Admirable," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We seated ourselves in the crazy conveyance, the count whispered to the
+ chauffeur an address which my ear failed to catch and we started off at a
+ lumbering pace along the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now tell me, Boobenstein," I said, "what does it all mean, the
+ foreign signs and the strange costumes?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear sir" he replied, "it is merely a further proof of our German
+ adaptability. Having failed to conquer the world by war we now propose to
+ conquer it by the arts of peace: Those people, for example, that you see
+ in Scotch costumes are members of our Highland Mission about to start for
+ Scotland to carry to the Scotch the good news that the war is a thing of
+ the past, that the German people forgive all wrongs and are prepared to
+ offer a line of manufactured goods as per catalogue sample."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wonderful," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it not?" said Von Boobenstein. "We call it the From Germany Out
+ movement. It is being organised in great detail by our Step from Under
+ Committee. They claim that already four million German voters are pledged
+ to forget the war and to forgive the Allies. All that we now ask is to be
+ able to put our hands upon the villains who made this war, no matter how
+ humble their station may be, and execute them after a fair trial or
+ possibly before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The count spoke with great sincerity and earnestness. "But come along," he
+ added. "I want to drive you about the city and show you a few of the
+ leading features of our new national reconstruction. We can talk as we
+ go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Von Boobenstein," I said, "you speak of the people who made the war;
+ surely you were all in favour of it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In favour of it! We were all against it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the Kaiser," I protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Kaiser, my poor master! How he worked to prevent the war! Day and
+ night; even before anybody else had heard of it. 'Boob,' he said to me one
+ day with tears in his eyes, 'this war must be stopped.' 'Which war, your
+ Serenity,' I asked. 'The war that is coming next month,' he answered, 'I
+ look to you, Count Boobenstein,' he continued, 'to bear witness that I am
+ doing my utmost to stop it a month before the English Government has heard
+ of it.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While we were thus speaking our taxi had taken us out of the roar and
+ hubbub of the main thoroughfare into the quiet of a side street. It now
+ drew up at the door of an unpretentious dwelling in the window of which I
+ observed a large printed card with the legend
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ REVEREND MR. TIBBITS
+ Private Tuition, English, Navigation,
+ and other Branches
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We entered and were shown by a servant into a little front room where a
+ venerable looking gentleman, evidently a Lutheran minister, was seated in
+ a corner at a writing table. He turned on our entering and at the sight of
+ the uniform which I wore jumped to his feet with a vigorous and unexpected
+ oath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is all right, Admiral," said Count Von Boobenstein. "My friend is not
+ really a sailor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" said the other. "You must excuse me. The sight of that uniform
+ always gives me the jumps."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came forward to shake hands and as the light fell upon him I recognized
+ the grand old seaman, perhaps the greatest sailor that Germany has ever
+ produced or ever will, Admiral Von Tirpitz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear Admiral!" I said, warmly. "I thought you were out of the country.
+ Our papers said that you had gone to Switzerland for a rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said the Admiral. "I regret to say that I find it impossible to get
+ away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Allied press," interjected the count, "has greatly maligned our
+ German patriots by reporting that they have left the country. Where better
+ could they trust themselves than in the bosom of their own people? You
+ noticed the cabman of our taxi? He was the former chancellor Von Hertling.
+ You saw that stout woman with the apple cart at the street corner? Frau
+ Bertha Krupp Von Bohlen. All are here, helping to make the new Germany.
+ But come, Admiral, our visitor here is much interested in our plans for
+ the restoration of the Fatherland. I thought that you might care to show
+ him your designs for the new German Navy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A new navy!" I exclaimed, while my voice showed the astonishment and
+ admiration that I felt. Here was this gallant old seaman, having just lost
+ an entire navy, setting vigorously to work to make another. "But how can
+ Germany possibly find the money in her present state for the building of
+ new ships?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are not going to be any ships," said the great admiral. "That was
+ our chief mistake in the past in insisting on having ships in the navy.
+ Ships, as the war has shown us, are quite unnecessary to the German plan;
+ they are not part of what I may call the German idea. The new navy will be
+ built inland and elevated on piles and will consist&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at this moment a great noise of shouting and sudden tumult could be
+ heard as if from the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some one is coming," said the admiral hastily. "Reach me my Bible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no," said the count, seizing me by the arm. "The sound comes from the
+ Great Square. There is trouble. We must hasten back at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dragged me from the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We perceived at once, as soon as we came into the main street again, from
+ the excited demeanour of the crowd and from the anxious faces of people
+ running to and fro that something of great moment must be happening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody was asking of the passer-by, "What is loose? What is it?"
+ Ramshack taxis, similar to the one in which we had driven, forced their
+ way as best they could through the crowded thoroughfare, moving evidently
+ in the direction of the government buildings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hurry, hurry!" said Von Boobenstein, clutching me by the arm, "or we
+ shall be too late. It is as I feared."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it?" I said; "what's the matter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fool that I was," said the count, "to leave the building. I should have
+ known. And in this costume I am helpless."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We made our way as best we could through the crowd of people, who all
+ seemed moving in the same direction, the count, evidently a prey to the
+ gravest anxiety, talking as if to himself and imprecating his own
+ carelessness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We turned the corner of a street and reached the edge of the great square.
+ It was filled with a vast concourse of people. At the very moment in which
+ we reached it a great burst of cheering rose from the crowd. We could see
+ over the heads of the people that a man had appeared on the balcony of the
+ Government Building, holding a paper in his hand. His appearance was
+ evidently a signal for the outburst of cheers, accompanied by the waving
+ of handkerchiefs. The man raised his hand in a gesture of authority.
+ German training is deep. Silence fell instantly upon the assembled
+ populace. We had time in the momentary pause to examine, as closely as the
+ distance permitted, the figure upon the balcony. The man was dressed in
+ the blue overall suit of a workingman. He was bare-headed. His features,
+ so far as we could tell, were those of a man well up in years, but his
+ frame was rugged and powerful. Then he began to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friends and comrades!" he called out in a great voice that resounded
+ through the square. "I have to announce that a New Revolution has been
+ completed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wild cheer woke from the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Bolsheviks' Republic is overthrown. The Bolsheviks are aristocrats.
+ Let them die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank Heaven for this costume!" I heard Count Boobenstein murmur at my
+ side. Then he seized his pea-green hat and waved it in the air, shouting:
+ "Down with the Bolsheviks!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All about us the cry was taken up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One saw everywhere in the crowd men pulling off their sheepskin coats and
+ tramping them under foot with the shout, "Down with Bolshevism!" To my
+ surprise I observed that most of the men had on blue overalls beneath
+ their Russian costumes. In a few moments the crowd seemed transformed into
+ a vast mass of mechanics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The speaker raised his hand again. "We have not yet decided what the new
+ Government will be"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great cheer from the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor do we propose to state who will be the leaders of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Renewed cheers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But this much we can say. It is to be a free, universal, Pan-German
+ Government of love."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cheers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meantime, be warned. Whoever speaks against it will be shot: anybody who
+ dares to lift a finger will be hanged. A proclamation of Brotherhood will
+ be posted all over the city. If anybody dares to touch it, or to discuss
+ it, or to look at or to be seen reading it, he will be hanged to a lamp
+ post."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loud applause greeted this part of the speech while the faces of the
+ people, to my great astonishment, seemed filled with genuine relief and
+ beamed with unmistakable enthusiasm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now," continued the speaker, "I command you, you dogs, to disperse
+ quietly and go home. Move quickly, swine that you are, or we shall open
+ fire upon you with machine guns."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a last outburst of cheering the crowd broke and dispersed, like a
+ vast theatre audience. On all sides were expressions of joy and
+ satisfaction. "Excellent, wunderschoen!" "He calls us dogs! That's
+ splendid. Swine! Did you hear him say 'Swine'? This is true German
+ Government again at last."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then just for a moment the burly figure reappeared on the balcony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A last word!" he called to the departing crowd. "I omitted to say that
+ all but one of the leaders of the late government are already caught. As
+ soon as we can lay our thumb on the Chief Executive rest assured that he
+ will be hanged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hurrah!" shouted Boobenstein, waving his hat in the air. Then in a
+ whisper to me: "Let us go," he said, "while the going is still good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We hastened as quickly and unobtrusively as we could through the
+ dispersing multitude, turned into a side street, and on a sign from the
+ count entered a small cabaret or drinking shop, newly named, as its sign
+ showed, THE GLORY OF THE BRITISH COLONIES CAFE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The count with a deep sigh of relief ordered wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You recognized him, of course?" he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who?" I asked. "You mean the big working-man that spoke? Who is he?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So you didn't recognize him?" said the count. "Well, well, but of course
+ all the rest did. Workingman! It is Field Marshal Hindenburg. It means of
+ course that the same old crowd are back again. That was Ludendorf standing
+ below. I saw it all at once. Perhaps it is the only way. But as for me I
+ shall not go back: I am too deeply compromised: it would be death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boobenstein remained for a time in deep thought, his fingers beating a
+ tattoo on the little table. Then he spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you remember," he said, "the old times of long ago when you first knew
+ me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, indeed," I answered. "You were one of the German waiters, or
+ rather, one of the German officers disguised as waiters at McConkey's
+ Restaurant in Toronto."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was," said the count. "I carried the beer on a little tray and opened
+ oysters behind a screen. It was a wunderschoen life. Do you think, my good
+ friend, you could get me that job again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Boobenstein," I exclaimed, "I can get you reinstated at once. It will be
+ some small return for your kindness to me in Germany."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good," said the count. "Let us sail at once for Canada."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One thing, however," I said. "You may not know that since you left there
+ are no longer beer waiters in Toronto because there is no beer. All is
+ forbidden."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me understand myself," said the count in astonishment. "No beer!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None whatever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wine, then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Absolutely not. All drinking, except of water, is forbidden."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The count rose and stood erect. His figure seemed to regain all its
+ old-time Prussian rigidity. He extended his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My friend," he said. "I bid you farewell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where are you going to?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My choice is made," said Von Boobenstein. "There are worse things than
+ death. I am about to surrender myself to the German authorities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III.&mdash;Afternoon Tea with the Sultan
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A Study of Reconstruction in Turkey
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ On the very day following the events related in the last chapter, I was
+ surprised and delighted to receive a telegram which read "Come on to
+ Constantinople and write US up too." From the signature I saw that the
+ message was from my old friend Abdul Aziz the Sultan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had visited him&mdash;as of course my readers will instantly recollect&mdash;during
+ the height of the war, and the circumstances of my departure had been such
+ that I should have scarcely ventured to repeat my visit without this
+ express invitation. But on receipt of it, I set out at once by rail for
+ Constantinople.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was delighted to find that under the new order of things in going from
+ Berlin to Constantinople it was no longer necessary to travel through the
+ barbarous and brutal populations of Germany, Austria and Hungary. The way
+ now runs, though I believe the actual railroad is the same, through the
+ Thuringian Republic, Czecho-Slovakia and Magyaria. It was a source of deep
+ satisfaction to see the scowling and hostile countenances of Germans,
+ Austrians and Hungarians replaced by the cheerful and honest faces of the
+ Thuringians, the Czecho-Slovaks and the Magyarians. Moreover I was assured
+ on all sides that if these faces are not perfectly satisfactory, they will
+ be altered in any way required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was very pleasant, too, to find myself once again in the flagstoned
+ halls of the Yildiz Kiosk, the Sultan's palace. My little friend Abdul
+ Aziz rose at once from his cushioned divan under a lemon tree and came
+ shuffling in his big slippers to meet me, a smile of welcome on his face.
+ He seemed, to my surprise, radiant with happiness. The disasters
+ attributed by the allied press to his unhappy country appeared to sit
+ lightly on the little man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How is everything going in Turkey?" I asked as we sat down side by side
+ on the cushions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Splendid," said Abdul. "I suppose you've heard that we're bankrupt?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bankrupt!" I exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," continued the Sultan, rubbing his hands together with positive
+ enjoyment, "we can't pay a cent: isn't it great? Have some champagne?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He clapped his hands together and a turbaned attendant appeared with wine
+ on a tray which he served into long-necked glasses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'd rather have tea," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, don't take tea," he protested. "We've practically cut out
+ afternoon tea here. It's part of our Turkish thrift movement. We're taking
+ champagne instead. Tell me, have you a Thrift Movement like that, where
+ you come from&mdash;Canada, I think it is, isn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," I answered, "we have one just like that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This war finance is glorious stuff, isn't it?" continued the Sultan. "How
+ much do you think we owe?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I haven't an idea," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wait a minute," said Abdul. He touched a bell and at the sound of it
+ there came shuffling into the room my venerable old acquaintance Toomuch
+ Koffi, the Royal Secretary. But to my surprise he no longer wore his
+ patriarchal beard, his flowing robe and his girdle. He was clean shaven
+ and close cropped and dressed in a short jacket like an American bell boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You remember Toomuch, I think," said Abdul. "I've reconstructed him a
+ little, as you see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Peace of Allah be upon thine head," said Toomuch Koffi to the Sultan,
+ commencing a deep salaam. "What wish sits behind thy forehead that thou
+ shouldst ring the bell for this humble creature of clay to come into the
+ sunlight of thy presence? Tell me, O Lord, if perchance&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, here," interrupted the Sultan impatiently, "cut all that stuff out,
+ please. That ancient courtesy business won't do, not if this country is to
+ reconstruct itself and come abreast of the great modern democracies. Say
+ to me simply 'What's the trouble?"'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toomuch bowed, and Abdul continued. "Look in your tablets and see how much
+ our public debt amounts to in American dollars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secretary drew forth his tablets and bowed his head a moment in some
+ perplexity over the figures that were scribbled on them. "Multiplication,"
+ I heard him murmur, "is an act of the grace of heaven; let me invoke a
+ blessing on FIVE, the perfect number, whereby the Pound Turkish is
+ distributed into the American dollar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He remained for a few moments with his eyes turned, as if in supplication,
+ towards the vaulted ceiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you got it?" asked Abdul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what do we owe, adding it all together?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Forty billion dollars," said Toomuch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Isn't that wonderful!" exclaimed Abdul, with delight radiating over his
+ countenance. "Who would have thought that before the war! Forty billion
+ dollars! Aren't we the financiers! Aren't we the bulwark of monetary
+ power! Can you touch that in Canada?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," I said, "we can't. We don't owe two billion yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, never mind, never mind," said the little man in a consoling tone.
+ "You are only a young country yet. You'll do better later on. And in any
+ case I am sure you are just as proud of your one billion as we are of our
+ forty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes," I said, "we certainly are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, that's something anyway. You're on the right track, and you
+ must not be discouraged if you're not up to the Turkish standard yet. You
+ must remember, as I told you before, that Turkey leads the world in all
+ ideas of government and finance. Take the present situation. Here we are,
+ bankrupt&mdash;pass me the champagne, Toomuch, and sit down with us&mdash;the
+ very first nation of the lot. It's a great feather in the cap of our
+ financiers. It gives us a splendid start for the new era of reconstruction
+ that we are beginning on. As you perhaps have heard we are all hugely busy
+ about it. You notice my books and papers, do you not?" the Sultan added
+ very proudly, waving his hand towards a great pile of blue books,
+ pamphlets and documents that were heaped upon the floor beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why! I never knew before that you ever read anything!" I exclaimed in
+ amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never did. But everything's changed now, isn't it, Toomuch? I sit and
+ work here for hours every morning. It's become a delight to me. After
+ all," said Abdul, lighting a big cigar and sticking up his feet on his
+ pile of papers with an air of the deepest comfort, "what is there like
+ work? So stimulating, so satisfying. I sit here working away, just like
+ this, most of the day. There's nothing like it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are you working at?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Reconstruction," said the little man, puffing a big cloud from his cigar,
+ "reconstruction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What kind of reconstruction?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All kinds&mdash;financial, industrial, political, social. It's great
+ stuff. By the way," he continued with great animation, "would you like to
+ be my Minister of Labour? No? Well, I'm sorry. I half hoped you would.
+ We're having no luck with them. The last one was thrown into the
+ Bosphorous on Monday. Here's the report on it&mdash;no, that's the one on
+ the shooting of the Minister of Religion&mdash;ah! here it is&mdash;Report
+ on the Drowning of the Minister of Labour. Let me read you a bit of this:
+ I call this one of the best reports, of its kind, that have come in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no," I said, "don't bother to read it. Just tell me who did it and
+ why."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Workingmen," said the Sultan, very cheerfully, "a delegation. They
+ withheld their reasons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So you are having labour troubles here too?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Labour troubles!" exclaimed the little Sultan rolling up his eyes. "I
+ should say so. The whole of Turkey is bubbling with labour unrest like the
+ rosewater in a narghile. Look at your tablets, Toomuch, and tell me what
+ new strikes there have been this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aged Secretary fumbled with his notes and began to murmur&mdash;"Truly
+ will I try with the aid of Allah&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, now," said Abdul, warningly, "that won't do. Say simply 'Sure.' Now
+ tell me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Secretary looked at a little list and read: "The strikes of to-day
+ comprise&mdash;the wig-makers, the dog fanciers, the conjurers, the snake
+ charmers, and the soothsayers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You hear that," said Abdul proudly. "That represents some of the most
+ skilled labour in Turkey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose it does," I said, "but tell me Abdul&mdash;what about the
+ really necessary trades, the coal miners, the steel workers, the textile
+ operatives, the farmers, and the railway people. Are they working?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Sultan threw himself back on his cushions in a paroxysm of
+ laughter, in which even his ancient Secretary was feign to join.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear sir, my dear sir!" he laughed, "don't make me die of laughter.
+ Working! those people working! Surely you don't think we are so behind
+ hand in Turkey as all that! All those worker's stopped absolutely months
+ ago. It is doubtful if they'll ever work again. There's a strong movement
+ in Turkey to abolish all NECESSARY work altogether."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But who then," I asked, "is working?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look on the tablets, Toomuch, and see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aged Secretary bowed, turned over the leaves of his "tablets," which I
+ now perceived on a closer view to be merely an American ten cent
+ memorandum book. Then he read:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The following, O all highest, still work&mdash;the beggars, the poets,
+ the missionaries, the Salvation Army, and the instructors of the Youths of
+ Light in the American Presbyterian College."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, dear me, Abdul," I exclaimed, "surely this situation is desperate?
+ What can your nation subsist on in such a situation?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pooh, pooh," said the Sultan. "The interest on our debt alone is two
+ billion a year. Everybody in Turkey, great or small, holds bonds to some
+ extent. At the worst they can all live fairly well on the interest. This
+ is finance, is it not, Toomuch Koffi?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The very best and latest," said the aged man with a profound salaam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what steps are you taking," I asked, "to remedy your labour
+ troubles?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are appointing commissions," said Abdul. "We appoint one for each new
+ labour problem. How many yesterday, Toomuch?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Forty-three," answered the secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's below our average, is it not?" said Abdul a little anxiously. "Try
+ to keep it up to fifty if you can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And these commissions, what do they do?"
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+"They make Reports," said Abdul, beginning to yawn as if
+the continued brain exercise of conversation were fatiguing
+his intellect, "excellent reports. We have had some that
+are said to be perfect models of the very best Turkish."
+ "And what do they recommend?"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know," said the Sultan. "We don't read them for that. We like to
+ read them simply as Turkish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what," I urged, "do you do with them? What steps do you take?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We send them all," replied the little man, puffing at his pipe and
+ growing obviously drowsy as he spoke, "to Woodrow Wilson. He can deal with
+ them. He is the great conciliator of the world. Let him have&mdash;how do
+ you say it in English, it is a Turkish phrase&mdash;let him have his
+ stomach full of conciliation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abdul dozed on his cushions for a moment. Then he reopened his eyes. "Is
+ there anything else you want to know," he asked, "before I retire to the
+ Inner Harem?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just one thing," I said, "if you don't mind. How do you stand
+ internationally? Are you coming into the New League of Nations?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sultan shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," he said, "we're not coming in. We are starting a new league of our
+ own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who are in it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ourselves, and the Armenians&mdash;and let me see&mdash;the Irish, are
+ they not, Toomuch&mdash;and the Bulgarians&mdash;are there any others,
+ Toomuch?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is talk," said the Secretary "of the Yugo-Hebrovians and the
+ Scaroovians&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who are they?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We don't know," said Abdul, testily. "They wrote to us. They seem all
+ right. Haven't you got a lot of people in your league that you never heard
+ of?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see," I said, "and what is the scheme that your league is formed on?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very simple," said the Sultan. "Each member of the league gives its WORD
+ to all the other members. Then they all take an OATH together. Then they
+ all sign it. That is absolutely binding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rolled back on his cushions in an evident state of boredom and
+ weariness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But surely," I protested, "you don't think that a league of that sort can
+ keep the peace?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Peace!" exclaimed Abdul waking into sudden astonishment. "Peace! I should
+ think NOT! Our league is for WAR. Every member gives its word that at the
+ first convenient opportunity it will knock the stuff out of any of the
+ others that it can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Sultan again subsided. Then he rose, with some difficulty, from
+ his cushions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Toomuch," he said, "take our inquisitive friend out into the town; take
+ him to the Bosphorous; take him to the island where the dogs are; take him
+ anywhere." He paused to whisper a few instructions into the ear of the
+ Secretary. "You understand," he said, "well, take him. As for me,"&mdash;he
+ gave a great yawn as he shuffled away, "I am about to withdraw into my
+ Inner Harem. Goodbye. I regret that I cannot invite you in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So do I," I said. "Goodbye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV.&mdash;Echoes of the War
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 1.&mdash;The Boy Who Came Back
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The war is over. The soldiers are coming home. On all sides we are assured
+ that the problem of the returned soldier is the gravest of our national
+ concerns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I may say it without fear of contradiction,&mdash;since everybody else
+ has seen it,&mdash;that, up to the present time, the returned soldier is a
+ disappointment. He is not turning out as he ought. According to all the
+ professors of psychology he was to come back bloodthirsty and brutalised,
+ soaked in militarism and talking only of slaughter. In fact, a widespread
+ movement had sprung up, warmly supported by the business men of the
+ cities, to put him on the land. It was thought that central Nevada or
+ northern Idaho would do nicely for him. At the same time an agitation had
+ been started among the farmers, with the slogan "Back to the city," the
+ idea being that farm life was so rough that it was not fair to ask the
+ returned soldier to share it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these anticipations turn out to be quite groundless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first returned soldier of whom I had direct knowledge was my nephew
+ Tom. When he came back, after two years in the trenches, we asked him to
+ dine with us. "Now, remember," I said to my wife, "Tom will be a very
+ different being from what he was when he went away. He left us as little
+ more than a school boy, only in his first year at college; in fact, a mere
+ child. You remember how he used to bore us with baseball talk and that
+ sort of thing. And how shy he was! You recall his awful fear of Professor
+ Razzler, who used to teach him mathematics. All that, of course, will be
+ changed now. Tom will have come back a man. We must ask the old professor
+ to meet him. It will amuse Tom to see him again. Just think of the things
+ he must have seen! But we must be a little careful at dinner not to let
+ him horrify the other people with brutal details of the war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom came. I had expected him to arrive in uniform with his pocket full of
+ bombs. Instead of this he wore ordinary evening dress with a dinner
+ jacket. I realised as I helped him to take off his overcoat in the hall
+ that he was very proud of his dinner jacket. He had never had one before.
+ He said he wished the "boys" could see him in it. I asked him why he had
+ put off his lieutenant's uniform so quickly. He explained that he was
+ entitled not to wear it as soon as he had his discharge papers signed;
+ some of the fellows, he said, kicked them off as soon as they left the
+ ship, but the rule was, he told me, that you had to wear the thing till
+ your papers were signed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then his eye caught a glimpse sideways of Professor Razzler standing on
+ the hearth rug in the drawing room. "Say," he said, "is that the
+ professor?" I could see that Tom was scared. All the signs of physical
+ fear were written on his face. When I tried to lead him into the drawing
+ room I realised that he was as shy as ever. Three of the women began
+ talking to him all at once. Tom answered, yes or no,&mdash;with his eyes
+ down. I liked the way he stood, though, so unconsciously erect and steady.
+ The other men who came in afterwards, with easy greetings and noisy talk,
+ somehow seemed loud-voiced and self-assertive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom, to my surprise, refused a cocktail. It seems, as he explained, that
+ he "got into the way of taking nothing over there." I noticed that my
+ friend Quiller, who is a war correspondent, or, I should say, a war
+ editorial writer, took three cocktails and talked all the more brilliantly
+ for it through the opening courses of the dinner, about the story of the
+ smashing of the Hindenburg line. He decided, after his second Burgundy,
+ that it had been simply a case of sticking it out. I say "Burgundy"
+ because we had substituted Burgundy, the sparkling kind, for champagne at
+ our dinners as one of our little war economies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom had nothing to say about the Hindenburg line. In fact, for the first
+ half of the dinner he hardly spoke. I think he was worried about his left
+ hand. There is a deep furrow across the back of it where a piece of
+ shrapnel went through and there are two fingers that will hardly move at
+ all. I could see that he was ashamed of its clumsiness and afraid that
+ someone might notice it. So he kept silent. Professor Razzler did indeed
+ ask him straight across the table what he thought about the final breaking
+ of the Hindenburg line. But he asked it with that same fierce look from
+ under his bushy eyebrows with which he used to ask Tom to define the path
+ of a tangent, and Tom was rattled at once. He answered something about
+ being afraid that he was not well posted, owing to there being so little
+ chance over there to read the papers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that Professor Razzler and Mr. Quiller discussed for us, most
+ energetically, the strategy of the Lorraine sector (Tom served there six
+ months, but he never said so) and high explosives and the possibilities of
+ aerial bombs. (Tom was "buried" by an aerial bomb but, of course, he
+ didn't break in and mention it.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we did get him talking of the war at last, towards the end of the
+ dinner; or rather, the girl sitting next to him did, and presently the
+ rest of us found ourselves listening. The strange thing was that the girl
+ was a mere slip of a thing, hardly as old as Tom himself. In fact, my wife
+ was almost afraid she might be too young to ask to dinner: girls of that
+ age, my wife tells me, have hardly sense enough to talk to men, and fail
+ to interest them. This is a proposition which I think it better not to
+ dispute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at any rate we presently realized that Tom was talking about his war
+ experiences and the other talk about the table was gradually hushed into
+ listening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, as nearly as I can set it down, is what he told us: That the French
+ fellows picked up baseball in a way that is absolutely amazing; they were
+ not much good, it seems, at the bat, at any rate not at first, but at
+ running bases they were perfect marvels; some of the French made good
+ pitchers, too; Tom knew a poilu who had lost his right arm who could pitch
+ as good a ball with his left as any man on the American side; at the port
+ where Tom first landed and where they trained for a month they had a dandy
+ ball ground, a regular peach, a former parade ground of the French
+ barracks. On being asked WHICH port it was, Tom said he couldn't remember;
+ he thought it was either Boulogne or Bordeaux or Brest,&mdash;at any rate,
+ it was one of those places on the English channel. The ball ground they
+ had behind the trenches was not so good; it was too much cut up by long
+ range shells. But the ball ground at the base hospital (where Tom was sent
+ for his second wound) was an A1 ground. The French doctors, it appears,
+ were perfectly rotten at baseball, not a bit like the soldiers. Tom
+ wonders that they kept them. Tom says that baseball had been tried among
+ the German prisoners, but they are perfect dubs. He doubts whether the
+ Germans will ever be able to play ball. They lack the national spirit. On
+ the other hand, Tom thinks that the English will play a great game when
+ they really get into it. He had two weeks' leave in London and went to see
+ the game that King George was at, and says that the King, if they will let
+ him, will make the greatest rooter of the whole bunch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Tom's war talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It grieved me to note that as the men sat smoking their cigars and
+ drinking liqueur whiskey (we have cut out port at our house till the final
+ peace is signed) Tom seemed to have subsided into being only a boy again,
+ a first-year college boy among his seniors. They spoke to him in quite a
+ patronising way, and even asked him two or three direct questions about
+ fighting in the trenches, and wounds and the dead men in No Man's Land and
+ the other horrors that the civilian mind hankers to hear about. Perhaps
+ they thought, from the boy's talk, that he had seen nothing. If so, they
+ were mistaken. For about three minutes, not more, Tom gave them what was
+ coming to them. He told them, for example, why he trained his "fellows" to
+ drive the bayonet through the stomach and not through the head, that the
+ bayonet driven through the face or skull sticks and,&mdash;but there is no
+ need to recite it here. Any of the boys like Tom can tell it all to you,
+ only they don't want to and don't care to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They've got past it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I noticed that as the boy talked,&mdash;quietly and reluctantly
+ enough,&mdash;the older men fell silent and looked into his face with the
+ realisation that behind his simple talk and quiet manner lay an inward
+ vision of grim and awful realities that no words could picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think that they were glad when we joined the ladies again and when Tom
+ talked of the amateur vaudeville show that his company had got up behind
+ the trenches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later on, when the other guests were telephoning for their motors and
+ calling up taxis, Tom said he'd walk to his hotel; it was only a mile and
+ the light rain that was falling would do him, he said, no harm at all. So
+ he trudged off, refusing a lift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, no, I don't think we need to worry about the returned soldier. Only
+ let him return, that's all. When he does, he's a better man than we are,
+ Gunga Dinn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 2.&mdash;The War Sacrifices of Mr. Spugg
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although we had been members of the same club for years, I only knew Mr.
+ Spugg by sight until one afternoon when I heard him saying that he
+ intended to send his chauffeur to the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was said quite quietly,&mdash;no bombast or boasting about it. Mr.
+ Spugg was standing among a little group of listening members of the club
+ and when he said that he had decided to send his chauffeur, he spoke with
+ a kind of simple earnestness, a determination that marks the character of
+ the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," he said, "we need all the man power we can command. This thing has
+ come to a showdown and we've got to recognise it. I told Henry that it's a
+ showdown and that he's to get ready and start right away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Spugg," said one of the members "you're certainly setting us a fine
+ example."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What else can a man do?" said Mr. Spugg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When does your chauffeur leave?" asked another man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Right away. I want him in the firing line just as quick as I can get him
+ there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a fine thing you're doing, Spugg," said a third member, "but do you
+ realise that your chauffeur may be killed?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must take my chance on that," answered Mr. Spugg, firmly. "I've thought
+ this thing out and made up my mind: If my chauffeur is killed, I mean to
+ pay for him,&mdash;full and adequate compensation. The loss must fall on
+ me, not on him. Or, say Henry comes back mutilated,&mdash;say he loses a
+ leg,&mdash;say he loses two legs,&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Mr. Spugg looked about him at his listeners, with a look that meant
+ that even three legs wouldn't be too much for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whatever Henry loses I pay for. The loss shall fall on me, every cent of
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Spugg," said a quiet looking, neatly dressed man whom I knew to be the
+ president of an insurance company and who reached out and shook the
+ speaker by the hand, "this is a fine thing you're doing, a big thing. But
+ we mustn't let you do it alone. Let our company take a hand in it. We're
+ making a special rate now on chauffeurs, footmen, and house-servants sent
+ to the war, quite below the rate that actuarial figures justify. It is our
+ little war contribution," he added modestly. "We like to feel that we're
+ doing our bit, too. We had a chauffeur killed last week. We paid for him
+ right off without demur,&mdash;waived all question of who killed him. I
+ never signed a check (as I took occasion to say in a little note I wrote
+ to his people) with greater pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you do if Henry's mutilated?" asked Mr. Spugg, turning his quiet
+ eyes on the insurance man and facing the brutal facts of things without
+ flinching. "What do you pay? Suppose I lose the use of Henry's legs, what
+ then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's all right," said his friend. "Leave it to us. Whatever he loses, we
+ make it good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right," said Spugg, "send me round a policy. I'm going to see Henry
+ clear through on this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this point that at my own urgent request I was introduced to Mr.
+ Spugg, so that I might add my congratulations to those of the others. I
+ told him that I felt, as all the other members of the club did, that he
+ was doing a big thing, and he answered again, in his modest way, that he
+ didn't see what else a man could do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My son Alfred and I," he said, "talked it over last night and we agreed
+ that we can run the car ourselves, or make a shot at it anyway. After all,
+ it's war time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What branch of the service are you putting your chauffeur in?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm not sure," he answered. "I think I'll send him up in the air. It's
+ dangerous, of course, but it's no time to think about that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, in due time, Mr. Spugg's chauffeur, Henry, went overseas. He was
+ reported first as in England. Next he was right at the front, at the very
+ firing itself. We knew then,&mdash;everybody in the club knew that Mr.
+ Spugg's chauffeur might be killed at any moment. But great as the strain
+ must have been, Spugg went up and down to his office and in and out of the
+ club without a tremor. The situation gave him a new importance in our
+ eyes, something tense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This seems to be a terrific business," I said to him one day at lunch,
+ "this new German drive."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My chauffeur," said Mr. Spugg, "was right in the middle of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," he continued, "one shell burst in the air so near him it almost
+ broke his wings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Spugg told this with no false boasting or bravado, eating his celery
+ as he spoke of it. Here was a man who had nearly had his chauffeur's wings
+ blown off and yet he never moved a muscle. I began to realize the kind of
+ resolute stuff that the man was made of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later bad news came to the club.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you heard the bad news about Spugg?" someone asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His chauffeur's been gassed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How is he taking it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fine. He's sending off his gardener to take the chauffeur's place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that was Mr. Spugg's answer to the Germans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We lunched together that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," he said, "Henry's gassed. How it happened I don't know. He must
+ have come down out of the air. I told him I wanted him in the air. But let
+ it pass. It's done now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you're sending your gardener?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am," said Spugg. "He's gone already. I called him in from the garden
+ yesterday. I said, 'William, Henry's been gassed. Our first duty is to
+ keep up our man power at the front. You must leave to-night.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are you putting William into?" I asked
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Infantry. He'll do best in the trenches,&mdash;digs well and is a very
+ fair shot. Anyway I want him to see all the fighting that's going. If the
+ Germans want give and take in this business they can have it. They'll soon
+ see who can stand it best. I told William when he left. I said, 'William,
+ we've got to show these fellows that man for man we're a match for them.'
+ That's the way I look at it, man for man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I watched Mr. Spugg's massive face as he went on with his meal. Not a
+ nerve of it moved. If he felt any fear, at least he showed no trace of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that I got war news from him at intervals, in little scraps, as I
+ happened to meet him. "The war looks bad," I said to him one day as I
+ chanced upon him getting into his motor. "This submarine business is
+ pretty serious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is," he said, "William was torpedoed yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he got into his car and drove away, as quietly as if nothing had
+ happened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later that day I heard him talking about it in the club. "Yes,"
+ he was saying, "a submarine. It torpedoed William,&mdash;my gardener. I
+ have both a chauffeur and a gardener at the war. William was picked up on
+ a raft. He's in pretty bad shape. My son Alfred had a cable from him that
+ he's coming home. We've both telegraphed him to stick it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news was the chief topic in the club that day. "Spugg's gardener has
+ been torpedoed," they said, "but Spugg refuses to have him quit and come
+ home." "Well done, Spugg," said everybody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that we had news from time to time about both William and Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Henry's out of the hospital," said Spugg. "I hope to have him back in
+ France in a few days. William's in bad shape still. I had a London surgeon
+ go and look at him. I told him not to mind the expense but to get William
+ fixed up right away. It seems that one arm is more or less paralysed. I've
+ wired back to him not to hesitate. They say William's blood is still too
+ thin for the operation. I've cabled to them to take some of Henry's. I
+ hate to do it, but this is no time to stick at anything."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later William and Henry were reported both back in France. This
+ was at the very moment of the great offensive. But Spugg went about his
+ daily business unmoved. Then came the worst news of all. "William and
+ Henry," he said to me, "are both missing. I don't know where the devil
+ they are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Missing?" I repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Both of them. The Germans have caught them both. I suppose I shan't have
+ either of them back now till the war is all over."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave a slight sigh,&mdash;the only sign of complaint that ever I had
+ heard come from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the next day we learned what was Spugg's answer to the German's
+ capture of William and Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you heard what Spugg is doing?" the members of the club asked one
+ another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's sending over Meadows, HIS OWN MAN!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no need to comment on it. The cool courage of the thing spoke
+ for itself. Meadows,&mdash;Spugg's own man,&mdash;his house valet, without
+ whom he never travelled twenty miles!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What else was there to do?" said Mr. Spugg when I asked him if it was
+ true that Meadows was going. "I take no credit for sending Meadows nor,
+ for the matter of that, for anything that Meadows may do over there. It
+ was a simple matter of duty. My son and I had him into the dining room
+ last night after dinner. 'Meadows,' we said, 'Henry and William are
+ caught. Our man power at the front has got to be kept up. There's no one
+ left but ourselves and you. There's no way out of it. You'll have to go.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how," I protested, "can you get along with Meadows, your valet, gone?
+ You'll be lost!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must do the best we can. We've talked it all over. My son will help me
+ dress and I will help him. We can manage, no doubt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Meadows went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this Mr. Spugg, dressed as best he could manage it, and taking turns
+ with his son in driving his own motor, was a pathetic but uncomplaining
+ object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meadows meantime was reported as with the heavy artillery, doing well. "I
+ hope nothing happens to Meadows," Spugg kept saying. "If it does, we're
+ stuck. We can't go ourselves. We're too busy. We've talked it over and
+ we've both decided that it's impossible to get away from the office,&mdash;not
+ with business as brisk as it is now. We're busier than we've been in ten
+ years and can't get off for a day. We may try to take a month off for the
+ Adirondacks a little later but as for Europe, it's out of the question."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, one little bit of consolation came to help Mr. Spugg to bear the
+ burden of the war. I found him in the lounge room of the club one
+ afternoon among a group of men, exhibiting two medals that were being
+ passed from hand to hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sent to me by the French government," he explained proudly. "They're for
+ William and Henry. The motto means, 'For Conspicuous Courage"' (Mr. Spugg
+ drew himself up with legitimate pride). "I shall keep one and let Alfred
+ keep the other till they come back." Then he added, as an afterthought,
+ "They may never come back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that day on, Mr. Spugg, with his French medal on his watch chain, was
+ the most conspicuous figure in the club. He was pointed out as having done
+ more than any other one man in the institution to keep the flag flying.
+ But presently the limit of Mr. Spugg's efforts and sacrifices was reached.
+ Even patriotism such as his must have some bounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On entering the club one afternoon I could hear his voice bawling
+ vociferously in one of the telephone cabinets in the hall. "Hello,
+ Washington," he was shouting. "Is that Washington? Long Distance, I want
+ Washington."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fifteen minutes later he came up to the sitting room, still flushed with
+ indignation and excitement. "That's the limit," he said, "the absolute
+ limit!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's the matter?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They drafted my son Alfred," he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just imagine it! When we're so busy in the office that we're getting down
+ there at half past eight in the morning! Drafted Alfred! 'Great Caesar' I
+ said to them! 'Look here! You've had my chauffeur and he's gassed, and
+ you've had my gardener and he's torpedoed and they're both prisoners, and
+ last month I sent you my own man! That,' I said, 'is about the limit.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What did they say," I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, it's all right. They've fixed it all up and they've apologized as
+ well. Alfred won't go, of course, but it makes one realise that you can
+ carry a thing too far. Why, they'd be taking me next!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, surely not!" I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 3.&mdash;If Germany Had Won
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes, in the past, we have grown a little impatient with our North
+ American civilisation, with its strident clamour, its noisy elections, its
+ extremes of liberty, its occasional corruption and the faults that we now
+ see were the necessary accompaniments of its merits. But let us set beside
+ it a picture such as this, taken from the New York Imperial Gazette of
+ 1925&mdash;or from any paper of the same period, such as would have been
+ published if Germany had won.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ General Boob of Boobenstiff, Imperial Governor of New York, will attend
+ divine (Imperial) service on Sunday morning next at the church of St. John
+ the (Imperial) Divine. The subway cars will be stopped while the General
+ is praying. All subway passengers are enjoined (befohlen), during the
+ thus-to-be-ordered period of cessation, to remain in a reverential
+ attitude. Those in the seats will keep the head bowed. Those holding to
+ the straps will elevate one leg, keeping the knee in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Monday evening General Boob von Boobenstiff, Imperial Governor of New
+ York, will be graciously pleased to attend a performance at the (Imperial)
+ Winter Garden on Upper (Imperial) Broadway. It is ordered that on the
+ entrance of His Excellency the audience will spontaneously rise and break
+ into three successive enthusiastic cheers. Mr. Al Jolson will remain
+ kneeling on the stage till the Gubernatorial All Highest has seated
+ itself. Mr. Jolson will then, by special (Imperial) permission, be allowed
+ to make four jokes in German to be taken from a list supplied by the
+ Imperial Censor of Humour. The Governor, accompanied by his military
+ staff, will then leave, and the performance will close.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is ordered that, on Tuesday afternoon, as a sign of thankfulness for
+ the blessings of the German peace, the business men of New York shall walk
+ in procession from the Battery to the Bronx. They will then be inspected
+ by Governor Boobenstiff. If the Governor is delayed in arriving at the
+ hereafter-to-be-indicated point of general put-yourself-there, the
+ procession will walk back to the Battery and back again, continuing so,
+ pro and con, till the arrival of the Governor.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The approaching visit of His Royal and Imperial Solemnity the Prince
+ Apparent of Bavaria shall be heralded in the (Imperial) City of New York
+ with general rejoicing. The city shall be spontaneously decorated with
+ flags. Smiles of cordial welcome shall appear on every face. Animated
+ crowds of eager citizens shall move to and fro and shouts of welcome
+ shall, by order of the Chief of Police, break from the lips. Among those
+ who are expected to be in the Imperial city to welcome his Royal Solemnity
+ will be the Hereditary Grand Duke of Schlitzin-Mein (formerly Milwaukee),
+ the Prince Margrave of Wisconsin and the Hereditary Chief Constable of
+ Nevada.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We are delighted to be able to chronicle that on the morning of the 14th
+ there was born at the Imperial Residence of His Simplicity the Hereditary
+ Governor of the Provinz (formerly State) of New York, in the (Imperial)
+ city of Albany a tenth son to the illustrious Prince and Princess who rule
+ over us with such fatherly care. The boy was christened yesterday at the
+ (Imperial) Lutheran Church and is to bear the name Frederick Wilhelm
+ Amelia Mary Johan Heinrich Ruprecht. The whole city of Albany is thrown
+ into the wildest rejoicing. The legislature has voted an addition of
+ $400,000 per annum to the civil list for the maintenance of the young
+ prince. Joy suffuses every home. This being the tenth son born to their
+ Highnesses in ten years it is felt that the future of the dynasty is more
+ or less secured. Even the humblest home is filled with the reflected joy
+ that streams out from the Residency. Their Royal Highnesses appeared
+ yesterday on the balcony amid the wild huzzoos of the people transported
+ with joy. His Simplicity the Prince wore the full dress uniform of an
+ Imperial Jaeger of the Adirondacks, and Her Royal Highness was attired as
+ a Colonel of Artillery. It is impossible to express the jubilation of the
+ moment.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We regret to report that owing to the jostling (possibly accidental, but
+ none the less actual) of an Imperial officer&mdash;Field-Lieutenant
+ Schmidt&mdash;at the entrance to Brooklyn Bridge, the bridge is declared
+ closed to the public until further notice. We are proud to state the Field
+ Lieutenant at once cut down his cowardly assailant with his saber. It has
+ pleased His Unspeakable Loftiness, the German Emperor, to cable his
+ congratulations to the Lieutenant, who will receive The Order of the Dead
+ Dog for the noble way in which he has maintained the traditions of his
+ uniform.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A striking feature of the now-taking-place Art Exhibition at the Kaiser
+ Wilhelm Institute (formerly Metropolitan Gallery) in the Thiergarten
+ (formerly Central Park) is offered by the absolutely marvellous paintings
+ exhibited by the Princess Marie Paul Cecilie Hohenzollern-Stickitintothem,
+ a cousin of Our Noble Governor. The paintings which the Princess has been
+ preciously pleased to paint and has even stooped to exhibit to the
+ filled-with-wonder eye of the public have been immediately awarded the
+ first prize in each class. While it would be invidious even to suggest
+ that any one of Her High Incipiency's pictures is better than any other,
+ our feeling is that especially the picture Night on the Hudson River is of
+ so rare a quality both of technique and of inspiration that it supersedes
+ the bounds of the hitherto-thought-to-be-possible art in America. The
+ Princess's conception of night, black as a pall and yet luminous as a
+ polished stove pipe, is only equalled by her feeling towards the Hudson
+ which lies extended in soporific superficiality beneath the sable covering
+ of darkness in which Her Highness has been pleased to overwhelm it.
+ Throughout the day an eager-to-see crowd of spectators were beaten back
+ from the picture by the police with clubs.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We are permitted officially to confirm the already
+ gladly-from-mouth-to-mouth-whispered news of an approaching marriage
+ between Prince Heinrich of Texas and the Princess Amelia Victoria Louisa,
+ Hereditary Heir Consumptive of the Imperial Provinz of Maine. The
+ marriage, so it is whispered, although performed in accordance with the
+ wishes of the Emperor as expressed by cable, is in every way a love match.
+ What lends a touch of romance to the betrothal of the Royal Younglings is
+ that the Prince had never even seen the Princess Amelia until the day when
+ the legislature of the Provinz of Maine voted her a marriage portion of
+ half a million dollars. Immediately on this news a secret visit was
+ arranged, the Prince journeying to Bangor incognito as the Count of
+ Flim-Flam in the costume of an officer of the Imperial Scavengers. On
+ receipt of the Emperor's telegram the happy pair fell in love with one
+ another at once. What makes the approaching union particularly auspicious
+ for the whole country is that it brings with it the union of Maine and
+ Texas, henceforth to form a single grateful provinz. The Royal Pair, it is
+ understood, will live alternately in each province a month at a time and
+ the legislature, the executive officials, the courts of law and the tax
+ collectors will follow them to and fro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cannot but contrast this happy issue with the turbulence and disorder
+ in which our country lived before the Great War of Liberation.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ &mdash;&mdash;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We are delighted to learn from our despatches from Boston that the
+ Hohenzollern Institute (formerly Harvard University) is to be opened next
+ autumn. By express permission of the Imperial Government, classes in
+ English will be permitted for half an hour each day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the clemency of the Emperor the sentences of W. H. Taft, and W. Wilson
+ have been commuted from the sentence of fifty years imprisonment to
+ imprisonment for life. We hope, in a special supplement, to be able to add
+ the full list of sentences, executions, imprisonments, fines, and
+ attainders that have been promulgated in honour of the birthday of our
+ Imperial Sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 4.&mdash;War and Peace at the Galaxy Club
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Great Peace Kermesse at the Galaxy Club, to which I have the honour to
+ belong, held with a view to wipe out the Peace Deficit of the Club, has
+ just ended. For three weeks our club house has been a blaze of
+ illumination. We have had four orchestras in attendance. There have been
+ suppers and dances every night. Our members have not spared themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kermesse is now over. We have time, as our lady members are saying, to
+ turn round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the moment we are sitting listening, amid bursts of applause, to our
+ treasurer's statement. As we hear it we realise that this Peace Kermesse
+ has proved the culmination and crown of four winters' war work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I must explain from the beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our efforts began with the very opening of the war. We felt that a rich
+ organisation like ours ought to do something for the relief of the
+ Belgians. At the same time we felt that our members would rather receive
+ something in the way of entertainment for their money than give it
+ straight out of their pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We therefore decided first to hold a public lecture in the club, and
+ engaged the services of Professor Dry to lecture on the causes of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In view of the circumstances, Professor Dry very kindly reduced his
+ lecture fee, which (he assured us) is generally two hundred and fifty
+ dollars, to two hundred and forty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lecture was most interesting. Professor Dry traced the causes of the
+ War backwards through the Middle Ages. He showed that it represented the
+ conflict of the brachiocephalic culture of the Wendic races with the
+ dolichocephalic culture of the Alpine stock. At the time when the lights
+ went out he had got it back to the eighth century before Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately the night, being extremely wet, was unfavourable. Few of our
+ members care to turn out to lectures in wet weather. The treasurer was
+ compelled to announce to the Committee a net deficit of two hundred
+ dollars. Some of the ladies of the Committee moved that the entire deficit
+ be sent to the Belgians, but were overruled by the interference of the
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the error was seen to have been in the choice of the lecturer. Our
+ members were no longer interested in the causes of the war. The topic was
+ too old. We therefore held another public lecture in the club, on the
+ topic What Will Come After the War. It was given by a very talented
+ gentleman, a Mr. Guess, a most interesting speaker, who reduced his fee
+ (as the thing was a war charity) by one-half, leaving it at three hundred
+ dollars. Unhappily the weather was against us. It was too fine. Our
+ members scarcely care to listen to lectures in fine weather. And it turned
+ out that our members are not interested in what will come after the war.
+ The topic is too new. Our receipts of fifty dollars left us with a net
+ deficit of two hundred and fifty. Our treasurer therefore proposed that we
+ should carry both deficits forward and open a Special Patriotic
+ Entertainment Account showing a net total deficit of four hundred and
+ fifty dollars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the opinion of the committee our mistake had been in engaging outside
+ talent. It was felt that the cost of this was prohibitive. It was better
+ to invite the services of the members of the club themselves. A great
+ number of the ladies expressed their willingness to take part in any kind
+ of war work that took the form of public entertainment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly we presented a play. It was given in the ball room of the club
+ house, a stage being specially put up for us by a firm of contractors. The
+ firm (as a matter of patriotism) did the whole thing for us at cost,
+ merely charging us with the labour, the material, the time, the thought
+ and the anxiety that they gave to the job, but for nothing else. In fact,
+ the whole staging, including lights, plumbing and decorations was merely a
+ matter of five hundred dollars. The plumbers very considerately made no
+ charge for their time, but only for their work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was felt that it would be better to have a new play than an old. We
+ selected a brilliant little modern drawing-room comedy never yet
+ presented. The owner of the copyright, a theatrical firm, let us use it
+ for a merely nominal fee of two hundred dollars, including the sole right
+ to play the piece forever. There being only twenty-eight characters in it,
+ it was felt to be more suitable than a more ambitious thing. The tickets
+ were placed at one dollar, no one being admitted free except the
+ performers themselves, and the members who very kindly acted as scene
+ shifters, curtain lifters, ushers, door-keepers, programme sellers, and
+ the general committee of management. All the performers, at their own
+ suggestion, supplied their own costumes, charging nothing to the club
+ except the material and the cost of dressmaking. Beyond this there was no
+ expense except for the fee, very reasonable, of Mr. Skip, the professional
+ coach who trained the performers, and who asked us, in view of the
+ circumstances, less than half of what he would have been willing to
+ accept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proceeds were to be divided between the Belgian Fund and the Red
+ Cross, giving fifty per cent to each. A motion in amendment from the
+ ladies' financial committee to give fifty per cent to the Belgian Fund and
+ sixty per cent to the Red Cross was voted down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately it turned out that the idea of a PLAY was a mistake in
+ judgment. Our members, it seemed, did not care to go to see a play except
+ in a theatre. A great number of them, however, very kindly turned out to
+ help in shifting the scenery and in acting as ushers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our treasurer announced, as the result of the play, a net deficit of
+ twelve hundred dollars. He moved, with general applause, that it be
+ carried forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The total deficit having now reached over sixteen hundred dollars, there
+ was a general feeling that a very special effort must be made to remove
+ it. It was decided to hold Weekly Patriotic Dances in the club ball room,
+ every Saturday evening. No charge was made for admission to the dances,
+ but a War Supper was served at one dollar a head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately the dances, as first planned, proved again an error. It
+ appeared that though our members are passionately fond of dancing, few if
+ any of them cared to eat at night. The plan was therefore changed. The
+ supper was served first, and was free, and for the dancing after supper a
+ charge was made of one dollar, per person. This again was an error. It
+ seems that after our members have had supper they prefer to go home and
+ sleep. After one winter of dancing the treasurer announced a total
+ Patriotic Relief Deficit of five thousand dollars, to be carried forward
+ to next year. This sum duly appeared in the annual balance sheet of the
+ club. The members, especially the ladies, were glad to think that we were
+ at least doing SOMETHING for the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point some of our larger men, themselves financial experts, took
+ hold. They said that our entertainments had been on too small a scale.
+ They told us that we had been "undermined by overhead expenses." The word
+ "overhead" was soon on everybody's lips. We were told that if we could
+ "distribute our overhead" it would disappear. It was therefore planned to
+ hold a great War Kermesse with a view to spreading out the overhead so
+ thin that it would vanish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was at this very moment that the Armistice burst upon us in a
+ perfectly unexpected fashion. Everyone of our members was, undoubtedly,
+ delighted that the war was over but there was a very general feeling that
+ it would have been better if we could have had a rather longer notice of
+ what was coming. It seemed, as many of our members said, such a leap in
+ the dark to rush into peace all at once. It was said indeed by our best
+ business men that in financial circles they had been fully aware that
+ there was a danger of peace for some time and had taken steps to discount
+ the peace risk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for the club itself the thing came with a perfect crash. The whole
+ preparation of the great Kermesse was well under way when the news broke
+ upon us. For a time the members were aghast. It looked like ruin. But
+ presently it was suggested that it might still be possible to save the
+ club by turning the whole affair into a Peace Kermesse and devoting the
+ proceeds to some suitable form of relief. Luckily it was discovered that
+ there was still a lot of starvation in Russia, and fortunately it turned
+ out that in spite of the armistice the Turks were still killing the
+ Armenians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was decided to hold the Kermesse and give all the profits realised
+ by it to the Victims of the Peace. Everybody set to work again with a
+ will. The Kermesse indeed had to be postponed for a few months to make
+ room for the changes needed, but it has now been held and, in a certain
+ sense, it has been the wildest kind of success. The club, as I said, has
+ been a blaze of light for three weeks. We have had four orchestras in
+ attendance every evening. There have been booths draped with the flags of
+ all the Allies, except some that we were not sure about, in every corridor
+ of the club. There have been dinner parties and dances every evening. The
+ members, especially the ladies, have not spared themselves. Many of them
+ have spent practically all their time at the Kermesse, not getting home
+ until two in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet somehow one has felt that underneath the surface it was not a
+ success. The spirit seemed gone out of it. The members themselves
+ confessed in confidence that in spite of all they could do their hearts
+ were not in it. Peace had somehow taken away all the old glad sense of
+ enjoyment. As to spending money at the Kermesse all the members admitted
+ frankly that they had no heart for it. This was especially the case when
+ the rumour got abroad that the Armenians were a poor lot and that some of
+ the Turks were quite gentlemanly fellows. It was said, too, that if the
+ Russians did starve it would do them a lot of good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was known even before we went to hear the financial report that
+ there would be no question of profits on the Kermesse going to the
+ Armenians or the Russians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to-night the treasurer has been reading out to a general meeting the
+ financial results as nearly as they can be computed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He has put the Net Patriotic Deficit, as nearly as he can estimate it, at
+ fifteen thousand dollars, though he has stated, with applause from the
+ ladies, that the Gross Deficit is bigger still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ladies Financial Committee has just carried a motion that the whole of
+ the deficit, both net and gross, be now forwarded to the Red Cross Society
+ (sixty per cent), the Belgian Relief Fund (fifty per cent), and the
+ remainder invested in the War Loan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there is a very general feeling among the male members that the club
+ will have to go into liquidation. Peace has ruined us. Not a single
+ member, so far as I am aware, is prepared to protest against the peace, or
+ is anything but delighted to think that the war is over. At the same time
+ we do feel that if we could have had a longer notice, six months for
+ instance, we could have braced ourselves better to stand up against it and
+ meet the blow when it fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think, too, that our feeling is shared outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 5.&mdash;The War News as I Remember it
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Everybody, I think, should make some little contribution towards keeping
+ alive the memories of the great war. In the larger and heroic sense this
+ is already being done. But some of the minor things are apt to be
+ neglected. When the record of the war has been rewritten into real
+ history, we shall be in danger of forgetting what WAR NEWS was like and
+ the peculiar kind of thrill that accompanied its perusal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence in order to preserve it for all time I embalm some little samples of
+ it, selected of course absolutely at random,&mdash;as such things always
+ are&mdash;in the pages of this book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me begin with:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I&mdash;THE CABLE NEWS FROM RUSSIA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This was the great breakfast-table feature for at least three years.
+ Towards the end of the war some people began to complain of it. They said
+ that they questioned whether it was accurate. Here for example is one
+ fortnight of it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Petrograd, April 14. Word has reached here that the
+ Germans have captured enormous quantities of grain on
+ the Ukrainian border.
+April 15. The Germans have captured no grain on the
+ Ukrainian border. The country is swept bare.
+April 16. Everybody in Petrograd is starving.
+April 17. There is no lack of food in Petrograd.
+April 18. The death of General Korniloff is credibly
+ reported this morning.
+April 19. It is credibly reported this morning that
+ General Korniloff is alive.
+April 20. It is credibly reported that General
+ Korniloff is hovering between life and death.
+April 21. The Bolsheviki are overthrown.
+April 22. The Bolsheviki got up again.
+April 23. The Czar died last night.
+April 24. The Czar did not die last night.
+April 25. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving north.
+April 26. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving south.
+April 27. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving east.
+April 28. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving west.
+April 29. It is reported that the Cossacks under General
+ Kaleidescope have revolted. They demand the Maximum.
+ General Kaleidescope hasn't got it.
+April 30. The National Pan-Russian Constituent Universal
+ Duma which met this morning at ten-thirty, was
+ dissolved at twenty-five minutes to eleven.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My own conclusion, reached with deep regret, is that the Russians are not
+ yet fit for the blessings of the Magna Carta and the Oklahama Constitution
+ of 1907. They ought to remain for some years yet under the Interstate
+ Commerce Commission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II&mdash;SAMPLE OF SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ New York (through London via Holland and coming out at Madrid). Mr. O.
+ Howe Lurid, our special correspondent, writing from "Somewhere near
+ Somewhere" and describing the terrific operations of which he has just
+ been an eyewitness, says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the crest where I stood, the whole landscape about me was
+ illuminated with the fierce glare of the bursting shells, while the ground
+ on which I stood quivered with the thunderous detonation of the artillery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing in the imagination of a Dante could have equalled the lurid and
+ pyrogriffic grandeur of the scene. Streams of fire rose into the sky,
+ falling in bifurcated crystallations in all directions. Disregarding all
+ personal danger, I opened one eye and looked at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I found myself now to be the very centre of the awful conflict. While not
+ stating that the whole bombardment was directed at me personally, I am
+ pretty sure that it was."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I admit that there was a time, at the very beginning of the war, when I
+ liked this kind of thing served up with my bacon and eggs every morning,
+ in the days when a man could eat bacon and eggs without being labelled a
+ pro-German. Later on I came to prefer the simple statements as to the same
+ scene and event, given out by Sir Douglas Haig and General Pershing&mdash;after
+ this fashion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Last night at ten-thirty P.M. our men noticed signs of a light
+ bombardment apparently coming from the German lines."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III&mdash;THE TECHNICAL WAR DESPATCHES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The best of these, as I remember them, used to come from the Italian front
+ and were done after this fashion:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tintino, near Trombono. Friday, April 3. The Germans, as I foresaw last
+ month they would, have crossed the Piave in considerable force. Their
+ position, as I said it would be, is now very strong. The mountains
+ bordering the valley run&mdash;just as I foresaw they would&mdash;from
+ northwest to southeast. The country in front is, as I anticipated, flat.
+ Venice is, as I assured my readers it would be, about thirty miles distant
+ from the Piave, which falls, as I expected it would, into the Adriatic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV&mdash;THE WAR PROPHECIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Startling Prophecy in Paris. All Paris is wildly excited over the
+ extraordinary prophecy of Madame Cleo de Clichy that the war will be over
+ in four weeks. Madame Cleo, who is now as widely known as a diseuse, a
+ liseuse, a friseuse and a clairvoyante, leaped into sudden prominence last
+ November by her startling announcement that the seven letters in the
+ Kaiser's name W i l h e l m represented the seven great beasts of the
+ apocalypse; in the next month she electrified all Paris by her disclosure
+ that the four letters of the word C z a r&mdash;by substituting the figure
+ 1 for C, 9 for Z, 1 for A, and 7 for R produce the date 1917, and
+ indicated a revolution in Russia. The salon of Madame Cleo is besieged by
+ eager crowds night and day. She may prophesy again at any minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Startling Forecast. A Russian peasant, living in Semipalatinsk, has
+ foretold that the war will end in August. The wildest excitement prevails
+ not only in Semipalatinsk but in the whole of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Extraordinary Prophecy. Rumbumbabad, India. April 1. The whole
+ neighbourhood has been thrown into a turmoil by the prophecy of Ram Slim,
+ a Yogi of this district, who has foretold that the war will be at an end
+ in September. People are pouring into Rumbumbabad in ox-carts from all
+ directions. Business in Rumbumbabad is at a standstill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Excitement in Midgeville, Ohio. William Bessemer Jones, a retired farmer
+ of Cuyahoga, Ohio, has foretold that the war will end in October. People
+ are flocking into Midgeville in lumber wagons from all parts of the
+ country. Jones, who bases his prophecy on the Bible, had hitherto been
+ thought to be half-witted. This is now recognised to have been a wrong
+ estimate of his powers. Business in Midgeville is at a standstill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dog's Foot. Wyoming. April 1. An Indian of the Cheyenne tribe has foretold
+ that the war will end in December. Business among the Indians is at a
+ standstill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V&mdash;DIPLOMATIC REVELATIONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ These were sent out in assortments, and labelled Vienna, via London,
+ through Stockholm. After reading them with feverish eagerness for nearly
+ four years, I decided that they somehow lack definiteness. Here is the way
+ they ran:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Special Correspondence. I learn from a very high authority, whose name I
+ am not at liberty to mention, (speaking to me at a place which I am not
+ allowed to indicate and in a language which I am forbidden to use)&mdash;that
+ Austria-Hungary is about to take a diplomatic step of the highest
+ importance. What this step is, I am forbidden to say. But the consequences
+ of it&mdash;which unfortunately I am pledged not to disclose&mdash;will be
+ such as to effect results which I am not free to enumerate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI&mdash;A NEW GERMAN PEACE FORMULA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Hertling, the Imperial Chancellor, speaking through his hat in the
+ Reichstag, said that he wished to state in the clearest language of which
+ he was capable that the German peace plan would not only provide the
+ fullest self determination of all ethnographic categories, but would
+ predicate the political self consciousness (politisches Selbstbewusztsein)
+ of each geographical and entomological unit, subject only to the necessary
+ rectilinear guarantees for the seismographic action of the German empire.
+ The entire Reichstag, especially the professorial section of it, broke
+ into unrestrained applause. It is felt that the new formula is the
+ equivalent of a German Magna Carta&mdash;or as near to it as they can get.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII&mdash;THE FINANCIAL NEWS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The war finance, as I remember it, always supplied items of the most
+ absorbing interest. I do not mean to say that I was an authority on
+ finance or held any official position in regard to it. But I watched it. I
+ followed it in the newspapers. When the war began I knew nothing about it.
+ But I picked up a little bit here and a little bit there until presently I
+ felt that I had a grasp on it not easily shaken off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a simple matter, anyway. Take the case of the rouble. It rose and
+ it fell. But the reason was always perfectly obvious. The Russian news
+ ran, as I got it in my newspapers, like this:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "M. Touchusoff, the new financial secretary of the Soviet, has declared
+ that Russia will repay her utmost liabilities. Roubles rose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "M. Touchusoff, the late financial secretary of the Soviet, was thrown
+ into the Neva last evening. Roubles fell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "M. Gorky, speaking in London last night, said that Russia was a great
+ country. Roubles rose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A Dutch correspondent, who has just beat his way out of Russia, reports
+ that nothing will induce him to go back. Roubles fell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Arthur Balfour, speaking in the House of Commons last night, paid a
+ glowing tribute to the memory of Peter the Great. Roubles rose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The local Bolsheviki of New York City at the Pan-Russian Congress held in
+ Murphy's Rooms, Fourth Avenue, voted unanimously in favor of a Free
+ Russia. Roubles never budged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these examples in view, anybody, I think, could grasp the central
+ principles of Russian finance. All that one needed to know was what M.
+ Touchusoff and such people were going to say, and who would be thrown into
+ the Neva, and the rise and fall of the rouble could be foreseen to a
+ kopeck. In speculation by shrewd people with proper judgment as to when to
+ buy and when to sell the rouble, large fortunes could be made, or even
+ lost, in a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But after all the Russian finance was simple. That of our German enemies
+ was much more complicated and yet infinitely more successful. That at
+ least I gathered from the little news items in regard to German finance
+ that used to reach us in cables that were headed Via Timbuctoo and ran
+ thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fourth Imperial War Loan of four billion marks, to be known as the
+ Kaiser's War Loan, was oversubscribed to-day in five minutes. Investors
+ thronged the banks, with tears in their eyes, bringing with them
+ everything that they had. The bank managers, themselves stained with
+ tears, took everything that was offered. Each investor received a button
+ proudly displayed by the too-happy-for-words out-of-the-bank-hustling
+ recipient."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 6.&mdash;Some Just Complaints About the War
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ No patriotic man would have cared to lift up his voice against the
+ Government in war time. Personally, I should not want to give utterance
+ even now to anything in the way of criticism. But the complaints which
+ were presented below came to me, unsought and unsolicited, and represented
+ such a variety of sources and such just and unselfish points of view that
+ I think it proper, for the sake of history, to offer them to the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I give them, just as they reached me, without modifications of any sort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The just complaint of Mr. Threadler, my tailor, as expressed while
+ measuring me for my Win-the-War autumn suit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Complaint, sir? Oh, no, we have no complaint to make in our line of
+ business, none whatever (forty-two, Mr. Jephson). It would hardly become
+ us to complain (side pockets, Mr. Jephson). But we think, perhaps, it is
+ rather a mistake for the Government (thirty-three on the leg) to encourage
+ the idea of economy in dress. Our attitude is that the well dressed man (a
+ little fuller in the chest? Yes, a little fuller in the chest, please, Mr.
+ Jephson) is better able to serve his country than the man who goes about
+ in an old suit. The motto of our trade is Thrift with Taste. It was made
+ up in our spring convention of five hundred members, in a four day
+ sitting. We feel it to be (twenty-eight) very appropriate. Our feeling is
+ that a gentleman wearing one of our thrift worsteds under one of our
+ Win-the-War light overcoats (Mr. Jephson, please show that new Win-the-War
+ overcoating) is really helping to keep things going. We like to reflect,
+ sir (nothing in shirtings, today?) that we're doing our bit, too, in
+ presenting to the enemy an undisturbed nation of well dressed men. Nothing
+ else, sir? The week after next? Ah! If we can, sir! but we're greatly
+ rushed with our new and patriotic Thrift orders. Good morning, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The just complaint of Madame Pavalucini, the celebrated contralto. As
+ interviewed incidentally in the palm-room of The Slitz Hotel, over a cup
+ of tea (one dollar), French Win-the-War pastry (one fifty) and
+ Help-the-Navy cigarettes (fifty).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would not want to creetecize ze gouvermen' ah! non! That would be what
+ you call a skonk treeck, hein?" (Madame Pavalucini comes from Missouri,
+ and dares not talk any other kind of English than this, while on tour,
+ with any strangers listening.) "But, I ask myself, ees it not just a
+ leetle wrong to discourage and tax ze poor artistes? We are doing our
+ beet, hein? We seeng, we recite! I seeng so many beautiful sings to ze
+ soldiers; sings about love, and youth, and passion, and spring and kisses.
+ And the men are carried off their feet. They rise. They rush to the war. I
+ have seen them, in my patriotic concerts where I accept nothing but my
+ expenses and my fee and give all that is beyond to the war. Only last
+ night one arose, right in the front rank&mdash;the fauteuils d'orchestre,
+ I do not know how you call them in English. 'Let me out of zis,' he
+ scream, 'me for the war! Me for the trenches!' Was it not magnifique&mdash;what
+ you call splendide, hein?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And then ze gouvermen' come and tell me I must pay zem ten thousan'
+ dollars, when I make only seexty thousan' dollars at ze opera! Anozzer
+ skonk treeck, hein?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The just complaint of Mr. Grunch, income tax payer, as imparted to me over
+ his own port wine, after dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I shouldn't want to complain: I mean, in any way that would reach the
+ outside,&mdash;reach it, that is, in connection with my name. Though I
+ think that the thing ought to be said by SOMEBODY. I think you might say
+ it. (Let me pour you out another glass of this Conquistador: yes, it's the
+ old '87: but I suppose we'll never get any more of it on this side: they
+ say that the rich Spaniards are making so much money they're buying up
+ every cask of it and it will never be exported again. Just another
+ illustration of the way that the war hits everybody alike.) But, as I was
+ saying, I think if YOU were to raise a complaint about the income tax,
+ you'd find the whole country&mdash;I mean all the men with incomes&mdash;behind
+ you. I don't suppose they'd want you to mention their names. But they'd be
+ BEHIND you, see? They'd all be there. (Will you try one of these
+ Googoolias? They're the very best, but I guess we'll never see them again.
+ They say the rich Cubans are buying them up. So the war hits us there,
+ too.) As I see it, the income tax is the greatest mistake the government
+ ever made. It hits the wrong man. It falls on the man with an income and
+ lets the other man escape. The way I look at it, and the way all the men
+ that will be behind you look at it, is that if a man sticks tight to it
+ and goes on earning all the income he can, he's doing his bit, in his own
+ way, to win the war. All we ask is to be let alone (don't put that in your
+ notes as from me, but you can say it), let us alone to go on quietly
+ piling up income till we get the Germans licked. But if you start to take
+ away our income, you discourage us, you knock all the patriotism out of
+ us. To my mind, a man's income and his patriotism are the same thing. But,
+ of course, don't say that I said that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The just complaint of my barber, as expressed in the pauses of his
+ operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm not saying nothing against the Government (any facial massage this
+ morning?). I guess they know their own business, or they'd ought to,
+ anyway. But I kick at all this talk against the barber business in war
+ time (will I singe them ends a bit?). The papers are full of it, all the
+ time. I don't see much else in them. Last week I saw where a feller said
+ that all the barber shops ought to be closed up (bay rum?) till the war
+ was over. Say, I'd like to have him right here in this chair with a razor
+ at his throat, the way I have you! As I see it, the barber business is the
+ most necessary business in the whole war. A man'll get along without
+ everything else, just about, but he can't get along without a shave, can
+ he?&mdash;or not without losing all the pep and self-respect that keeps
+ him going. They say them fellers over in France has to shave every morning
+ by military order: if they didn't the Germans would have 'em beat. I say
+ the barber is doing his bit as much as any man. I was to Washington four
+ months last winter, and I done all the work of three senators and two
+ congressmen (will I clip that neck?) and I done the work of a United
+ States Admiral every Saturday night. If that ain't war work, show me what
+ is. But I don't kick, I just go along. If a man appreciates what I do, and
+ likes to pay a little extra for it, why so much the better, but if he's
+ low enough to get out of this chair you're in and walk off without giving
+ a cent more than he has to, why let him go. But, sometimes, when I get
+ thinking about all this outcry about barber's work in war time, I feel
+ like following the man to the door and slitting his throat for him...
+ Thank you, sir; thank you, sir. Good morning. Next!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The just complaint of Mr. Singlestone;&mdash;formerly Mr. Einstein,
+ Theatre Proprietor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would be the last man, the very last, to say one word against the
+ Government. I think they are doing fine. I think the boys in the trenches
+ are doing fine. I think the nation is doing fine. But, if there's just one
+ thing where they're wrong, it's in the matter of the theatres. I think it
+ would be much better for the Government not to attempt to cut down or
+ regulate theatres in any way. The theatre is the people's recreation. It
+ builds them up. It's all part of a great machine to win the war. I like to
+ stand in the box office and see the money come in and feel that the
+ theatre is doing its bit. But, mind you, I think the President is doing
+ fine. So, all I say is, I think the theatres ought to be allowed to do
+ fine, too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The just complaint of Mr. Silas Heck, farmer, as interviewed by me,
+ incognito, at the counter of the Gold Dollar Saloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir, I say the Government's in the wrong, and I don't care who hears
+ me. (Say, is that feller in the slick overcoat listening? Let's move along
+ a little further.) They're right to carry on the war for all the nation is
+ worth. That's sound and I'm with 'em. But they ought not to take the
+ farmer offen his farm. There I'm agin them. The farmer is the one man
+ necessary for the country. They say they want bacon for the Allies. Well,
+ the way I look at it is, if you want bacon, you need hogs. And if there
+ are no men left in the country like me, what'll you do for hogs!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thanks, was you paying for that? I guess we won't have another, eh? Two
+ of them things might be bad for a feller."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, when I used to listen to the complaints of this sort that rose on
+ every side, I was glad that I was not President of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time I DO think that the Government makes a mistake in taxing
+ the profits of the poor book writers under the absurd name of INCOME. But
+ let that go. The Kaiser would probably treat us worse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 7.&mdash;Some Startling Side Effects of the War
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "There is no doubt," said Mr. Taft recently, "that the war is destined to
+ effect the most profound uplift and changes, not only in our political
+ outlook, but upon our culture, our thought and, most of all, upon our
+ literature."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am not absolutely certain that Mr. Taft really said this. He may not
+ have said "uplift." But I seem to have heard something about uplift,
+ somewhere. At any rate, there is no doubt of the fact that our literature
+ has moved&mdash;up or down. Yes, the war is not only destined to affect
+ our literature, but it has already done so. The change in outlook, in
+ literary style, in mode of expression, even in the words themselves is
+ already here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anybody can see it for himself by turning over the pages of our
+ fashionable novels or by looking at the columns of our great American and
+ English newspapers and periodicals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But stop,&mdash;let me show what I mean by examples. I have them here in
+ front of me. Take, for example, the London Spectator. Everybody recognised
+ in it a model of literary dignity and decorum. Even those who read it
+ least, admitted this most willingly; in fact, perhaps all the more so. In
+ its pages to-day one finds an equal dignity of thought, yet, somehow, the
+ wording seems to have undergone an alteration. One cannot say just where
+ the change comes in. It is what the French call a je ne sais quoi, a
+ something insaisissable, a sort of nuance, not amounting of course to a
+ lueur, but still,&mdash;how shall one put it,&mdash;SOMETHING.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The example that is given below was taken almost word for word (indeed
+ some of the words actually were so) from the very latest copy of The
+ Spectator.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ EDITORIAL FROM THE LONDON "SPECTATOR"
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Showing the Stimulating Effect of the War on Its Literary Style
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no doubt that our boys, and the Americans, are going some on the
+ western front. We have no hesitation in saying that last week's scrap was
+ a cinch for the boys. It is credibly reported by our correspondent at The
+ Hague that the German Emperor, the Crown Prince and a number of other guys
+ were eye witnesses of the fight. If so, they got the surprise of their
+ young lives. While we should not wish to show anything less than the
+ chivalrous consideration for a beaten enemy which has been a tradition of
+ our nation, we feel it is but just to say that for once the dirty pups got
+ what was coming to them. We are glad to learn from official quarters that
+ His Majesty King George has been graciously pleased to telegraph to
+ General Pershing, 'Soak it to 'em&mdash;and THEN some.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meantime the situation from the point of view both of terrain and of
+ tactics remains altogether in our favour. The deep salient driven into the
+ German lines near Soissons threatens to break up their communications and
+ force a withdrawal on a wide front. We cannot make the position clearer to
+ our English readers than by saying that our new lines occupy, as it were,
+ the form of a baseball diamond, with Soissons at second base and with our
+ headquarters at the home plate and our artillery support at third. Our
+ readers will at once grasp the fact that, with our advance pivoted on the
+ pitcher's box and with adequate cover at short, the thing is a lead-pipe
+ cinch, &mdash;in fact, we have them lashed to the mast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meantime the mood of the hour should be one, not of undue confidence or
+ boastfulness, but of quiet resolution and deep thankfulness. As the
+ Archbishop of Canterbury so feelingly put it in his sermon in Westminster
+ Abbey last Sunday, 'Now that we have them by the neck let us go on, in
+ deep and steadfast purpose, till we have twisted the gizzard out of them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Archbishop's noble words should, and will, re-echo in every English
+ home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Critical people may be inclined to doubt the propriety, or even the
+ propinquity, of some of the literary changes due to the war. But there can
+ be no doubt of the excellent effect of one of them, namely, the increasing
+ knowledge and use among us of the pleasant language of France. It is no
+ exaggeration to say that, before the war, few people in the United States,
+ even among the colored population, spoke French with ease. In fact, in
+ some cases the discomfort was so obvious as to be almost painful. This is
+ now entirely altered. Thanks to our military guide-books, and to the
+ general feeling of the day, our citizens are setting themselves to acquire
+ the language of our gallant ally. And the signs are that they will do it.
+ One hears every day in metropolitan society such remarks as, "Have you
+ read, 'Soo le foo?'" "Oh, you mean that book by Haingri Barbooze? No, I
+ have not read it yet, but I have read 'Mong Swassant Quinz' you know, by
+ that other man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is hopeful indeed. Nor need we wonder that our best magazines are
+ reflecting the same tendency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here for instance are the opening sentences of a very typical serial now
+ running in one of our best periodicals: for all I know the rest of the
+ sentences may be like them. At any rate, any magazine reader will
+ recognize them at once:
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ BONNE MERE PITOU
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A Conte of Old Normandy
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bonne Mere Pitou sat spinning beside the porte of the humble chaumiere in
+ which she dwelt. From time to time her eyes looked up and down the gran'
+ route that passed her door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Il ne vient pas," she murmured (he does not come).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose wearily and went dedans. Presently she came out again, dehors.
+ "Il ne vient toujours pas," she sighed (he still does not come).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About her in the tall trees of the allee the percherons twittered while
+ the soft roucoulement of the bees murmured drowsily in the tall calice of
+ the chou-fleur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Il n'est pas venu," she said (perfect tense, third singular, he is not,
+ or has not, come).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can we blame him if he didn't? No doubt he was still studying his active
+ verb before tackling Mere Pitou.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there! Let it pass. In any case it is not only the magazines, but the
+ novels themselves, that are being transformed by the war. Witness this:
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ BY ONE OF OUR MOST POPULAR NOVELISTS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "It was in the summer house, at the foot of the old garden, that the
+ awaited declaration came. Edwin kneeled at Angelina's feet. At last they
+ were alone! The successful barrage of conversation which he had put up at
+ breakfast had compelled her mother to remain in her trenches, and had
+ driven her father to the shelter of his dug-out. Her younger brother he
+ had camouflaged with the present of a new fishing rod, thus inducing him
+ to retire to the river. The communications with the servants had been cut.
+ Of the strict neutrality of the gardener he was already assured. Edwin
+ felt that the moment had come for going over the top. Yet being an able
+ strategist, he was anxious not to attempt to advance on too wide a front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Angelina!" he exclaimed, raising himself to one knee with his hands
+ outstretched toward her. The girl started as at the sound of an air bomb;
+ for a moment she elevated her eyes and looked him full in the tangent,
+ then she lowered them again but continued to observe him through her
+ mental periscope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Angelina," he repeated, "I have a declaration to make."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As from what date?" she questioned quietly. Edwin drew his watch from his
+ pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As from this morning, at ten-forty-six," he said. Then, emboldened by her
+ passive attitude, he continued with rising passion in his tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ever since I first met you I have felt that I could not live without you.
+ I am a changed man. My calibre is altered. I feel ten centimeters wider in
+ the mouth than I did six weeks ago. I feel that my path is altered. I have
+ a new range and an angle of elevation such as I never experienced before.
+ I have hidden my love as best I could till now. I have worn a moral
+ gas-mask before your family. I can do so no longer. Angelina, will you be
+ mine, forming with me a single unit, drawing our rations from the same
+ field kitchen and occupying the same divisional headquarters?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl seemed to hesitate. She raised her eyes to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We know one another so little," she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edwin felt that his offensive was failing. He therefore hastened to bring
+ up his means of support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have an ample income of my own," he pleaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Angelina raised her eyes again. It was evident that she was about to
+ surrender. But at this moment her mother's voice was heard calling,
+ "Angelina, Angelina, my dear, where are you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barrage had broken down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quick," said the girl, "mobilize yourself. Pick up that tennis racket and
+ let us hurry to the court and dig ourselves in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But my declaration," urged Edwin eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Accepted," she said, "as from eleven-two this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V.&mdash;Other Impossibilities
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 1.&mdash;The Art of Conversation
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I&mdash;HOW TO INTRODUCE TWO PEOPLE TO ONE ANOTHER
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more important in introducing two people to each other than to
+ employ a fitting form of words. The more usually recognized forms are
+ easily learned and committed to memory and may be utilized as occasion
+ requires. I pass over such rudimentary formulas as "Ed, shake hands with
+ Jim Taylor," or, "Boys, this is Pete, the new hand; Pete, get hold of the
+ end of that cant-hook." In fact, we are speaking only of polite society as
+ graced by the fair sex, the only kind that we need care about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Third Avenue Procedure
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very neat and convenient form is that in vogue in Third Avenue circles,
+ New York, as, for instance, at a fifty-cents-a-head dance (ladies free) in
+ the hall of the Royal Knights of Benevolence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Summerside, meet Mr. O'Hara," after which Miss Summerside says very
+ distinctly, "Mr. O'Hara," and Mr. O'Hara says with equal clearness "Miss
+ Summerside." In this circle a mark of exquisite breeding is found in the
+ request to have the name repeated. "I don't quite catch the name!" says
+ Mr. O'Hara critically; then he catches it and repeats it&mdash;"Miss
+ Summerside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Catching the name" is a necessary part of this social encounter. If not
+ caught the first time it must be put over again. The peculiar merit of
+ this introduction is that it lets Miss Summerside understand clearly that
+ Mr. O'Hara never heard of her before. That helps to keep her in her place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In superior circles, however, introduction becomes more elaborate, more
+ flattering, more unctuous. It reaches its acme in what everyone recognizes
+ at once as
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Clerical Method
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is what would be instinctively used in Anglican circles&mdash;as, for
+ example, by the Episcopal Bishop of Boof in introducing a Canon of the
+ Church to one of the "lady workers" of the congregation (meaning a lady
+ too rich to work) who is expected to endow a crib in the Diocesan Home for
+ Episcopal Cripples. A certain quantity of soul has to be infused into this
+ introduction. Anybody who has ever heard it can fill in the proper
+ accentuation, which must be very rich and deep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Mrs. Putitover, MAY I introduce my very dear old friend, Canon
+ Cutitout? The Canon, Mrs. Putitover, is one of my DEAREST friends. Mrs.
+ Putitover, my dear Canon, is quite one of our most enthusiastic workers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After which outburst of soul the Bishop is able to add, "Will you excuse
+ me, I'm afraid I simply MUST run."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Personally, I have never known or met a Bishop in society in any other
+ situation than just about to run. Where they run to, I do not know. But I
+ think I understand what they run from.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lounge Room of the Club
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Equally high in the social scale but done quite differently is the Club
+ Introduction. It is done by a club man who, for the life of him, can't
+ remember the names of either of the two club men whom he is introducing,
+ and who each, for the life of him, can't think of the name of the man they
+ are being introduced by. It runs&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I say, I beg your pardon&mdash;I thought, of course, you two fellows
+ knew one another perfectly well&mdash;let me introduce&mdash;urr&mdash;&mdash;wurr&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later on, after three whiskey-and-sodas, each of the three finds out the
+ names of the other two, surreptitiously from the hall porter. But it makes
+ no difference. They forget them again anyway. Now let us move up higher,
+ in fact, very high. Let us approach the real thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Introduction to H.E. the Viceroy of India, K.C.B.,
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ K.C.S.I., S.O.S.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The most exalted form of introduction is seen in the presentation of Mr.
+ Tomkins, American tourist, to H.E. the Viceroy of India. An aide-de-camp
+ in uniform at the foot of a grand staircase shouts, "Mr. Tomkins!" An
+ aide-de-camp at the top (one minute later) calls "Mr. Thompson"; another
+ aide, four feet further on, calls "Mr. Torps."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a military secretary, standing close to His Excellency, takes Mr.
+ Tomkins by the neck and bends him down toward the floor and says very
+ clearly and distinctly, "Mr. Torpentine." Then he throws him out by the
+ neck into the crowd beyond and calls for another. The thing is done. Mr.
+ Tomkins wipes the perspiration from his hair with his handkerchief and
+ goes back at full speed to the Hoogli Hotel, Calcutta, eager for
+ stationery to write at once to Ohio and say that he knows the Viceroy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Office Introduction, One-sided
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This introduction comes into our office, slipping past whoever keeps the
+ door with a packet of books under its arm. It says&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ledd me introduze myself. The book proposition vidge I am introduzing is
+ one vidge ve are now pudding on the market..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, of two things, one&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Either a crash of glass is heard as the speaker is hurled through the
+ skylight, or he walks out twenty minutes later, bowing profusely as he
+ goes, and leaving us gazing in remorse at a signed document entitling us
+ to receive the "Masterpieces of American Poetry" in sixty volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Stage
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything on the stage is done far better than in real life. This is true
+ of introductions. There is a warmth, a soul, in the stage introduction not
+ known in the chilly atmosphere of everyday society. Let me quote as an
+ example of a stage introduction the formula used, in the best melodramatic
+ art, in the kitchen-living-room (stove right centre) of the New England
+ farm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Neighbour Jephson's son, this is my little gal, as good and sweet a
+ little gal, as mindful of her old father, as you'll find in all New
+ England. Neighbour Jephson's son, she's been my all in all to me, this
+ little gal, since I laid her mother in the ground five Christmases ago&mdash;"
+ The speaker is slightly overcome and leans against a cardboard clock for
+ strength: he recovers and goes on&mdash;"Hope, this is Neighbour Jephson's
+ son, new back from over the seas, as fine a lad, gal, if he's like the
+ folk that went before him, as ever followed the sea. Hope, your hand. My
+ boy, your hand. See to his comfort, Hope, while I go and read the Good
+ Book a spell in the barnyard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indian Formula
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many people, tired of the empty phrases of society, look back wistfully to
+ the simple direct speech of savage life. Such persons will find useful the
+ usual form of introduction (the shorter form) prevalent among our North
+ American Indians (at least as gathered from the best literary model):
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Friends and comrades who are worthy,
+ See and look with all your eyesight,
+ Listen with your sense of hearing,
+ Gather with your apprehension&mdash;
+ Bow your heads, O trees, and hearken.
+ Hush thy rustling, corn, and listen;
+ Turn thine ear and give attention;
+ Ripples of the running water,
+ Pause a moment in your channels&mdash;
+ Here I bring you,&mdash;Hiawatha."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last line of this can be changed to suit the particular case. It can
+ just as easily read, at the end, "Here is Henry Edward Eastwood," or,
+ "Here is Hal McGiverin, Junior," or anything else. All names fit the
+ sense. That, in fact, was the wonderful art of Longfellow&mdash;the sense
+ being independent of the words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Platform Introduction
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a form of introduction cruelly familiar to those who know it. It
+ is used by the sour-looking villain facetiously called in newspaper
+ reports the "genial chairman" of the meeting. While he is saying it the
+ victim in his little chair on the platform is a target for the eyes of a
+ thousand people who are wondering why he wears odd socks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The next speaker, ladies and gentlemen, is one who needs no introduction
+ to this gathering. His name" (here the chairman consults a little card)
+ "is one that has become a household word. His achievements in" (here the
+ chairman looks at his card again, studies it, turns it upside down and
+ adds) "in many directions are familiar to all of you." There is a feeble
+ attempt at applause and the chairman then lifts his hand and says in a
+ plain business-like tone&mdash;"Will those of the audience who are leaving
+ kindly step as lightly as possible." He is about to sit down, but then
+ adds as a pleasant afterthought for the speaker to brood over&mdash;"I may
+ say, while I am on my feet, that next week our society is to have a REAL
+ treat in hearing&mdash;et cetera and so forth&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II&mdash;HOW TO OPEN A CONVERSATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After the ceremony of introduction is completed the next thing to consider
+ is the proper way to open a conversation. The beginning of conversation is
+ really the hardest part. It is the social equivalent to "going over the
+ top." It may best be studied in the setting and surroundings of the
+ Evening Reception, where people stand upright and agonise, balancing a
+ dish of ice-cream. Here conversation reaches its highest pitch of social
+ importance. One must talk or die. Something may be done to stave it off a
+ little by vigorous eating. But the food at such affairs is limited. There
+ comes a point when it is absolutely necessary to say something.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beginning, as I say, is the hardest problem. Other communities solve
+ it better than we do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese System
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In China conversation, between strangers after introduction, is always
+ opened by the question, "And how old are YOU?" This strikes me as
+ singularly apt and sensible. Here is the one thing that is common ground
+ between any two people, high or low, rich or poor&mdash;how far are you on
+ your pilgrimage in life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Penetentiary Method
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compare with the Chinese method the grim, but very significant formula
+ that is employed (I believe it is a literal fact) in the exercise yards of
+ the American penitentiaries. "What have YOU brought?" asks the San Quentin
+ or Sing Sing convict of the new arrival, meaning, "And how long is your
+ sentence?" There is the same human touch about this, the same common
+ ground of interest, as in the Chinese formula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Polite Society
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in our polite society we have as yet found no better method than
+ beginning with a sort of medical diagnosis&mdash;"How do you do?" This
+ admits of no answer. Convention forbids us to reply in detail that we are
+ feeling if anything slightly lower than last week, but that though our
+ temperature has risen from ninety-one-fifty to ninety-one-seventy-five,
+ our respiration is still normal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still worse is the weather as an opening topic. For it either begins and
+ ends as abruptly as the medical diagnosis, or it leads the two talkers on
+ into a long and miserable discussion of the weather of yesterday, of the
+ day before yesterday, of last month, of last year and the last fifty
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let one beware, however, of a conversation that begins too easily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mutual Friends' Opening
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This can be seen at any evening reception, as when the hostess introduces
+ two people who are supposed to have some special link to unite them at
+ once with an instantaneous snap, as when, for instance, they both come
+ from the same town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me introduce Mr. Sedley," said the hostess. "I think you and Mr.
+ Sedley are from the same town, Miss Smiles. Miss Smiles, Mr. Sedley."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Off they go at a gallop. "I'm so delighted to meet you," says Mr. Sedley.
+ "It's good to hear from anybody who comes from our little town." (If he's
+ a rollicking humourist, Mr. Sedley calls it his little old "burg.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes," answers Miss Smiles. "I'm from Winnipeg too. I was so anxious
+ to meet you to ask if you knew the McGowans. They're my greatest friends
+ at home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The&mdash;who?" asks Mr. Sedley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The McGowans&mdash;on Selkirk Avenue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No-o, I don't think I do. I know the Prices on Selkirk Avenue. Of course
+ you know them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Prices? No, I don't believe I do&mdash;I don't think I ever heard of
+ the Prices. You don't mean the Pearsons? I know them very well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I don't know the Pearsons. The Prices live just near the reservoir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, then I'm sure I don't know them. The Pearsons live close to the
+ college."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Close to the College? Is it near the William Kennedys?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think I know the William Kennedys."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the way the conversation goes on for ten minutes. Both Mr. Sedley
+ and Miss Smiles are getting desperate. Their faces are fixed. Their
+ sentences are reduced to&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know the Petersons?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. Do you know the Appleby's?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. Do you know the Willie Johnsons?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then at last comes a rift in the clouds. One of them happens to mention
+ Beverley Dixon. The other is able to cry exultingly&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Beverley Dixon? Oh, yes, rather. At least, I don't KNOW him, but I used
+ often to hear the Applebys speak of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the other exclaims with equal delight&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know him very well either, but I used to hear the Willie Johnsons
+ talk about him all the time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half an hour after they are still standing there talking of Beverly Dixon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Etiquette Book
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Personally I have suffered so much from inability to begin a conversation
+ that not long ago I took the extreme step of buying a book on the subject.
+ I regret to say that I got but little light or help from it. It was
+ written by the Comtesse de Z&mdash;. According to the preface the Comtesse
+ had "moved in the highest circles of all the European capitals." If so,
+ let her go on moving there. I for one, after trying her book, shall never
+ stop her. This is how the Comtesse solves the problem of opening a
+ conversation:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In commencing a conversation, the greatest care should be devoted to the
+ selection of a topic, good taste demanding that one should sedulously
+ avoid any subject of which one's vis-a-vis may be in ignorance. Nor are
+ the mere words alone to be considered. In the art of conversation much
+ depends upon manner. The true conversationalist must, in opening, invest
+ himself with an atmosphere of interest and solicitude. He must, as we say
+ in French, be prepared to payer les rais de la conversation. In short, he
+ must 'give himself an air.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There! Go and do it if you can. I admit that I can't. I have no idea what
+ the French phrase above means, but I know that personally I cannot "invest
+ myself with an atmosphere of interest." I might manage about two per cent
+ on five hundred dollars. But what is that in these days of plutocracy?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any rate I tried the Comtesse's directions at a reception last week, on
+ being introduced to an unknown lady. And they failed. I cut out nearly all
+ the last part, and confined myself merely to the proposed selection of a
+ topic, endeavouring to pick it with as much care as if I were selecting a
+ golf club out of a bag. Naturally I had to confine myself to the few
+ topics that I know about, and on which I can be quite interesting if I get
+ started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know any mathematics?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was too bad. I could have shown her some good puzzles about the
+ squares of the prime numbers up to forty-one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I paused and gave myself more air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How are you," I asked, "on hydrostatics?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I beg your pardon," she said. Evidently she was ignorant again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you ever studied the principles of aerial navigation?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," She answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was pausing again and trying to invest myself with an air of further
+ interest, when another man was introduced to her, quite evidently, from
+ his appearance, a vapid jackass without one tenth of the brain calibre
+ that I have.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, how do you do?" he said. "I say, I've just heard that Harvard beat
+ Princeton this afternoon. Great, isn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In two minutes they were talking like old friends. How do these silly
+ asses do it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Dressed Hogs are Dull
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An equally unsuccessful type of conversation, often overheard at
+ receptions, is where one of the two parties to it is too surly, too
+ stupid, or too self-important and too rich to talk, and the other labours
+ in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surly one is, let us say, a middle-aged, thick-set man of the type
+ that anybody recognizes under the name Money Hog. This kind of person, as
+ viewed standing in his dress suit, mannerless and stupid, too rich to have
+ to talk and too dull to know how to, always recalls to my mind the
+ head-line of the market reports in the newspapers, "Dressed Hogs are
+ Dull."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other party to the conversation is a winsome and agreeable woman,
+ trying her best to do her social duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, tenez, as the Comtesse of Z&mdash;&mdash; would say, I can exactly
+ illustrate the position and attitude of the two of them from a
+ recollection of my childhood. I remember that in one of my nursery books
+ of forty years ago there was a picture entitled "The Lady in Love With A
+ Swine." A willowy lady in a shimmering gown leaned over the rail of a
+ tessellated pig-sty, in which an impossibly clean hog stood in an attitude
+ of ill-mannered immobility. With the picture was the rhyming legend,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ There was a Lady in love with a swine,
+ "Honey," said she, "will you be mine?
+ I'll build you a silver sty
+ And in it you shall lie."
+ "Honk!" said He.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was something, as I recall it, in the sweet willingness of the Lady
+ that was singularly appealing, and contrasted with the dull mannerless
+ passivity of the swine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In each of the little stanzas that followed, the pretty advances of the
+ Lady were rebuffed by a surly and monosyllabic "honk" from the hog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the social counterpart of the scene in the picture-book. Mr.
+ Grunt, capitalist, is standing in his tessellated sty,&mdash;the
+ tessellated sty being represented by the hardwood floor of a fashionable
+ drawing-room. His face is just the same as the face of the pig in the
+ picture-book. The willowy lady, in the same shimmering clothes and with
+ the same pretty expression of eagerness, is beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Mr. Grunt," she is saying, "how interesting it must be to be in your
+ place and feel such tremendous power. Our hostess was just telling me that
+ you own practically all the shoemaking machinery factories&mdash;it IS
+ shoe-making machinery, isn't it?&mdash;east of Pennsylvania."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Honk!" says Mr. Grunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shoe-making machinery," goes on the willowy lady (she really knows
+ nothing and cares less about it) "must be absolutely fascinating, is it
+ not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Honk!" says Mr. Grunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But still you must find it sometimes a dreadful strain, do you not? I
+ mean, so much brain work, and that sort of thing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Honk!" says Mr. Grunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should love so much to see one of your factories. They must be so
+ interesting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Honk!" says Mr. Grunt. Then he turns and moves away sideways. Into his
+ little piggy eyes has come a fear that the lady is going to ask him to
+ subscribe to something, or wants a block of his common stock, or his name
+ on a board of directors. So he leaves her. Yet if he had known it she is
+ probably as rich as he is, or richer, and hasn't the faintest interest in
+ his factories, and never intends to go near one. Only she is fit to move
+ and converse in polite society and Mr. Grunt is not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 2.&mdash;Heroes and Heroines
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "What are you reading?" I asked the other day of a blue-eyed boy of ten
+ curled up among the sofa cushions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He held out the book for me to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dauntless Ned among the Cannibals," he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it exciting?" I enquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not very," said the child in a matter-of-fact tone. "But it's not bad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took the book from him and read aloud at the opened page.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In a compact mass the gigantic savages rushed upon our hero, shrieking
+ with rage and brandishing their huge clubs. Ned stood his ground
+ fearlessly, his back to a banana tree. With a sweep of his cutlass he
+ severed the head of the leading savage from his body, while with a back
+ stroke of his dirk he stabbed another to the heart. But resistance against
+ such odds was vain. By sheer weight of numbers, Ned was borne to the
+ ground. His arms were then pinioned with stout ropes made of the fibres of
+ the boobooda tree. With shrieks of exultation the savages dragged our hero
+ to an opening in the woods where a huge fire was burning, over which was
+ suspended an enormous caldron of bubbling oil. 'Boil him, boil him,'
+ yelled the savages, now wrought to the point of frenzy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That seems fairly exciting, isn't it?" I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, he won't get boiled," said the little boy. "He's the hero."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I knew that the child has already taken his first steps in the
+ disillusionment of fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course he was quite right as to Ned. This wonderful youth, the hero
+ with whom we all begin an acquaintance with books, passes unhurt through a
+ thousand perils. Cannibals, Apache Indians, war, battles, shipwrecks,
+ leave him quite unscathed. At the most Ned gets a flesh wound which is
+ healed, in exactly one paragraph, by that wonderful drug called a
+ "simple."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the most amazing thing about this particular hero, the boy Ned, is the
+ way in which he turns up in all the great battles and leading events of
+ the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Ned, for example, who at the critical moment at Gettysburg turned
+ in his saddle to General Meade and said quietly, "General, the day is
+ ours." "If it is," answered Meade, as he folded his field glass, "you
+ alone, Ned, have saved it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same way Ned was present at the crossing of the Delaware with
+ Washington. Thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What do you see, Ned?' said Washington, as they peered from the leading
+ boat into the driving snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ice,' said Ned. 'My boy,' said the Great American General, and a tear
+ froze upon his face as he spoke, 'you have saved us all.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is Ned at Runningmede when King John with his pen in hand was about
+ to sign the Magna Carta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For a moment the King paused irresolute, the uplifted quill in his hand,
+ while his crafty, furtive eyes indicated that he might yet break his
+ plighted faith with the assembled barons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ned laid his mailed hand upon the parchment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Sign it,' he said sternly, 'or take the consequences.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King signed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ned,' said the Baron de Bohun, as he removed his iron vizor from his
+ bronze face, 'thou hast this day saved all England.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the stories of our boyhood in which Ned figured, there was no such
+ thing as a heroine, or practically none. At best she was brought in as an
+ afterthought. It was announced on page three hundred and one that at the
+ close of Ned's desperate adventures in the West Indies he married the
+ beautiful daughter of Don Diego, the Spanish governor of Portobello; or
+ else, at the end of the great war with Napoleon, that he married a
+ beautiful and accomplished French girl whose parents had perished in the
+ Revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ned generally married away from home. In fact his marriages were intended
+ to cement the nations, torn asunder by Ned's military career. But
+ sometimes he returned to his native town, all sunburned, scarred and
+ bronzed from battle (the bronzing effect of being in battle is always
+ noted): he had changed from a boy to a man: that is, from a boy of fifteen
+ to a man of sixteen. In such a case Ned marries in his own home town. It
+ is done after this fashion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But who is this who advances smiling to greet him as he crosses the
+ familiar threshold of the dear old house? Can this tall, beautiful girl be
+ Gwendoline, the child-playmate of his boyhood?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, can it? I ask it of every experienced reader&mdash;can it or can it
+ not?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ned had his day, in the boyhood of each of us. We presently passed him by.
+ I am speaking, of course, of those of us who are of maturer years and can
+ look back upon thirty or forty years of fiction reading. "Ned," flourishes
+ still, I understand, among the children of today. But now he flies in
+ aeroplanes, and dives in submarines, and gives his invaluable military
+ advice to General Joffre and General Pershing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with the oncoming of adolescent years something softer was needed than
+ Ned with his howling cannibals and his fusillade of revolver shots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the "Ned" of the Adventure Books was supplanted by the Romantic Heroine
+ of the Victorian Age and the Long-winded Immaculate who accompanied her as
+ the Hero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know when these two first opened their twin career. Whether
+ Fenimore Cooper or Walter Scott began them, I cannot say. But they had an
+ undisputed run on two continents for half a century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Heroine was a sylph. Her chiefest charm lay in her physical
+ feebleness. She was generally presented to us in some such words as these:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let us now introduce to our readers the fair Madeline of Rokewood.
+ Slender and graceful and of a form so fragile that her frame scarce fitted
+ to fulfil its bodily functions...she appeared rather as one of those
+ ethereal beings of the air who might visit for a brief moment this
+ terrestrial scene, than one of its earthly inhabitants. Her large,
+ wondering eyes looked upon the beholder in childlike innocence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sounds simple, doesn't it? One might suspect there was something wrong
+ with the girl's brain. But listen to this:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The mind of Madeline, elegantly formed by the devoted labours of the
+ venerable Abbe, her tutor, was of a degree of culture rarely found in one
+ so young. Though scarce eighteen summers had flown over her head at the
+ time when we introduce her to our readers, she was intimately conversant
+ with the French, Italian, Spanish, and Provencal tongues. The abundant
+ pages of history, both ancient and modern, sacred and profane, had been
+ opened for her by her devoted instructor. In music she played with
+ exquisite grace and accuracy upon both the spinet and the harpsichord,
+ while her voice, though lacking something in compass, was sweet and
+ melodious to a degree."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From such a list of accomplishments it is clear that Madeline could have
+ matriculated, even at the Harvard Law School, with five minutes
+ preparation. Is it any wonder that there was a wild rush for Madeline? In
+ fact, right after the opening description of the Heroine, there follows an
+ ominous sentence such as this:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was this exquisite being whose person Lord Rip de Viperous, a man
+ whose reputation had shamed even the most licentious court of the age, and
+ had led to his banishment from the presence of the king, had sworn to get
+ within his power."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Personally I don't blame Lord Rip a particle; it must have been very rough
+ on him to have been banished from the presence of the king&mdash;enough to
+ inflame a man to do anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With two such characters in the story, the scene was set and the plot and
+ adventures followed as a matter of course. Lord Rip de Viperous pursued
+ the Heroine. But at every step he is frustrated. He decoys Madeline to a
+ ruined tower at midnight, her innocence being such and the gaps left in
+ her education by the Abbe being so wide, that she is unaware of the danger
+ of ruined towers after ten thirty P.M. In fact, "tempted by the exquisite
+ clarity and fulness of the moon, which magnificent orb at this season
+ spread its widest effulgence over all nature, she accepts the invitation
+ of her would-be-betrayer to gather upon the battlements of the ruined keep
+ the strawberries which grew there in wild profusion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at the critical moment, Lord de Viperous is balked. At the very
+ instant when he is about to seize her in his arms, Madeline turns upon him
+ and says in such icy tones, "Titled villain that you are, unhand me," that
+ the man is "cowed." He slinks down the ruined stairway "cowed." And at
+ every later turn, at each renewed attempt, Madeline "cows" him in like
+ fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover while Lord de Viperous is being thus cowed by Madeline the
+ Heroine, he is also being "dogged" by the Hero. This counterpart of
+ Madeline who shared her popularity for fifty years can best be described
+ as the Long-winded Immaculate Hero. Entirely blameless in his morals, and
+ utterly virtuous in his conduct, he possessed at least one means of
+ defending himself. He could make speeches. This he did on all occasions.
+ With these speeches he "dogged" Lord de Viperous. Here is the style of
+ them:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'My Lord,' said Markham..." (incidentally let it be explained that this
+ particular brand of hero was always known by his surname and his surname
+ was always Markham) &mdash;"'My lord, the sentiments that you express and
+ the demeanour which you have evinced are so greatly at variance with the
+ title that you bear and the lineage of which you spring that no authority
+ that you can exercise and no threats that you are able to command shall
+ deter me from expressing that for which, however poor and inadequate my
+ powers of speech, all these of whom and for what I am what I am, shall
+ answer to it for the integrity of that, which, whether or not, is at least
+ as it is. My lord, I have done. Or shall I speak more plainly still?'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it to be wondered that after this harangue Lord Rip sank into a chair,
+ a hideous convulsion upon his face, murmuring&mdash;"It is enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But successful as they were as Hero and Heroine, Markham and Madeline
+ presently passed off the scene. Where they went to, I do not know. Perhaps
+ Markham got elected in the legislature of Massachusetts. At any rate they
+ disappeared from fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There followed in place of Madeline, the athletic sunburned heroine with
+ the tennis racket. She was generally called Kate Middleton, or some such
+ plain, straightforward designation. She wore strong walking boots and
+ leather leggings. She ate beef steak. She shot with a rifle. For a while
+ this Boots and Beef Heroine (of the middle nineties) made a tremendous
+ hit. She climbed crags in the Rockies. She threw steers in Colorado with a
+ lariat. She came out strong in sea scenes and shipwrecks, and on sinking
+ steamers, where she "cowed" the trembling stewards and "dogged" the
+ mutinous sailors in the same fashion that Madeline used to "cow" and "dog"
+ Lord Rip de Viperous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the Boots and Beef Heroine went as her running mate the out-of-doors
+ man, whose face had been tanned and whose muscles had been hardened into
+ tempered steel in wild rides over the Pampas of Patagonia, and who had
+ learned every art and craft of savage life by living among the wild
+ Hoodoos of the Himalayas. This Air-and-Grass-man, as he may be called, is
+ generally supposed to write the story... He was "I" all through. And he
+ had an irritating modesty in speaking of his own prowess. Instead of
+ saying straight out that he was the strongest and bravest man in the
+ world, he implied it indirectly on every page.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, for example, is a typical scene in which "I" and Kate figure in a
+ desperate adventure in the Rocky Mountains, pursued by Indians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are about to descend on a single cord from the summit of a lofty crag,
+ our sole chance of escape (and a frightfully small chance at that) from
+ the roving band of Apaches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With my eye I measured the fearsome descent below us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Hold fast to the line, Miss Middleton,' I said as I set my foot against
+ a projecting rock. (Please note that the Air-and-Grass Hero in these
+ stories always calls the Heroine Miss Middleton right up to the very end.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The noble girl seized the knotted end of the buckskin line. 'All right,
+ Mr. Smith,' she said with quiet confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I braced myself for the effort. My muscles like tempered steel responded
+ to the strain. I lowered a hundred fathoms of the line. I could already
+ hear the voice of Kate far down the cliff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't let go the line, Miss Middleton,' I called. (Here was an excellent
+ piece of advice.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The girl's clear voice floated up to me... 'All right, Mr. Smith,' she
+ called, 'I won't.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course they landed safely at the foot of the cliff, after the manner of
+ all heroes and heroines. And here it is that Kate in her turn comes out
+ strong, at the evening encampment, frying bacon over a blazing fire of
+ pine branches, while the firelight illuminates her leather leggings and
+ her rough but picturesque costume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The circumstances might seem a little daring and improper. But the reader
+ knows that it is all right, because the hero and heroine always call one
+ another Miss Middleton and Mr. Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not till right at the end, when they are just getting back again to the
+ confines of civilization, do they depart from this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the scene that happens... The hero and heroine are on the platform
+ of the way-side depot where they are to part... Kate to return to the
+ luxurious home of her aunt, Mrs. van der Kyper of New York, and the
+ Air-and-Grass Man to start for the pampas of Patagonia to hunt the hoopoo.
+ The Air-and-Grass Man is about to say goodbye. Then... "'Kate,' I said, as
+ I held the noble girl's gloved hand in mine a moment. She looked me in the
+ face with the full, frank, fearless gaze of a sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes?' she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Kate,' I repeated, 'do you know what I was thinking of when I held the
+ line while you were half way down the cliff?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No,' she murmured, while a flush suffused her cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I was thinking, Kate,' I said, 'that if the rope broke I should be very
+ sorry.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Edward!' she exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I clasped her in my arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Shall I make a confession,' said Kate, looking up timidly, half an hour
+ later, as I tenderly unclasped the noble girl from my encircling arms,
+ ...'I was thinking the same thing too.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Kate and Edward had their day and then, as Tennyson says, they
+ "passed," or as less cultivated people put it, "they were passed up in the
+ air."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the years went by they failed to please. Kate was a great improvement
+ upon Madeline. But she wouldn't do. The truth was, if one may state it
+ openly, Kate wasn't TOUGH enough. In fact she wasn't tough at all. She
+ turned out to be in reality just as proper and just as virtuous as
+ Madeline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, too, with the Air-and-Grass Hero. For all of his tempered muscles and
+ his lariat and his Winchester rifle, he was presently exposed as a fraud.
+ He was just as Long-winded and just as Immaculate as the Victorian Hero
+ that he displaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the public really wants and has always wanted in its books is
+ wickedness. Fiction was recognised in its infancy as being a work of the
+ devil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the popular novel, despairing of real wickedness among the cannibals,
+ and in the ruined tower at midnight, and on the open-air of the prairies,
+ shifted its scenes again. It came indoors. It came back to the city. And
+ it gave us the new crop of heroes and heroines and the scenes and settings
+ with which the fiction of to-day has replaced the Heroes and Heroines of
+ Yesterday. The Lure of the City is its theme. It pursues its course to the
+ music of the ukalele, in the strident racket of the midnight cabaret. Here
+ move the Harvard graduate in his dinner jacket, drunk at one in the
+ morning. Here is the hard face of Big Business scowling at its desk; and
+ here the glittering Heroine of the hour in her dress of shimmering
+ sequins, making such tepid creatures as Madeline and Kate look like the
+ small change out of a twenty-five cent shinplaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 3.&mdash;The Discovery of America;
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Being Done into Moving Pictures and Out Again
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "No greater power for education," said President Shurman the other day,
+ "has come among us during the last forty years than the moving picture."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am not certain that it was President Shurman. And he may not have said
+ it the other day. Nor do I feel absolutely sure that he referred to the
+ LAST forty years. Indeed now that I come to think of it, I don't believe
+ it WAS Shurman. In fact it may have been ex-President Eliot. Or was it,
+ perhaps, President Hadley of Yale? Or did I say it myself? Judging by the
+ accuracy and force of the language, I think I must have. I doubt if
+ Shurman or Hadley could have put it quite so neatly. There's a touch about
+ it that I recognise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let that pass. At any rate it is something that everybody is saying
+ and thinking. All our educators have turned their brains towards the
+ possibility of utilising moving pictures for the purpose of education. It
+ is being freely said that history and geography, and even arithmetic,
+ instead of being taught by the slow and painful process of books and
+ memory, can be imparted through the eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had no sooner heard of this idea than I became impassioned to put it
+ into practice. I have therefore prepared, or am preparing, a film,
+ especially designed for the elementary classes of our schools to narrate
+ the story of the discovery of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This I should like the reader to sit and see with me, in the eye of his
+ imagination. But let me first give the plain, unvarnished account of the
+ discovery of America as I took it from one of our school histories.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Christopher Columbus, otherwise Christoforo Colombo,
+ the celebrated discoverer of America, was born of poor
+ but honest parents in the Italian city of Genoa. His
+ mother, Teresa Colombo, seems to have been a woman of
+ great piety and intelligence. Of his father, Bartolomeo
+ Colombo, nothing is recorded. From his earliest youth
+ the boy Christopher developed a passion for mathematics,
+ astronomy, geodesy, and the other sciences of the
+ day..."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But, no,&mdash;stop! I am going too fast. The reader will get it better if
+ we turn it into pictures bit by bit as we go on. Let the reader therefore
+ imagine himself seated before the curtain in the lighted theatre. All
+ ready? Very good. Let the music begin&mdash;Star Spangled Banner, please&mdash;flip
+ off the lights. Now then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DISCOVERY OF AMERICA AUTHORIZED BY THE BOARD OF CENSORS OF NEW YORK STATE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There we are. That gives the child the correct historical background right
+ away. Now what goes on next? Let me see. Ah, yes, of course. We throw an
+ announcement on the screen, thus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS.. Mr. Quinn
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the face of Mr. Quinn (in a bowler hat) is thrown on the screen and
+ fades out again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We follow him up with
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SPIRIT OF AMERICA.. Miss E. Dickenson
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, we are ready to begin in earnest. Let us make the scenario together.
+ First idea to be expressed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Christopher Columbus was the son of poor but honest parents."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This might seem difficult to a beginner, but to those of us who frequent
+ the movies it is nothing. The reel spins and we see&mdash;a narrow room&mdash;(it
+ is always narrow in the movies)&mdash;to indicate straitened circumstances&mdash;cardboard
+ furniture&mdash;high chairs with carved backs&mdash;two cardboard beams
+ across the ceiling (all this means the Middle Ages)&mdash;a long dinner
+ table&mdash;all the little Columbuses seated at it&mdash;Teresa Colombo
+ cutting bread at one end of it&mdash;gives a slice to each, one slice
+ (that means poverty in the movies)&mdash;Teresa rolls her eyes up&mdash;all
+ the little children put their hands together and say grace (this registers
+ honesty). The thing is done. Let us turn back to the history book and see
+ what is to be put in next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...The father of Christopher, Bartolomeo Colombo, was a man of no
+ especial talent of whom nothing is recorded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That's easy. First we announce him on the screen:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BARTOLOMEO COLOMBO.. Mr. Henderson
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we stick him on the film on a corner of the room, leaning up against
+ the cardboard clock and looking at the children. This attitude in the
+ movies always indicates a secondary character of no importance. His
+ business is to look at the others and to indicate forgetfulness of self,
+ incompetence, unimportance, vacuity, simplicity. Note how this differs
+ from the attitudes of important characters. If a movie character&mdash;one
+ of importance&mdash;is plotting or scheming, he seats himself at a little
+ round table, drums on it with his fingers, and half closes one eye. If he
+ is being talked to, or having a letter or document or telegram read to
+ him, he stands "facing full" and working his features up and down to
+ indicate emotion sweeping over them. If he is being "exposed" (which is
+ done by pointing fingers at him), he hunches up like a snake in an angle
+ of the room with both eyes half shut and his mouth set as if he had just
+ eaten a lemon. But if he has none of these things to express and is only
+ in the scene as a background for the others, then he goes over and leans
+ in an easy attitude against the tall cardboard clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That then is the place for Bartolomeo Colombo. To the clock with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now what comes next?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...The young Christopher developed at an early age a passion for study,
+ and especially for astronomy, geometry, geodesy, and the exact science of
+ the day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quite easy. On spins the film. Young Christopher in a garret room (all
+ movie study is done in garrets). The cardboard ceiling slopes within six
+ inches of his head. This shows that the boy never rises from his books. He
+ can't. On a table in front of him is a little globe and a pair of
+ compasses. Christopher spins the globe round. Then he makes two circles
+ with the compasses, one after the other, very carefully. This is the
+ recognised movie symbol for mathematical research.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So there we have Christopher&mdash;poor, honest, studious, full of
+ circles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now to the book again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...The young Columbus received his education at the monastery of the
+ Franciscan monks at Genoa. Here he spent seven years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, but we can put that on the screen in seven seconds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn on the film.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Movie Monastery&mdash;exterior, done in grey cardboard&mdash;ding, dong,
+ ding, dong (man in the orchestra with triangle and stick)&mdash;procession
+ of movie friars&mdash;faces more like thugs, but never mind&mdash;they are
+ friars because they walk two and two in a procession, singing out of hymn
+ books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for the book again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...Fra Giacomo, the prior of the monastery, delighted with the boy's
+ progress, encourages his studies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wait a minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FRA GIACOMO... Mr. Edward Sims
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims's face, clean-shaved under a round hat fades in and out. Then the
+ picture goes on. Movie monastery interior&mdash;young Christopher, still
+ at a table with compasses&mdash;benevolent friar bending over him&mdash;Christopher
+ turns the compasses and looks up with a what-do-you-know-about-that look&mdash;astonishment
+ and delight of friar (registered by opening his eyes like a bull frog).
+ All this shows study, progress, application. The friars are delighted with
+ the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...Christopher, after seven years of study, reaches the firm conviction
+ that the world is round."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Picture. Christopher&mdash;with his globe&mdash;jumps up from table&mdash;passes
+ his fingers round and round the globe&mdash;registers the joy of invention&mdash;seats
+ himself at table and draws circles with his compasses furiously. He fades
+ out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...Fired with his discovery Christopher sets out from the monastery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stop a minute, this is a little hard. Fired. How can we show Christopher
+ "fired." We can't. Perhaps he'll be fired if the film is no good, but we
+ must omit it just now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He sets out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One second only for this. Monastery door (double cardboard with iron
+ across it)&mdash;Christopher leaving&mdash;carries a wallet to mean
+ distance. Fra Giacomo blessing him&mdash;fade out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...For eighteen years Columbus vainly travelled through the world on foot
+ offering his discovery at the courts of Europe, in vain, though asking
+ nothing in return for it except a fleet of ships, two hundred men and
+ provisions for two years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To anybody not used to scenarios this looks a large order. Eighteen years
+ seems difficult to put on the screen. In reality this is exactly where the
+ trained movie man sees his chance. Here he can put in anything and
+ everything that he likes, bringing in, in a slightly mediaeval form, all
+ his favourite movie scenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, for example, here we have first the good old midnight cabaret supper
+ scene&mdash;thinly disguised as the court of the King of Sardinia. To turn
+ a cabaret into a court the movie men merely exchange their Fifth Avenue
+ evening dress for short coats and knee breeches, heavily wadded and
+ quilted, and wear large wigs. Quilted pants and wigs register courtiers,
+ the courtiers of anybody&mdash;Charlemagne, Queen Elizabeth, Peter the
+ Great, Louis Quatorze, anybody and everybody who ever had courtiers. Just
+ as men with bare legs mean Romans, men in pea-jackets mean detectives, and
+ young men drunk in evening dress Harvard graduates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ladies at the court of Sardinia wear huge paper frills round their
+ necks. Otherwise it is the cabaret scene with the familiar little tables,
+ and the ukaleles going like mad in one corner, and black sarsaparilla
+ being poured foaming into the glasses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this scene Columbus moves up and down, twirling his little globe and
+ looking appealingly in their faces. All laugh at him. His part is just the
+ same as that of the poor little girl trying to sell up-state violets in
+ the midnight cabaret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Court of Sardinia fades and the film shows Columbus vainly soliciting
+ financial aid from Lorenzo the Magnificent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stop one minute, please.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LORENZO THE MAGNIFICENT... Mr. L. Evans
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This scene again is old and familiar. It is the well-known interior
+ representing the Grinding Capitalist, or the Bitter Banker refusing aid to
+ the boy genius who has invented a patent pea-rake. The only change is that
+ Lorenzo wears a huge wig, has no telephone, and handles a large quill pen
+ (to register Middle Ages) which he wiggles furiously up and down on a
+ piece of parchment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the eighteen years, with scenes of this sort turn out the easiest part
+ of the whole show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us to the book again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...After eighteen years Columbus, now past the prime of life, is
+ presented at the Court of Queen Isabella of Spain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just half a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ QUEEN ISABELLA.. Miss Janet Briggs
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There will be very probably at this point a slight applause from the back
+ of the hall. Miss Briggs was here last week, or her astral body was&mdash;as
+ Maggie of the Cattle Ranges. The impression that she made is passed on to
+ Isabella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen and her consort, King Ferdinand of Aragon..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stop, stick him on the film.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FERDINAND OF ARAGON.. Mr. Edward Giles
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (Large wig, flat velvet cap and square whiskers&mdash;same make-up as for
+ Ferdinand of Bulgaria, Ferdinand of Bohemia, or any of the Ferdinands.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...were immediately seized with enthusiasm for the marvellous discovery
+ of the Genoese adventurer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Picture. Columbus hands his globe to Isabella and his compasses to
+ Ferdinand. They register delight and astonishment. The Queen turns the
+ globe round and round and holds it up to Ferdinand. Both indicate with
+ their faces, well-what-do-you-know-about-this. Ferdinand makes a circle
+ with the compasses on a table&mdash;the courtiers, fickle creatures, crowd
+ around. They are still dressed as in Sardinia eighteen years ago. In fact,
+ one recognises quite a lot of them. When Ferdinand draws the circle they
+ fall back in wild astonishment, gesticulating frantically. What they mean
+ is, "It's a circle, it's a circle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King and Queen at once place three ships at the disposal of
+ Columbus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On with the picture. The harbour of the port of Palos&mdash; ships bobbing
+ up and down (it is really the oyster boats in Baltimore Bay but it looks
+ just like Palos, or near enough). Notice Queen Isabella on the right, at
+ the top of a flight of steps, extending her hand and looking at Columbus.
+ Her gesture means, "Pick a ship, any ship you like, any colour." Just as
+ if she were saying, "Pick a card, any card you like."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We turn again to the history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...Christopher Columbus, now arrived at the height of his desire, sets
+ out upon his memorable voyage accompanied by a hundred companions in three
+ caravels, the Pinta, the Nina and the Espiritu Santo."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah, here we have the movie work&mdash;the real thing. Cardboard caravel
+ tossing on black water&mdash;seen first right close to us&mdash;we are
+ almost on board of it. Notice the movie sailors with black whiskers and
+ bare feet (bare feet in the movies always means a sailor, and black
+ whiskers mean Spaniards). Now we see the caravel a little way out&mdash;whoop!
+ How she bobs up and down! They give her that jolt (it's done with the
+ machine itself) to mean danger. There are all three caravels&mdash;Hoop&mdash;er&mdash;oo!
+ See them go up and down&mdash;stormy night coming all right. See the sun
+ setting in the west, over the water? They're heading straight for it.
+ Good-night Columbus&mdash;take care of yourself out there in the
+ blackness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During the voyage Columbus remained continually on deck. Sleeping at the
+ prow, his face towards the new world, he saw already in his dreams the
+ accomplishment of his hopes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On goes the picture. Christopher in the prow of the caravel (in the movies
+ a prow is made by putting two little board fences together and propping up
+ a bowsprit lengthwise over them). Columbus sits up, peers intently into
+ the darkness, his hand to his brow&mdash;registers a look. Do I see
+ America? No. Lies down, shuts his eyes and falls into an instantaneous
+ movie sleep. His face fades out slowly to music, which means that he is
+ going to dream. Then on the screen the announcement is shown:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SPIRIT OF AMERICA... Miss E. Dickenson
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ and here we have Miss Dickenson floating in the air above Columbus. She
+ wears nothing except mosquito netting, but she has got on enough of it to
+ get past the censor of the State of New York. Just enough, apparently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss E. Dickenson is joined by a whole troop of Miss Dickensons all in
+ white mosquito netting. They go through a series of beautiful evolutions,
+ floating over the sleeping figure of Columbus. The dance they do is meant
+ to typify, or rather to signify,&mdash;as a matter of fact we needn't
+ worry much about what it signified. It is an allegory, done in white
+ mosquito netting. That is generally held to be quite enough. Let us go
+ back to the book&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After a storm-tossed voyage of three months..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wait a bit. Turn on the picture again and toss the caravels up and down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...during which the food supply threatened to fail..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Put that on the screen, please. Columbus surrounded by ten sailors,
+ dividing up a potato.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...the caravels arrived in safety at the beautiful island of San
+ Salvador. Columbus, bearing the banner of Spain, stepped first ashore.
+ Surrounded by a wondering crowd of savages he prostrated himself upon the
+ beach and kissed the soil of the New World that he had discovered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this is so easy that it's too easy. It runs into pictures of itself.
+ Anybody, accustomed to the movies, can see Columbus with his banner and
+ the movie savages hopping up and down around him. Movie savages are gay,
+ gladsome creatures anyway, and hopping up and down is their chief mode of
+ expressing themselves. Add to them a sandy beach, with palm trees waving
+ visibly in the wind (it is always windy in the movies) and the thing is
+ done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just one further picture is needed to complete the film.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Columbus who returned to Europe to lay at the feet of the Spanish
+ sovereigns the world he had discovered, fell presently under the disfavour
+ of the court, and died in poverty and obscurity, a victim of the
+ ingratitude of princes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Last picture. Columbus dying under the poignant circumstances known only
+ in the movies&mdash;a garret room&mdash;ceiling lower than ever&mdash;a
+ truckle bed, narrow enough to kill him if all else failed&mdash;Teresa
+ Colombo his aged mother alone at his bedside&mdash;she offers him medicine
+ in a long spoon&mdash;(this shows, if nothing else would, that the man is
+ ill)&mdash;he shakes his head&mdash;puts out his hand and rests it on the
+ little globe&mdash;reaches feebly for his compasses&mdash;can't manage it&mdash;rolls
+ up his eyes and fades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The music plays softly and the inexorable film, like the reel of life
+ itself, spins on, announcing
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ At this theatre
+ All next week
+
+ MAGGIE MAY
+ and
+ WALTER CURRAN
+ in
+ IS IT WORTH IT
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And after that I can imagine the audience dispersing, and the now educated
+ children going off to their homes and one saying as he enters&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gee, I seen a great picture show at school to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes?" says his mother, "and what was it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, it was all about a gink that went round the cabarets trying to sell
+ an invention what he'd got but nobody wouldn't look at it till at last one
+ dame gave him three oyster boats, see? and so he and a lot of other guys
+ loaded them up and hiked off across the ocean."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And where did he go to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Africa. And he and the other guys had a great stand in with the natives
+ and he'd have sold his invention all right but one old dame got him alone
+ in a hut and poisoned him and took it off him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That, I think, is about the way the film would run. When it is finished I
+ must get President Shurman, or whoever it was, to come and see it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 4.&mdash;Politics from Within
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To avoid all error as to the point of view, let me say in commencing that
+ I am a Liberal Conservative, or, if you will, a Conservative Liberal with
+ a strong dash of sympathy with the Socialist idea, a friend of Labour, and
+ a believer in Progressive Radicalism. I do not desire office but would
+ take a seat in the Canadian Senate at five minutes notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe there are ever so many people of exactly this way of thinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me say further than in writing of "politics" I am only dealing with
+ the lights and shadows that flicker over the surface, and am not trying to
+ discuss, still less to decry, the deep and vital issues that lie below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet I will say that vital though the issues may be below the surface,
+ there is more clap-trap, insincerity and humbug on the surface of politics
+ than over any equal area on the face of any institution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The candidate, as such, is a humbug. The voters, as voters&mdash;not as
+ fathers, brothers or sons&mdash;are humbugs. The committees are humbugs.
+ And the speeches to the extent of about ninety per cent are pure buncombe.
+ But, oddly enough, out of the silly babel of talk that accompanies popular
+ government, we get, after all, pretty good government&mdash;infinitely
+ better than the government of an autocratic king. Between democracy and
+ despotic kingship lies all the difference between genial humbug and black
+ sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the candidate for popular office I have nothing but sympathy and
+ sorrow. It has been my fortune to walk round at the heels of half a dozen
+ of them in different little Canadian towns, watching the candidate try in
+ vain to brighten up his face at the glad sight of a party voter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One, in particular, I remember. Nature had meant him to be a sour man, a
+ hard man, a man with but little joy in the company of his fellows. Fate
+ had made him a candidate for the House of Commons. So he was doing his
+ best to belie his nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hullo, William!" he would call out as a man passed driving a horse and
+ buggy, "got the little sorrel out for a spin, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he would turn to me and say in a low rasping voice&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There goes about the biggest skunk in this whole constituency."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later he would wave his hand over a little hedge in friendly
+ salutation to a man working in a garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hullo, Jasper! That's a fine lot of corn you've got there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jasper replied in a growl. And when we were well past the house the
+ candidate would say between his teeth&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's about the meanest whelp in the riding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our conversation all down the street was of that pattern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good morning, Edward! Giving the potatoes a dose of Paris green, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in an undertone&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish to Heaven he'd take a dose of it himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so on from house to house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I counted up, from one end of the street to the other, that there were
+ living in it seven skunks, fourteen low whelps, eight mean hounds and two
+ dirty skinflints. And all of these merely among the Conservative voters.
+ It made me wish to be a Liberal. Especially as the Liberal voters, by the
+ law of the perversity of human affairs, always seemed to be the finer lot.
+ As they were NOT voting for our candidate, they were able to meet him in a
+ fair and friendly way, whereas William and Jasper and Edward and our
+ "bunch" were always surly and hardly deigned to give more than a growl in
+ answer to the candidate's greeting, without even looking up at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a Liberal voter would stop him in the street and shake hands and say
+ in a frank, cordial way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Grouch, I'm sorry indeed that I can't vote for you, and I'd like to
+ be able to wish you success, but of course you know I'm on the other side
+ and always have been and can't change now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon the Candidate would say. "That's all right, John, I don't expect
+ you to. I can respect a man's convictions all right, I guess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they would part excellent friends, the Candidate saying as we moved
+ off:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That man, John Winter, is one of the straightest men in this whole
+ county."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he would add&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now we'll just go into this house for a minute. There's a dirty pup in
+ here that's one of our supporters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My opinion of our own supporters went lower every day, and my opinion of
+ the Liberal voters higher, till it so happened that I went one day to an
+ old friend of mine who was working on the Liberal side. I asked him how he
+ liked it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, well enough!" he said, "as a sort of game. But in this constituency
+ you've got all the decent voters; our voters are the lowest bunch of
+ skunks I ever struck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then a man passed in a buggy, and looked sourly at my friend the
+ Liberal worker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hullo, John!" he called, with a manufactured hilarity, "got the little
+ mare out for a turn, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John grunted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's one of them," said my friend, "the lowest pup in this county,
+ John Winter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come along," said the Candidate to me one morning, "I want you to meet my
+ committee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You'll find them," he said confidingly, as we started down the street
+ towards the committee rooms, "an awful bunch of mutts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Too bad," I said, "what's wrong with them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I don't know&mdash;they're just a pack of simps. They don't seem to
+ have any PUNCH in them. The one you'll meet first is the chairman&mdash;he's
+ about the worst dub of the lot; I never saw a man with so little force in
+ my life. He's got no magnetism, that's what's wrong with him&mdash;no
+ magnetism."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later the Candidate was introducing me to a roomful of heavy
+ looking Committee men. Committee men in politics, I notice, have always a
+ heavy bovine look. They are generally in a sort of daze, or doped from
+ smoking free cigars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now I want to introduce you first," said the Candidate, "to our chairman,
+ Mr. Frog. Mr. Frog is our old battle horse in this constituency. And this
+ is our campaign secretary Mr. Bughouse, and Mr. Dope, and Mr. Mudd, et
+ cetera."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those may not have been their names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is merely what the names sounded like when one was looking into their
+ faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Candidate introduced them all as battle horses, battle axes, battle
+ leaders, standard bearers, flag-holders, and so forth. If he had
+ introduced them as hat-racks or cigar holders, it would have been nearer
+ the mark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the Candidate went out and I was left with the battle-axes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you think of our chances?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle-axes shook their heads with dubious looks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pretty raw deal," said the Chairman, "the Convention wishing HIM on us."
+ He pointed with his thumb over his shoulder to indicate the departed
+ Candidate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's wrong with him?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Frog shook his head again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No PUNCH," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None at all," agreed all the battle horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll tell you," said the Campaign secretary, Mr. Bughouse, a voluble man,
+ with wandering eyes&mdash;"the trouble is he has no magnetism, no personal
+ magnetism."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see," I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, you take this man, Shortis, that the Liberals have got hold of,"
+ continued Mr. Bughouse, "he's full of MAGNETISM. He appeals."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the other Committee men nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's so," they murmured, "magnetism, Our man hasn't a darned ounce of
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I met Shortis the other night in the street," went on Mr. Bughouse, "and
+ he said, 'Come on up to my room in the hotel.' 'Oh,' I said, 'I can't very
+ well.' 'Nonsense,' he said, 'You're on the other side but what does that
+ matter?' Well, we went up to his room, and there he had whiskey, and gin,
+ and lager,&mdash;everything. 'Now,' he says, 'name your drink&mdash;what
+ is it?' There he was, right in his room, breaking the law without caring a
+ darn about it. Well, you know the voters like that kind of thing. It
+ appeals to them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said another of the Committee men,&mdash;I think it was the one
+ called Mr. Dope, "I wouldn't mind that so much. But the chief trouble
+ about our man, to my mind, is that he can't speak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He can't?" I exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the Committee shook their heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not for sour apples!" asserted Mr. Dope positively. "Now, in this riding
+ that won't do. Our people here are used to first class speaking, they
+ expect it. I suppose there has been better speaking in this Constituency
+ than anywhere else in the whole dominion. Not lately, perhaps; not in the
+ last few elections. But I can remember, and so can some of the boys here,
+ the election when Sir John A. spoke here, when the old Mackenzie
+ government went out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked around at the circle. Several nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Remember it as well," assented Mr. Mudd, "as if it were yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, sir," continued Mr. Dope, "I'll never forget Sir John A. speaking
+ here in the Odd Fellows' Hall, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Committee men nodded and gurgled in corroboration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My! but he was PLASTERED. We had him over at Pete Robinson's hotel all
+ afternoon, and I tell you he was plastered for fair. We ALL were. I
+ remember I was so pickled myself I could hardly help Sir John up the steps
+ of the platform. So were you, Mudd, do you remember?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I certainly was!" said Mr. Mudd proudly. Committee men who would scorn to
+ drink lager beer in 1919, take a great pride, I have observed, in having
+ been pickled in 1878.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir," continued Mr. Dope, "you certainly were pickled. I remember
+ just as well as anything, when they opened the doors and let the crowd in:
+ all the boys had been bowling up and were pretty well soused. You never
+ saw such a crowd. Old Dr. Greenway (boys, you remember the old Doc) was in
+ the chair, and he was pretty well spifflocated. Well, sir, Sir John A. got
+ up in that hall and he made the finest, most moving speech I ever listened
+ to. Do you remember when he called old Trelawney an ash-barrel? And when
+ he made that appeal for a union of hearts and said that the sight of
+ McGuire (the Liberal candidate) made him sick? I tell you those were great
+ days. You don't get speaking like that now; and you don't get audiences
+ like that now either. Not the same calibre."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the Committee shook their heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, anyway, boys," said the Chairman, as he lighted a fresh cigar,
+ "to-morrow will decide, one way or the other. We've certainly worked hard
+ enough,"&mdash;here he passed the box of cigars round to the others&mdash;"I
+ haven't been in bed before two any night since the work started."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Neither have I," said another of the workers. "I was just saying to the
+ wife when I got up this morning that I begin to feel as if I never wanted
+ to see the sight of a card again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I don't regret the work," said the Secretary, "so long as we carry
+ the riding. You see," he added in explanation to me, "we're up against a
+ pretty hard proposition here. This riding really is Liberal: they've got
+ the majority of voters though we HAVE once or twice swung it Conservative.
+ But whether we can carry it with a man like Grouch is hard to say. One
+ thing is certain, boys, if he DOES carry it, he doesn't owe it to
+ himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the battle horses agreed on this. A little after that we dispersed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And twenty-four hours later the vote was taken and to my intense surprise
+ the riding was carried by Grouch the Conservative candidate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say, to MY surprise. But apparently not to anybody else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it appeared this (was in conversations after the election) that Grouch
+ was a man of extraordinary magnetism. He had, so they said, "punch."
+ Shortis, the Liberal, it seemed, lacked punch absolutely. Even his own
+ supporters admitted that he had no personality whatever. Some wondered how
+ he had the nerve to run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But my own theory of how the election was carried is quite different.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I feel certain that all the Conservative voters despised their candidate
+ so much that they voted Liberal. And all the Liberals voted Conservative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That carried the riding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Grouch left the constituency by the first train next day for
+ Ottawa. Except for paying taxes on his house, he will not be back in the
+ town till they dissolve parliament again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 5.&mdash;The Lost Illusions of Mr. Sims
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the club to which I belong, in a quiet corner where the sunlight falls
+ in sideways, there may be seen sitting of an afternoon my good friend of
+ thirty years' standing, Mr. Edward Sims. Being somewhat afflicted with
+ gout, he generally sits with one foot up on a chair. On a brass table
+ beside him are such things as Mr. Sims needs. But they are few. Wealthy as
+ he is, the needs of Mr. Sims reach scarcely further than Martini cocktails
+ and Egyptian cigarettes. Such poor comforts as these, brought by a
+ deferential waiter, with, let us say, a folded newspaper at five o'clock,
+ suffice for all his wants. Here sits Mr. Sims till the shadows fall in the
+ street outside, when a limousine motor trundles up to the club and rolls
+ him home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here of an afternoon Mr. Sims talks to me of his college days when he
+ was young. The last thirty years of his life have moved in so gentle a
+ current upon so smooth a surface that they have been without adventure. It
+ is the stormy period of his youth that preoccupies my friend as he sits
+ looking from the window of the club at the waving leaves in the summer
+ time and the driving snow in the winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am of that habit of mind that makes me prone to listen. And for this,
+ perhaps, Mr. Sims selects me as the recipient of the stories of his
+ college days. It is, it seems, the fixed belief of my good friend that
+ when he was young he belonged at college to a particularly nefarious crowd
+ or group that exists in his mind under the name of the "old gang." The
+ same association, or corporate body or whatever it should be called, is
+ also designated by Mr. Sims, the "old crowd," or more simply and
+ affectionately "the boys." In the recollection of my good friend this "old
+ gang" were of a devilishness since lost off the earth. Work they wouldn't.
+ Sleep they despised. While indoors they played poker in a blue haze of
+ tobacco smoke with beer in jugs and mugs all round them. All night they
+ were out of doors on the sidewalk with linked arms, singing songs in
+ chorus and jeering at the city police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet in spite of life such as this, which might appear to an outsider
+ wearing to the intellect, the "old gang" as recollected by Mr. Sims were
+ of a mental brilliancy that eclipses everything previous or subsequent.
+ McGregor of the Class of '85 graduated with a gold medal in Philosophy
+ after drinking twelve bottles of lager before sitting down to his final
+ examination. Ned Purvis, the football half-back, went straight from the
+ football field after a hard game with his ankle out of joint, drank half a
+ bottle of Bourbon Rye and then wrote an examination in Greek poetry that
+ drew tears from the President of the college.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims is perhaps all the more prone to talk of these early days
+ insomuch that, since his youth, life, in the mere material sense, has used
+ him all too kindly. At an early age, indeed at about the very time of his
+ graduation, Mr. Sims came into money,&mdash;not money in the large and
+ frenzied sense of a speculative fortune, begetting care and breeding
+ anxiety, but in the warm and comfortable inheritance of a family brewery,
+ about as old and as well-established as the Constitution of the United
+ States. In this brewery, even to-day, Mr. Sims, I believe, spends a
+ certain part, though no great part, of his time. He is carried to it, I
+ understand, in his limousine in the sunnier hours of the morning; for an
+ hour or so each day he moves about among the warm smell of the barley and
+ the quiet hum of the machinery murmuring among its dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is, too, somewhere in the upper part of the city a huge, silent
+ residence, where a noiseless butler adjusts Mr. Sims's leg on a chair and
+ serves him his dinner in isolated luxury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the residence, and the brewery, and with them the current of Mr.
+ Sims's life move of themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus has care passed Mr. Sims by, leaving him stranded in a club chair
+ with his heavy foot and stick beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims is a bachelor. Nor is he likely now to marry: but this through no
+ lack of veneration or respect for the sex. It arises, apparently, from the
+ fact that when Mr. Sims was young, during his college days, the beauty and
+ charm of the girls who dwelt in his college town was such as to render all
+ later women mere feeble suggestions of what might have been. There was, as
+ there always is, one girl in particular. I have not heard my friend speak
+ much of her. But I gather that Kate Dashaway was the kind of girl who
+ might have made a fit mate even for the sort of intellectual giant that
+ flourished at Mr. Sims's college. She was not only beautiful. All the
+ girls remembered by Mr. Sims were that. But she was in addition "a good
+ head" and "a good sport," two of the highest qualities that, in Mr. Sims's
+ view, can crown the female sex. She had, he said, no "nonsense" about her,
+ by which term Mr. Sims indicated religion. She drank lager beer, played
+ tennis as well as any man in the college, and smoked cigarettes a whole
+ generation in advance of the age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims, so I gather, never proposed to her, nor came within a measurable
+ distance of doing so. A man so prone, as is my friend, to spend his time
+ in modest admiration of the prowess of others is apt to lag behind. Miss
+ Dashaway remains to Mr. Sims, as all else does, a retrospect and a regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the chief peculiarities of the old gang&mdash;as they exist in the
+ mind of Mr. Sims&mdash;is the awful fate that has overwhelmed them. It is
+ not merely that they are scattered to the four corners of the continent.
+ That might have been expected. But, apparently, the most awful moral ruin
+ has fallen upon them. That, at least, is the abiding belief of Mr. Sims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you ever hear anything of McGregor now?" I ask him sometimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," he says, shaking his head quietly. "I understand he went all to the
+ devil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How was that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Booze," says Mr. Sims. There is a quiet finality about the word that ends
+ all discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor old Curly!" says Mr. Sims, in speaking of another of his classmates.
+ "I guess he's pretty well down and out these days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's the trouble?" I say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims moves his eyes sideways as he sits. It is easier than moving his
+ head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Booze," he says.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even apparent success in life does not save Mr. Sims's friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see," I said one day, "that they have just made Arthur Stewart a Chief
+ Justice out west."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor old Artie," murmured Mr. Sims. "He'll have a hard time holding it
+ down. I imagine he's pretty well tanked up all the time these days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Mr. Sims has not heard of any of his associates for a certain lapse
+ of years, he decides to himself that they are down and out. It is a form
+ of writing them off. There is a melancholy satisfaction in it. As the
+ years go by Mr. Sims is coming to regard himself and a few others as the
+ lonely survivors of a great flood. All the rest, brilliant as they once
+ were, are presumed to be "boozed," "tanked," "burnt out," "bust-up," and
+ otherwise consumed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After having heard for so many years the reminiscences of my good friend
+ about the old gang, it seemed almost incredible that one of them should
+ step into actual living being before my eyes. Yet so it happened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found Mr. Sims at the club one day, about to lunch there, a thing
+ contrary to his wont. And with him was a friend, a sallow, insignificant
+ man in the middle fifties, with ragged, sandy hair, wearing thin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shake hands with Tommy Vidal," said Mr. Sims proudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he had said, "Shake hands with Aristotle," he couldn't have spoken with
+ greater pride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then was Tommy Vidal, the intellectual giant of whom I had heard a
+ hundred times. Tommy had, at college, so Mr. Sims had often assured me,
+ the brightest mind known since the age of Pericles. He took the prize in
+ Latin poetry absolutely "without opening a book." Latin to Tommy Vidal had
+ been, by a kind of natural gift, born in him. In Latin he was "a whale."
+ Indeed in everything. He had passed his graduation examination with first
+ class honours; "plastered." He had to be held in his seat, so it was
+ recorded, while he wrote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tommy, it seemed, had just "blown in" to town that morning. It was
+ characteristic of Mr. Sims's idea of the old gang that the only way in
+ which any of them were supposed to enter a town was to "blow in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When did you say you 'blew in,' Tommy?" he asked about half a dozen times
+ during our lunch. In reality, the reckless, devil-may-care fellow Vidal
+ had "blown in" to bring his second daughter to a boarding school&mdash;a
+ thing no doubt contemplated months ahead. But Mr. Sims insisted in
+ regarding Tommy's movements as purely fortuitous, the sport of chance. He
+ varied his question by asking "When do you expect to 'blow out' Tommy?"
+ Tommy's answers he forgot at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat and talked after lunch, and it pained me to notice that Tommy Vidal
+ was restless and anxious to get away. Mr. Sims offered him cigars, thick
+ as ropes and black as night, but he refused them. It appeared that he had
+ long since given up smoking. It affected his eyes, he said. The
+ deferential waiter brought brandy and curacoa in long thin glasses. But
+ Mr. Vidal shook his head. He hadn't had a drink, he said, for twenty
+ years. He found it affected his hearing. Coffee, too, he refused. It
+ affected, so it seemed, his sense of smell. He sat beside us, ill at ease,
+ and anxious, as I could see, to get back to his second daughter and her
+ schoolmistresses. Mr. Sims, who is geniality itself in his heart, but has
+ no great powers in conversation, would ask Tommy if he remembered how he
+ acted as Antigone in the college play, and was "plastered" from the second
+ act on. Mr. Vidal had no recollection of it, but wondered if there was any
+ good book-store in town where he could buy his daughter an Algebra. He
+ rose when he decently could and left us. As Mr. Sims saw it, he "blew
+ out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims is kindliness itself in his judgments. He passed no word of
+ censure on his departed friend. But a week or so later he mentioned to me
+ in conversation that Tommy Vidal had "turned into a kind of stiff." The
+ vocabulary of Mr. Sims holds no term of deeper condemnation than the word
+ "stiff." To be a "stiff" is the last form of degradation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is strange that when a thing happens once, it forthwith happens twice
+ or even more. For years no member of the "old gang" had come in touch with
+ Mr. Sims. Yet the visit of Tommy Vidal was followed at no great distance
+ of time by the "blowing in" of Ned Purvis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well!" said Mr. Sims, as he opened one afternoon a telegram that
+ the deferential waiter brought upon a tray. "This beats all! Old Ned
+ Purvis wires that he's going to blow in to town to-night at seven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forthwith Mr. Sims fell to ordering dinner for the three of us in a
+ private room, with enough of an assortment of gin cocktails and Scotch
+ highballs to run a distillery, and enough Vichy water and imported soda
+ for a bath. "I know old Ned!" he said as he added item after item to the
+ list.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At seven o'clock the waiter whispered, as in deep confidence, that there
+ was a gentleman below for Mr. Sims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It so happened that on that evening my friend's foot was in bad shape, and
+ rested on a chair. At his request I went from the lounge room of the club
+ downstairs to welcome the new arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Purvis I knew all about. My friend had spoken of him a thousand times. He
+ had played half-back on the football team&mdash;a big hulking brute of a
+ fellow. In fact, he was, as pictured by Mr. Sims, a perfect colossus. And
+ he played football&mdash;as did all Mr. Sims's college chums&mdash;"plastered."
+ "Old Ned," so Mr. Sims would relate, "was pretty well 'soused' when the
+ game started: but we put a hose at him at half-time and got him into
+ pretty good shape." All men in any keen athletic contest, as remembered by
+ Mr. Sims, were pretty well "tanked up." For the lighter, nimbler games
+ such as tennis, they were reported "spifflocated" and in that shape
+ performed prodigies of agility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You'll know Ned," said Mr. Sims, "by his big shoulders." I went
+ downstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reception room below was empty, except for one man, a little,
+ gentle-looking man with spectacles. He wore black clothes with a waistcoat
+ reaching to the throat, a white tie and a collar buttoned on backwards.
+ Ned Purvis was a clergyman! His great hulking shoulders had gone the way
+ of all my good friend's reminiscences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I brought him upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment, in the half light of the room, Mr. Sims was still deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Ned!" he began heartily, with a struggle to rise from his chair&mdash;then
+ he saw the collar and tie of the Rev. Mr. Purvis, and the full horror of
+ the thing dawned upon him. Nor did the three gin cocktails, which Mr. Sims
+ had had stationed ready for the reunion, greatly help its geniality. Yet
+ it had been a maxim, in the recollections of Mr. Sims, that when any of
+ the boys blew in anywhere the bringing of drinks must be instantaneous and
+ uproarious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our dinner that night was very quiet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Purvis drank only water. That, with a little salad, made his meal. He
+ had a meeting to address that evening at eight, a meeting of women&mdash;"dear
+ women" he called them&mdash;who had recently affiliated their society with
+ the work that some of the dear women in Mr. Purvis's own town were
+ carrying on. The work, as described, boded no good for breweries. Mr.
+ Purvis's wife, so it seemed, was with him and would also "take the
+ platform."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As best we could we made conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I didn't know that you were married," said Mr. Sims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said Mr. Purvis, "married, and with five dear boys and three dear
+ girls." The eight of them, he told us, were a great blessing. So, too, was
+ his wife&mdash;a great social worker, it seemed, in the cause of women's
+ rights and a marvellous platform speaker in the temperance crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the way, Mr. Sims," said Mr. Purvis (they had called one another "Mr."
+ after the first five minutes), "you may remember my wife. I think perhaps
+ you knew her in our college days. She was a Miss Dashaway."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims bowed his head over his plate, as another of his lost illusions
+ vanished into thin air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Mr. Purvis had gone, my friend spoke out his mind&mdash;once and
+ once only, and more in regret than anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm afraid," he said, "that old Ned has turned into a SISSY."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only to be expected that the visits of later friends&mdash;the
+ "boys" who happened to "blow in"&mdash;were disappointments. Art Hamilton,
+ who came next, and who had been one of the most brilliant men of the Class
+ of '86 had turned somehow into a "complete mutt." Jake Todd, who used to
+ write so brilliantly in the college paper, as recollected by Mr. Sims, was
+ now the editor of a big New York daily. Good things might have been
+ expected of him, but it transpired that he had undergone "wizening of the
+ brain." In fact, a number of Mr. Sims's former friends had suffered from
+ this cruel disease, consisting apparently of a shrinkage or contraction of
+ the cerebellum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims spoke little of his disappointments. But I knew that he thought
+ much about them. They set him wondering. There were changes here that to
+ the thoughtful mind called for investigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I was not surprised when he informed me that it was his intention to
+ visit "the old place" and have a look at it. The "old place," called also
+ the "old shop," indicated, as I knew, Mr. Sims's college, the original
+ scene of the exploits of the old gang. In the thirty years since he had
+ graduated, though separated from it only by two hundred miles, Mr. Sims
+ had never revisited it. So is it always with the most faithful of the sons
+ of learning. The illumination of the inner eye is better than the crude
+ light of reality. College reunions are but for the noisy lip service of
+ the shallow and the interested. The deeper affection glows in the absent
+ heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friend invited me to "come along." We would, he said, "blow in" upon
+ the place and have a look at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the fullness of the spring time that we went, when the leaves
+ are out on the college campus, and when Commencement draws near, and when
+ all the college, even the students, are busy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims, I noted when I joined him at the train, was dressed as for the
+ occasion. He wore a round straw hat with a coloured ribbon, and light grey
+ suit, and a necktie with the garish colours of the college itself. Thus
+ dressed, he leaned as lightly as his foot allowed him upon a yellow stick,
+ and dreamed himself again an undergraduate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had thought the purpose of his visit a mere curiosity bred in his
+ disappointment. It appeared that I was wrong. On the train Mr. Sims
+ unfolded to me that his idea in "blowing in" upon his college was one of
+ benefaction. He had it in his mind, he said, to do something for the "old
+ place," no less a thing than to endow a chair. He explained to me,
+ modestly as was his wont, the origin of his idea. The brewing business, it
+ appeared, was rapidly reaching a stage when it would have to be wound up.
+ The movement of prohibition would necessitate, said Mr. Sims, the closing
+ of the plant. The prospect, in the financial sense, occasioned my friend
+ but little excitement. I was given to understand that prohibition, in the
+ case of Mr. Sims's brewery, had long since been "written off" or "written
+ up" or at least written somewhere where it didn't matter. And the movement
+ itself Mr. Sims does not regard as permanent. Prohibition, he says, is
+ bound to be washed out by a "turn of the tide"; in fact, he speaks of this
+ returning wave of moral regeneration much as Martin Luther might have
+ spoken of the Protestant Reformation. But for the time being the brewery
+ will close. Mr. Sims had thought deeply, it seemed, about putting his
+ surplus funds into the manufacture of commercial alcohol, itself a noble
+ profession. For some time his mind has wavered between that and endowing a
+ chair of philosophy. There is, and always has been, a sort of natural
+ connection between the drinking of beer and deep quiet thought. Mr. Sims,
+ as a brewer, felt that philosophy was the proper thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We left the train, walked through the little town and entered the
+ university gates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gee!" said Mr. Sims, pausing a moment and leaning on his stick, "were the
+ gates only as big as that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We began to walk up the avenue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought there were more trees to it than these," said Mr. Sims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," I answered. "You often said that the avenue was a quarter of a mile
+ long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So the thing used to be," he murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Mr. Sims looked at the campus. "A dinky looking little spot," he
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Didn't you say," I asked, "that the Arts Building was built of white
+ marble?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Always thought it was," he answered. "Looks like rough cast from here,
+ doesn't it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'll have to go in and see the President, I suppose," continued Mr.
+ Sims. He said it with regret. Something of his undergraduate soul had
+ returned to his body. Although he had never seen the President (this one)
+ in his life, and had only read of his appointment some five years before
+ in the newspapers, Mr. Sims was afraid of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, I tell you," he went on. "We'll just make a break in and then a
+ quick get-away. Don't let's get anchored in there, see? If the old fellow
+ gets talking, he'll go on for ever. I remember the way it used to be when
+ a fellow had to go in to see Prexy in my time. The old guy would start
+ mooning away and quoting Latin and keep us there half the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment two shabby-looking, insignificant men who had evidently
+ come out from one of the buildings, passed us on the sidewalk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder who those guys are," said Mr. Sims. "Look like bums, don't
+ they?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shook my head. Some instinct told me that they were professors. But I
+ didn't say so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friend continued his instructions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the President asks us to lunch," he said, "I'll say that we're
+ lunching with a friend down town, see? Then we'll make a break and get
+ out. If he says he wants to introduce us to the Faculty or anything like
+ that, then you say that we have to get the twelve-thirty to New York, see?
+ I'm not going to say anything about a chair in philosophy to-day. I want
+ to read it up first some night so as to be able to talk about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To all of this I agreed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a janitor we inquired where to find the President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the Administration Building, eh?" said Mr. Sims. "That's a new one on
+ me. The building on the right, eh? Thank you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See the President?" said a young lady in an ante-office. "I'm not sure
+ whether you can see him just now. Have you an appointment?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims drew out a card. "Give him that" he said. On the card he had
+ scribbled "Graduate of 1887."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes we were shown into another room where there was a young
+ man, evidently the President's secretary, and a number of people waiting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you kindly sit down," murmured the young man, in a consulting-room
+ voice, "and wait? The President is engaged just now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We waited. Through the inner door leading to the President people went and
+ came. Mr. Sims, speaking in whispers, continued to caution me on the
+ quickness of our get-away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the young man touched him on the shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The President will see you now," he whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We entered the room. The "old guy" rose to meet us, Mr. Sims's card in his
+ hand. But he was not old. He was at least ten years younger than either of
+ us. He was, in fact, what Mr. Sims and I would almost have called a boy.
+ In dress and manner he looked as spruce and busy as the sales manager of a
+ shoe factory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Delighted to see you, gentlemen," he said, shaking hands effusively. "We
+ are always pleased to see our old graduates, Mr. Samson&mdash;No, I beg
+ pardon, Mr. Sims&mdash;class of '97, I see&mdash;No, I beg your pardon,
+ Class of '67, I read it wrongly&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard Mr. Sims murmuring something that seemed to contain the words "a
+ look around."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes, exactly," said the President. "A look round, you'll find a
+ great deal to interest you in looking about the place, I'm sure, Mr.
+ Samson, great changes. I'm extremely sorry I can't offer to take you round
+ myself," here he snapped a gold watch open and shut, "the truth is I have
+ to catch the twelve-thirty to New York&mdash;so sorry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he shook our hands again, very warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another moment we were outside the door. The get-away was accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We walked out of the building and towards the avenue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we passed the portals of the Arts Building, a noisy, rackety crowd of
+ boys&mdash;evidently, to our eyes, schoolboys &mdash;came out, jostling
+ and shouting. They swarmed past us, accidentally, no doubt, body-checking
+ Mr. Sims, whose straw hat was knocked off and rolled on the sidewalk. A
+ janitor picked it up for him as the crowd of boys passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What pack of young bums are those?" asked Mr. Sims. "You oughtn't to let
+ young roughs like that come into the buildings. Are they here from some
+ school or something?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No sir," said the janitor. "They're students."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Students?" repeated Mr. Sims. "And what are they shouting like that for?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's a notice up that their professor is ill, and so the class is
+ cancelled, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Class!" said Mr. Sims. "Are those a class?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir," said the janitor. "That's the Senior Class in Philosophy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Sims said nothing. He seemed to limp more than his custom as we passed
+ down the avenue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the way home on the train he talked much of crude alcohol and the
+ possibilities of its commercial manufacture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far as I know, his only benefaction up to date has been the two dollars
+ that he gave to a hackman to drive us away from the college.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 6.&mdash;Fetching the Doctor: From Recollections of Childhood in the
+ Canadian Countryside
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We lived far back in the country, such as it used to be in Canada, before
+ the days of telephones and motor cars, with long lonely roads and snake
+ fences buried in deep snow, and with cedar swamps where the sleighs could
+ hardly pass two abreast. Here and there, on a winter night, one saw the
+ light in a farm house, distant and dim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over it all was a great silence such as people who live in the cities can
+ never know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And on us, as on the other families of that lonely countryside, there
+ sometimes fell the sudden alarm of illness, and the hurrying drive through
+ the snow at night to fetch the doctor from the village, seven miles away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My elder brother and I&mdash;there was a long tribe of us, as with all
+ country families&mdash;would hitch up the horse by the light of the stable
+ lantern, eager with haste and sick with fear, counting the time till the
+ doctor could be there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then out into the driving snow, urging the horse that knew by instinct
+ that something was amiss, and so mile after mile, till we rounded the
+ corner into the single street of the silent village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late, late at night it was&mdash;eleven o'clock, perhaps&mdash;and the
+ village dark and deep in sleep, except where the light showed red against
+ the blinds of the "Surgery" of the doctor's rough-cast house behind the
+ spruce trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Doctor," we cried, as we burst in, "hurry and come. Jim's ill&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can see him still as he sat there in his surgery, the burly doctor,
+ rugged and strong for all the sixty winters that he carried. There he sat
+ playing chess&mdash;always he seemed to be playing chess&mdash;with his
+ son, a medical student, burly and rugged already as himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shut the door, shut the door!" he called. "Come in, boys; here, let me
+ brush that snow off you&mdash;it's my move Charlie, remember&mdash;now,
+ what the devil's the matter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we would pant out our hurried exclamations, both together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bah!" he growled, "ill nothing! Mere belly ache, I guess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was his term, his favorite word, for an undiagnosed disease&mdash;"belly
+ ache." They call it supergastral aesthesia now. In a city house, it sounds
+ better. Yet how we hung upon the doctor's good old Saxon term, yearning
+ and hoping that it might be that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even as he growled the doctor had taken down a lantern from a hook,
+ thrown on a huge, battered fur coat that doubled his size, and was putting
+ medicines&mdash;a very shopful it seemed&mdash;into a leather case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your horse is done up," he said. "We'll put my mare in. Come and give me
+ a hand, Charlie."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was his own hostler and stable-man, he and his burly son. Yet how
+ quickly and quietly he moved, the lantern swinging on his arm, as he
+ buckled the straps. "What kind of a damn fool tug is this you've got?" he
+ would say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, in a moment, as it seemed, out into the wind and snow again, the
+ great figure of the doctor almost filling the seat of the cutter, the two
+ of us crushed in beside him, with responsibility, the unbearable burden,
+ gone from us, and renewed comfort in our hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little is said on the way: our heads are bent against the storm: the long
+ stride of the doctor's mare eats up the flying road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then as we near the farm house and see the light in the sick-room window,
+ fear clutches our hearts again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You boys unhitch," says the doctor. "I'll go right in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, when we enter the house, we find that he is in the sick-room&mdash;the
+ door closed. No word of comfort has come forth. He has sent out for hot
+ blankets. The stoves are to be kept burning. We must sit up. We may be
+ needed. That is all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there in that still room through the long night, he fights
+ single-handed against Death. Behind him is no human help, no consultation,
+ no wisdom of the colleges to call in; only his own unaided strength, and
+ his own firm purpose and that strange instinct in the fight for a
+ flickering life, that some higher power than that of colleges has planted
+ deep within his soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we watch through the night hours, in dull misery and fear, a phantom at
+ the window pane: so must we wait till the slow morning shows dim and pale
+ at the windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he comes out from the room. His face is furrowed with the fatigue of
+ his long vigil. But as he speaks the tone of his voice is as that of one
+ who has fought and conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There&mdash;he'll do now. Give him this when he wakes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a great joy sweeps over us as the phantom flees away, and we shudder
+ back into the warm sunshine of life, while the sound of the doctor's
+ retreating sleighbells makes music to our ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And once it was not so. The morning dawned and he did not come from the
+ darkened room: only there came to our listening ears at times the sound of
+ a sob or moan, and the doctor's voice, firm and low, but with all hope
+ gone from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when at last he came, his face seemed old and sad as we had never seen
+ it. He paused a moment on the threshold and we heard him say, "I have done
+ all that I can." Then he beckoned us into the darkened room, and, for the
+ first time, we knew Death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that is forty years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They tell me that, since then, the practice of medicine has been vastly
+ improved. There are specialists now, I understand, for every conceivable
+ illness and for every subdivision of it. If I fall ill, there is a whole
+ battery of modern science to be turned upon me in a moment. There are
+ X-rays ready to penetrate me in all directions. I may have any and every
+ treatment&mdash;hypnotic, therapeutic or thaumaturgic&mdash;for which I am
+ able to pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, oh, my friends, when it shall come to be my lot to be ill and
+ stricken&mdash;in the last and real sense, with the Great Fear upon me,
+ and the Dark Phantom at the pane&mdash;then let some one go, fast and
+ eager&mdash;though it be only in the paths of an expiring memory&mdash;fast
+ and eager, through the driving snow to bring him to my bedside. Let me
+ hear the sound of his hurrying sleighbells as he comes, and his strong
+ voice without the door&mdash;and, if that may not be, then let me seem at
+ least to feel the clasp of his firm hand to guide me without fear to the
+ Land of Shadows, where he has gone before.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg's The Hohenzollerns in America, by Stephen Leacock
+#8 in our series by Stephen Leacock
+
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+Title: The Hohenzollerns in America
+ With the Bolsheviks in Berlin and other impossibilities
+
+Author: Stephen Leacock
+
+Release Date: December, 2003 [Etext #4781]
+[This file was last updated on May 20, 2004]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXT THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA ***
+
+
+
+
+This etext was produced by Gardner Buchanan
+
+
+
+
+THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA
+
+WITH THE BOLSHEVIKS IN BERLIN AND OTHER IMPOSSIBILITIES
+
+By Stephen Leacock
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+I. THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA
+II. WITH THE BOLSHEVIKS IN BERLIN
+III. AFTERNOON TEA WITH THE SULTAN
+IV. ECHOES OF THE WAR
+ 1. The Boy Who Came Back
+ 2. The War Sacrifices of Mr. Spugg
+ 3. If Germany Had Won
+ 4. War and Peace at the Galaxy Club
+ 5. The War News as I Remember It
+ 6. Some Just Complaints About the War
+ 7. Some Startling Side Effects of the War
+V. OTHER IMPOSSIBILITIES
+ 1. The Art of Conversation
+ 2. Heroes and Heroines
+ 3. The Discovery of America
+ 4. Politics from Within
+ 5. The Lost Illusions of Mr. Sims
+ 6. Fetching the Doctor
+
+
+
+
+I.--The Hohenzollerns in America
+
+PREFACE
+
+The proper punishment for the Hohenzollerns, and the
+Hapsburgs, and the Mecklenburgs, and the Muckendorfs,
+and all such puppets and princelings, is that they should
+be made to work; and not made to work in the glittering
+and glorious sense, as generals and chiefs of staff, and
+legislators, and land-barons, but in the plain and humble
+part of laborers looking for a job; that they should
+carry a hod and wield a trowel and swing a pick and, at
+the day's end, be glad of a humble supper and a night's
+rest; that they should work, in short, as millions of
+poor emigrants out of Germany have worked for generations
+past; that there should be about them none of the prestige
+of fallen grandeur; that, if it were possible, by some
+trick of magic, or change of circumstance, the world
+should know them only as laboring men, with the dignity
+and divinity of kingship departed out of them; that, as
+such, they should stand or fall, live or starve, as best
+they might by the work of their own hands and brains.
+Could this be done, the world would have a better idea
+of the thin stuff out of which autocratic kingship is
+fashioned.
+
+It is a favourite fancy of mine to imagine this
+transformation actually brought about; and to picture
+the Hohenzollerns as an immigrant family departing for
+America, their trunks and boxes on their backs, their
+bundles in their hands.
+
+The fragments of a diary that here follow present the
+details of such a picture. It is written, or imagined to
+be written, by the (former) Princess Frederica of
+Hohenzollern. I do not find her name in the Almanach de
+Gotha. Perhaps she does not exist. But from the text
+below she is to be presumed to be one of the innumerable
+nieces of the German Emperor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+On Board the S.S. America. Wednesday
+
+At last our embarkation is over, and we are at sea. I am
+so glad it is done. It was dreadful to see poor Uncle
+William and Uncle Henry and Cousin Willie and Cousin
+Ferdinand of Bulgaria, coming up the gang-plank into the
+steerage, with their boxes on their backs. They looked
+so different in their rough clothes. Uncle William is
+wearing an old blue shirt and a red handkerchief round
+his neck, and his hair looks thin and unkempt, and his
+moustache draggled and his face unshaved. His eyes seem
+watery and wandering, and his little withered arm so
+pathetic. Is it possible he was always really like that?
+
+At the top of the gang-plank he stood still a minute,
+his box still on his back, and said, "This then is the
+pathway to Saint Helena." I heard an officer down on the
+dock call up, "Now then, my man, move on there smartly,
+please." And I saw some young roughs pointing at Uncle
+and laughing and saying, "Look at the old guy with the
+red handkerchief. Is he batty, eh?"
+
+The forward deck of the steamer, the steerage deck, which
+is the only place that we are allowed to go, was crowded
+with people, all poor and with their trunks and boxes
+and paper bags all round them. When Uncle set down his
+box, there was soon quite a little crowd around him, so
+that I could hardly see him. But I could hear them
+laughing, and I knew that they were "taking a rise out
+of him," as they call it,--just as they did in the
+emigration sheds on shore. I heard Uncle say, "Let wine
+be brought: I am faint;" and some one else said, "Yes,
+let it," and there arose a big shout of laughter.
+
+Cousin Willie had sneaked away with his box down to the
+lower deck. I thought it mean of him not to stay with
+his father. I never noticed till now what a sneaking face
+Cousin Willie has. In his uniform, as Crown Prince, it
+was different. But in his shabby clothes, among these
+rough people, he seems so changed. He walks with a mean
+stoop, and his eyes look about in such a furtive way,
+never still. I saw one of the ship's officers watching
+him, very closely and sternly.
+
+Cousin Karl of Austria, and Cousin Ruprecht of Bavaria,
+are not here. We thought they were to come on this ship,
+but they are not here. We could hardly believe that the
+ship would sail without them.
+
+I managed to get Uncle William out of the crowd and down
+below. He was glad to get off the deck. He seemed afraid
+to look at the sea, and when we got into the big cabin,
+he clutched at the cover of the port and said, "Shut it,
+help me shut it, shut out the sound of the sea;" and then
+for a little time he sat on one of the bunks all hunched
+up, and muttering, "Don't let me hear the sea, don't let
+me hear it." His eyes looked so queer and fixed, that I
+thought he must be in a sort of fit, or seizure. But
+Uncle Henry and Cousin Willie and Cousin Ferdinand came
+into the cabin and he got better again.
+
+Cousin Ferdinand has got hold of a queer long overcoat
+with the sleeves turned up, and a little round hat, and
+looks exactly like a Jew. He says he traded one of our
+empty boxes for the coat and hat. I never noticed before
+how queer and thick Cousin Ferdinand's speech is, and
+how much he gesticulates with his hands when he talks.
+I am sure that when I visited at Sofia nobody ever
+noticed it. And he called Uncle William and Uncle Henry
+"Mister," and said that on the deck he had met two "fine
+gentlemen," (that's what he called them), who are in the
+clothing trade in New York. It was with them he traded
+for the coat.
+
+Cousin Ferdinand, who is very clever at figures, is going
+to look after all our money, because the American money
+is too difficult for Uncle William and Cousin Willie to
+understand. We have only a little money, but Cousin
+Ferdinand said that we would put it all together and make
+it a pool. But when Uncle Henry laughed, and turned his
+pockets out and had no money at all, Cousin Ferdinand
+said that it would NOT be a pool. He said he would make
+it "on shares" and explained it, but I couldn't understand
+what it meant.
+
+While he was talking I saw Cousin Willie slip one of the
+pieces of money out of the pile into his pocket: at least
+I think I saw it; but he did it so quickly that I was
+not sure, and didn't like to say anything.
+
+Then a bell rang and we went to eat in a big saloon, all
+crowded with common people, and very stuffy. The food
+was wretched, and I could not eat. I suppose Uncle was
+famished from the long waiting and the bad food in the
+emigrant shed. It was dreadful to see the hungry way that
+he ate the greasy stew they gave us, with his head down
+almost in his plate and his moustache all unkempt. "This
+ragout is admirable," he said. "Let the chef be informed
+that I said it."
+
+Cousin Ferdinand didn't sit with us. He sat beside his
+two new friends and they had their heads all close together
+and talked with great excitement. I never knew before
+that Cousin Ferdinand talked Yiddish. I remember him at
+Sofia, on horseback addressing his army, and I don't
+think he talked to his troops in Yiddish. He was telling
+them, I remember, how sorry he was that he couldn't
+accompany them to the front. But for "business in Sofia,"
+he said, he would like to be in the very front trenches,
+the foremost of all. It was thought very brave of him.
+
+When we got up from supper, the ship was heaving and
+rolling quite a bit. A young man, a steward, told us that
+we were now out of the harbor and in the open sea. Uncle
+William told him to convey his compliments to the captain
+on his proper navigation of the channel. The young man
+looked very closely at Uncle and said, "Sure, I'll tell
+him right away," but he said it kindly. Then he said to
+me, when Uncle couldn't hear, "Your pa ain't quite right,
+is he, Miss Hohen?" I didn't know what he meant, but, of
+course, I said that Uncle William was only my uncle.
+Hohen is, I should explain, the name by which we are
+known now. The young man said that he wasn't really a
+steward, only just for the trip. He said that, because
+I had a strange feeling that I had met him before, and
+asked him if I hadn't seen him at one of the courts. But
+he said he had never been "up before one" in his life.
+He said he lives in New York, and drives an ice-wagon
+and is an ice-man. He said he was glad to have the pleasure
+of our acquaintance. He is, I think, the first ice-man
+I have ever met. He reminds me very much of the Romanoffs,
+the Grand Dukes of the younger branch, I mean. But he
+says he is not connected with them, so far as he knows.
+He said his name is Peters. We have no Almanach de Gotha
+here on board the steamer, so I cannot look up his name.
+
+
+S.S. America. Thursday
+
+We had a dreadful experience last night. In the middle
+of the night Uncle Henry came and called me and said that
+Uncle William was ill. So I put on an old shawl and went
+with him. The ship was pitching and heaving with a dreadful
+straining and creaking noise. A dim light burned in the
+cabin, and outside there was a great roaring of the wind
+and the wild sound of the sea surging against the ship.
+
+Uncle William was half sitting up in his rough bunk, with
+the tattered gray blankets over him, one hand was clutched
+on the side of the bed and there was a great horror in
+his eyes. "The sea; the sea," he kept saying, "don't let
+me hear it. It's THEIR voices. Listen! They're beating
+at the sides of the ship. Keep them from me, keep them
+out!"
+
+He was quiet for a minute, until there came another great
+rush of the sea against the sides of the ship, and a roar
+of water against the port. Then he broke out, almost
+screaming--"Henry, brother Henry, keep them back! Don't
+let them drag me down. I never willed it. I never wanted
+it. Their death is not at my door. It was necessity.
+Henry! Brother Henry! Tell them not to drag me below the
+sea!"
+
+Like that he raved for perhaps an hour and we tried to
+quiet him. Cousin Willie had slipped away, I don't know
+where. Cousin Ferdinand was in his bunk with his back
+turned.
+
+"Do I slip to-night, at all," he kept growling "or do I
+not? Say, mister, do I get any slip at all?"
+
+But no one minded him.
+
+Then daylight came and Uncle fell asleep. His face looked
+drawn and gray and the cords stood out on his withered
+hand, which was clutched against his shirt.
+
+So he slept. It seemed so strange. There was no court
+physician, no bulletins to reassure the world that he
+was sleeping quietly.
+
+Later in the morning I saw the ship's doctor and the
+captain, all in uniform, with gold braid, walking on
+their inspection round.
+
+"You had some trouble here last night," I heard the
+captain say.
+
+"No, nothing," the doctor answered, "only one of the
+steerage passengers delirious in the night."
+
+Later in the morning the storm had gone down and the sea
+was calm as glass, and Uncle Henry and I got Uncle William
+up on deck. Mr. Peters, the steward that I think I spoke
+about before, got us a steamer chair from the first class
+that had been thrown away--quite good except for one
+leg,--and Uncle William sat in it with his face away from
+the sea. He seemed much shaken and looked gray and tired,
+but he talked quite quietly and rationally about our
+going to America, and how we must all work, because work
+is man's lot. He himself, he says, will take up the
+presidency of Harvard University in New York, and Uncle
+Henry, who, of course, was our own Grand Admiral and is
+a sailor, will enter as Admiral of the navy of one of
+the states, probably, Uncle says, the navy of Missouri,
+or else that of Colorado.
+
+It was pleasant to hear Uncle William talk in this way,
+just as quietly and rationally as at Berlin, and with
+the same grasp of political things. He only got excited
+once, and that was when he was telling Uncle Henry that
+it was his particular wish that Uncle should go to the
+captain and offer to take over the navigation of the
+vessel. Uncle Henry is a splendid sailor, and in all our
+cruises in the Baltic he used to work out all the navigation
+of the vessel, except, of course, the arithmetic--which
+was beneath him.
+
+Uncle Henry laughed (he is always so good natured) and
+said that he had had enough of being Admiral to last him
+all his life. But when Uncle William insisted, he said
+he would see what he could do.
+
+
+S.S. America. Friday
+
+All yesterday and to-day the sea was quite calm, and we
+could sit on deck. I was glad because, in the cabin where
+I am, there are three other women, and it is below the
+water-line, and is very close and horrid. So when it is
+rough, I can only sit in the alley-way with my knitting.
+There the light is very dim and the air bad. But I do
+not complain. It is woman's lot. Uncle William and Cousin
+Willie have both told me this--that it is woman's lot to
+bear and to suffer; and they said it with such complete
+resignation that I feel I ought to imitate their attitude.
+
+Cousin Ferdinand, too, is very brave about the dirt and
+the discomfort of being on board the ship. He doesn't
+seem to mind the dirt at all, and his new friends (Mr.
+Sheehan and Mr. Mosenhammer) seem to bear it so well,
+too. Uncle Henry goes and washes his hands and face at
+one of the ship's pumps before every meal, with a great
+noise and splashing, but Cousin Ferdinand says, "For me
+the pump, no." He says that nothing like that matters
+now, and that his only regret is that he did not fall at
+the head of his troops, as he would have done if he had
+not been detained by business.
+
+I caught sight of Cousin Karl of Austria! So it seems he
+is on the ship after all. He was up on the promenade deck
+where the first class passengers are, and of which you
+can just see one end from down here in the steerage.
+Cousin Karl had on a waiter's suit and was bringing
+something to drink to two men who were in steamer chairs
+on the deck. I don't know whether he saw me or not, but
+if he did he didn't give any sign of recognizing me. One
+of the men gave Cousin Karl a piece of money and I was
+sure it was he, from the peculiar, cringing way in which
+he bowed. It was just the manner that he used to have at
+Vienna with his cousin, Franz Ferdinand, and with dear
+old Uncle Franz Joseph.
+
+We always thought, we girls I mean, that it was Cousin
+Karl who had Cousin Franz Ferdinand blown up at Serajevo.
+I remember once we dared Cousin Zita, Karl's wife, to
+ask Uncle William if it really was Karl. But Uncle William
+spoke very gravely, and said that it was not a thing for
+us to discuss, and that if Karl did it, it was an "act
+of State," and no doubt very painful to Cousin Karl to
+have to do. Zita asked Uncle if Karl poisoned dear old
+Uncle Franz Joseph, because some of Karl's best and most
+intimate friends said that he did. But Uncle said very
+positively, "No," that dear old Uncle Franz Joseph had
+not needed any poison, but had died, very naturally,
+under the hands of Uncle William's own physician, who
+was feeling his wind-pipe at the time.
+
+Of course, all these things seem very far away now. But
+seeing Cousin Karl on the upper deck, reminded me of all
+the harmless gossip and tattle that used to go on among
+us girls in the old days.
+
+
+Friday afternoon
+
+I saw Cousin Willie on the deck this afternoon. I had
+not seen him all day yesterday as he seems to keep out
+of sight. His eyes looked bloodshot and I was sure that
+he had been drinking.
+
+I asked him where he had been in the storm while Uncle
+William was ill. He gave a queer sort of leering chuckle
+and said, "Over there," and pointed backwards with his
+thumb towards the first class part of the ship. Then he
+said, "Come here a minute," and he led me round a corner
+to where no one could see, and showed me a gold brooch
+and two diamond rings. He told me not to tell the others,
+and then he tried to squeeze my hand and to pull me
+towards him, in such a horrid way, but I broke away and
+went back. Since then I have been trying to think how he
+could have got the brooch and the rings. But I cannot
+think.
+
+
+S.S. America. Saturday
+
+To-day when I went up on deck, the first thing I saw was
+Uncle Henry. I hardly recognized him. He had on an old
+blue sailor's jersey, and was cleaning up a brass rail
+with a rag. I asked him why he was dressed like that and
+Uncle Henry laughed and said he had become an admiral.
+I couldn't think what he meant, as I never guess things
+with a double meaning, so he explained that he has got
+work as a sailor for the voyage across. I thought he
+looked very nice in his sailor's jersey, much nicer than
+in the coat with gold facings, when he was our High
+Admiral. He reminded me very much of those big fair-haired
+Norwegian sailors that we used to see when we went on
+the Meteor to Flekkefyord and Gildeskaale. I am sure that
+he will be of great service to this English captain, in
+helping to work the ship across.
+
+When Cousin Ferdinand came up on deck with his two friends,
+Mr. Mosenhammer and Mr. Sheehan, he was very much interested
+in Uncle Henry's having got work. He made an arrangement
+right away that he would borrow Uncle Henry's wages, and
+that Mr. Sheehan would advance them, and he would then
+add it to our capital, and then he would take it and keep
+it. Uncle Henry is to get what is called, in the new
+money, one seventy-five a day, and to get it for four
+days, and Cousin Ferdinand says that comes to four dollars
+and a quarter. Cousin Ferdinand is very quick with figures.
+He says that he will have to take out a small commission
+for managing the money for Uncle Henry, and that later
+on he will tell Uncle Henry how much will be left after
+taking it out. Uncle Henry said all right and went on
+with his brass work. It is strange how his clothes seem
+to change him. He looks now just like a rough, common
+sailor.
+
+
+S.S. America. Tuesday
+
+To-day our voyage is to end. I am so glad. When we came
+on deck Mr. Peters told me that we were in sight of land.
+He told me the names of the places, but they were hard
+and difficult to remember, like Long Island and Sandy
+Hook; not a bit like our dear old simple German names.
+
+So we were all told to put our things together and get
+ready to land. I got, out of one of our boxes, an old
+frock coat for Uncle William. It is frayed at the ends
+of the sleeves and it shines a little, but I had stitched
+it here and there and it looked quite nice. He put it on
+with a pair of gray trousers that are quite good, and
+not very much bagged, and I had knitted for him a red
+necktie that he wears over his blue shirt with a collar,
+called a celluloid collar, that American gentlemen wear.
+
+The sea is so calm that Uncle doesn't mind being on deck
+now, and he even came close to the bulwarks, which he
+wouldn't do all the way across. He stood there in quite
+an attitude with his imperfect hand folded into his coat.
+He looked something, but not quite, as he used to look
+on the deck of the Meteor in the Baltic.
+
+Presently he said, "Henry, your arm!" and walked up and
+down with Uncle Henry. I could see that the other passengers
+were quite impressed with the way Uncle looked, and it
+pleased him. I heard some rough young loafers saying,
+"Catch on to the old Dutch, will you? Eh, what?"
+
+Uncle Henry is going ashore just as he is, in his blue
+jersey. But Cousin Ferdinand has put on a bright red tie
+that Mr. Mosenhammer has loaned to him for three hours.
+
+Cousin Willie only came on deck at the very last minute,
+and he seemed anxious to slink behind the other passengers
+and to keep out of sight. I think it must have something
+to do with the brooch that he showed me, and the rings.
+His eyes looked very red and bloodshot and his face more
+crooked and furtive than ever. I am sure that he had been
+drinking again.
+
+I have written the last lines of this diary sitting on
+the deck. We have just passed a huge statue that rises
+out of the water, the name of which they mentioned but
+I can't remember, as it was not anything I ever heard of
+before.
+
+Just think--in a little while we shall land in America!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+City New York. 2nd Avenue
+
+We came off the steamer late yesterday afternoon and came
+across the city to a pension on Second Avenue where we
+are now. Only here they don't call it a pension but a
+boarding house. Cousin Ferdinand and Cousin Willie drove
+across in the cart with our boxes, and Uncle William and
+Uncle Henry and I came on a street car. It cost us fifteen
+cents. A cent is four and one-sixth pfennigs. We tried
+to reckon what it came to, but we couldn't; but Uncle
+Henry thinks it could be done.
+
+This house is a tall house in a mean street, crowded and
+noisy with carts and street-sellers. I think it would be
+better to have all the boarding houses stand far back
+from the street with elm trees and fountains and lawns
+where peacocks could walk up and down. I am sure it would
+be MUCH better.
+
+We have taken a room for Uncle William and Uncle Henry
+on the third floor at the back and a small room in the
+front for me of the kind called a hall bedroom, which I
+don't ever remember seeing before. There were none at
+Sans Souci and none, I think, at any of the palaces.
+Cousin Willie has a room at the top of the house, and
+Cousin Ferdinand in the basement.
+
+The landlady of this house is very stout and reminds me
+very much of the Grand Duchess of Sondersburg-Augustenburg:
+her manner when she showed us the rooms was very like
+that of the Grand Duchess; only perhaps a little firmer
+and more authoritative. But it appears that they are
+probably not related, as the landlady's name is Mrs.
+O'Halloran, which is, I think, Scotch.
+
+When we arrived it was already time for dinner so we went
+downstairs to it at once. The dining-room was underground
+in the basement. It was very crowded and stuffy, and
+there was a great clatter of dishes and a heavy smell of
+food. Most of the people were already seated, but there
+was an empty place at the head of one of the tables and
+Uncle William moved straight towards that. Uncle was
+wearing, as I said, his frock coat and his celluloid
+collar and he walked into the room with quite an air, in
+something of the way that he used to come into the great
+hall of the Neues Palais at Potsdam, only that in these
+clothes it looked different. As Uncle entered the room
+he waved his hand and said, "Let no one rise!" I remember
+that when Uncle said this at the big naval dinner at Kiel
+it made a great sensation as an example of his ready
+tact. He realised that if they had once risen there would
+have been great difficulty in their order of procedure
+for sitting down again. He was afraid that the same
+difficulty might have been felt here in the boarding
+house. But I don't think it would, and I don't think that
+they were going to stand up, anyway. They just went on
+eating. I noticed one cheap-looking young man watching
+Uncle with a sort of half smile as he moved towards his
+seat. I heard him say to his neighbour, "Some scout, eh?"
+
+The food was so plain and so greasy that I could hardly
+eat it. But I have noticed that it is a strange thing
+about Uncle that he doesn't seem to know what he eats at
+all. He takes all this poor stuff that they put before
+him to be the same delicacies that we had at the Neues
+Palais and Sans Souci. "Is this a pheasant?" he asked
+when the servant maid passed him his dish of meat. I
+heard the mean young man whisper, "I guess not." Presently
+some hash was brought in and Uncle said, "Ha! A Salmi!
+Ha! excellent!" I could see that Mrs. O'Halloran, the
+landlady, who sat at the other end of the table, was
+greatly pleased.
+
+I was surprised to find--because it is so hard to get
+used to the change of things in our new life--that all
+the people went on talking just the same after Uncle sat
+down. At the palace at Potsdam nobody ever spoke at dinner
+unless Uncle William first addressed him, and then he
+was supposed to give a sort of bow and answer as briefly
+as possible so as not to interrupt the flow of Uncle
+William's conversation. Generally Uncle talked and all
+the rest listened. His conversation was agreed by everybody
+to be wonderful. Princes, admirals, bishops, artists,
+scholars and everybody united in declaring that Uncle
+William showed a range of knowledge and a brilliance of
+language that was little short of marvellous. So naturally
+it was a little disappointing at first to find that these
+people just went on talking to one another and didn't
+listen to Uncle William at all, or merely looked at him
+in an inquisitive sort of way and whispered remarks to
+one another. But presently, I don't just know how, Uncle
+began to get the attention of the table and one after
+the other the people stopped talking to listen to him.
+I was very glad of this because Uncle was talking about
+America and I was sure that it would interest them, as
+what he said was very much the same as the wonderful
+speech that he made to the American residents of Berlin
+at the time when the first exchange professor was sent
+over to the University. I remember that all the Americans
+who heard it said that Uncle told them things about their
+own country that they had never known, or even suspected,
+before. So I was glad when I heard Uncle explaining to
+these people the wonderful possibilities of their country.
+He talked of the great plains of Connecticut and the huge
+seaports of Pittsburg and Colorado Springs, and the
+tobacco forests of Idaho till one could just see it all.
+He said that the Mississippi, which is a great river here
+as large as the Weser, should be dammed back and held
+while a war of extermination was carried on against the
+Indians on the other side of it with a view to
+Christianizing them. The people listened, their faces
+flushed with eating and with the close air. Here and
+there some of them laughed or nudged one another and
+said, "Get on to this, will you?" But I remember that
+when Uncle William made this speech in Berlin the Turkish
+ambassador said after it that he now knew so much about
+America that he wanted to die, and that the Shah of Persia
+wrote a letter to Uncle, all in his own writing, except
+the longest words, and said that he had ordered Uncle's
+speech on America to be printed and read aloud by all
+the schoolmasters in Persia under penalty of decapitation.
+Nearly all of them read it.
+
+
+Wednesday
+
+This morning we had a great disappointment. It had been
+pretty well arranged on board the ship that Uncle would
+take over the presidency of Harvard University. Uncle
+Henry and Cousin Ferdinand and Cousin Willie had all
+consented to it, and we looked upon it as done. Now it
+seems there is a mistake. First of all Harvard University
+is not in New York, as we had always thought in Germany
+that it was. I remember that when Uncle Henry came home
+from his great tour in America, in which he studied
+American institutions so profoundly, and made his report
+he said that Harvard University was in New York. Uncle
+had this information filed away in our Secret Service
+Department.
+
+But it seems that it is somewhere else. The University
+here is called Columbia, so Uncle decided that he would
+be president of that. In the old days all the great men
+of learning used to assure Uncle that if fate had not
+made him an emperor he would have been better fitted than
+any living man to be the head of a great university.
+Uncle admitted this himself, though he resented being
+compared only to the living ones.
+
+So it was a great disappointment to-day when they refused
+to give him the presidency. I went with him to the college,
+but I cannot quite understand what happened or why they
+won't give it to him. We walked all the way up and I
+carried a handbag filled with Uncle's degrees and diplomas
+from Oxford and all over the world. All the way up Uncle
+talked about the majesty and the freedom of learning and
+what he would do to the college when he was made president,
+and how all the professors should sit up and obey him.
+At times he got so excited that he would stop on the
+street and wave his hands and gesticulate so that people
+turned and looked at him. At Potsdam we never realized
+that Uncle was excited all the time, and, in any case,
+with his uniform on and his sabre clattering as he walked,
+it all seemed different. But here in the street, in his
+faded frock coat and knitted tie, and with his face
+flushed and his eyes rambling, people seemed to mistake
+it and thought that his mind was not quite right.
+
+So I think he made a wrong impression when we went into
+the offices of the college. Uncle was still quite excited
+from his talking. "Let the trustees be brought," he said
+in a peremptory way to the two young men in black frock
+coats, secretaries of some sort, I suppose, who received
+us. Then he turned to me. "Princess," he said, "my
+diplomas!" He began pulling them out of the bag and
+throwing them on the table in a wild sort of way. The
+other people waiting in the room were all staring at him.
+Then the young men took Uncle by the arm and led him into
+an inner room and I went out into the corridor and waited.
+Presently one of the young men came out and told me not
+to wait, as Uncle had been sent home in a cab. He was
+very civil and showed me where to go to get the elevated
+railroad. But while I was waiting I had overheard some
+of the people talking about Uncle. One said, "That's that
+same old German that was on board our ship last week in
+the steerage--has megalomania or something of the sort,
+they say, and thinks he's the former Emperor: I saw the
+Kaiser once at a review in Berlin,--not much resemblance,
+is there?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+For weeks and weeks I have written nothing in my diary
+because it has been so discouraging. After Uncle William's
+offer to take over the presidency of Columbia University
+had been refused, he debated with Uncle Henry and with
+Cousin Ferdinand of Bulgaria (who is not living in our
+boarding house now but who comes over quite often in the
+evenings) whether he would accept the presidency of
+Harvard. Cousin Ferdinand looked up the salary in a book
+and told him not to take it. Cousin Ferdinand has little
+books with all the salaries of people in America and he
+says that these books are fine and much better than the
+Almanach de Gotha which we used to use in Europe to hunt
+people up. He says that if he ever goes back to be King
+of Bulgaria again he is going to introduce books like
+these. Cousin Ferdinand is getting very full of American
+ideas and he says that what you want to know about a man
+is not his line of descent but his line of credit. And
+he says that the whole King business in Europe has been
+mismanaged. He says that there should have been millions
+in it. I forgot to say in my diary sooner that Cousin
+Ferdinand's two friends, Mr. Mosenhammer and Mr. Sheehan,
+took him into their clothing business at once as a sort
+of partner. The reason was that they found that he could
+wear clothes; the effect on the customers when they see
+Cousin Ferdinand walking up and down in front of the
+store is wonderful. Of course all kings can wear clothes
+and in the old days in the Potsdam palace we thought
+nothing of it. But Cousin Ferdinand says that the kings
+should have known enough to stop trying to be soldiers
+and to put themselves at the head of the export clothing
+trade. He wishes, he says, that he had some of his
+Bulgarian generals here now in their blue coats trimmed
+with black fur; he says that with a little alteration,
+which he showed us how to do, he could have sent them
+out "on the road," wherever that is, and have made the
+biggest boom in gentlemen's winter fur trimmings that
+the trade ever saw.
+
+Cousin Ferdinand, when he comes over in the evenings now,
+is always beautifully dressed and I can notice that Mrs.
+O'Halloran, the landlady, is much impressed with him. I
+am glad of this because we have not yet been able to pay
+her any money and I was afraid she might say something
+about it. But what is stranger is that now that Cousin
+Ferdinand has good clothes, Uncle William and Uncle Henry
+seem much impressed too. Uncle Henry looks so plain and
+common in his sailor's jersey, and Uncle William in his
+old frock coat looks faded and shabby and his face always
+vacant and wondering. So now when Cousin Ferdinand comes
+in they stand up and get a chair for him and listen to
+his advice on everything.
+
+So, as I said, Cousin Ferdinand looked up the salary of
+the President of Harvard in a book and he was strongly
+against Uncle William's taking the position. But Uncle
+William says this kind of position is the nearest thing
+in this country to what he had in Germany. He thinks that
+he could do for Harvard what he did for Germany. He has
+written out on a big sheet of paper all the things that
+he calls the Chief Needs of America, because he is always
+busy like this and never still. I forget the whole list,
+especially as he changes it every day according to the
+way that people treat Uncle William on the street, but
+the things that he always puts first are Culture, Religion,
+and Light. These he says he can supply, and he thought
+that the presidency of Harvard would be the best place
+to do it from. In the end he accepted the position against
+Cousin Ferdinand's advice, or at least I mean he said
+that he would be willing to take it and he told Uncle
+Henry to pack up all his degrees and diplomas and to send
+them to Harvard and say that he was coming.
+
+So it was dreadfully disappointing when all the diplomas
+came back again by the next post. There was a letter with
+them but I didn't see it, as Uncle William tore it into
+fragments and stamped on it. He said he was done with
+American universities for ever: I have never seen him so
+furious: he named over on his fingers all the American
+professors that he had fed at Berlin, one meal each and
+sometimes even two,--Uncle has a wonderful memory for
+things like that,--and yet this was their gratitude. He
+walked up and down his room and talked so wildly and
+incoherently that if I had not known and been told so
+often by our greatest authorities in Germany how beautifully
+balanced Uncle William's brain is, I should have feared
+that he was wandering.
+
+But presently he quieted down and said with deep earnestness
+that the American universities must now go to ruin in
+their own way. He was done with them. He said he would
+go into a cloister and spend his life in quiet adoration,
+provided that he could find anything to adore, which, he
+said, in his station was very doubtful. But half an hour
+later he was quite cheerful again,--it is wonderful how
+quickly Uncle William's brain recovers itself,--and said
+that a cloister was too quiet and that he would take a
+position as Governor of a State; there are a great many
+of these in this country and Uncle spent days and days
+writing letters to them and when the answers came in--
+though some never answered at all--Uncle William got into
+the same state of fury as about the Presidency of Harvard.
+So, naturally, each day seemed more disappointing than
+the last, especially with the trouble that we have been
+having with Cousin Willie, of which I have not spoken
+yet, and I was getting quite disheartened until last
+evening, when everything seemed to change.
+
+We all knew, of course, that Uncle William is the greatest
+artist in the world, but no one liked to suggest that he
+should sell his pictures for money, a thing that no prince
+was ever capable of doing. Yet I could not but feel glad
+when Uncle decided yesterday that he would stoop to make
+his living by art. It cost him a great struggle to make
+this decision, but he talked it over very fully last
+night with Uncle Henry, after Uncle Henry came home from
+work, and the resolution is taken.
+
+Of course, Uncle always had a wonderful genius for
+painting. I remember how much his pictures used to be
+admired at the court at Berlin. I have seen some of the
+best painters stand absolutely entranced,--they said so
+themselves,--in front of Uncle's canvasses. I remember
+one of the greatest of our artists saying one day to
+Uncle in the Potsdam Gallery, "Now, which of these two
+pictures is yours and which is Michel Angelo's: I never
+can tell you two apart." Uncle gave him the order of the
+Red Swan. Another painter once said that if Uncle's genius
+had been developed he would have been the greatest painter
+of modern times. Uncle William, I remember, was dreadfully
+angry. He said it WAS developed.
+
+So it seemed only natural that Uncle should turn to Art
+to make our living. But he hesitated because there is
+some doubt whether a person of noble birth can sell
+anything for money. But Uncle says Tintoretto the great
+Italian artist had two quarterings of nobility, and
+Velasquez had two and a half.
+
+Luckily we have with us among our things Uncle's easel
+and his paints that he used in Berlin. He had always to
+have special things because he doesn't use little brushes
+and tubes of colour as ordinary artists do, but had a
+big brush and his paint in a tin can, so that he can work
+more quickly. Fortunately we have with us three of Uncle's
+pictures rolled up in the bottom of our boxes. He is
+going to sell these first and after that he says that he
+will paint one or two every day. One of the three canvasses
+that we have is an allegorical picture called "Progress"
+in which Progress is seen coming out of a cloud in the
+background with Uncle William standing in the foreground.
+Another is called "Modern Science" and in this Science
+is seen crouched in the dark in the background and Uncle
+William standing in the light in the foreground. The
+other is called "Midnight in the Black Forest." Uncle
+William did it in five minutes with a pot of black paint.
+They say it is impressionistic.
+
+So all the evening Uncle William and Uncle Henry talked
+about the new plan. It is wonderful how Uncle William
+enters into a thing. He got me to fetch him his old blue
+blouse, which was with the painting things, and he put
+it on over his clothes and walked up and down the room
+with a long paint-brush in his hand. "We painters, my
+dear Henry," he said, "must not be proud. America needs
+Art. Very good. She shall have it."
+
+I could see, of course, that Uncle William did not like
+the idea of selling pictures for money. But he is going
+to make that side of it less objectionable by painting
+a picture, a very large picture, for nothing and giving
+it to the big Metropolitan Art Gallery which is here.
+Uncle has already partly thought it out. It is to be
+called the "Spirit of America" and in it the Spirit of
+America will be seen doubled up in the background: Uncle
+has not yet fully thought out the foreground, but he says
+he has an idea.
+
+In any case he is going to refuse to take anything more
+than a modest price for his pictures. Beyond that, he
+says, not one pfennig.
+
+So this morning Uncle rolled up his three canvasses under
+his arm and has gone away to sell them.
+
+I am very glad, as we have but little money, indeed hardly
+any except Uncle Henry's wages. And I have been so worried,
+too, and surprised since we came here about Cousin Willie.
+He hardly is with the rest of us at all. He is out all
+night and sleeps in the day time, and often I am sure
+that he has been drinking. One morning when he came back
+to the house at about breakfast time he showed me quite
+a handful of money, but wouldn't say where he got it. He
+said there was lots more where it came from. I asked him
+to give me some to pay Mrs. O'Halloran, but he only
+laughed in his leering way and said that he needed it
+all. At another time when I went up to Cousin Willie's
+room one day when he was out, I saw quite a lot of silver
+things hidden in a corner of the cupboard. They looked
+like goblets and silver dinner things, and there was a
+revolver and a sheath-knife hidden with them. I began to
+think that he must have stolen all these things, though
+it seemed impossible for a prince. I have spoken to Uncle
+William several times about Cousin Willie, but he gets
+impatient and does not seem to care. Uncle never desires
+very much to talk of people other than himself. I think
+it fatigues his mind. In any case, he says that he has
+done for Willie already all that he could. He says he
+had him confined to a fortress three times and that four
+times he refused to have him in his sight for a month,
+and that twice he banished him to a country estate for
+six weeks. His duty, he says, is done. I said that I was
+afraid that Cousin Willie had been stealing and told him
+about the silver things hidden in the cupboard. But Uncle
+got very serious and read me a very severe lecture. No
+prince, he said, ever stole. His son, he explained, might
+very well be collecting souvenirs as memorials of his
+residence in America: all the Hohenzollerns collected
+souvenirs: some of our most beautiful art things at
+Potsdam and Sans Souci were souvenirs collected by our
+ancestors in France fifty years ago. Uncle said that if
+the Great War had turned out as it should and if his
+soldiers had not betrayed him by getting killed, we should
+have had more souvenirs than ever. After that he dismissed
+the subject from his mind. Uncle William can dismiss
+things from his mind more quickly than anybody I ever
+knew.
+
+
+The Same Day. Later
+
+I was so surprised this afternoon, when I happened to go
+down to the door, to see Mr. Peters, the ice gentleman
+that was on the ship, with his ice cart delivering ice
+into the basement. I knew that he delivered ice in this
+part of the city because he said so, and I think he had
+mentioned this street, and two or three times I thought
+I had seen him from the window. But it did seem surprising
+to happen to go down to the door (I forget what I went
+for) at the moment that he was there. He looked very fine
+in his big rough suit of overalls. It is not quite like
+a military uniform, but I think it looks better. Mr.
+Peters knew me at once. "Good afternoon, Miss Hohen," he
+said (that is the name, as I think I said, that we have
+here), "how are all the folks?"
+
+So we talked for quite a little time, and I told him
+about Uncle trying to get work and how hard it was and
+how at last he had got work, or at least had gone out to
+get it, as a painter. Mr. Peters said that that was fine.
+He said that painters do well here: he has a lot of
+friends who are painters and they get all the way from
+sixty to seventy-five cents an hour. It seems so odd to
+think of them being paid by the hour. I don't think the
+court artists at home were paid like that. It will be
+very nice if Uncle William can mingle with Mr. Peters's
+artist friends. Mr. Peters asked if he might take me out
+some Sunday, and I said that I would ask Uncle William
+and Uncle Henry and Cousin Ferdinand and Cousin Willie
+and if they all consented to come I would go. I hope it
+was not a forward thing to do.
+
+I forgot when I was talking of work to say that Uncle
+Henry got work the very second day that we were here. He
+works down at the docks where the ships are. I think he
+supervises the incoming and outgoing of the American
+navy. It is called being a stevedore, and no doubt his
+being an Admiral helped him to get it. He hopes to get
+a certificate presently to be a Barge Master, which will
+put him in charge of the canals. But there is a very
+difficult examination to go through and Uncle Henry is
+working for it at night out of a book. He has to take up
+Vulgar Fractions which, of course, none of our High Seas
+Command were asked to learn. But Uncle Henry is stooping
+to them.
+
+So now, I think, everything will go well.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Uncle's art has failed. It was only yesterday that I was
+writing in my memoirs of how cheerful and glad I felt to
+think that Uncle William was going to be able to make
+his living by art, and now everything is changed again.
+All the time that Uncle was out on his visit to the
+picture dealers, I was making plans and thinking what we
+would do with the money when it came in, so it is very
+disappointing to have it all come to nothing. I don't
+know just what happened because Uncle William never gives
+any details of things. His mind moves too rapidly for
+that. But he came home with his pictures still under his
+arm in a perfect fury and raged up and down his room,
+using very dreadful language.
+
+But after a little while when he grew calmer he explained
+to me that the Americans are merely swineheads and that
+art, especially art such as his, is wasted on them. Uncle
+says that he has no wish to speak harshly of the Americans,
+but they are pig-dogs. He bears them no ill-will, he
+says, for what they have done and his heart is free of
+any spirit of vengeance, but he wishes he had his heel
+on their necks for about half a minute. He said this with
+such a strange dreadful snarl that for the moment his
+face seemed quite changed. But presently when he recovered
+himself he got quite cheerful again, and said that it
+was perhaps unseemly in him, as the guest of the American
+people, to say anything against them. It is strange how
+Uncle always refers to himself as the guest of the American
+people. Living in this poor place, in these cheap
+surroundings, it seems so odd. Often at our meals in the
+noisy dining-room down in the basement, in the speeches
+that he makes to the boarders, he talks of himself as
+the guest of America and he says, "What does America ask
+in return? Nothing." I can see that Mrs. O'Halloran, the
+landlady, doesn't like this, because we have not paid
+her anything for quite a long time, and she has spoken
+to me about it in the corridor several times.
+
+But when Uncle William makes speeches in the dining-room
+I think the whole room becomes transformed for him into
+the banquet room of a palace, and the cheap bracket lamps
+against the wall turn into a blaze of light and the
+boarders are all courtiers, and he becomes more and more
+grandiloquent. He waves his hand towards Uncle Henry and
+refers to him as "my brother the Admiral," and to me as
+"the Princess at my side." Some of the people, the meaner
+ones, begin to laugh and to whisper, and others look
+uncomfortable and sorry. And it is always on these
+occasions that Uncle William refers to himself as America's
+guest, and refers to the Americans as the hospitable
+nation who have taken him to their heart. I think that
+when Uncle says this he really believes it; Uncle can
+believe practically anything if he says it himself.
+
+So, as I say, when he came home yesterday, after failing
+to sell his pictures, he was at first furious and then
+he fell into his other mood and he said that, as the
+guest of a great people, he had found out at last the
+return he could make to them. He said that he would
+organise a School of Art, and as soon as he had got the
+idea he was carried away with it at once and seized a
+pencil and paper and began making plans for the school
+and drawing up a list of the instructors needed. He asked
+first who could be Principal, or President, of the School,
+and decided that he would have to be that himself as he
+knew of no one but himself who had the peculiar power of
+organisation needed for it. All the technical instructors,
+he said, must be absolutely the best, each one a master
+in his own line. So he wrote down at the top of his list,
+Instructor in Oils, and reflected a little, with his head
+in his hand, as to who could do that. Presently he sighed
+and said that as far as he knew there was no one; he'd
+have to do that himself. Then he wrote down Instructor
+in Water Colour, and as soon as he had written it he said
+right off that he would have to take that over too; there
+was no one else that he could trust it to. Then he said,
+"Now, let me see, Perspective, Freehand, and Crayon Work.
+I need three men: three men of the first class. Can I
+get them? I doubt it. Let me think what can be done."
+
+He walked up and down the room a little with his hands
+behind his back and his head sunk in thought while he
+murmured, "Three men? Three men? But Ha! why THREE? Why
+not, if sufficiently gifted, ONE man?"
+
+But just when he was saying this there was a knock at
+the door and Mrs. O'Halloran came in. I knew at once what
+she had come for, because she had been threatening to do
+it, and so I felt dreadfully nervous when she began to
+say that our bill at the house had gone unpaid too long
+and that we must pay her at once what we owed her. It
+took some time before Uncle William understood what she
+was talking about, but when he did he became dreadfully
+frigid and polite. He said, "Let me understand clearly,
+madame, just what it is that you wish to say: do I
+apprehend that you are saying that my account here for
+our maintenance is now due and payable?" Mrs. O'Halloran
+said yes, she was. And Uncle said, "Let me endeavour to
+grasp your meaning exactly: am I correct in thinking that
+you mean I owe you money?" Mrs. O'Halloran said that was
+what she meant. Uncle said, "Let me try to apprehend just
+as accurately as possible what it is that you are trying
+to tell me: is my surmise correct that you are implying
+that it is time that I settled up my bill?"
+
+Mrs. O'Halloran said, "Yes," but I could see that by this
+time she was getting quite flustered because there was
+something so dreadfully chilling in Uncle's manner: his
+tone in a way was courtesy itself, but there was something
+in it calculated to make Mrs. O'Halloran feel that she
+had committed a dreadful breach in what she had done.
+Uncle William told me afterwards that to mention money
+to a prince is not a permissible thing, and that no true
+Hohenzollern has ever allowed the word "bill" to be said
+in his presence, and that for this reason he had tried,
+out of courtesy, to give the woman every chance to withdraw
+her words and had only administered a reprimand to her
+when she failed to do so. Certainly it was a dreadful
+rebuke that he gave her. He told her that he must insist
+on this topic being dismissed and never raised again:
+that he could allow no such discussion: the subject was
+one, he said, that he must absolutely refuse to entertain:
+he did not wish, he said, to speak with undue severity,
+but he had better make it plain that if there were any
+renewal of this discussion he should feel it impossible
+to remain in the house.
+
+While Uncle William was saying all this Mrs. O'Halloran
+was getting more and more confused and angry, and when
+Uncle finally opened the door for her with cold dignity,
+she backed out of it and found herself outside the room
+without seeming to know what she was doing. Presently I
+could hear her down in the scullery below, rattling dishes
+and saying that she was just as good as anybody.
+
+But Uncle William seemed to be wonderfully calmed and
+elevated after this scene, and said, "Princess, bring me
+my flute." I brought it to him and he sat by the window
+and leaned his head out over the back lane and played
+our dear old German melodies, till somebody threw a boot
+at him. The people about here are not musical. But meantime
+Uncle William had forgotten all about the School of Art,
+and he said no more about it.
+
+
+Next Day
+
+To-day a dreadful thing has happened. The police have
+come into the house and have taken Cousin Willie away.
+He is now in a place called The Tombs, and Mr. Peters
+says that he will be sent to the great prison at Sing-Sing.
+He is to be tried for robbery and for stabbing with intent
+to kill.
+
+It was very dreadful when they came to take him. I was
+so glad that Uncle William was not here to see it all.
+But it was in the morning and he had gone out to see a
+steamship company about being president of it, and I was
+tidying up our rooms, because Mrs. O'Halloran won't tidy
+them up any more or let the coloured servant tidy them
+up until we pay her more money. She said that to me, but
+I think she is afraid to say it to Uncle William. So I
+mean to do the work now while Uncle is out and not let
+him know.
+
+This morning, in the middle of the morning, while I was
+working, all of a sudden I heard the street door open
+and slam and some one rushing up the stairway: and then
+Cousin Willie broke into the room, all panting and excited,
+and his face grey with fright and gasping out, "Hide me,
+hide me!" He ran from room to room whining and hysterical,
+and his breath coming in a sort of sob, but he seemed
+incapable of deciding what to do. I would have hidden
+him if I could, but at the very next moment I heard the
+policemen coming in below, and the voice of the landlady.
+Then they came upstairs, big strong-looking men in blue,
+any one of whom could have choked Cousin Willie with one
+hand. Cousin Willie ran to and fro like a cornered rat,
+and two of the men seized him and then I think he must
+have been beside himself with fear for I saw his teeth
+bite into the man's hand that held him, and one of the
+policemen struck him hard with his wooden club across
+the head and he fell limp to the floor. They dragged him
+down the stairway like that and I followed them down,
+but there was nothing that I could do. I saw them lift
+Cousin Willie into a closed black wagon that stood at
+the street door with quite a little crowd of people
+gathered about it already, all excited and leering as if
+it were a show. And then they drove away with him and I
+came in and went upstairs and sat down in Uncle's room
+but I could not work any more. A little later on Mr.
+Peters came to the house,--I don't know why, because it
+was not for the ice as he had his other clothes on,--and
+he came upstairs and sat down and told me about what had
+happened. It seemed a strange thing to receive him upstairs
+in Uncle's bedroom like that, but I was so upset that I
+did not think about it at the time. Mr. Peters had been
+on our street with his ice wagon when the police came,
+though I did not see him. But he saw me, he said, standing
+at the door. And I think he must have gone home and
+changed his things and come back again, but I did not
+ask him.
+
+He told me that Cousin Willie had stabbed a man, or at
+least a boy, that was in charge of a jewelry shop, and
+that the boy might die. Cousin Willie, Mr. Peters says,
+has been stealing jewelry nearly ever since we came here
+and the police have been watching him but he did not know
+this and so he had grown quite foolhardy, and this morning
+in broad daylight he went into some sort of jewelry or
+pawn shop where there was only a boy watching the shop,
+and the boy was a cripple. Cousin Willie had planned to
+hide the things under his coat and to sneak out but the
+boy saw what he was doing and cried out, and when Cousin
+Willie tried to break out of the shop he hobbled to the
+door and threw himself in the way. And then it was that
+Cousin Willie stabbed him with his sheath-knife,--the
+one that I had seen in his room,--and ran. But already
+there was a great outcry and the people followed on his
+tracks and shouted to the police, and so they easily ran
+him down.
+
+All of this Mr. Peters told me, but he couldn't stay very
+long and had to go again. He says he is going to see what
+can be done for Cousin Willie but I am afraid that he
+doesn't feel very sorry for him; but after Mr. Peters
+had gone I could not help going on thinking about it all
+and it seemed to me as if Cousin Willie had not altogether
+had a fair chance in life. Common people are brought up
+in fear of prison and punishment and they learn to do
+what they should. But Cousin Willie was brought up as a
+prince and was above imprisonment and things like that.
+And in any case he seemed, when the big men seized hold
+of him, such a paltry and miserable thing.
+
+Later on in the day Uncle William came home and I had to
+tell him all about Cousin Willie. I had feared that he
+would be dreadfully upset, but he was much less disturbed
+than I had thought. Indeed it is quite wonderful the way
+in which Uncle can detach his mind from things.
+
+I told him that Mr. Peters had said that Cousin Willie
+must go to Sing-Sing, and Uncle said, "Ha! a fortress?"
+So I told him that I thought it was. After that he asked
+if Cousin Willie was in his uniform at the time, and when
+I said that he was not, Uncle said "That may make it more
+difficult." Of course Cousin Willie has no uniform here
+in America and doesn't wear any, but I notice that Uncle
+William begins to mix up our old life with our life here
+and seems sometimes quite confused and wandering; at
+least other people would think him so. He went on talking
+quite a long time about what had happened and he said
+that there is an almost exact precedent for the "incident"
+(that's what he calls it) in the Zabern Case. I don't
+remember much about that, as it was years ago, before
+the war, but Uncle William said that it was a similar
+case of an officer finding himself compelled to pass his
+sword once through a cripple (only once, Uncle says) in
+order to clear himself a way on the sidewalk. Uncle quoted
+a good many other precedents for passing swords through
+civilians, but he says that this is the best one.
+
+In the evening Cousin Ferdinand and Uncle Henry came
+over. Uncle Henry seemed very gloomy and depressed about
+what had happened and said very little, but Cousin
+Ferdinand was very much excited and angry. He said what
+is the good of all his honesty and his industry if he is
+to be disgraced like this: he asked of what use is his
+uprightness and business integrity if he is to have a
+first cousin in Sing-Sing. He said that if it was known
+that he had a cousin there it would damage him with his
+best trade to an incalculable extent. But later on he
+quieted down and said that perhaps with a certain part
+of his trade it would work the other way. Uncle Ferdinand
+has grown to be much interested in what is called here
+"advertising,"--a thing that he says all kings ought to
+study--and he decided, after he had got over his first
+indignation, that Cousin Willie being in Sing-Sing would
+be a very good advertisement for him. It might bring him,
+he said, quite a lot of new business; especially if it
+was known that he refused to help Cousin Willie in any
+way or to have anything more to do with any of the rest
+of us, and not to give us any money. He said that this
+was a point of view which people could respect and admire.
+
+So before he went home he said that we must not expect
+to see or hear from him any more, unless, of course,
+things should in some way brighten up, in which case he
+would come back.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+It is a long time--nearly three months--since I have
+added anything to my memoirs. The truth is I find it very
+hard to write memoirs here. For one thing nobody else
+seems to do it. Mrs. O'Halloran tells me that she never
+thinks of writing memoirs at all. At the Potsdam palace
+it was different. We all wrote memoirs. Eugenia of Pless
+did, and Cecilia did, and I did, and all of us. We all
+had our memoir books with little silver padlocks and
+keys. We were brought up to do it because it helped us
+to realise how important everything was that we did
+and how important all the people about us were. It was
+wonderful to realise that in the old life one met every
+day great world figures like Prince Rasselwitz-Windischkopf,
+the Grand Falconer of Reuss, and the Grand Duke of
+Schlitzin-Mein, and Field Marshall Topoff, General-in-Chief
+of the army of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt. There are no such
+figures as these in America.
+
+But another reason for not writing has been that things
+have been going so badly with us. Uncle William still
+has no work and he seems to be getting older and more
+broken and stranger in his talk every day. He is very
+shabby now in spite of all I can do with my needle, but
+he becomes more grandiloquent and consequential all the
+time. Some of the mean looking young men at this boarding
+house have christened him "The Emperor"--which seems a
+strange thing for them to have picked upon, and they draw
+him out in his talk, and when they meet him they make
+mock salutes to him which Uncle returns with very great
+dignity. Quite a lot of the people on the nearby streets
+have taken it up and when they see Uncle come along they
+make him military salutes. Uncle gets quite pleased and
+flushed as he goes along the street and answers the
+salutes with a sort of military bow.
+
+He is quite happy when he is out of doors explaining to
+me with his stick the plans he has for rebuilding New
+York and turning the Hudson River to make it run the
+other way. But when he comes in he falls into the most
+dreadful depression and sometimes at night I hear him
+walking up and down in his room far into the night. Two
+or three times he has had the same dreadful kind of
+seizures that he had on board the ship when we came over,
+and this is always when there is a great wind blowing
+from the ocean and a storm raging out at sea.
+
+Of course as Uncle has not any work or any position, we
+are getting poorer and poorer. Cousin Willie has been
+sent to the fortress at Sing-Sing and Cousin Ferdinand
+of Bulgaria refuses to know us any more, though, from
+what we hear, he is getting on wonderfully well in the
+clothing business and is very soon to open a big new
+store of which he is to be the general manager. Cousin
+Karl is now the Third Assistant Head-Waiter at the King
+George Hotel, and in the sphere in which he moves it is
+impossible for him to acknowledge any relationship with
+us. I don't know what we should do but that Uncle Henry
+manages to give us enough of his wages to pay for our
+board and lodging. Uncle Henry has passed his Naval
+Examination and is now appointed to a quite high command.
+It is called a Barge Master. They refused to accept his
+certificate of a German Admiral, so he had to study very
+hard, but at last he got his qualification and is now in
+charge of long voyages on the canals.
+
+I am very glad that Uncle Henry's command turned out to
+be on canals instead of on the high seas, as it makes it
+so much more German. Of course Uncle Henry had splendid
+experience in the Kiel Canal all through the four years
+of the war, and it is bound to come in. So he goes away
+now on quite long voyages, often of two or three weeks
+at a time, and for all this time he is in chief charge
+of his barge and has to work out all the navigation.
+Sometimes Uncle Henry takes bricks and sometimes sand.
+He says it is a great responsibility to feel oneself
+answerable for the safety of a whole barge-full of bricks
+or sand. It is quite different from what he did in the
+German navy, because there it was only a question of the
+sailors and for most of the time, as I have heard Uncle
+William and Uncle Henry say, we had plenty of them, but
+here with bricks and sand it is different. Uncle Henry
+says that if his barge was wrecked he would lose his job.
+This makes it a very different thing from being a royal
+admiral.
+
+But Uncle William all through the last three months has
+failed first at one thing and then at another. After all
+his plans for selling pictures had come to nothing he
+decided, very reluctantly that he would go into business.
+He only reached this decision after a great deal of
+anxious thought because, of course, business is a
+degradation. It involves taking money for doing things
+and this, Uncle William says, no prince can consent to
+do. But at last, after deep thought, Uncle said, "The
+die is cast," and sat down and wrote a letter offering
+to take over the presidency of the United States Steel
+Corporation. We spent two or three anxious days waiting
+for the answer. Uncle was very firm and kept repeating,
+"I have set my hand to it, and I will do it," but I was
+certain that he was sorry about it and it was a great
+relief when the answer came at last--it took days and
+days, evidently, for them to decide about it--in which
+the corporation said that they would "worry along" as
+they were. Uncle explained to me what "worrying along"
+meant and he said that he admired their spirit. But that
+ended all talk of his going into business and I am sure
+that we were both glad.
+
+After that Uncle William decided that it was necessary
+for me to marry in a way to restore our fortunes and he
+decided to offer me to a State Governor. He asked me if
+I had any choice of States, and I said no. Of course I
+should not have wished to marry a state governor, but I
+knew my duty towards Uncle William and I said nothing.
+So Uncle got a map of the United States and he decided
+to marry me to the Governor of Texas. He told me that I
+could have two weeks to arrange my supply of household
+linen and my trousseau to take to Texas, and he wrote at
+once to the Governor. He showed me what he wrote and it
+was a very formal letter. I think that Uncle's mind gets
+more and more confused as to where he is and what he is
+and he wrote in quite the old strain and I noticed that
+he signed himself, "Your brother, William." Perhaps it
+was on that account that we had no answer to the letter.
+Uncle seemed to forget all about it very soon and I was
+glad that it was so, and that I had escaped going to the
+court of Texas.
+
+All this time Mr. Peters has been very kind. He comes
+to the house with his ice every day and sometimes when
+Uncle Henry is here he comes in with him and smokes in
+the evenings. One day he brought a beautiful bunch of
+chrysanthemums for Uncle William, and another day a lovely
+nosegay of violets for Uncle Henry. And one Sunday he
+took us out for a beautiful drive with one of his ice-horses
+in a carriage called a buggy, with three seats. Uncle
+William sat with Mr. Peters in the front seat, and Uncle
+Henry and Cousin Ferdinand (it was the last time he came
+to see us) sat behind them and there was a little seat
+at the back in which I sat. It was a lovely drive and
+Uncle William pointed out to Mr. Peters all the things
+of interest, and Cousin Ferdinand smoked big cigars and
+told Uncle Henry all about the clothing trade, and I
+listened to them all and enjoyed it very much indeed.
+But I was afraid afterwards that it was a very bold and
+unconventional thing to do, and perhaps Mr. Peters felt
+that he had asked too much because he did not invite me
+to drive again.
+
+But he is always very kind and thoughtful.
+
+One Sunday afternoon he came to see us, thinking by
+mistake that Uncle William and Uncle Henry were there,
+but they weren't, and his manner seemed so strange and
+constrained that I was certain that there was something
+that he was trying to say and it made me dreadfully
+nervous and confused. And at last quite suddenly he said
+that there was something that he wanted to ask me if I
+wouldn't think it a liberty. My breath stopped and I
+couldn't speak, and then he went on to ask if he might
+lend us twenty-five dollars. He got very red in the face
+when he said it and he began counting out the money on
+the sofa, and somehow I hadn't expected that it was money
+and began to cry. But I told Mr. Peters that of course
+we couldn't think of taking any money, and I begged him
+to pick it up again and then I began to try to tell him
+about how hard it was to get along and to ask him to get
+work for Uncle William, but I started to cry again. Mr.
+Peters came over to my chair and took hold of the arm of
+it and told me not to cry. Somehow his touch on the arm
+of the chair thrilled all through me and though I knew
+that it was wrong I let him keep it there and even let
+him stroke the upholstery and I don't know just what
+would have happened but at that very minute Uncle William
+came in. He was most courteous to Mr. Peters and expressed
+his apologies for having been out and said that it must
+have been extremely depressing for Mr. Peters to find
+that he was not at home, and he thanked him for putting
+himself to the inconvenience of waiting. And a little
+while after that Mr. Peters left.
+
+
+The Next Day
+
+Mr. Peters came back this morning and said that he had
+got work for Uncle William. So I was delighted. He said
+that Uncle will make a first class "street man," and that
+he has arranged for a line of goods for him and that he
+has a "territory" that Uncle can occupy. He showed me a
+flat cardboard box filled with lead pencils and shoe-strings
+and little badges and buttons with inscriptions on them,
+and he says these are what is called a "line," and that
+Uncle can take out this line and do splendidly. I don't
+quite understand yet who makes the appointment to be a
+street man or what influence it takes or what it means
+to have a territory, but Mr. Peters explained that there
+is a man who is retiring from being a street man and that
+Uncle can take his place and can have both sides of the
+Bowery, which sounds very pretty indeed.
+
+At first I didn't understand--because Mr. Peters hesitated
+a good deal in telling me about it--that if Uncle gets
+this appointment, it will mean that he will sell things
+in the street. But as soon as I understood this I felt
+that Uncle William would scorn to do anything like this,
+as the degradation would be the same as being President
+of the Steel Corporation. So I was much surprised to find
+that when Uncle came in he didn't look at it that way at
+all. He looked at the box of badges and buttons and
+things, and he said at once, "Ha! Orders of Distinction!
+An excellent idea." He picked up a silly little white
+button with the motto "Welcome to New York," and he said
+"Admirable! That shall be the first class." And there
+was a little lead spoon with "Souvenir of the Bowery"
+that he made the second class. He started arranging and
+rearranging all the things in the box, just as he used
+to arrange the orders and decorations at the Palace. Only
+those were REAL things such as the Order of the Red
+Feather, and The Insignia of the Black Duck, and these
+were only poor tin baubles. But I could see that Uncle
+no longer knows the difference, and as his fingers fumbled
+among these silly things he was quite trembling and eager
+to begin, like a child waiting for to-morrow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+It is a year or nearly a year since I wrote in my memoirs,
+and I only add to them now because things have happened
+which mean that I shall never write any more.
+
+Mr. Peters and I were married last autumn. He asked me
+if I would marry him the day that he held the arm of my
+chair in the boarding house where we used to live. At
+first I never thought that Uncle William would permit
+it, because of the hopeless difference of birth. But it
+turned out that there was no difficulty at all. Uncle's
+mind was always so wonderful that he could find a way
+out of anything provided that he wanted to. So he conferred
+on Mr. Peters an Order that raised him right up in birth
+so that he came level with me. Uncle said that he could
+have lifted him higher still if need be but that as I
+was only, in our old life, of a younger branch of the
+family, it was not necessary to lift Mr. Peters to the
+very top. He takes precedence, Uncle said, just below
+Uncle Henry of Prussia and just above an Archbishop.
+
+It is so pleasant to think--now that poor Uncle William
+is gone--that my marriage was with his full consent.
+
+But even after Uncle William had given his formal consent,
+I didn't want to get married till I could leave him
+safely. Only he got along so well in his "territory" of
+the Bowery from the very start that he was soon quite
+all right. He used to go out every morning with his
+trayful of badges and pencils and shoe-strings and he
+was a success at once. All the people got to know him by
+sight and they would say when they saw him, "Here comes
+the Emperor," or "Here comes Old Dutch," and very often
+there would be quite a little crowd round him buying his
+things. Uncle regarded himself always as conferring a
+great dignity on any one that he sold a badge to, but he
+was very capricious and he had certain buttons and badges
+that he would only part with as a very special favour
+and honour. Uncle got on so fast that presently Cousin
+Ferdinand decided that it would be all right to know him
+again and so he came over and made a reconciliation and
+took away Uncle's money,--it was all in small coins,--in
+a bag to invest for him.
+
+So when everything was all right with Uncle William, Mr.
+Peters and I were married and it was on our wedding
+morning that Uncle conferred the Order on my husband
+which made me very proud. That was a year ago, and since
+then we have lived in a very fine place of our own with
+four rooms, all to ourselves, and a gallery at the back.
+I have cooked all the meals and done all the work of our
+apartment, except just at the time when our little boy
+was born. We both think he is a very wonderful child. At
+first I wanted to call him after the Hohenzollerns and
+to name him William Frederick Charles Mary Augustus
+Francis Felix, but somehow it seemed out of place and so
+we have called him simply Joe Peters. I think it sounds
+better. Uncle William drew up an act of abnegation of
+Joe, whereby he gives up all claim to a reversion of the
+throne of Prussia, Brunswick and Waldeck. I was sorry
+for this at first but Uncle said that all the Hohenzollerns
+had done it and had made just as great a sacrifice as
+Joe has in doing it. But my husband says that under the
+constitution of the United States, Joe can be President,
+which I think I will like better.
+
+It was one day last week that Uncle William met with the
+accident that caused his death. He had walked far away
+from his "territory" up to where the Great Park is,
+because in this lovely spring weather he liked to wander
+about. And he came to where there was a great crowd of
+people gathered to see the unveiling of a new monument.
+It is called the Lusitania Monument and it is put up in
+memory of the people that were lost when one of our war
+boats fought the English cruiser Lusitania. There were
+a lot of soldiers lining the streets and regiments of
+cavalry riding between. And it seems that when Uncle
+William saw the crowd and the soldiers he was drawn nearer
+and nearer by a sort of curiosity, and when he saw the
+great white veil drawn away from the monument, and read
+the word "Lusitania" that is carved in large letters
+across the base, he screamed out in a sudden fear, and
+clashed among the horses of the cavalry and was ridden
+down.
+
+They carried him to the hospital, but he never spoke
+again, and died on the next day but one. My husband would
+not let me go to see him, as he was not conscious and it
+could do no good, but after Uncle William was dead they
+let me see him in his coffin.
+
+Lying there he seemed such a pitiful and ghastly lump of
+clay that it seemed strange that he could, in his old
+life, have vexed the world as he did.
+
+I had thought that when Uncle William died there would
+have been long accounts of him in the papers; at least
+I couldn't help thinking so, by a sort of confusion of
+mind, as it is hard to get used to things as they are
+and to remember that our other life is unknown here and
+that we are known only as ourselves.
+
+But though I looked in all the papers I could find nothing
+except one little notice, which I cut out of an evening
+paper and which I put in here as a conclusion to my
+memoirs.
+
+
+ THE "EMPEROR" DEAD
+
+ Unique Character of the East Side Passes Away
+
+ A unique and interesting character, a familiar figure
+ of the East Side of the City, has been lost from our
+ streets with the death of William Hohen lost Thursday
+ in the Pauper Hospital, to which he had been brought
+ as the result of injuries sustained in a street accident
+ at the Lusitania celebration. Hohen, who was about
+ sixty-five years of age, was an immigrant out of
+ Germany after the troubles of the Great War. He had
+ been for a year or more a street pedler on the Bowery,
+ where he sold souvenir buttons and various little
+ trinkets. The old man appears to have been the victim
+ of a harmless hallucination whereby he thought himself
+ a person of Royal distinction and in his fancy converted
+ the box of wares that he carried into Orders of Chivalry
+ and decorations of Knighthood. The effect of this
+ strange fancy was heightened by an attempt at military
+ bearing which, comic though it was in so old and ragged
+ a figure, was not without a touch of pathos. Some
+ fancied resemblance to the former Kaiser had earned
+ for Hohen the designation of the "Emperor," of which
+ he appeared inordinately proud. But those who knew
+ Hohen by sight assure us that the resemblance to the
+ former ruler of Germany, who with all his faults made
+ a splendid and imposing appearance, was of a purely
+ superficial character. It would, alas! have been well
+ for the world if the lot of William Hohenzollern had
+ fallen on the lines of the simple and pathetic "Emperor"
+ of the Bowery.
+
+
+
+
+II.--With the Bolsheviks in Berlin
+
+Two years ago as my readers will remember,--but of course
+they don't,--I made a secret visit to Germany during the
+height of the war. It was obviously quite impossible at
+that time to disclose the means whereby I made my way
+across the frontier. I therefore adopted the familiar
+literary device of professing to have been transported
+to Germany in a dream. In that state I was supposed to
+be conducted about the country by my friend Count Boob
+von Boobenstein, whom I had known years before as a waiter
+in Toronto, to see GERMANY FROM WITHIN, and to report
+upon it in the Allied press.
+
+What I wrote attracted some attention. So the German
+Government--feeling, perhaps, that the prestige of their
+own spy system was at stake--published a white paper,
+--or a green paper,--I forget which,--in denial of all
+my adventures and disclosures. In this they proved (1)
+that all entry into Germany by dreams had been expressly
+forbidden of the High General Command; (2) that astral
+bodies were prohibited and (3) that nobody else but the
+Kaiser was allowed to have visions. They claimed therefore
+(1) that my article was a fabrication and (2) that for
+all they knew it was humorous. There the matter ended
+until it can be taken up at the General Peace Table.
+
+But as soon as I heard that the People's Revolution had
+taken place in Berlin I determined to make a second visit.
+
+This time I had no difficulty about the frontier whatever.
+I simply put on the costume of a British admiral and
+walked in.
+
+"Three Cheers for the British Navy!" said the first
+official whom I met. He threw his hat in the air and the
+peasants standing about raised a cheer. It was my first
+view of the marvellous adaptability of this great people.
+I noticed that many of them were wearing little buttons
+with pictures of Jellicoe and Beatty.
+
+At my own request I was conducted at once to the nearest
+railway station.
+
+"So your Excellency wishes to go to Berlin?" said the
+stationmaster.
+
+"Yes," I replied, "I want to see something of the people's
+revolution."
+
+The stationmaster looked at his watch.
+
+"That Revolution is over," he said.
+
+"Too bad!" I exclaimed.
+
+"Not at all. A much better one is in progress, quite the
+best Revolution that we have had. It is called--Johann,
+hand me that proclamation of yesterday--the Workmen and
+Soldiers Revolution."
+
+"What's it about?" I asked.
+
+"The basis of it," said the stationmaster, "or what we
+Germans call the Fundamental Ground Foundation, is
+universal love. They hanged all the leaders of the Old
+Revolution yesterday."
+
+"When can I get a train?" I inquired.
+
+"Your Excellency shall have a special train at once,
+Sir," he continued with a sudden burst of feeling, while
+a tear swelled in his eye. "The sight of your uniform
+calls forth all our gratitude. My three sons enlisted in
+our German Navy. For four years they have been at Kiel,
+comfortably fed, playing dominos. They are now at home
+all safe and happy. Had your brave navy relaxed its
+vigilance for a moment those boys might have had to go
+out on the sea, a thing they had never done. Please God,"
+concluded the good old man, removing his hat a moment,
+"no German sailor now will ever have to go to sea."
+
+I pass over my journey to Berlin. Interesting and varied
+as were the scenes through which I passed they gave me
+but little light upon the true situation of the country:
+indeed I may say without exaggeration that they gave me
+as little--or even more so--as the press reports of our
+talented newspaper correspondents. The food situation
+seemed particularly perplexing. A well-to-do merchant
+from Bremen who travelled for some distance in my train
+assured me that there was plenty of food in Germany,
+except of course for the poor. Distress, he said, was
+confined entirely to these. Similarly a Prussian gentleman
+who looked very like a soldier, but who assured me with
+some heat that he was a commercial traveller, told me
+the same thing: There were no cases of starvation, he
+said, except among the very poor.
+
+The aspect of the people too, at the stations and in the
+towns we passed, puzzled me. There were no uniforms, no
+soldiers. But I was amazed at the number of commercial
+travellers, Lutheran ministers, photographers, and so
+forth, and the odd resemblance they presented, in spite
+of their innocent costumes, to the arrogant and ubiquitous
+military officers whom I had observed on my former visit.
+
+But I was too anxious to reach Berlin to pay much attention
+to the details of my journey.
+
+Even when I at last reached the capital, I arrived as I
+had feared, too late.
+
+"Your Excellency," said a courteous official at the
+railway station, to whom my naval uniform acted as a
+sufficient passport. "The Revolution of which you speak
+is over. Its leaders were arrested yesterday. But you
+shall not be disappointed. There is a better one. It is
+called the Comrades' Revolution of the Bolsheviks. The
+chief Executive was installed yesterday."
+
+"Would it be possible for me to see him?" I asked.
+
+"Nothing simpler, Excellency," he continued as a tear
+rose in his eye. "My four sons,--"
+
+"I know," I said; "your four sons are in the German Navy.
+It is enough. Can you take me to the Leader?"
+
+"I can and will," said the official. "He is sitting now
+in the Free Palace of all the German People, once usurped
+by the Hohenzollern Tyrant. The doors are guarded by
+machine guns. But I can take you direct from here through
+a back way. Come."
+
+We passed out from the station, across a street and
+through a maze of little stairways, and passages into
+the heart of the great building that had been the offices
+of the Imperial Government.
+
+"Enter this room. Do not knock," said my guide. "Good bye."
+
+In another moment I found myself face to face with the
+chief comrade of the Bolsheviks.
+
+He gave a sudden start as he looked at me, but instantly
+collected himself.
+
+He was sitting with his big boots up on the mahogany
+desk, a cigar at an edgeways angle in his mouth. His hair
+under his sheepskin cap was shaggy, and his beard stubbly
+and unshaven. His dress was slovenly and there was a big
+knife in his belt. A revolver lay on the desk beside him.
+I had never seen a Bolshevik before but I knew at sight
+that he must be one.
+
+"You say you were here in Berlin once before?" he
+questioned, and he added before I had time to answer:
+"When you speak don't call me 'Excellency' or 'Sereneness'
+or anything of that sort; just call me 'brother' or
+'comrade.' This is the era of freedom. You're as good as
+I am, or nearly."
+
+"Thank you," I said.
+
+"Don't be so damn polite," he snarled. "No good comrade
+ever says 'thank you.' So you were here in Berlin before?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, "I was here writing up Germany from
+Within in the middle of the war."
+
+"The war, the war!" he murmured, in a sort of wail or
+whine. "Take notice, comrade, that I weep when I speak
+of it. If you write anything about me be sure to say that
+I cried when the war was mentioned. We Germans have been
+so misjudged. When I think of the devastation of France
+and Belgium I weep."
+
+He drew a greasy, red handkerchief from his pocket and
+began to sob. "To think of the loss of all those English
+merchant ships!"
+
+"Oh, you needn't worry," I said, "it's all going to be
+paid for."
+
+"Oh I hope so, I do hope so," said the Bolshevik chief.
+"What a regret it is to us Germans to think that
+unfortunately we are not able to help pay for it; but
+you English--you are so generous--how much we have admired
+your noble hearts--so kind, so generous to the
+vanquished..."
+
+His voice had subsided into a sort of whine.
+
+But at this moment there was a loud knocking at the door.
+The Bolshevik hastily wiped the tears from his face and
+put away his handkerchief.
+
+"How do I look?" he asked anxiously. "Not humane, I hope?
+Not soft?"
+
+"Oh, no," I said, "quite tough."
+
+"That's good," he answered. "That's good. But am I tough
+ENOUGH?"
+
+He hastily shoved his hands through his hair.
+
+"Quick," he said, "hand me that piece of chewing tobacco.
+Now then. Come in!"
+
+The door swung open.
+
+A man in a costume much like the leader's swaggered into
+the room. He had a bundle of papers in his hands, and
+seemed to be some sort of military secretary.
+
+"Ha! comrade!" he said, with easy familiarity. "Here are
+the death warrants!"
+
+"Death warrants!" said the Bolshevik. "Of the leaders of
+the late Revolution? Excellent! And a good bundle of
+them! One moment while I sign them."
+
+He began rapidly signing the warrants, one after the
+other.
+
+"Comrade," said the secretary in a surly tone, "you are
+not chewing tobacco!"
+
+"Yes I am, yes I am," said the leader, "or, at least, I
+was just going to."
+
+He bit a huge piece out of his plug, with what seemed to
+me an evident distaste, and began to chew furiously.
+
+"It is well," said the other. "Remember comrade, that
+you are watched. It was reported last night to the
+Executive Committee of the Circle of the Brothers that
+you chewed no tobacco all day yesterday. Be warned,
+comrade. This is a free and independent republic. We will
+stand for no aristocratic nonsense. But whom have you
+here?" he added, breaking off in his speech, as if he
+noticed me for the first time. "What dog is this?"
+
+"Hush," said the leader, "he is a representative of the
+foreign press, a newspaper reporter."
+
+"Your pardon," said the secretary. "I took you by your
+dress for a prince. A representative of the great and
+enlightened press of the Allies, I presume. How deeply
+we admire in Germany the press of England! Let me kiss
+you."
+
+"Oh, don't trouble," I said, "it's not worth while."
+
+"Say, at least, when you write to your paper, that I
+offered to kiss you, will you not?"
+
+Meantime, the leader had finished signing the papers.
+The secretary took them and swung on his heels with
+something between a military bow and a drunken swagger.
+"Remember, comrade," he said in a threatening tone as he
+passed out, "you are watched."
+
+The Bolshevik leader looked after him with something of
+a shudder.
+
+"Excuse me a moment," he said, "while I go and get rid
+of this tobacco."
+
+He got up from his chair and walked away towards the door
+of an inner room. As he did so, there struck me something
+strangely familiar in his gait and figure. Conceal it as
+he might, there was still the stiff wooden movement of
+a Prussian general beneath his assumed swagger. The poise
+of his head still seemed to suggest the pointed helmet
+of the Prussian. I could without effort imagine a military
+cloak about his shoulders instead of his Bolshevik
+sheepskin.
+
+Then, all in a moment, as he re-entered the room, I
+recalled exactly who he was.
+
+"My friend," I said, reaching out my hand, "pardon me
+for not knowing you at once. I recognize you now..."
+
+"Hush," said the Bolshevik. "Don't speak! I never saw
+you in my life."
+
+"Nonsense," I said, "I knew you years ago in Canada when
+you were disguised as a waiter. And you it was who
+conducted me through Germany two years ago when I made
+my war visit. You are no more a Bolshevik than I am. You
+are General Count Boob von Boobenstein."
+
+The general sank down in his chair, his face pale beneath
+its plaster of rouge.
+
+"Hush!" he said. "If they learn it, it is death."
+
+"My dear Boob," I said, "not a word shall pass my lips."
+
+The general grasped my hand. "The true spirit," he said,
+"the true English comradeship; how deeply we admire it
+in Germany!"
+
+"I am sure you do," I answered. "But tell me, what is
+the meaning of all this? Why are you a Bolshevik?"
+
+"We all are," said the count, dropping his assumed rough
+voice, and speaking in a tone of quiet melancholy. "It's
+the only thing to be. But come," he added, getting up
+from his chair, "I took you once through Berlin in war
+time. Let me take you out again and show you Berlin under
+the Bolsheviks."
+
+"I shall be only too happy," I said.
+
+"I shall leave my pistols and knives here," said
+Boobenstein, "and if you will excuse me I shall change
+my costume a little. To appear as I am would excite too
+much enthusiasm. I shall walk out with you in the simple
+costume of a gentleman. It's a risky thing to do in
+Berlin, but I'll chance it."
+
+The count retired, and presently returned dressed in the
+quiet bell-shaped purple coat, the simple scarlet tie,
+the pea-green hat and the white spats that mark the German
+gentleman all the world over.
+
+"Bless me, Count," I said, "you look just like Bernstorff."
+
+"Hush," said the count. "Don't mention him. He's here in
+Berlin."
+
+"What's he doing?" I asked.
+
+"He's a Bolshevik; one of our leaders; he's just been
+elected president of the Scavengers Union. They say he's
+the very man for it. But come along, and, by the way,
+when we get into the street talk English and only English.
+There's getting to be a prejudice here against German."
+
+We passed out of the door and through the spacious
+corridors and down the stairways of the great building.
+All about were little groups of ferocious looking men,
+dressed like stage Russians, all chewing tobacco and
+redolent of alcohol.
+
+"Who are all these people?" I said to the count in a low
+voice.
+
+"Bolsheviks," he whispered. "At least they aren't really.
+You see that group in the corner?
+
+"The ones with the long knives," I said.
+
+"Yes. They are, or at least they were, the orchestra of
+the Berlin Opera. They are now the Bolshevik Music
+Commission. They are here this morning to see about
+getting their second violinist hanged."
+
+"Why not the first?" I asked.
+
+"They had him hanged yesterday. Both cases are quite
+clear. The men undoubtedly favoured the war: one, at
+least, of them openly spoke in disparagement of President
+Wilson. But come along. Let me show you our new city."
+
+We stepped out upon the great square which faced the
+building. How completely it was changed from the Berlin
+that I had known! My attention was at once arrested by
+the new and glaring signboards at the shops and hotels,
+and the streamers with mottos suspended across the streets.
+I realised as I read them the marvellous adaptability of
+the German people and their magnanimity towards their
+enemies. Conspicuous in huge lettering was HOTEL PRESIDENT
+WILSON, and close beside it CABARET QUEEN MARY: ENGLISH
+DANCING. The square itself, which I remembered as the
+Kaiserplatz, was now renamed on huge signboards GRAND
+SQUARE OF THE BRITISH NAVY. Not far off one noticed the
+RESTAURANT MARSHAL FOCH, side by side with the ROOSEVELT
+SALOON and the BEER GARDEN GEORGE V.
+
+But the change in the appearance and costume of the men
+who crowded the streets was even more notable. The uniforms
+and the pointed helmets of two years ago had vanished
+utterly. The men that one saw retained indeed their German
+stoutness, their flabby faces, and their big spectacles.
+But they were now dressed for the most part in the costume
+of the Russian Monjik, while some of them appeared in
+American wideawakes and Kentucky frock coats, or in
+English stove-pipe hats and morning coats. A few of the
+stouter were in Highland costume.
+
+"You are amazed," said Boobenstein as we stood a moment
+looking at the motley crowd. "What does it mean?" I
+asked.
+
+"One moment," said the count. "I will first summon a
+taxi. It will be more convenient to talk as we ride."
+
+He whistled and there presently came lumbering to our
+side an ancient and decrepit vehicle which would have
+excited my laughter but for the seriousness of the count's
+face. The top of the conveyance had evidently long since
+been torn off leaving, only the frame: the copper fastenings
+had been removed: the tires were gone: the doors were
+altogether missing.
+
+"Our new 1919 model," said the count. "Observe the
+absence of the old-fashioned rubber tires, still used by
+the less progressive peoples. Our chemists found that
+riding on rubber was bad for the eye-sight. Note, too,
+the time saved by not having any doors."
+
+"Admirable," I said.
+
+We seated ourselves in the crazy conveyance, the count
+whispered to the chauffeur an address which my ear failed
+to catch and we started off at a lumbering pace along
+the street.
+
+"And now tell me, Boobenstein," I said, "what does it
+all mean, the foreign signs and the strange costumes?"
+
+"My dear sir" he replied, "it is merely a further proof
+of our German adaptability. Having failed to conquer the
+world by war we now propose to conquer it by the arts of
+peace: Those people, for example, that you see in Scotch
+costumes are members of our Highland Mission about to
+start for Scotland to carry to the Scotch the good news
+that the war is a thing of the past, that the German
+people forgive all wrongs and are prepared to offer a
+line of manufactured goods as per catalogue sample."
+
+"Wonderful," I said.
+
+"Is it not?" said Von Boobenstein. "We call it the From
+Germany Out movement. It is being organised in great
+detail by our Step from Under Committee. They claim that
+already four million German voters are pledged to forget
+the war and to forgive the Allies. All that we now ask
+is to be able to put our hands upon the villains who made
+this war, no matter how humble their station may be, and
+execute them after a fair trial or possibly before."
+
+The count spoke with great sincerity and earnestness.
+"But come along," he added. "I want to drive you about
+the city and show you a few of the leading features of
+our new national reconstruction. We can talk as we go."
+
+"But Von Boobenstein," I said, "you speak of the people
+who made the war; surely you were all in favour of it?"
+
+"In favour of it! We were all against it."
+
+"But the Kaiser," I protested.
+
+"The Kaiser, my poor master! How he worked to prevent
+the war! Day and night; even before anybody else had
+heard of it. 'Boob,' he said to me one day with tears in
+his eyes, 'this war must be stopped.' 'Which war, your
+Serenity,' I asked. 'The war that is coming next month,'
+he answered, 'I look to you, Count Boobenstein,' he
+continued, 'to bear witness that I am doing my utmost to
+stop it a month before the English Government has heard
+of it.'"
+
+While we were thus speaking our taxi had taken us out of
+the roar and hubbub of the main thoroughfare into the
+quiet of a side street. It now drew up at the door of an
+unpretentious dwelling in the window of which I observed
+a large printed card with the legend
+
+ REVEREND MR. TIBBITS
+ Private Tuition, English, Navigation,
+ and other Branches
+
+We entered and were shown by a servant into a little
+front room where a venerable looking gentleman, evidently
+a Lutheran minister, was seated in a corner at a writing
+table. He turned on our entering and at the sight of the
+uniform which I wore jumped to his feet with a vigorous
+and unexpected oath.
+
+"It is all right, Admiral," said Count Von Boobenstein.
+"My friend is not really a sailor."
+
+"Ah!" said the other. "You must excuse me. The sight of
+that uniform always gives me the jumps."
+
+He came forward to shake hands and as the light fell upon
+him I recognized the grand old seaman, perhaps the greatest
+sailor that Germany has ever produced or ever will,
+Admiral Von Tirpitz.
+
+"My dear Admiral!" I said, warmly. "I thought you were
+out of the country. Our papers said that you had gone to
+Switzerland for a rest."
+
+"No," said the Admiral. "I regret to say that I find it
+impossible to get away."
+
+"Your Allied press," interjected the count, "has greatly
+maligned our German patriots by reporting that they have
+left the country. Where better could they trust themselves
+than in the bosom of their own people? You noticed the
+cabman of our taxi? He was the former chancellor Von
+Hertling. You saw that stout woman with the apple cart
+at the street corner? Frau Bertha Krupp Von Bohlen. All
+are here, helping to make the new Germany. But come,
+Admiral, our visitor here is much interested in our plans
+for the restoration of the Fatherland. I thought that
+you might care to show him your designs for the new German
+Navy."
+
+"A new navy!" I exclaimed, while my voice showed the
+astonishment and admiration that I felt. Here was this
+gallant old seaman, having just lost an entire navy,
+setting vigorously to work to make another. "But how can
+Germany possibly find the money in her present state for
+the building of new ships?"
+
+"There are not going to be any ships," said the great
+admiral. "That was our chief mistake in the past in
+insisting on having ships in the navy. Ships, as the war
+has shown us, are quite unnecessary to the German plan;
+they are not part of what I may call the German idea.
+The new navy will be built inland and elevated on piles
+and will consist--"
+
+But at this moment a great noise of shouting and sudden
+tumult could be heard as if from the street.
+
+"Some one is coming," said the admiral hastily. "Reach
+me my Bible."
+
+"No, no," said the count, seizing me by the arm. "The
+sound comes from the Great Square. There is trouble. We
+must hasten back at once."
+
+He dragged me from the house.
+
+We perceived at once, as soon as we came into the main
+street again, from the excited demeanour of the crowd
+and from the anxious faces of people running to and fro
+that something of great moment must be happening.
+
+Everybody was asking of the passer-by, "What is loose?
+What is it?" Ramshack taxis, similar to the one in which
+we had driven, forced their way as best they could through
+the crowded thoroughfare, moving evidently in the direction
+of the government buildings.
+
+"Hurry, hurry!" said Von Boobenstein, clutching me by
+the arm, "or we shall be too late. It is as I feared."
+
+"What is it?" I said; "what's the matter?"
+
+"Fool that I was," said the count, "to leave the building.
+I should have known. And in this costume I am helpless."
+
+We made our way as best we could through the crowd of
+people, who all seemed moving in the same direction, the
+count, evidently a prey to the gravest anxiety, talking
+as if to himself and imprecating his own carelessness.
+
+We turned the corner of a street and reached the edge of
+the great square. It was filled with a vast concourse of
+people. At the very moment in which we reached it a great
+burst of cheering rose from the crowd. We could see over
+the heads of the people that a man had appeared on the
+balcony of the Government Building, holding a paper in
+his hand. His appearance was evidently a signal for the
+outburst of cheers, accompanied by the waving of
+handkerchiefs. The man raised his hand in a gesture of
+authority. German training is deep. Silence fell instantly
+upon the assembled populace. We had time in the momentary
+pause to examine, as closely as the distance permitted,
+the figure upon the balcony. The man was dressed in the
+blue overall suit of a workingman. He was bare-headed.
+His features, so far as we could tell, were those of a
+man well up in years, but his frame was rugged and
+powerful. Then he began to speak.
+
+"Friends and comrades!" he called out in a great voice
+that resounded through the square. "I have to announce
+that a New Revolution has been completed."
+
+A wild cheer woke from the people.
+
+"The Bolsheviks' Republic is overthrown. The Bolsheviks
+are aristocrats. Let them die."
+
+"Thank Heaven for this costume!" I heard Count Boobenstein
+murmur at my side. Then he seized his pea-green hat and
+waved it in the air, shouting: "Down with the Bolsheviks!"
+
+All about us the cry was taken up.
+
+One saw everywhere in the crowd men pulling off their
+sheepskin coats and tramping them under foot with the
+shout, "Down with Bolshevism!" To my surprise I observed
+that most of the men had on blue overalls beneath their
+Russian costumes. In a few moments the crowd seemed
+transformed into a vast mass of mechanics.
+
+The speaker raised his hand again. "We have not yet
+decided what the new Government will be"--
+
+A great cheer from the people.
+
+"Nor do we propose to state who will be the leaders of it."
+
+Renewed cheers.
+
+"But this much we can say. It is to be a free, universal,
+Pan-German Government of love."
+
+Cheers.
+
+"Meantime, be warned. Whoever speaks against it will be
+shot: anybody who dares to lift a finger will be hanged.
+A proclamation of Brotherhood will be posted all over
+the city. If anybody dares to touch it, or to discuss
+it, or to look at or to be seen reading it, he will be
+hanged to a lamp post."
+
+Loud applause greeted this part of the speech while the
+faces of the people, to my great astonishment, seemed
+filled with genuine relief and beamed with unmistakable
+enthusiasm.
+
+"And now," continued the speaker, "I command you, you
+dogs, to disperse quietly and go home. Move quickly,
+swine that you are, or we shall open fire upon you with
+machine guns."
+
+With a last outburst of cheering the crowd broke and
+dispersed, like a vast theatre audience. On all sides
+were expressions of joy and satisfaction. "Excellent,
+wunderschoen!" "He calls us dogs! That's splendid. Swine!
+Did you hear him say 'Swine'? This is true German Government
+again at last."
+
+Then just for a moment the burly figure reappeared on
+the balcony.
+
+"A last word!" he called to the departing crowd. "I
+omitted to say that all but one of the leaders of the
+late government are already caught. As soon as we can
+lay our thumb on the Chief Executive rest assured that
+he will be hanged."
+
+"Hurrah!" shouted Boobenstein, waving his hat in the air.
+Then in a whisper to me: "Let us go," he said, "while
+the going is still good."
+
+We hastened as quickly and unobtrusively as we could
+through the dispersing multitude, turned into a side
+street, and on a sign from the count entered a small
+cabaret or drinking shop, newly named, as its sign showed,
+THE GLORY OF THE BRITISH COLONIES CAFE.
+
+The count with a deep sigh of relief ordered wine.
+
+"You recognized him, of course?" he said.
+
+"Who?" I asked. "You mean the big working-man that spoke?
+Who is he?"
+
+"So you didn't recognize him?" said the count. "Well,
+well, but of course all the rest did. Workingman! It is
+Field Marshal Hindenburg. It means of course that the
+same old crowd are back again. That was Ludendorf standing
+below. I saw it all at once. Perhaps it is the only way.
+But as for me I shall not go back: I am too deeply
+compromised: it would be death."
+
+Boobenstein remained for a time in deep thought, his
+fingers beating a tattoo on the little table. Then he
+spoke.
+
+"Do you remember," he said, "the old times of long ago
+when you first knew me?"
+
+"Very well, indeed," I answered. "You were one of the
+German waiters, or rather, one of the German officers
+disguised as waiters at McConkey's Restaurant in Toronto."
+
+"I was," said the count. "I carried the beer on a little
+tray and opened oysters behind a screen. It was a
+wunderschoen life. Do you think, my good friend, you could
+get me that job again?"
+
+"Boobenstein," I exclaimed, "I can get you reinstated at
+once. It will be some small return for your kindness to
+me in Germany."
+
+"Good," said the count. "Let us sail at once for Canada."
+
+"One thing, however," I said. "You may not know that
+since you left there are no longer beer waiters in Toronto
+because there is no beer. All is forbidden."
+
+"Let me understand myself," said the count in astonishment.
+"No beer!"
+
+"None whatever."
+
+"Wine, then?"
+
+"Absolutely not. All drinking, except of water, is
+forbidden."
+
+The count rose and stood erect. His figure seemed to
+regain all its old-time Prussian rigidity. He extended
+his hand.
+
+"My friend," he said. "I bid you farewell."
+
+"Where are you going to?" I asked.
+
+"My choice is made," said Von Boobenstein. "There are
+worse things than death. I am about to surrender myself
+to the German authorities."
+
+
+
+
+III.--Afternoon Tea with the Sultan
+
+A Study of Reconstruction in Turkey
+
+On the very day following the events related in the last
+chapter, I was surprised and delighted to receive a
+telegram which read "Come on to Constantinople and write
+US up too." From the signature I saw that the message
+was from my old friend Abdul Aziz the Sultan.
+
+I had visited him--as of course my readers will instantly
+recollect--during the height of the war, and the
+circumstances of my departure had been such that I should
+have scarcely ventured to repeat my visit without this
+express invitation. But on receipt of it, I set out at
+once by rail for Constantinople.
+
+I was delighted to find that under the new order of things
+in going from Berlin to Constantinople it was no longer
+necessary to travel through the barbarous and brutal
+populations of Germany, Austria and Hungary. The way now
+runs, though I believe the actual railroad is the same,
+through the Thuringian Republic, Czecho-Slovakia and
+Magyaria. It was a source of deep satisfaction to see
+the scowling and hostile countenances of Germans, Austrians
+and Hungarians replaced by the cheerful and honest faces
+of the Thuringians, the Czecho-Slovaks and the Magyarians.
+Moreover I was assured on all sides that if these faces
+are not perfectly satisfactory, they will be altered in
+any way required.
+
+It was very pleasant, too, to find myself once again in
+the flagstoned halls of the Yildiz Kiosk, the Sultan's
+palace. My little friend Abdul Aziz rose at once from
+his cushioned divan under a lemon tree and came shuffling
+in his big slippers to meet me, a smile of welcome on
+his face. He seemed, to my surprise, radiant with happiness.
+The disasters attributed by the allied press to his
+unhappy country appeared to sit lightly on the little man.
+
+"How is everything going in Turkey?" I asked as we sat
+down side by side on the cushions.
+
+"Splendid," said Abdul. "I suppose you've heard that
+we're bankrupt?"
+
+"Bankrupt!" I exclaimed.
+
+"Yes," continued the Sultan, rubbing his hands together
+with positive enjoyment, "we can't pay a cent: isn't it
+great? Have some champagne?"
+
+He clapped his hands together and a turbaned attendant
+appeared with wine on a tray which he served into
+long-necked glasses.
+
+"I'd rather have tea," I said.
+
+"No, no, don't take tea," he protested. "We've practically
+cut out afternoon tea here. It's part of our Turkish
+thrift movement. We're taking champagne instead. Tell
+me, have you a Thrift Movement like that, where you come
+from--Canada, I think it is, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," I answered, "we have one just like that."
+
+"This war finance is glorious stuff, isn't it?" continued
+the Sultan. "How much do you think we owe?"
+
+"I haven't an idea," I said.
+
+"Wait a minute," said Abdul. He touched a bell and at
+the sound of it there came shuffling into the room my
+venerable old acquaintance Toomuch Koffi, the Royal
+Secretary. But to my surprise he no longer wore his
+patriarchal beard, his flowing robe and his girdle. He
+was clean shaven and close cropped and dressed in a short
+jacket like an American bell boy.
+
+"You remember Toomuch, I think," said Abdul. "I've
+reconstructed him a little, as you see."
+
+"The Peace of Allah be upon thine head," said Toomuch
+Koffi to the Sultan, commencing a deep salaam. "What wish
+sits behind thy forehead that thou shouldst ring the bell
+for this humble creature of clay to come into the sunlight
+of thy presence? Tell me, O Lord, if perchance--"
+
+"Here, here," interrupted the Sultan impatiently, "cut
+all that stuff out, please. That ancient courtesy business
+won't do, not if this country is to reconstruct itself
+and come abreast of the great modern democracies. Say to
+me simply 'What's the trouble?"'
+
+Toomuch bowed, and Abdul continued. "Look in your tablets
+and see how much our public debt amounts to in American
+dollars."
+
+The secretary drew forth his tablets and bowed his head
+a moment in some perplexity over the figures that were
+scribbled on them. "Multiplication," I heard him murmur,
+"is an act of the grace of heaven; let me invoke a blessing
+on FIVE, the perfect number, whereby the Pound Turkish
+is distributed into the American dollar."
+
+He remained for a few moments with his eyes turned, as
+if in supplication, towards the vaulted ceiling.
+
+"Have you got it?" asked Abdul.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And what do we owe, adding it all together?"
+
+"Forty billion dollars," said Toomuch.
+
+"Isn't that wonderful!" exclaimed Abdul, with delight
+radiating over his countenance. "Who would have thought
+that before the war! Forty billion dollars! Aren't we
+the financiers! Aren't we the bulwark of monetary power!
+Can you touch that in Canada?"
+
+"No," I said, "we can't. We don't owe two billion yet."
+
+"Oh, never mind, never mind," said the little man in a
+consoling tone. "You are only a young country yet. You'll
+do better later on. And in any case I am sure you are
+just as proud of your one billion as we are of our forty."
+
+"Oh, yes," I said, "we certainly are."
+
+"Come, come, that's something anyway. You're on the right
+track, and you must not be discouraged if you're not up
+to the Turkish standard yet. You must remember, as I told
+you before, that Turkey leads the world in all ideas of
+government and finance. Take the present situation. Here
+we are, bankrupt--pass me the champagne, Toomuch, and
+sit down with us--the very first nation of the lot. It's
+a great feather in the cap of our financiers. It gives
+us a splendid start for the new era of reconstruction
+that we are beginning on. As you perhaps have heard we
+are all hugely busy about it. You notice my books and
+papers, do you not?" the Sultan added very proudly, waving
+his hand towards a great pile of blue books, pamphlets
+and documents that were heaped upon the floor beside him.
+
+"Why! I never knew before that you ever read anything!"
+I exclaimed in amazement.
+
+"Never did. But everything's changed now, isn't it,
+Toomuch? I sit and work here for hours every morning.
+It's become a delight to me. After all," said Abdul,
+lighting a big cigar and sticking up his feet on his pile
+of papers with an air of the deepest comfort, "what is
+there like work? So stimulating, so satisfying. I sit
+here working away, just like this, most of the day.
+There's nothing like it."
+
+"What are you working at?" I asked.
+
+"Reconstruction," said the little man, puffing a big
+cloud from his cigar, "reconstruction."
+
+"What kind of reconstruction?"
+
+"All kinds--financial, industrial, political, social.
+It's great stuff. By the way," he continued with great
+animation, "would you like to be my Minister of Labour?
+No? Well, I'm sorry. I half hoped you would. We're having
+no luck with them. The last one was thrown into the
+Bosphorous on Monday. Here's the report on it--no, that's
+the one on the shooting of the Minister of Religion--ah!
+here it is--Report on the Drowning of the Minister of
+Labour. Let me read you a bit of this: I call this one
+of the best reports, of its kind, that have come in."
+
+"No, no," I said, "don't bother to read it. Just tell me
+who did it and why."
+
+"Workingmen," said the Sultan, very cheerfully, "a
+delegation. They withheld their reasons."
+
+"So you are having labour troubles here too?" I asked.
+
+"Labour troubles!" exclaimed the little Sultan rolling
+up his eyes. "I should say so. The whole of Turkey is
+bubbling with labour unrest like the rosewater in a
+narghile. Look at your tablets, Toomuch, and tell me what
+new strikes there have been this morning."
+
+The aged Secretary fumbled with his notes and began to
+murmur--"Truly will I try with the aid of Allah--"
+
+"Now, now," said Abdul, warningly, "that won't do. Say
+simply 'Sure.' Now tell me."
+
+The Secretary looked at a little list and read: "The
+strikes of to-day comprise--the wig-makers, the dog
+fanciers, the conjurers, the snake charmers, and the
+soothsayers."
+
+"You hear that," said Abdul proudly. "That represents
+some of the most skilled labour in Turkey."
+
+"I suppose it does," I said, "but tell me Abdul--what
+about the really necessary trades, the coal miners, the
+steel workers, the textile operatives, the farmers, and
+the railway people. Are they working?"
+
+The little Sultan threw himself back on his cushions in
+a paroxysm of laughter, in which even his ancient Secretary
+was feign to join.
+
+"My dear sir, my dear sir!" he laughed, "don't make me
+die of laughter. Working! those people working! Surely
+you don't think we are so behind hand in Turkey as all
+that! All those worker's stopped absolutely months ago.
+It is doubtful if they'll ever work again. There's a
+strong movement in Turkey to abolish all NECESSARY work
+altogether."
+
+"But who then," I asked, "is working?"
+
+"Look on the tablets, Toomuch, and see."
+
+The aged Secretary bowed, turned over the leaves of his
+"tablets," which I now perceived on a closer view to be
+merely an American ten cent memorandum book. Then he
+read:
+
+"The following, O all highest, still work--the beggars,
+the poets, the missionaries, the Salvation Army, and the
+instructors of the Youths of Light in the American
+Presbyterian College."
+
+"But, dear me, Abdul," I exclaimed, "surely this situation
+is desperate? What can your nation subsist on in such a
+situation?"
+
+"Pooh, pooh," said the Sultan. "The interest on our debt
+alone is two billion a year. Everybody in Turkey, great
+or small, holds bonds to some extent. At the worst they
+can all live fairly well on the interest. This is finance,
+is it not, Toomuch Koffi?"
+
+"The very best and latest," said the aged man with a
+profound salaam.
+
+"But what steps are you taking," I asked, "to remedy your
+labour troubles?"
+
+"We are appointing commissions," said Abdul. "We appoint
+one for each new labour problem. How many yesterday,
+Toomuch?"
+
+"Forty-three," answered the secretary.
+
+"That's below our average, is it not?" said Abdul a little
+anxiously. "Try to keep it up to fifty if you can."
+
+"And these commissions, what do they do?"
+
+"They make Reports," said Abdul, beginning to yawn as if
+the continued brain exercise of conversation were fatiguing
+his intellect, "excellent reports. We have had some that
+are said to be perfect models of the very best Turkish."
+ "And what do they recommend?"
+
+"I don't know," said the Sultan. "We don't read them for
+that. We like to read them simply as Turkish."
+
+"But what," I urged, "do you do with them? What steps do
+you take?"
+
+"We send them all," replied the little man, puffing at
+his pipe and growing obviously drowsy as he spoke, "to
+Woodrow Wilson. He can deal with them. He is the great
+conciliator of the world. Let him have--how do you say
+it in English, it is a Turkish phrase--let him have his
+stomach full of conciliation."
+
+Abdul dozed on his cushions for a moment. Then he reopened
+his eyes. "Is there anything else you want to know," he
+asked, "before I retire to the Inner Harem?"
+
+"Just one thing," I said, "if you don't mind. How do you
+stand internationally? Are you coming into the New League
+of Nations?"
+
+The Sultan shook his head.
+
+"No," he said, "we're not coming in. We are starting a
+new league of our own."
+
+"And who are in it?"
+
+"Ourselves, and the Armenians--and let me see--the Irish,
+are they not, Toomuch--and the Bulgarians--are there any
+others, Toomuch?"
+
+"There is talk," said the Secretary "of the Yugo-Hebrovians
+and the Scaroovians--"
+
+"Who are they?" I asked.
+
+"We don't know," said Abdul, testily. "They wrote to us.
+They seem all right. Haven't you got a lot of people in
+your league that you never heard of?"
+
+"I see," I said, "and what is the scheme that your league
+is formed on?"
+
+"Very simple," said the Sultan. "Each member of the league
+gives its WORD to all the other members. Then they all
+take an OATH together. Then they all sign it. That is
+absolutely binding."
+
+He rolled back on his cushions in an evident state of
+boredom and weariness.
+
+"But surely," I protested, "you don't think that a league
+of that sort can keep the peace?"
+
+"Peace!" exclaimed Abdul waking into sudden astonishment.
+"Peace! I should think NOT! Our league is for WAR. Every
+member gives its word that at the first convenient
+opportunity it will knock the stuff out of any of the
+others that it can."
+
+The little Sultan again subsided. Then he rose, with some
+difficulty, from his cushions.
+
+"Toomuch," he said, "take our inquisitive friend out into
+the town; take him to the Bosphorous; take him to the
+island where the dogs are; take him anywhere." He paused
+to whisper a few instructions into the ear of the Secretary.
+"You understand," he said, "well, take him. As for me,"--he
+gave a great yawn as he shuffled away, "I am about to
+withdraw into my Inner Harem. Goodbye. I regret that I
+cannot invite you in."
+
+"So do I," I said. "Goodbye."
+
+
+
+
+IV.--Echoes of the War
+
+
+1.--The Boy Who Came Back
+
+The war is over. The soldiers are coming home. On all
+sides we are assured that the problem of the returned
+soldier is the gravest of our national concerns.
+
+So I may say it without fear of contradiction,--since
+everybody else has seen it,--that, up to the present
+time, the returned soldier is a disappointment. He is
+not turning out as he ought. According to all the
+professors of psychology he was to come back bloodthirsty
+and brutalised, soaked in militarism and talking only of
+slaughter. In fact, a widespread movement had sprung up,
+warmly supported by the business men of the cities, to
+put him on the land. It was thought that central Nevada
+or northern Idaho would do nicely for him. At the same
+time an agitation had been started among the farmers,
+with the slogan "Back to the city," the idea being that
+farm life was so rough that it was not fair to ask the
+returned soldier to share it.
+
+All these anticipations turn out to be quite groundless.
+
+The first returned soldier of whom I had direct knowledge
+was my nephew Tom. When he came back, after two years in
+the trenches, we asked him to dine with us. "Now, remember,"
+I said to my wife, "Tom will be a very different being
+from what he was when he went away. He left us as little
+more than a school boy, only in his first year at college;
+in fact, a mere child. You remember how he used to bore
+us with baseball talk and that sort of thing. And how
+shy he was! You recall his awful fear of Professor Razzler,
+who used to teach him mathematics. All that, of course,
+will be changed now. Tom will have come back a man. We
+must ask the old professor to meet him. It will amuse
+Tom to see him again. Just think of the things he must
+have seen! But we must be a little careful at dinner not
+to let him horrify the other people with brutal details
+of the war."
+
+Tom came. I had expected him to arrive in uniform with
+his pocket full of bombs. Instead of this he wore ordinary
+evening dress with a dinner jacket. I realised as I helped
+him to take off his overcoat in the hall that he was very
+proud of his dinner jacket. He had never had one before.
+He said he wished the "boys" could see him in it. I asked
+him why he had put off his lieutenant's uniform so quickly.
+He explained that he was entitled not to wear it as soon
+as he had his discharge papers signed; some of the fellows,
+he said, kicked them off as soon as they left the ship,
+but the rule was, he told me, that you had to wear the
+thing till your papers were signed.
+
+Then his eye caught a glimpse sideways of Professor
+Razzler standing on the hearth rug in the drawing room.
+"Say," he said, "is that the professor?" I could see that
+Tom was scared. All the signs of physical fear were
+written on his face. When I tried to lead him into the
+drawing room I realised that he was as shy as ever. Three
+of the women began talking to him all at once. Tom
+answered, yes or no,--with his eyes down. I liked the
+way he stood, though, so unconsciously erect and steady.
+The other men who came in afterwards, with easy greetings
+and noisy talk, somehow seemed loud-voiced and
+self-assertive.
+
+Tom, to my surprise, refused a cocktail. It seems, as he
+explained, that he "got into the way of taking nothing
+over there." I noticed that my friend Quiller, who is a
+war correspondent, or, I should say, a war editorial
+writer, took three cocktails and talked all the more
+brilliantly for it through the opening courses of the
+dinner, about the story of the smashing of the Hindenburg
+line. He decided, after his second Burgundy, that it had
+been simply a case of sticking it out. I say "Burgundy"
+because we had substituted Burgundy, the sparkling kind,
+for champagne at our dinners as one of our little war
+economies.
+
+Tom had nothing to say about the Hindenburg line. In
+fact, for the first half of the dinner he hardly spoke.
+I think he was worried about his left hand. There is a
+deep furrow across the back of it where a piece of shrapnel
+went through and there are two fingers that will hardly
+move at all. I could see that he was ashamed of its
+clumsiness and afraid that someone might notice it. So
+he kept silent. Professor Razzler did indeed ask him
+straight across the table what he thought about the final
+breaking of the Hindenburg line. But he asked it with
+that same fierce look from under his bushy eyebrows with
+which he used to ask Tom to define the path of a tangent,
+and Tom was rattled at once. He answered something about
+being afraid that he was not well posted, owing to there
+being so little chance over there to read the papers.
+
+After that Professor Razzler and Mr. Quiller discussed
+for us, most energetically, the strategy of the Lorraine
+sector (Tom served there six months, but he never said
+so) and high explosives and the possibilities of aerial
+bombs. (Tom was "buried" by an aerial bomb but, of course,
+he didn't break in and mention it.)
+
+But we did get him talking of the war at last, towards
+the end of the dinner; or rather, the girl sitting next
+to him did, and presently the rest of us found ourselves
+listening. The strange thing was that the girl was a mere
+slip of a thing, hardly as old as Tom himself. In fact,
+my wife was almost afraid she might be too young to ask
+to dinner: girls of that age, my wife tells me, have
+hardly sense enough to talk to men, and fail to interest
+them. This is a proposition which I think it better not
+to dispute.
+
+But at any rate we presently realized that Tom was talking
+about his war experiences and the other talk about the
+table was gradually hushed into listening.
+
+This, as nearly as I can set it down, is what he told
+us: That the French fellows picked up baseball in a way
+that is absolutely amazing; they were not much good, it
+seems, at the bat, at any rate not at first, but at
+running bases they were perfect marvels; some of the
+French made good pitchers, too; Tom knew a poilu who had
+lost his right arm who could pitch as good a ball with
+his left as any man on the American side; at the port
+where Tom first landed and where they trained for a month
+they had a dandy ball ground, a regular peach, a former
+parade ground of the French barracks. On being asked
+WHICH port it was, Tom said he couldn't remember; he
+thought it was either Boulogne or Bordeaux or Brest,--at
+any rate, it was one of those places on the English
+channel. The ball ground they had behind the trenches
+was not so good; it was too much cut up by long range
+shells. But the ball ground at the base hospital (where
+Tom was sent for his second wound) was an A1 ground. The
+French doctors, it appears, were perfectly rotten at
+baseball, not a bit like the soldiers. Tom wonders that
+they kept them. Tom says that baseball had been tried
+among the German prisoners, but they are perfect dubs.
+He doubts whether the Germans will ever be able to play
+ball. They lack the national spirit. On the other hand,
+Tom thinks that the English will play a great game when
+they really get into it. He had two weeks' leave in London
+and went to see the game that King George was at, and
+says that the King, if they will let him, will make the
+greatest rooter of the whole bunch.
+
+Such was Tom's war talk.
+
+It grieved me to note that as the men sat smoking their
+cigars and drinking liqueur whiskey (we have cut out port
+at our house till the final peace is signed) Tom seemed
+to have subsided into being only a boy again, a first-year
+college boy among his seniors. They spoke to him in quite
+a patronising way, and even asked him two or three direct
+questions about fighting in the trenches, and wounds and
+the dead men in No Man's Land and the other horrors that
+the civilian mind hankers to hear about. Perhaps they
+thought, from the boy's talk, that he had seen nothing.
+If so, they were mistaken. For about three minutes, not
+more, Tom gave them what was coming to them. He told
+them, for example, why he trained his "fellows" to drive
+the bayonet through the stomach and not through the head,
+that the bayonet driven through the face or skull sticks
+and,--but there is no need to recite it here. Any of the
+boys like Tom can tell it all to you, only they don't
+want to and don't care to.
+
+They've got past it.
+
+But I noticed that as the boy talked,--quietly and
+reluctantly enough,--the older men fell silent and looked
+into his face with the realisation that behind his simple
+talk and quiet manner lay an inward vision of grim and
+awful realities that no words could picture.
+
+I think that they were glad when we joined the ladies
+again and when Tom talked of the amateur vaudeville show
+that his company had got up behind the trenches.
+
+Later on, when the other guests were telephoning for
+their motors and calling up taxis, Tom said he'd walk to
+his hotel; it was only a mile and the light rain that
+was falling would do him, he said, no harm at all. So he
+trudged off, refusing a lift.
+
+Oh, no, I don't think we need to worry about the returned
+soldier. Only let him return, that's all. When he does,
+he's a better man than we are, Gunga Dinn.
+
+
+
+
+2.--The War Sacrifices of Mr. Spugg
+
+Although we had been members of the same club for years,
+I only knew Mr. Spugg by sight until one afternoon when
+I heard him saying that he intended to send his chauffeur
+to the war.
+
+It was said quite quietly,--no bombast or boasting about
+it. Mr. Spugg was standing among a little group of
+listening members of the club and when he said that he
+had decided to send his chauffeur, he spoke with a kind
+of simple earnestness, a determination that marks the
+character of the man.
+
+"Yes," he said, "we need all the man power we can command.
+This thing has come to a showdown and we've got to
+recognise it. I told Henry that it's a showdown and that
+he's to get ready and start right away."
+
+"Well, Spugg," said one of the members "you're certainly
+setting us a fine example."
+
+"What else can a man do?" said Mr. Spugg.
+
+"When does your chauffeur leave?" asked another man.
+
+"Right away. I want him in the firing line just as quick
+as I can get him there."
+
+"It's a fine thing you're doing, Spugg," said a third
+member, "but do you realise that your chauffeur may be
+killed?"
+
+"I must take my chance on that," answered Mr. Spugg,
+firmly. "I've thought this thing out and made up my mind:
+If my chauffeur is killed, I mean to pay for him,--full
+and adequate compensation. The loss must fall on me, not
+on him. Or, say Henry comes back mutilated,--say he loses
+a leg,--say he loses two legs,--"
+
+Here Mr. Spugg looked about him at his listeners, with
+a look that meant that even three legs wouldn't be too
+much for him.
+
+"Whatever Henry loses I pay for. The loss shall fall on
+me, every cent of it."
+
+"Spugg," said a quiet looking, neatly dressed man whom
+I knew to be the president of an insurance company and
+who reached out and shook the speaker by the hand, "this
+is a fine thing you're doing, a big thing. But we mustn't
+let you do it alone. Let our company take a hand in it.
+We're making a special rate now on chauffeurs, footmen,
+and house-servants sent to the war, quite below the rate
+that actuarial figures justify. It is our little war
+contribution," he added modestly. "We like to feel that
+we're doing our bit, too. We had a chauffeur killed last
+week. We paid for him right off without demur,--waived
+all question of who killed him. I never signed a check
+(as I took occasion to say in a little note I wrote to
+his people) with greater pleasure."
+
+"What do you do if Henry's mutilated?" asked Mr. Spugg,
+turning his quiet eyes on the insurance man and facing
+the brutal facts of things without flinching. "What do
+you pay? Suppose I lose the use of Henry's legs, what
+then?"
+
+"It's all right," said his friend. "Leave it to us.
+Whatever he loses, we make it good."
+
+"All right," said Spugg, "send me round a policy. I'm
+going to see Henry clear through on this."
+
+It was at this point that at my own urgent request I was
+introduced to Mr. Spugg, so that I might add my
+congratulations to those of the others. I told him that
+I felt, as all the other members of the club did, that
+he was doing a big thing, and he answered again, in his
+modest way, that he didn't see what else a man could do.
+
+"My son Alfred and I," he said, "talked it over last
+night and we agreed that we can run the car ourselves,
+or make a shot at it anyway. After all, it's war time."
+
+"What branch of the service are you putting your chauffeur
+in?" I asked.
+
+"I'm not sure," he answered. "I think I'll send him up
+in the air. It's dangerous, of course, but it's no time
+to think about that."
+
+So, in due time, Mr. Spugg's chauffeur, Henry, went
+overseas. He was reported first as in England. Next he
+was right at the front, at the very firing itself. We
+knew then,--everybody in the club knew that Mr. Spugg's
+chauffeur might be killed at any moment. But great as
+the strain must have been, Spugg went up and down to his
+office and in and out of the club without a tremor. The
+situation gave him a new importance in our eyes, something
+tense.
+
+"This seems to be a terrific business," I said to him
+one day at lunch, "this new German drive."
+
+"My chauffeur," said Mr. Spugg, "was right in the middle
+of it."
+
+"He was, eh?"
+
+"Yes," he continued, "one shell burst in the air so near
+him it almost broke his wings."
+
+Mr. Spugg told this with no false boasting or bravado,
+eating his celery as he spoke of it. Here was a man who
+had nearly had his chauffeur's wings blown off and yet
+he never moved a muscle. I began to realize the kind of
+resolute stuff that the man was made of.
+
+A few days later bad news came to the club.
+
+"Have you heard the bad news about Spugg?" someone asked.
+
+"No, what?"
+
+"His chauffeur's been gassed."
+
+"How is he taking it?"
+
+"Fine. He's sending off his gardener to take the chauffeur's
+place."
+
+So that was Mr. Spugg's answer to the Germans.
+
+We lunched together that day.
+
+"Yes," he said, "Henry's gassed. How it happened I don't
+know. He must have come down out of the air. I told him
+I wanted him in the air. But let it pass. It's done now."
+
+"And you're sending your gardener?"
+
+"I am," said Spugg. "He's gone already. I called him in
+from the garden yesterday. I said, 'William, Henry's been
+gassed. Our first duty is to keep up our man power at
+the front. You must leave to-night.'"
+
+"What are you putting William into?" I asked
+
+"Infantry. He'll do best in the trenches,--digs well and
+is a very fair shot. Anyway I want him to see all the
+fighting that's going. If the Germans want give and take
+in this business they can have it. They'll soon see who
+can stand it best. I told William when he left. I said,
+'William, we've got to show these fellows that man for
+man we're a match for them.' That's the way I look at
+it, man for man."
+
+I watched Mr. Spugg's massive face as he went on with
+his meal. Not a nerve of it moved. If he felt any fear,
+at least he showed no trace of it.
+
+After that I got war news from him at intervals, in little
+scraps, as I happened to meet him. "The war looks bad,"
+I said to him one day as I chanced upon him getting into
+his motor. "This submarine business is pretty serious."
+
+"It is," he said, "William was torpedoed yesterday."
+
+Then he got into his car and drove away, as quietly as
+if nothing had happened.
+
+A little later that day I heard him talking about it in
+the club. "Yes," he was saying, "a submarine. It torpedoed
+William,--my gardener. I have both a chauffeur and a
+gardener at the war. William was picked up on a raft.
+He's in pretty bad shape. My son Alfred had a cable from
+him that he's coming home. We've both telegraphed him to
+stick it out."
+
+The news was the chief topic in the club that day. "Spugg's
+gardener has been torpedoed," they said, "but Spugg
+refuses to have him quit and come home." "Well done,
+Spugg," said everybody.
+
+After that we had news from time to time about both
+William and Henry.
+
+"Henry's out of the hospital," said Spugg. "I hope to
+have him back in France in a few days. William's in bad
+shape still. I had a London surgeon go and look at him.
+I told him not to mind the expense but to get William
+fixed up right away. It seems that one arm is more or
+less paralysed. I've wired back to him not to hesitate.
+They say William's blood is still too thin for the
+operation. I've cabled to them to take some of Henry's.
+I hate to do it, but this is no time to stick at anything."
+
+A little later William and Henry were reported both back
+in France. This was at the very moment of the great
+offensive. But Spugg went about his daily business unmoved.
+Then came the worst news of all. "William and Henry," he
+said to me, "are both missing. I don't know where the
+devil they are."
+
+"Missing?" I repeated.
+
+"Both of them. The Germans have caught them both. I
+suppose I shan't have either of them back now till the
+war is all over."
+
+He gave a slight sigh,--the only sign of complaint that
+ever I had heard come from him.
+
+But the next day we learned what was Spugg's answer to
+the German's capture of William and Henry.
+
+"Have you heard what Spugg is doing?" the members of the
+club asked one another.
+
+"What?"
+
+"He's sending over Meadows, HIS OWN MAN!"
+
+There was no need to comment on it. The cool courage of
+the thing spoke for itself. Meadows,--Spugg's own man,--his
+house valet, without whom he never travelled twenty miles!
+
+"What else was there to do?" said Mr. Spugg when I asked
+him if it was true that Meadows was going. "I take no
+credit for sending Meadows nor, for the matter of that,
+for anything that Meadows may do over there. It was a
+simple matter of duty. My son and I had him into the
+dining room last night after dinner. 'Meadows,' we said,
+'Henry and William are caught. Our man power at the front
+has got to be kept up. There's no one left but ourselves
+and you. There's no way out of it. You'll have to go.'"
+
+"But how," I protested, "can you get along with Meadows,
+your valet, gone? You'll be lost!"
+
+"We must do the best we can. We've talked it all over.
+My son will help me dress and I will help him. We can
+manage, no doubt."
+
+So Meadows went.
+
+After this Mr. Spugg, dressed as best he could manage
+it, and taking turns with his son in driving his own
+motor, was a pathetic but uncomplaining object.
+
+Meadows meantime was reported as with the heavy artillery,
+doing well. "I hope nothing happens to Meadows," Spugg
+kept saying. "If it does, we're stuck. We can't go
+ourselves. We're too busy. We've talked it over and we've
+both decided that it's impossible to get away from the
+office,--not with business as brisk as it is now. We're
+busier than we've been in ten years and can't get off
+for a day. We may try to take a month off for the
+Adirondacks a little later but as for Europe, it's out
+of the question."
+
+Meantime, one little bit of consolation came to help Mr.
+Spugg to bear the burden of the war. I found him in the
+lounge room of the club one afternoon among a group of
+men, exhibiting two medals that were being passed from
+hand to hand.
+
+"Sent to me by the French government," he explained
+proudly. "They're for William and Henry. The motto means,
+'For Conspicuous Courage"' (Mr. Spugg drew himself up
+with legitimate pride). "I shall keep one and let Alfred
+keep the other till they come back." Then he added, as
+an afterthought, "They may never come back."
+
+From that day on, Mr. Spugg, with his French medal on
+his watch chain, was the most conspicuous figure in the
+club. He was pointed out as having done more than any
+other one man in the institution to keep the flag flying.
+But presently the limit of Mr. Spugg's efforts and
+sacrifices was reached. Even patriotism such as his must
+have some bounds.
+
+On entering the club one afternoon I could hear his voice
+bawling vociferously in one of the telephone cabinets in
+the hall. "Hello, Washington," he was shouting. "Is that
+Washington? Long Distance, I want Washington."
+
+Fifteen minutes later he came up to the sitting room,
+still flushed with indignation and excitement. "That's
+the limit," he said, "the absolute limit!"
+
+"What's the matter?" I asked.
+
+"They drafted my son Alfred," he answered.
+
+"Just imagine it! When we're so busy in the office that
+we're getting down there at half past eight in the morning!
+Drafted Alfred! 'Great Caesar' I said to them! 'Look
+here! You've had my chauffeur and he's gassed, and you've
+had my gardener and he's torpedoed and they're both
+prisoners, and last month I sent you my own man! That,'
+I said, 'is about the limit.'"
+
+"What did they say," I asked.
+
+"Oh, it's all right. They've fixed it all up and they've
+apologized as well. Alfred won't go, of course, but it
+makes one realise that you can carry a thing too far.
+Why, they'd be taking me next!"
+
+"Oh, surely not!" I said.
+
+
+
+
+3.--If Germany Had Won
+
+Sometimes, in the past, we have grown a little impatient
+with our North American civilisation, with its strident
+clamour, its noisy elections, its extremes of liberty,
+its occasional corruption and the faults that we now see
+were the necessary accompaniments of its merits. But let
+us set beside it a picture such as this, taken from the
+New York Imperial Gazette of 1925--or from any paper of
+the same period, such as would have been published if
+Germany had won.
+
+----
+
+General Boob of Boobenstiff, Imperial Governor of New
+York, will attend divine (Imperial) service on Sunday
+morning next at the church of St. John the (Imperial)
+Divine. The subway cars will be stopped while the General
+is praying. All subway passengers are enjoined (befohlen),
+during the thus-to-be-ordered period of cessation, to
+remain in a reverential attitude. Those in the seats will
+keep the head bowed. Those holding to the straps will
+elevate one leg, keeping the knee in the air.
+
+On Monday evening General Boob von Boobenstiff, Imperial
+Governor of New York, will be graciously pleased to attend
+a performance at the (Imperial) Winter Garden on Upper
+(Imperial) Broadway. It is ordered that on the entrance
+of His Excellency the audience will spontaneously rise
+and break into three successive enthusiastic cheers. Mr.
+Al Jolson will remain kneeling on the stage till the
+Gubernatorial All Highest has seated itself. Mr. Jolson
+will then, by special (Imperial) permission, be allowed
+to make four jokes in German to be taken from a list
+supplied by the Imperial Censor of Humour. The Governor,
+accompanied by his military staff, will then leave, and
+the performance will close.
+
+----
+
+It is ordered that, on Tuesday afternoon, as a sign of
+thankfulness for the blessings of the German peace, the
+business men of New York shall walk in procession from
+the Battery to the Bronx. They will then be inspected by
+Governor Boobenstiff. If the Governor is delayed in
+arriving at the hereafter-to-be-indicated point of general
+put-yourself-there, the procession will walk back to the
+Battery and back again, continuing so, pro and con, till
+the arrival of the Governor.
+
+----
+
+The approaching visit of His Royal and Imperial Solemnity
+the Prince Apparent of Bavaria shall be heralded in the
+(Imperial) City of New York with general rejoicing. The
+city shall be spontaneously decorated with flags. Smiles
+of cordial welcome shall appear on every face. Animated
+crowds of eager citizens shall move to and fro and shouts
+of welcome shall, by order of the Chief of Police, break
+from the lips. Among those who are expected to be in
+the Imperial city to welcome his Royal Solemnity will be
+the Hereditary Grand Duke of Schlitzin-Mein (formerly
+Milwaukee), the Prince Margrave of Wisconsin and the
+Hereditary Chief Constable of Nevada.
+
+----
+
+We are delighted to be able to chronicle that on the
+morning of the 14th there was born at the Imperial
+Residence of His Simplicity the Hereditary Governor of
+the Provinz (formerly State) of New York, in the (Imperial)
+city of Albany a tenth son to the illustrious Prince and
+Princess who rule over us with such fatherly care. The
+boy was christened yesterday at the (Imperial) Lutheran
+Church and is to bear the name Frederick Wilhelm Amelia
+Mary Johan Heinrich Ruprecht. The whole city of Albany
+is thrown into the wildest rejoicing. The legislature
+has voted an addition of $400,000 per annum to the civil
+list for the maintenance of the young prince. Joy suffuses
+every home. This being the tenth son born to their
+Highnesses in ten years it is felt that the future of
+the dynasty is more or less secured. Even the humblest
+home is filled with the reflected joy that streams out
+from the Residency. Their Royal Highnesses appeared
+yesterday on the balcony amid the wild huzzoos of the
+people transported with joy. His Simplicity the Prince
+wore the full dress uniform of an Imperial Jaeger of the
+Adirondacks, and Her Royal Highness was attired as a
+Colonel of Artillery. It is impossible to express the
+jubilation of the moment.
+
+----
+
+We regret to report that owing to the jostling (possibly
+accidental, but none the less actual) of an Imperial
+officer--Field-Lieutenant Schmidt--at the entrance to
+Brooklyn Bridge, the bridge is declared closed to the
+public until further notice. We are proud to state the
+Field Lieutenant at once cut down his cowardly assailant
+with his saber. It has pleased His Unspeakable Loftiness,
+the German Emperor, to cable his congratulations to the
+Lieutenant, who will receive The Order of the Dead Dog
+for the noble way in which he has maintained the traditions
+of his uniform.
+
+----
+
+A striking feature of the now-taking-place Art Exhibition
+at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute (formerly Metropolitan
+Gallery) in the Thiergarten (formerly Central Park) is
+offered by the absolutely marvellous paintings exhibited by
+the Princess Marie Paul Cecilie Hohenzollern-Stickitintothem,
+a cousin of Our Noble Governor. The paintings which the
+Princess has been preciously pleased to paint and has even
+stooped to exhibit to the filled-with-wonder eye of the
+public have been immediately awarded the first prize in
+each class. While it would be invidious even to suggest that
+any one of Her High Incipiency's pictures is better than any
+other, our feeling is that especially the picture Night on
+the Hudson River is of so rare a quality both of technique
+and of inspiration that it supersedes the bounds of the
+hitherto-thought-to-be-possible art in America. The
+Princess's conception of night, black as a pall and yet
+luminous as a polished stove pipe, is only equalled by
+her feeling towards the Hudson which lies extended in
+soporific superficiality beneath the sable covering of
+darkness in which Her Highness has been pleased to
+overwhelm it. Throughout the day an eager-to-see crowd
+of spectators were beaten back from the picture by the
+police with clubs.
+
+----
+
+We are permitted officially to confirm the already
+gladly-from-mouth-to-mouth-whispered news of an approaching
+marriage between Prince Heinrich of Texas and the Princess
+Amelia Victoria Louisa, Hereditary Heir Consumptive of
+the Imperial Provinz of Maine. The marriage, so it is
+whispered, although performed in accordance with the
+wishes of the Emperor as expressed by cable, is in every
+way a love match. What lends a touch of romance to the
+betrothal of the Royal Younglings is that the Prince had
+never even seen the Princess Amelia until the day when
+the legislature of the Provinz of Maine voted her a
+marriage portion of half a million dollars. Immediately
+on this news a secret visit was arranged, the Prince
+journeying to Bangor incognito as the Count of Flim-Flam
+in the costume of an officer of the Imperial Scavengers.
+On receipt of the Emperor's telegram the happy pair fell
+in love with one another at once. What makes the approaching
+union particularly auspicious for the whole country is
+that it brings with it the union of Maine and Texas,
+henceforth to form a single grateful provinz. The Royal
+Pair, it is understood, will live alternately in each
+province a month at a time and the legislature, the
+executive officials, the courts of law and the tax
+collectors will follow them to and fro.
+
+We cannot but contrast this happy issue with the turbulence
+and disorder in which our country lived before the Great
+War of Liberation.
+
+----
+
+We are delighted to learn from our despatches from Boston
+that the Hohenzollern Institute (formerly Harvard
+University) is to be opened next autumn. By express
+permission of the Imperial Government, classes in English
+will be permitted for half an hour each day.
+
+By the clemency of the Emperor the sentences of W. H.
+Taft, and W. Wilson have been commuted from the sentence
+of fifty years imprisonment to imprisonment for life. We
+hope, in a special supplement, to be able to add the full
+list of sentences, executions, imprisonments, fines, and
+attainders that have been promulgated in honour of the
+birthday of our Imperial Sovereign.
+
+
+
+
+4.--War and Peace at the Galaxy Club
+
+The Great Peace Kermesse at the Galaxy Club, to which I
+have the honour to belong, held with a view to wipe out
+the Peace Deficit of the Club, has just ended. For three
+weeks our club house has been a blaze of illumination.
+We have had four orchestras in attendance. There have
+been suppers and dances every night. Our members have
+not spared themselves.
+
+The Kermesse is now over. We have time, as our lady
+members are saying, to turn round.
+
+For the moment we are sitting listening, amid bursts of
+applause, to our treasurer's statement. As we hear it we
+realise that this Peace Kermesse has proved the culmination
+and crown of four winters' war work.
+
+But I must explain from the beginning.
+
+Our efforts began with the very opening of the war. We
+felt that a rich organisation like ours ought to do
+something for the relief of the Belgians. At the same
+time we felt that our members would rather receive
+something in the way of entertainment for their money
+than give it straight out of their pockets.
+
+We therefore decided first to hold a public lecture in
+the club, and engaged the services of Professor Dry to
+lecture on the causes of the war.
+
+In view of the circumstances, Professor Dry very kindly
+reduced his lecture fee, which (he assured us) is generally
+two hundred and fifty dollars, to two hundred and forty.
+
+The lecture was most interesting. Professor Dry traced
+the causes of the War backwards through the Middle Ages.
+He showed that it represented the conflict of the
+brachiocephalic culture of the Wendic races with the
+dolichocephalic culture of the Alpine stock. At the time
+when the lights went out he had got it back to the eighth
+century before Christ.
+
+Unfortunately the night, being extremely wet, was
+unfavourable. Few of our members care to turn out to
+lectures in wet weather. The treasurer was compelled to
+announce to the Committee a net deficit of two hundred
+dollars. Some of the ladies of the Committee moved that
+the entire deficit be sent to the Belgians, but were
+overruled by the interference of the men.
+
+But the error was seen to have been in the choice of the
+lecturer. Our members were no longer interested in the
+causes of the war. The topic was too old. We therefore
+held another public lecture in the club, on the topic
+What Will Come After the War. It was given by a very
+talented gentleman, a Mr. Guess, a most interesting
+speaker, who reduced his fee (as the thing was a war
+charity) by one-half, leaving it at three hundred dollars.
+Unhappily the weather was against us. It was too fine.
+Our members scarcely care to listen to lectures in fine
+weather. And it turned out that our members are not
+interested in what will come after the war. The topic is
+too new. Our receipts of fifty dollars left us with a
+net deficit of two hundred and fifty. Our treasurer
+therefore proposed that we should carry both deficits
+forward and open a Special Patriotic Entertainment Account
+showing a net total deficit of four hundred and fifty
+dollars.
+
+In the opinion of the committee our mistake had been in
+engaging outside talent. It was felt that the cost of
+this was prohibitive. It was better to invite the services
+of the members of the club themselves. A great number of
+the ladies expressed their willingness to take part in
+any kind of war work that took the form of public
+entertainment.
+
+Accordingly we presented a play. It was given in the ball
+room of the club house, a stage being specially put up
+for us by a firm of contractors. The firm (as a matter
+of patriotism) did the whole thing for us at cost, merely
+charging us with the labour, the material, the time, the
+thought and the anxiety that they gave to the job, but
+for nothing else. In fact, the whole staging, including
+lights, plumbing and decorations was merely a matter of
+five hundred dollars. The plumbers very considerately
+made no charge for their time, but only for their work.
+
+It was felt that it would be better to have a new play
+than an old. We selected a brilliant little modern
+drawing-room comedy never yet presented. The owner of
+the copyright, a theatrical firm, let us use it for a
+merely nominal fee of two hundred dollars, including the
+sole right to play the piece forever. There being only
+twenty-eight characters in it, it was felt to be more
+suitable than a more ambitious thing. The tickets were
+placed at one dollar, no one being admitted free except
+the performers themselves, and the members who very kindly
+acted as scene shifters, curtain lifters, ushers, door-keepers,
+programme sellers, and the general committee of management.
+All the performers, at their own suggestion, supplied their
+own costumes, charging nothing to the club except the material
+and the cost of dressmaking. Beyond this there was no expense
+except for the fee, very reasonable, of Mr. Skip, the
+professional coach who trained the performers, and who asked
+us, in view of the circumstances, less than half of what he
+would have been willing to accept.
+
+The proceeds were to be divided between the Belgian Fund
+and the Red Cross, giving fifty per cent to each. A motion
+in amendment from the ladies' financial committee to give
+fifty per cent to the Belgian Fund and sixty per cent to
+the Red Cross was voted down.
+
+Unfortunately it turned out that the idea of a PLAY was
+a mistake in judgment. Our members, it seemed, did not
+care to go to see a play except in a theatre. A great
+number of them, however, very kindly turned out to help
+in shifting the scenery and in acting as ushers.
+
+Our treasurer announced, as the result of the play, a
+net deficit of twelve hundred dollars. He moved, with
+general applause, that it be carried forward.
+
+The total deficit having now reached over sixteen hundred
+dollars, there was a general feeling that a very special
+effort must be made to remove it. It was decided to hold
+Weekly Patriotic Dances in the club ball room, every
+Saturday evening. No charge was made for admission to
+the dances, but a War Supper was served at one dollar a
+head.
+
+Unfortunately the dances, as first planned, proved again
+an error. It appeared that though our members are
+passionately fond of dancing, few if any of them cared
+to eat at night. The plan was therefore changed. The
+supper was served first, and was free, and for the dancing
+after supper a charge was made of one dollar, per person.
+This again was an error. It seems that after our members
+have had supper they prefer to go home and sleep. After
+one winter of dancing the treasurer announced a total
+Patriotic Relief Deficit of five thousand dollars, to be
+carried forward to next year. This sum duly appeared in
+the annual balance sheet of the club. The members,
+especially the ladies, were glad to think that we were
+at least doing SOMETHING for the war.
+
+At this point some of our larger men, themselves financial
+experts, took hold. They said that our entertainments
+had been on too small a scale. They told us that we had
+been "undermined by overhead expenses." The word "overhead"
+was soon on everybody's lips. We were told that if we
+could "distribute our overhead" it would disappear. It
+was therefore planned to hold a great War Kermesse with
+a view to spreading out the overhead so thin that it
+would vanish.
+
+But it was at this very moment that the Armistice burst
+upon us in a perfectly unexpected fashion. Everyone of
+our members was, undoubtedly, delighted that the war was
+over but there was a very general feeling that it would
+have been better if we could have had a rather longer
+notice of what was coming. It seemed, as many of our
+members said, such a leap in the dark to rush into peace
+all at once. It was said indeed by our best business men
+that in financial circles they had been fully aware that
+there was a danger of peace for some time and had taken
+steps to discount the peace risk.
+
+But for the club itself the thing came with a perfect
+crash. The whole preparation of the great Kermesse was
+well under way when the news broke upon us. For a time
+the members were aghast. It looked like ruin. But presently
+it was suggested that it might still be possible to save
+the club by turning the whole affair into a Peace Kermesse
+and devoting the proceeds to some suitable form of relief.
+Luckily it was discovered that there was still a lot of
+starvation in Russia, and fortunately it turned out that
+in spite of the armistice the Turks were still killing
+the Armenians.
+
+So it was decided to hold the Kermesse and give all the
+profits realised by it to the Victims of the Peace.
+Everybody set to work again with a will. The Kermesse
+indeed had to be postponed for a few months to make room
+for the changes needed, but it has now been held and, in
+a certain sense, it has been the wildest kind of success.
+The club, as I said, has been a blaze of light for three
+weeks. We have had four orchestras in attendance every
+evening. There have been booths draped with the flags of
+all the Allies, except some that we were not sure about,
+in every corridor of the club. There have been dinner
+parties and dances every evening. The members, especially
+the ladies, have not spared themselves. Many of them have
+spent practically all their time at the Kermesse, not
+getting home until two in the morning.
+
+And yet somehow one has felt that underneath the surface
+it was not a success. The spirit seemed gone out of it.
+The members themselves confessed in confidence that in
+spite of all they could do their hearts were not in it.
+Peace had somehow taken away all the old glad sense of
+enjoyment. As to spending money at the Kermesse all the
+members admitted frankly that they had no heart for it.
+This was especially the case when the rumour got abroad
+that the Armenians were a poor lot and that some of the
+Turks were quite gentlemanly fellows. It was said, too,
+that if the Russians did starve it would do them a lot
+of good.
+
+So it was known even before we went to hear the financial
+report that there would be no question of profits on the
+Kermesse going to the Armenians or the Russians.
+
+And to-night the treasurer has been reading out to a
+general meeting the financial results as nearly as they
+can be computed.
+
+He has put the Net Patriotic Deficit, as nearly as he
+can estimate it, at fifteen thousand dollars, though he
+has stated, with applause from the ladies, that the Gross
+Deficit is bigger still.
+
+The Ladies Financial Committee has just carried a motion
+that the whole of the deficit, both net and gross, be
+now forwarded to the Red Cross Society (sixty per cent),
+the Belgian Relief Fund (fifty per cent), and the remainder
+invested in the War Loan.
+
+But there is a very general feeling among the male members
+that the club will have to go into liquidation. Peace
+has ruined us. Not a single member, so far as I am aware,
+is prepared to protest against the peace, or is anything
+but delighted to think that the war is over. At the same
+time we do feel that if we could have had a longer notice,
+six months for instance, we could have braced ourselves
+better to stand up against it and meet the blow when it
+fell.
+
+I think, too, that our feeling is shared outside.
+
+
+
+
+5.--The War News as I Remember it
+
+Everybody, I think, should make some little contribution
+towards keeping alive the memories of the great war. In
+the larger and heroic sense this is already being done.
+But some of the minor things are apt to be neglected.
+When the record of the war has been rewritten into real
+history, we shall be in danger of forgetting what WAR
+NEWS was like and the peculiar kind of thrill that
+accompanied its perusal.
+
+Hence in order to preserve it for all time I embalm some
+little samples of it, selected of course absolutely at
+random,--as such things always are--in the pages of this
+book.
+
+Let me begin with:--
+
+
+
+
+I--THE CABLE NEWS FROM RUSSIA
+
+This was the great breakfast-table feature for at least
+three years. Towards the end of the war some people began
+to complain of it. They said that they questioned whether
+it was accurate. Here for example is one fortnight of
+it.
+
+Petrograd, April 14. Word has reached here that the
+ Germans have captured enormous quantities of grain on
+ the Ukrainian border.
+April 15. The Germans have captured no grain on the
+ Ukrainian border. The country is swept bare.
+April 16. Everybody in Petrograd is starving.
+April 17. There is no lack of food in Petrograd.
+April 18. The death of General Korniloff is credibly
+ reported this morning.
+April 19. It is credibly reported this morning that
+ General Korniloff is alive.
+April 20. It is credibly reported that General
+ Korniloff is hovering between life and death.
+April 21. The Bolsheviki are overthrown.
+April 22. The Bolsheviki got up again.
+April 23. The Czar died last night.
+April 24. The Czar did not die last night.
+April 25. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving north.
+April 26. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving south.
+April 27. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving east.
+April 28. General Kaleidescope and his Cossacks
+ are moving west.
+April 29. It is reported that the Cossacks under General
+ Kaleidescope have revolted. They demand the Maximum.
+ General Kaleidescope hasn't got it.
+April 30. The National Pan-Russian Constituent Universal
+ Duma which met this morning at ten-thirty, was
+ dissolved at twenty-five minutes to eleven.
+
+My own conclusion, reached with deep regret, is that the
+Russians are not yet fit for the blessings of the Magna
+Carta and the Oklahama Constitution of 1907. They ought
+to remain for some years yet under the Interstate Commerce
+Commission.
+
+
+
+
+II--SAMPLE OF SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE
+
+New York (through London via Holland and coming out at
+Madrid). Mr. O. Howe Lurid, our special correspondent,
+writing from "Somewhere near Somewhere" and describing
+the terrific operations of which he has just been an
+eyewitness, says:
+
+"From the crest where I stood, the whole landscape about
+me was illuminated with the fierce glare of the bursting
+shells, while the ground on which I stood quivered with
+the thunderous detonation of the artillery.
+
+"Nothing in the imagination of a Dante could have equalled
+the lurid and pyrogriffic grandeur of the scene. Streams
+of fire rose into the sky, falling in bifurcated
+crystallations in all directions. Disregarding all personal
+danger, I opened one eye and looked at it.
+
+"I found myself now to be the very centre of the awful
+conflict. While not stating that the whole bombardment
+was directed at me personally, I am pretty sure that it
+was."
+
+I admit that there was a time, at the very beginning of
+the war, when I liked this kind of thing served up with
+my bacon and eggs every morning, in the days when a man
+could eat bacon and eggs without being labelled a
+pro-German. Later on I came to prefer the simple statements
+as to the same scene and event, given out by Sir Douglas
+Haig and General Pershing--after this fashion:
+
+"Last night at ten-thirty P.M. our men noticed signs of
+a light bombardment apparently coming from the German
+lines."
+
+
+
+
+III--THE TECHNICAL WAR DESPATCHES
+
+The best of these, as I remember them, used to come from
+the Italian front and were done after this fashion:--
+
+"Tintino, near Trombono. Friday, April 3. The Germans,
+as I foresaw last month they would, have crossed the
+Piave in considerable force. Their position, as I said
+it would be, is now very strong. The mountains bordering
+the valley run--just as I foresaw they would--from
+northwest to southeast. The country in front is, as I
+anticipated, flat. Venice is, as I assured my readers it
+would be, about thirty miles distant from the Piave,
+which falls, as I expected it would, into the Adriatic."
+
+
+
+
+IV--THE WAR PROPHECIES
+
+Startling Prophecy in Paris. All Paris is wildly excited
+over the extraordinary prophecy of Madame Cleo de Clichy
+that the war will be over in four weeks. Madame Cleo,
+who is now as widely known as a diseuse, a liseuse, a
+friseuse and a clairvoyante, leaped into sudden prominence
+last November by her startling announcement that the
+seven letters in the Kaiser's name W i l h e l m represented
+the seven great beasts of the apocalypse; in the next
+month she electrified all Paris by her disclosure that
+the four letters of the word C z a r--by substituting
+the figure 1 for C, 9 for Z, 1 for A, and 7 for R produce
+the date 1917, and indicated a revolution in Russia. The
+salon of Madame Cleo is besieged by eager crowds night
+and day. She may prophesy again at any minute.
+
+Startling Forecast. A Russian peasant, living in
+Semipalatinsk, has foretold that the war will end in
+August. The wildest excitement prevails not only in
+Semipalatinsk but in the whole of it.
+
+Extraordinary Prophecy. Rumbumbabad, India. April 1. The
+whole neighbourhood has been thrown into a turmoil by
+the prophecy of Ram Slim, a Yogi of this district, who
+has foretold that the war will be at an end in September.
+People are pouring into Rumbumbabad in ox-carts from all
+directions. Business in Rumbumbabad is at a standstill.
+
+Excitement in Midgeville, Ohio. William Bessemer Jones,
+a retired farmer of Cuyahoga, Ohio, has foretold that
+the war will end in October. People are flocking into
+Midgeville in lumber wagons from all parts of the country.
+Jones, who bases his prophecy on the Bible, had hitherto
+been thought to be half-witted. This is now recognised
+to have been a wrong estimate of his powers. Business in
+Midgeville is at a standstill.
+
+Dog's Foot. Wyoming. April 1. An Indian of the Cheyenne
+tribe has foretold that the war will end in December.
+Business among the Indians is at a standstill.
+
+
+
+
+V--DIPLOMATIC REVELATIONS
+
+These were sent out in assortments, and labelled Vienna,
+via London, through Stockholm. After reading them with
+feverish eagerness for nearly four years, I decided that
+they somehow lack definiteness. Here is the way they ran:
+
+"Special Correspondence. I learn from a very high authority,
+whose name I am not at liberty to mention, (speaking to
+me at a place which I am not allowed to indicate and in
+a language which I am forbidden to use)--that
+Austria-Hungary is about to take a diplomatic step of
+the highest importance. What this step is, I am forbidden
+to say. But the consequences of it--which unfortunately
+I am pledged not to disclose--will be such as to effect
+results which I am not free to enumerate."
+
+
+
+
+VI--A NEW GERMAN PEACE FORMULA
+
+Dr. Hertling, the Imperial Chancellor, speaking through
+his hat in the Reichstag, said that he wished to state
+in the clearest language of which he was capable that
+the German peace plan would not only provide the fullest
+self determination of all ethnographic categories, but
+would predicate the political self consciousness
+(politisches Selbstbewusztsein) of each geographical and
+entomological unit, subject only to the necessary
+rectilinear guarantees for the seismographic action of
+the German empire. The entire Reichstag, especially the
+professorial section of it, broke into unrestrained
+applause. It is felt that the new formula is the equivalent
+of a German Magna Carta--or as near to it as they can
+get.
+
+
+
+
+VII--THE FINANCIAL NEWS
+
+The war finance, as I remember it, always supplied items
+of the most absorbing interest. I do not mean to say that
+I was an authority on finance or held any official position
+in regard to it. But I watched it. I followed it in the
+newspapers. When the war began I knew nothing about it.
+But I picked up a little bit here and a little bit there
+until presently I felt that I had a grasp on it not easily
+shaken off.
+
+It was a simple matter, anyway. Take the case of the
+rouble. It rose and it fell. But the reason was always
+perfectly obvious. The Russian news ran, as I got it in
+my newspapers, like this:--
+
+"M. Touchusoff, the new financial secretary of the Soviet,
+has declared that Russia will repay her utmost liabilities.
+Roubles rose."
+
+"M. Touchusoff, the late financial secretary of the
+Soviet, was thrown into the Neva last evening. Roubles
+fell."
+
+"M. Gorky, speaking in London last night, said that Russia
+was a great country. Roubles rose."
+
+"A Dutch correspondent, who has just beat his way out of
+Russia, reports that nothing will induce him to go back.
+Roubles fell."
+
+"Mr. Arthur Balfour, speaking in the House of Commons
+last night, paid a glowing tribute to the memory of Peter
+the Great. Roubles rose."
+
+"The local Bolsheviki of New York City at the Pan-Russian
+Congress held in Murphy's Rooms, Fourth Avenue, voted
+unanimously in favor of a Free Russia. Roubles never
+budged."
+
+With these examples in view, anybody, I think, could
+grasp the central principles of Russian finance. All that
+one needed to know was what M. Touchusoff and such people
+were going to say, and who would be thrown into the Neva,
+and the rise and fall of the rouble could be foreseen to
+a kopeck. In speculation by shrewd people with proper
+judgment as to when to buy and when to sell the rouble,
+large fortunes could be made, or even lost, in a day.
+
+But after all the Russian finance was simple. That of
+our German enemies was much more complicated and yet
+infinitely more successful. That at least I gathered from
+the little news items in regard to German finance that
+used to reach us in cables that were headed Via Timbuctoo
+and ran thus:--
+
+"The fourth Imperial War Loan of four billion marks, to
+be known as the Kaiser's War Loan, was oversubscribed
+to-day in five minutes. Investors thronged the banks,
+with tears in their eyes, bringing with them everything
+that they had. The bank managers, themselves stained with
+tears, took everything that was offered. Each investor
+received a button proudly displayed by the
+too-happy-for-words out-of-the-bank-hustling recipient."
+
+
+
+
+6.--Some Just Complaints About the War
+
+No patriotic man would have cared to lift up his voice
+against the Government in war time. Personally, I should
+not want to give utterance even now to anything in the
+way of criticism. But the complaints which were presented
+below came to me, unsought and unsolicited, and represented
+such a variety of sources and such just and unselfish
+points of view that I think it proper, for the sake of
+history, to offer them to the public.
+
+I give them, just as they reached me, without modifications
+of any sort.
+
+
+The just complaint of Mr. Threadler, my tailor, as
+expressed while measuring me for my Win-the-War autumn
+suit.
+
+"Complaint, sir? Oh, no, we have no complaint to make in
+our line of business, none whatever (forty-two, Mr.
+Jephson). It would hardly become us to complain (side
+pockets, Mr. Jephson). But we think, perhaps, it is rather
+a mistake for the Government (thirty-three on the leg)
+to encourage the idea of economy in dress. Our attitude
+is that the well dressed man (a little fuller in the
+chest? Yes, a little fuller in the chest, please, Mr.
+Jephson) is better able to serve his country than the
+man who goes about in an old suit. The motto of our trade
+is Thrift with Taste. It was made up in our spring
+convention of five hundred members, in a four day sitting.
+We feel it to be (twenty-eight) very appropriate. Our
+feeling is that a gentleman wearing one of our thrift
+worsteds under one of our Win-the-War light overcoats
+(Mr. Jephson, please show that new Win-the-War overcoating)
+is really helping to keep things going. We like to reflect,
+sir (nothing in shirtings, today?) that we're doing our
+bit, too, in presenting to the enemy an undisturbed nation
+of well dressed men. Nothing else, sir? The week after
+next? Ah! If we can, sir! but we're greatly rushed with
+our new and patriotic Thrift orders. Good morning, sir."
+
+
+The just complaint of Madame Pavalucini, the celebrated
+contralto. As interviewed incidentally in the palm-room
+of The Slitz Hotel, over a cup of tea (one dollar), French
+Win-the-War pastry (one fifty) and Help-the-Navy cigarettes
+(fifty).
+
+"I would not want to creetecize ze gouvermen' ah! non!
+That would be what you call a skonk treeck, hein?" (Madame
+Pavalucini comes from Missouri, and dares not talk any
+other kind of English than this, while on tour, with any
+strangers listening.) "But, I ask myself, ees it not just
+a leetle wrong to discourage and tax ze poor artistes?
+We are doing our beet, hein? We seeng, we recite! I seeng
+so many beautiful sings to ze soldiers; sings about love,
+and youth, and passion, and spring and kisses. And the
+men are carried off their feet. They rise. They rush to
+the war. I have seen them, in my patriotic concerts where
+I accept nothing but my expenses and my fee and give all
+that is beyond to the war. Only last night one arose,
+right in the front rank--the fauteuils d'orchestre, I do
+not know how you call them in English. 'Let me out of
+zis,' he scream, 'me for the war! Me for the trenches!'
+Was it not magnifique--what you call splendide, hein?
+
+"And then ze gouvermen' come and tell me I must pay zem
+ten thousan' dollars, when I make only seexty thousan'
+dollars at ze opera! Anozzer skonk treeck, hein?"
+
+
+The just complaint of Mr. Grunch, income tax payer, as
+imparted to me over his own port wine, after dinner.
+
+"No, I shouldn't want to complain: I mean, in any way
+that would reach the outside,--reach it, that is, in
+connection with my name. Though I think that the thing
+ought to be said by SOMEBODY. I think you might say it.
+(Let me pour you out another glass of this Conquistador:
+yes, it's the old '87: but I suppose we'll never get any
+more of it on this side: they say that the rich Spaniards
+are making so much money they're buying up every cask of
+it and it will never be exported again. Just another
+illustration of the way that the war hits everybody
+alike.) But, as I was saying, I think if YOU were to
+raise a complaint about the income tax, you'd find the
+whole country--I mean all the men with incomes--behind
+you. I don't suppose they'd want you to mention their
+names. But they'd be BEHIND you, see? They'd all be there.
+(Will you try one of these Googoolias? They're the very
+best, but I guess we'll never see them again. They say
+the rich Cubans are buying them up. So the war hits us
+there, too.) As I see it, the income tax is the greatest
+mistake the government ever made. It hits the wrong man.
+It falls on the man with an income and lets the other
+man escape. The way I look at it, and the way all the
+men that will be behind you look at it, is that if a man
+sticks tight to it and goes on earning all the income he
+can, he's doing his bit, in his own way, to win the war.
+All we ask is to be let alone (don't put that in your
+notes as from me, but you can say it), let us alone to
+go on quietly piling up income till we get the Germans
+licked. But if you start to take away our income, you
+discourage us, you knock all the patriotism out of us.
+To my mind, a man's income and his patriotism are the
+same thing. But, of course, don't say that I said that."
+
+
+The just complaint of my barber, as expressed in the
+pauses of his operations.
+
+"I'm not saying nothing against the Government (any facial
+massage this morning?). I guess they know their own
+business, or they'd ought to, anyway. But I kick at all
+this talk against the barber business in war time (will
+I singe them ends a bit?). The papers are full of it,
+all the time. I don't see much else in them. Last week
+I saw where a feller said that all the barber shops ought
+to be closed up (bay rum?) till the war was over. Say,
+I'd like to have him right here in this chair with a
+razor at his throat, the way I have you! As I see it,
+the barber business is the most necessary business in
+the whole war. A man'll get along without everything
+else, just about, but he can't get along without a shave,
+can he?--or not without losing all the pep and self-respect
+that keeps him going. They say them fellers over in France
+has to shave every morning by military order: if they
+didn't the Germans would have 'em beat. I say the barber
+is doing his bit as much as any man. I was to Washington
+four months last winter, and I done all the work of three
+senators and two congressmen (will I clip that neck?)
+and I done the work of a United States Admiral every
+Saturday night. If that ain't war work, show me what is.
+But I don't kick, I just go along. If a man appreciates
+what I do, and likes to pay a little extra for it, why
+so much the better, but if he's low enough to get out of
+this chair you're in and walk off without giving a cent
+more than he has to, why let him go. But, sometimes, when
+I get thinking about all this outcry about barber's work
+in war time, I feel like following the man to the door
+and slitting his throat for him... Thank you, sir; thank
+you, sir. Good morning. Next!"
+
+
+The just complaint of Mr. Singlestone;--formerly Mr.
+Einstein, Theatre Proprietor.
+
+"I would be the last man, the very last, to say one word
+against the Government. I think they are doing fine. I
+think the boys in the trenches are doing fine. I think
+the nation is doing fine. But, if there's just one thing
+where they're wrong, it's in the matter of the theatres.
+I think it would be much better for the Government not
+to attempt to cut down or regulate theatres in any way.
+The theatre is the people's recreation. It builds them
+up. It's all part of a great machine to win the war. I
+like to stand in the box office and see the money come
+in and feel that the theatre is doing its bit. But, mind
+you, I think the President is doing fine. So, all I say
+is, I think the theatres ought to be allowed to do fine,
+too."
+
+
+The just complaint of Mr. Silas Heck, farmer, as
+interviewed by me, incognito, at the counter of the
+Gold Dollar Saloon.
+
+"Yes, sir, I say the Government's in the wrong, and I
+don't care who hears me. (Say, is that feller in the
+slick overcoat listening? Let's move along a little
+further.) They're right to carry on the war for all the
+nation is worth. That's sound and I'm with 'em. But they
+ought not to take the farmer offen his farm. There I'm
+agin them. The farmer is the one man necessary for the
+country. They say they want bacon for the Allies. Well,
+the way I look at it is, if you want bacon, you need
+hogs. And if there are no men left in the country like
+me, what'll you do for hogs!
+
+"Thanks, was you paying for that? I guess we won't have
+another, eh? Two of them things might be bad for a feller."
+
+So, when I used to listen to the complaints of this sort
+that rose on every side, I was glad that I was not
+President of the United States.
+
+At the same time I DO think that the Government makes a
+mistake in taxing the profits of the poor book writers
+under the absurd name of INCOME. But let that go. The
+Kaiser would probably treat us worse.
+
+
+
+
+I.--Some Startling Side Effects of the War
+
+"There is no doubt," said Mr. Taft recently, "that the
+war is destined to effect the most profound uplift and
+changes, not only in our political outlook, but upon our
+culture, our thought and, most of all, upon our literature."
+
+I am not absolutely certain that Mr. Taft really said
+this. He may not have said "uplift." But I seem to have
+heard something about uplift, somewhere. At any rate,
+there is no doubt of the fact that our literature has
+moved--up or down. Yes, the war is not only destined to
+affect our literature, but it has already done so. The
+change in outlook, in literary style, in mode of expression,
+even in the words themselves is already here.
+
+Anybody can see it for himself by turning over the pages
+of our fashionable novels or by looking at the columns
+of our great American and English newspapers and
+periodicals.
+
+But stop,--let me show what I mean by examples. I have
+them here in front of me. Take, for example, the London
+Spectator. Everybody recognised in it a model of literary
+dignity and decorum. Even those who read it least, admitted
+this most willingly; in fact, perhaps all the more so.
+In its pages to-day one finds an equal dignity of thought,
+yet, somehow, the wording seems to have undergone an
+alteration. One cannot say just where the change comes
+in. It is what the French call a je ne sais quoi, a
+something insaisissable, a sort of nuance, not amounting
+of course to a lueur, but still,--how shall one put
+it,--SOMETHING.
+
+The example that is given below was taken almost word
+for word (indeed some of the words actually were so) from
+the very latest copy of The Spectator.
+
+
+EDITORIAL FROM THE LONDON "SPECTATOR"
+
+Showing the Stimulating Effect of the War on Its
+Literary Style
+
+"There is no doubt that our boys, and the Americans, are
+going some on the western front. We have no hesitation
+in saying that last week's scrap was a cinch for the
+boys. It is credibly reported by our correspondent at
+The Hague that the German Emperor, the Crown Prince and
+a number of other guys were eye witnesses of the fight.
+If so, they got the surprise of their young lives. While
+we should not wish to show anything less than the chivalrous
+consideration for a beaten enemy which has been a tradition
+of our nation, we feel it is but just to say that for
+once the dirty pups got what was coming to them. We are
+glad to learn from official quarters that His Majesty
+King George has been graciously pleased to telegraph to
+General Pershing, 'Soak it to 'em--and THEN some.'
+
+"Meantime the situation from the point of view both of
+terrain and of tactics remains altogether in our favour.
+The deep salient driven into the German lines near Soissons
+threatens to break up their communications and force a
+withdrawal on a wide front. We cannot make the position
+clearer to our English readers than by saying that our
+new lines occupy, as it were, the form of a baseball
+diamond, with Soissons at second base and with our
+headquarters at the home plate and our artillery support
+at third. Our readers will at once grasp the fact that,
+with our advance pivoted on the pitcher's box and with
+adequate cover at short, the thing is a lead-pipe cinch,
+--in fact, we have them lashed to the mast.
+
+"Meantime the mood of the hour should be one, not of
+undue confidence or boastfulness, but of quiet resolution
+and deep thankfulness. As the Archbishop of Canterbury
+so feelingly put it in his sermon in Westminster Abbey
+last Sunday, 'Now that we have them by the neck let us
+go on, in deep and steadfast purpose, till we have twisted
+the gizzard out of them.'
+
+"The Archbishop's noble words should, and will, re-echo
+in every English home."
+
+Critical people may be inclined to doubt the propriety,
+or even the propinquity, of some of the literary changes
+due to the war. But there can be no doubt of the excellent
+effect of one of them, namely, the increasing knowledge
+and use among us of the pleasant language of France. It
+is no exaggeration to say that, before the war, few people
+in the United States, even among the colored population,
+spoke French with ease. In fact, in some cases the
+discomfort was so obvious as to be almost painful. This
+is now entirely altered. Thanks to our military guide-books,
+and to the general feeling of the day, our citizens are
+setting themselves to acquire the language of our gallant
+ally. And the signs are that they will do it. One hears
+every day in metropolitan society such remarks as, "Have
+you read, 'Soo le foo?'" "Oh, you mean that book by
+Haingri Barbooze? No, I have not read it yet, but I have
+read 'Mong Swassant Quinz' you know, by that other man."
+
+This is hopeful indeed. Nor need we wonder that our best
+magazines are reflecting the same tendency.
+
+Here for instance are the opening sentences of a very
+typical serial now running in one of our best periodicals:
+for all I know the rest of the sentences may be like
+them. At any rate, any magazine reader will recognize
+them at once:
+
+
+BONNE MERE PITOU
+
+A Conte of Old Normandy
+
+Bonne Mere Pitou sat spinning beside the porte of the
+humble chaumiere in which she dwelt. From time to time
+her eyes looked up and down the gran' route that passed
+her door.
+
+"Il ne vient pas," she murmured (he does not come).
+
+She rose wearily and went dedans. Presently she came out
+again, dehors. "Il ne vient toujours pas," she sighed
+(he still does not come).
+
+About her in the tall trees of the allee the percherons
+twittered while the soft roucoulement of the bees murmured
+drowsily in the tall calice of the chou-fleur.
+
+"Il n'est pas venu," she said (perfect tense, third
+singular, he is not, or has not, come).
+
+Can we blame him if he didn't? No doubt he was still
+studying his active verb before tackling Mere Pitou.
+
+But there! Let it pass. In any case it is not only the
+magazines, but the novels themselves, that are being
+transformed by the war. Witness this:
+
+
+BY ONE OF OUR MOST POPULAR NOVELISTS
+
+"It was in the summer house, at the foot of the old
+garden, that the awaited declaration came. Edwin kneeled
+at Angelina's feet. At last they were alone! The successful
+barrage of conversation which he had put up at breakfast
+had compelled her mother to remain in her trenches, and
+had driven her father to the shelter of his dug-out. Her
+younger brother he had camouflaged with the present of
+a new fishing rod, thus inducing him to retire to the
+river. The communications with the servants had been cut.
+Of the strict neutrality of the gardener he was already
+assured. Edwin felt that the moment had come for going
+over the top. Yet being an able strategist, he was anxious
+not to attempt to advance on too wide a front.
+
+"Angelina!" he exclaimed, raising himself to one knee
+with his hands outstretched toward her. The girl started
+as at the sound of an air bomb; for a moment she elevated
+her eyes and looked him full in the tangent, then she
+lowered them again but continued to observe him through
+her mental periscope.
+
+"Angelina," he repeated, "I have a declaration to make."
+
+"As from what date?" she questioned quietly. Edwin drew
+his watch from his pocket.
+
+"As from this morning, at ten-forty-six," he said. Then,
+emboldened by her passive attitude, he continued with
+rising passion in his tone.
+
+"Ever since I first met you I have felt that I could not
+live without you. I am a changed man. My calibre is
+altered. I feel ten centimeters wider in the mouth than
+I did six weeks ago. I feel that my path is altered. I
+have a new range and an angle of elevation such as I
+never experienced before. I have hidden my love as best
+I could till now. I have worn a moral gas-mask before
+your family. I can do so no longer. Angelina, will you
+be mine, forming with me a single unit, drawing our
+rations from the same field kitchen and occupying the
+same divisional headquarters?"
+
+The girl seemed to hesitate. She raised her eyes to his.
+
+"We know one another so little," she murmured.
+
+Edwin felt that his offensive was failing. He therefore
+hastened to bring up his means of support.
+
+"I have an ample income of my own," he pleaded.
+
+Angelina raised her eyes again. It was evident that she
+was about to surrender. But at this moment her mother's
+voice was heard calling, "Angelina, Angelina, my dear,
+where are you?"
+
+The barrage had broken down.
+
+"Quick," said the girl, "mobilize yourself. Pick up that
+tennis racket and let us hurry to the court and dig
+ourselves in."
+
+"But my declaration," urged Edwin eagerly.
+
+"Accepted," she said, "as from eleven-two this morning."
+
+
+
+
+V.--Other Impossibilities
+
+
+1.--The Art of Conversation
+
+
+I--HOW TO INTRODUCE TWO PEOPLE TO ONE ANOTHER
+
+Nothing is more important in introducing two people to
+each other than to employ a fitting form of words. The
+more usually recognized forms are easily learned and
+committed to memory and may be utilized as occasion
+requires. I pass over such rudimentary formulas as "Ed,
+shake hands with Jim Taylor," or, "Boys, this is Pete,
+the new hand; Pete, get hold of the end of that cant-hook."
+In fact, we are speaking only of polite society as graced
+by the fair sex, the only kind that we need care about.
+
+
+The Third Avenue Procedure
+
+A very neat and convenient form is that in vogue in Third
+Avenue circles, New York, as, for instance, at a
+fifty-cents-a-head dance (ladies free) in the hall of
+the Royal Knights of Benevolence.
+
+"Miss Summerside, meet Mr. O'Hara," after which Miss
+Summerside says very distinctly, "Mr. O'Hara," and Mr.
+O'Hara says with equal clearness "Miss Summerside." In
+this circle a mark of exquisite breeding is found in the
+request to have the name repeated. "I don't quite catch
+the name!" says Mr. O'Hara critically; then he catches
+it and repeats it--"Miss Summerside."
+
+"Catching the name" is a necessary part of this social
+encounter. If not caught the first time it must be put
+over again. The peculiar merit of this introduction is
+that it lets Miss Summerside understand clearly that Mr.
+O'Hara never heard of her before. That helps to keep her
+in her place.
+
+In superior circles, however, introduction becomes more
+elaborate, more flattering, more unctuous. It reaches
+its acme in what everyone recognizes at once as
+
+
+The Clerical Method
+
+This is what would be instinctively used in Anglican
+circles--as, for example, by the Episcopal Bishop of Boof
+in introducing a Canon of the Church to one of the "lady
+workers" of the congregation (meaning a lady too rich to
+work) who is expected to endow a crib in the Diocesan
+Home for Episcopal Cripples. A certain quantity of soul
+has to be infused into this introduction. Anybody who
+has ever heard it can fill in the proper accentuation,
+which must be very rich and deep.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Putitover, MAY I introduce my very dear old
+friend, Canon Cutitout? The Canon, Mrs. Putitover, is
+one of my DEAREST friends. Mrs. Putitover, my dear Canon,
+is quite one of our most enthusiastic workers."
+
+After which outburst of soul the Bishop is able to add,
+"Will you excuse me, I'm afraid I simply MUST run."
+
+Personally, I have never known or met a Bishop in society
+in any other situation than just about to run. Where they
+run to, I do not know. But I think I understand what they
+run from.
+
+
+The Lounge Room of the Club
+
+Equally high in the social scale but done quite differently
+is the Club Introduction. It is done by a club man who,
+for the life of him, can't remember the names of either
+of the two club men whom he is introducing, and who each,
+for the life of him, can't think of the name of the man
+they are being introduced by. It runs--
+
+"Oh, I say, I beg your pardon--I thought, of course, you
+two fellows knew one another perfectly well--let me
+introduce--urr----wurr----"
+
+Later on, after three whiskey-and-sodas, each of the
+three finds out the names of the other two, surreptitiously
+from the hall porter. But it makes no difference. They
+forget them again anyway. Now let us move up higher, in
+fact, very high. Let us approach the real thing.
+
+
+Introduction to H.E. the Viceroy of India, K.C.B.,
+K.C.S.I., S.O.S.
+
+The most exalted form of introduction is seen in the
+presentation of Mr. Tomkins, American tourist, to H.E.
+the Viceroy of India. An aide-de-camp in uniform at the
+foot of a grand staircase shouts, "Mr. Tomkins!" An
+aide-de-camp at the top (one minute later) calls "Mr.
+Thompson"; another aide, four feet further on, calls "Mr.
+Torps."
+
+Then a military secretary, standing close to His Excellency,
+takes Mr. Tomkins by the neck and bends him down toward
+the floor and says very clearly and distinctly, "Mr.
+Torpentine." Then he throws him out by the neck into the
+crowd beyond and calls for another. The thing is done.
+Mr. Tomkins wipes the perspiration from his hair with
+his handkerchief and goes back at full speed to the Hoogli
+Hotel, Calcutta, eager for stationery to write at once
+to Ohio and say that he knows the Viceroy.
+
+
+The Office Introduction, One-sided
+
+This introduction comes into our office, slipping past
+whoever keeps the door with a packet of books under its
+arm. It says--
+
+"Ledd me introduze myself. The book proposition vidge I
+am introduzing is one vidge ve are now pudding on the
+market..."
+
+Then, of two things, one--
+
+Either a crash of glass is heard as the speaker is hurled
+through the skylight, or he walks out twenty minutes
+later, bowing profusely as he goes, and leaving us gazing
+in remorse at a signed document entitling us to receive
+the "Masterpieces of American Poetry" in sixty volumes.
+
+
+On the Stage
+
+Everything on the stage is done far better than in real
+life. This is true of introductions. There is a warmth,
+a soul, in the stage introduction not known in the chilly
+atmosphere of everyday society. Let me quote as an example
+of a stage introduction the formula used, in the best
+melodramatic art, in the kitchen-living-room (stove right
+centre) of the New England farm.
+
+"Neighbour Jephson's son, this is my little gal, as good
+and sweet a little gal, as mindful of her old father, as
+you'll find in all New England. Neighbour Jephson's son,
+she's been my all in all to me, this little gal, since
+I laid her mother in the ground five Christmases ago--"
+The speaker is slightly overcome and leans against a
+cardboard clock for strength: he recovers and goes
+on--"Hope, this is Neighbour Jephson's son, new back from
+over the seas, as fine a lad, gal, if he's like the folk
+that went before him, as ever followed the sea. Hope,
+your hand. My boy, your hand. See to his comfort, Hope,
+while I go and read the Good Book a spell in the barnyard."
+
+
+The Indian Formula
+
+Many people, tired of the empty phrases of society, look
+back wistfully to the simple direct speech of savage
+life. Such persons will find useful the usual form of
+introduction (the shorter form) prevalent among our North
+American Indians (at least as gathered from the best
+literary model):
+
+ "Friends and comrades who are worthy,
+ See and look with all your eyesight,
+ Listen with your sense of hearing,
+ Gather with your apprehension--
+ Bow your heads, O trees, and hearken.
+ Hush thy rustling, corn, and listen;
+ Turn thine ear and give attention;
+ Ripples of the running water,
+ Pause a moment in your channels--
+ Here I bring you,--Hiawatha."
+
+The last line of this can be changed to suit the particular
+case. It can just as easily read, at the end, "Here is
+Henry Edward Eastwood," or, "Here is Hal McGiverin,
+Junior," or anything else. All names fit the sense. That,
+in fact, was the wonderful art of Longfellow--the sense
+being independent of the words.
+
+
+The Platform Introduction
+
+Here is a form of introduction cruelly familiar to those
+who know it. It is used by the sour-looking villain
+facetiously called in newspaper reports the "genial
+chairman" of the meeting. While he is saying it the victim
+in his little chair on the platform is a target for the
+eyes of a thousand people who are wondering why he wears
+odd socks.
+
+"The next speaker, ladies and gentlemen, is one who needs
+no introduction to this gathering. His name" (here the
+chairman consults a little card) "is one that has become
+a household word. His achievements in" (here the chairman
+looks at his card again, studies it, turns it upside down
+and adds) "in many directions are familiar to all of
+you." There is a feeble attempt at applause and the
+chairman then lifts his hand and says in a plain
+business-like tone--"Will those of the audience who are
+leaving kindly step as lightly as possible." He is about
+to sit down, but then adds as a pleasant afterthought
+for the speaker to brood over--"I may say, while I am on
+my feet, that next week our society is to have a REAL
+treat in hearing--et cetera and so forth--"
+
+
+
+
+II--HOW TO OPEN A CONVERSATION
+
+After the ceremony of introduction is completed the next
+thing to consider is the proper way to open a conversation.
+The beginning of conversation is really the hardest part.
+It is the social equivalent to "going over the top." It
+may best be studied in the setting and surroundings of
+the Evening Reception, where people stand upright and
+agonise, balancing a dish of ice-cream. Here conversation
+reaches its highest pitch of social importance. One must
+talk or die. Something may be done to stave it off a
+little by vigorous eating. But the food at such affairs
+is limited. There comes a point when it is absolutely
+necessary to say something.
+
+The beginning, as I say, is the hardest problem. Other
+communities solve it better than we do.
+
+
+The Chinese System
+
+In China conversation, between strangers after introduction,
+is always opened by the question, "And how old are YOU?"
+This strikes me as singularly apt and sensible. Here is
+the one thing that is common ground between any two
+people, high or low, rich or poor--how far are you on
+your pilgrimage in life?
+
+
+The Penetentiary Method
+
+Compare with the Chinese method the grim, but very
+significant formula that is employed (I believe it is a
+literal fact) in the exercise yards of the American
+penitentiaries. "What have YOU brought?" asks the San
+Quentin or Sing Sing convict of the new arrival, meaning,
+"And how long is your sentence?" There is the same human
+touch about this, the same common ground of interest, as
+in the Chinese formula.
+
+
+Polite Society
+
+But in our polite society we have as yet found no better
+method than beginning with a sort of medical diagnosis--"How
+do you do?" This admits of no answer. Convention forbids
+us to reply in detail that we are feeling if anything
+slightly lower than last week, but that though our
+temperature has risen from ninety-one-fifty to
+ninety-one-seventy-five, our respiration is still normal.
+
+Still worse is the weather as an opening topic. For it
+either begins and ends as abruptly as the medical diagnosis,
+or it leads the two talkers on into a long and miserable
+discussion of the weather of yesterday, of the day before
+yesterday, of last month, of last year and the last fifty
+years.
+
+Let one beware, however, of a conversation that begins
+too easily.
+
+
+The Mutual Friends' Opening
+
+This can be seen at any evening reception, as when the
+hostess introduces two people who are supposed to have
+some special link to unite them at once with an
+instantaneous snap, as when, for instance, they both come
+from the same town.
+
+"Let me introduce Mr. Sedley," said the hostess. "I think
+you and Mr. Sedley are from the same town, Miss Smiles.
+Miss Smiles, Mr. Sedley."
+
+Off they go at a gallop. "I'm so delighted to meet you,"
+says Mr. Sedley. "It's good to hear from anybody who
+comes from our little town." (If he's a rollicking
+humourist, Mr. Sedley calls it his little old "burg.")
+
+"Oh, yes," answers Miss Smiles. "I'm from Winnipeg too.
+I was so anxious to meet you to ask if you knew the
+McGowans. They're my greatest friends at home."
+
+"The--who?" asks Mr. Sedley.
+
+"The McGowans--on Selkirk Avenue."
+
+"No-o, I don't think I do. I know the Prices on Selkirk
+Avenue. Of course you know them."
+
+"The Prices? No, I don't believe I do--I don't think I
+ever heard of the Prices. You don't mean the Pearsons?
+I know them very well."
+
+"No, I don't know the Pearsons. The Prices live just near
+the reservoir."
+
+"No, then I'm sure I don't know them. The Pearsons live
+close to the college."
+
+"Close to the College? Is it near the William Kennedys?"
+
+"I don't think I know the William Kennedys."
+
+This is the way the conversation goes on for ten minutes.
+Both Mr. Sedley and Miss Smiles are getting desperate.
+Their faces are fixed. Their sentences are reduced to--
+
+"Do you know the Petersons?"
+
+"No. Do you know the Appleby's?"
+
+"No. Do you know the Willie Johnsons?"
+
+"No."
+
+Then at last comes a rift in the clouds. One of them
+happens to mention Beverley Dixon. The other is able to
+cry exultingly--
+
+"Beverley Dixon? Oh, yes, rather. At least, I don't KNOW
+him, but I used often to hear the Applebys speak of him."
+
+And the other exclaims with equal delight--
+
+"I don't know him very well either, but I used to hear
+the Willie Johnsons talk about him all the time."
+
+They are saved.
+
+Half an hour after they are still standing there talking
+of Beverly Dixon.
+
+
+The Etiquette Book
+
+Personally I have suffered so much from inability to
+begin a conversation that not long ago I took the extreme
+step of buying a book on the subject. I regret to say
+that I got but little light or help from it. It was
+written by the Comtesse de Z--. According to the preface
+the Comtesse had "moved in the highest circles of all
+the European capitals." If so, let her go on moving there.
+I for one, after trying her book, shall never stop her.
+This is how the Comtesse solves the problem of opening
+a conversation:
+
+"In commencing a conversation, the greatest care should
+be devoted to the selection of a topic, good taste
+demanding that one should sedulously avoid any subject
+of which one's vis-a-vis may be in ignorance. Nor are
+the mere words alone to be considered. In the art of
+conversation much depends upon manner. The true
+conversationalist must, in opening, invest himself with
+an atmosphere of interest and solicitude. He must, as we
+say in French, be prepared to payer les rais de la
+conversation. In short, he must 'give himself an air.'"
+
+There! Go and do it if you can. I admit that I can't. I
+have no idea what the French phrase above means, but I
+know that personally I cannot "invest myself with an
+atmosphere of interest." I might manage about two per
+cent on five hundred dollars. But what is that in these
+days of plutocracy?
+
+At any rate I tried the Comtesse's directions at a
+reception last week, on being introduced to an unknown
+lady. And they failed. I cut out nearly all the last
+part, and confined myself merely to the proposed selection
+of a topic, endeavouring to pick it with as much care as
+if I were selecting a golf club out of a bag. Naturally
+I had to confine myself to the few topics that I know
+about, and on which I can be quite interesting if I get
+started.
+
+"Do you know any mathematics?" I asked.
+
+"No," said the lady.
+
+This was too bad. I could have shown her some good puzzles
+about the squares of the prime numbers up to forty-one.
+
+I paused and gave myself more air.
+
+"How are you," I asked, "on hydrostatics?"
+
+"I beg your pardon," she said. Evidently she was ignorant
+again.
+
+"Have you ever studied the principles of aerial navigation?"
+I asked.
+
+"No," She answered.
+
+I was pausing again and trying to invest myself with an
+air of further interest, when another man was introduced
+to her, quite evidently, from his appearance, a vapid
+jackass without one tenth of the brain calibre that I
+have.
+
+"Oh, how do you do?" he said. "I say, I've just heard
+that Harvard beat Princeton this afternoon. Great, isn't it?"
+
+In two minutes they were talking like old friends. How
+do these silly asses do it?
+
+
+When Dressed Hogs are Dull
+
+An equally unsuccessful type of conversation, often
+overheard at receptions, is where one of the two parties
+to it is too surly, too stupid, or too self-important
+and too rich to talk, and the other labours in vain.
+
+The surly one is, let us say, a middle-aged, thick-set
+man of the type that anybody recognizes under the name
+Money Hog. This kind of person, as viewed standing in
+his dress suit, mannerless and stupid, too rich to have
+to talk and too dull to know how to, always recalls to
+my mind the head-line of the market reports in the
+newspapers, "Dressed Hogs are Dull."
+
+The other party to the conversation is a winsome and
+agreeable woman, trying her best to do her social duty.
+
+But, tenez, as the Comtesse of Z---- would say, I can
+exactly illustrate the position and attitude of the two
+of them from a recollection of my childhood. I remember
+that in one of my nursery books of forty years ago there
+was a picture entitled "The Lady in Love With A Swine."
+A willowy lady in a shimmering gown leaned over the rail
+of a tessellated pig-sty, in which an impossibly clean
+hog stood in an attitude of ill-mannered immobility. With
+the picture was the rhyming legend,
+
+ There was a Lady in love with a swine,
+ "Honey," said she, "will you be mine?
+ I'll build you a silver sty
+ And in it you shall lie."
+ "Honk!" said He.
+
+There was something, as I recall it, in the sweet
+willingness of the Lady that was singularly appealing,
+and contrasted with the dull mannerless passivity of the
+swine.
+
+In each of the little stanzas that followed, the pretty
+advances of the Lady were rebuffed by a surly and
+monosyllabic "honk" from the hog.
+
+Here is the social counterpart of the scene in the
+picture-book. Mr. Grunt, capitalist, is standing in his
+tessellated sty,--the tessellated sty being represented
+by the hardwood floor of a fashionable drawing-room. His
+face is just the same as the face of the pig in the
+picture-book. The willowy lady, in the same shimmering
+clothes and with the same pretty expression of eagerness,
+is beside him.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Grunt," she is saying, "how interesting it must
+be to be in your place and feel such tremendous power.
+Our hostess was just telling me that you own practically
+all the shoemaking machinery factories--it IS shoe-making
+machinery, isn't it?--east of Pennsylvania."
+
+"Honk!" says Mr. Grunt.
+
+"Shoe-making machinery," goes on the willowy lady (she
+really knows nothing and cares less about it) "must be
+absolutely fascinating, is it not?"
+
+"Honk!" says Mr. Grunt.
+
+"But still you must find it sometimes a dreadful strain,
+do you not? I mean, so much brain work, and that sort of
+thing."
+
+"Honk!" says Mr. Grunt.
+
+"I should love so much to see one of your factories. They
+must be so interesting."
+
+"Honk!" says Mr. Grunt. Then he turns and moves away
+sideways. Into his little piggy eyes has come a fear that
+the lady is going to ask him to subscribe to something,
+or wants a block of his common stock, or his name on a
+board of directors. So he leaves her. Yet if he had known
+it she is probably as rich as he is, or richer, and hasn't
+the faintest interest in his factories, and never intends
+to go near one. Only she is fit to move and converse in
+polite society and Mr. Grunt is not.
+
+
+
+
+2.--Heroes and Heroines
+
+"What are you reading?" I asked the other day of a blue-eyed
+boy of ten curled up among the sofa cushions.
+
+He held out the book for me to see.
+
+"Dauntless Ned among the Cannibals," he answered.
+
+"Is it exciting?" I enquired.
+
+"Not very," said the child in a matter-of-fact tone. "But
+it's not bad."
+
+I took the book from him and read aloud at the opened page.
+
+"In a compact mass the gigantic savages rushed upon our
+hero, shrieking with rage and brandishing their huge
+clubs. Ned stood his ground fearlessly, his back to a
+banana tree. With a sweep of his cutlass he severed the
+head of the leading savage from his body, while with a
+back stroke of his dirk he stabbed another to the heart.
+But resistance against such odds was vain. By sheer weight
+of numbers, Ned was borne to the ground. His arms were
+then pinioned with stout ropes made of the fibres of the
+boobooda tree. With shrieks of exultation the savages
+dragged our hero to an opening in the woods where a huge
+fire was burning, over which was suspended an enormous
+caldron of bubbling oil. 'Boil him, boil him,' yelled
+the savages, now wrought to the point of frenzy."
+
+"That seems fairly exciting, isn't it?" I said.
+
+"Oh, he won't get boiled," said the little boy. "He's
+the hero."
+
+So I knew that the child has already taken his first
+steps in the disillusionment of fiction.
+
+Of course he was quite right as to Ned. This wonderful
+youth, the hero with whom we all begin an acquaintance
+with books, passes unhurt through a thousand perils.
+Cannibals, Apache Indians, war, battles, shipwrecks,
+leave him quite unscathed. At the most Ned gets a flesh
+wound which is healed, in exactly one paragraph, by that
+wonderful drug called a "simple."
+
+But the most amazing thing about this particular hero,
+the boy Ned, is the way in which he turns up in all the
+great battles and leading events of the world.
+
+It was Ned, for example, who at the critical moment at
+Gettysburg turned in his saddle to General Meade and said
+quietly, "General, the day is ours." "If it is," answered
+Meade, as he folded his field glass, "you alone, Ned,
+have saved it."
+
+In the same way Ned was present at the crossing of the
+Delaware with Washington. Thus:--
+
+"'What do you see, Ned?' said Washington, as they peered
+from the leading boat into the driving snow.
+
+"'Ice,' said Ned. 'My boy,' said the Great American
+General, and a tear froze upon his face as he spoke, 'you
+have saved us all.'"
+
+Here is Ned at Runningmede when King John with his pen
+in hand was about to sign the Magna Carta.
+
+"For a moment the King paused irresolute, the uplifted
+quill in his hand, while his crafty, furtive eyes indicated
+that he might yet break his plighted faith with the
+assembled barons.
+
+"Ned laid his mailed hand upon the parchment.
+
+"'Sign it,' he said sternly, 'or take the consequences.'
+
+"The King signed.
+
+"'Ned,' said the Baron de Bohun, as he removed his iron
+vizor from his bronze face, 'thou hast this day saved
+all England.'"
+
+In the stories of our boyhood in which Ned figured, there
+was no such thing as a heroine, or practically none. At
+best she was brought in as an afterthought. It was
+announced on page three hundred and one that at the close
+of Ned's desperate adventures in the West Indies he
+married the beautiful daughter of Don Diego, the Spanish
+governor of Portobello; or else, at the end of the great
+war with Napoleon, that he married a beautiful and
+accomplished French girl whose parents had perished in
+the Revolution.
+
+Ned generally married away from home. In fact his marriages
+were intended to cement the nations, torn asunder by
+Ned's military career. But sometimes he returned to his
+native town, all sunburned, scarred and bronzed from
+battle (the bronzing effect of being in battle is always
+noted): he had changed from a boy to a man: that is, from
+a boy of fifteen to a man of sixteen. In such a case Ned
+marries in his own home town. It is done after this
+fashion:
+
+"But who is this who advances smiling to greet him as he
+crosses the familiar threshold of the dear old house?
+Can this tall, beautiful girl be Gwendoline, the
+child-playmate of his boyhood?"
+
+Well, can it? I ask it of every experienced reader--can
+it or can it not?
+
+Ned had his day, in the boyhood of each of us. We presently
+passed him by. I am speaking, of course, of those of us
+who are of maturer years and can look back upon thirty
+or forty years of fiction reading. "Ned," flourishes
+still, I understand, among the children of today. But
+now he flies in aeroplanes, and dives in submarines, and
+gives his invaluable military advice to General Joffre
+and General Pershing.
+
+But with the oncoming of adolescent years something softer
+was needed than Ned with his howling cannibals and his
+fusillade of revolver shots.
+
+So the "Ned" of the Adventure Books was supplanted by
+the Romantic Heroine of the Victorian Age and the
+Long-winded Immaculate who accompanied her as the Hero.
+
+I do not know when these two first opened their twin
+career. Whether Fenimore Cooper or Walter Scott began
+them, I cannot say. But they had an undisputed run on
+two continents for half a century.
+
+This Heroine was a sylph. Her chiefest charm lay in her
+physical feebleness. She was generally presented to us
+in some such words as these:
+
+"Let us now introduce to our readers the fair Madeline
+of Rokewood. Slender and graceful and of a form so fragile
+that her frame scarce fitted to fulfil its bodily
+functions...she appeared rather as one of those ethereal
+beings of the air who might visit for a brief moment this
+terrestrial scene, than one of its earthly inhabitants.
+Her large, wondering eyes looked upon the beholder in
+childlike innocence."
+
+Sounds simple, doesn't it? One might suspect there was
+something wrong with the girl's brain. But listen to
+this:--
+
+"The mind of Madeline, elegantly formed by the devoted
+labours of the venerable Abbe, her tutor, was of a degree
+of culture rarely found in one so young. Though scarce
+eighteen summers had flown over her head at the time when
+we introduce her to our readers, she was intimately
+conversant with the French, Italian, Spanish, and Provencal
+tongues. The abundant pages of history, both ancient and
+modern, sacred and profane, had been opened for her by
+her devoted instructor. In music she played with exquisite
+grace and accuracy upon both the spinet and the harpsichord,
+while her voice, though lacking something in compass,
+was sweet and melodious to a degree."
+
+From such a list of accomplishments it is clear that
+Madeline could have matriculated, even at the Harvard
+Law School, with five minutes preparation. Is it any
+wonder that there was a wild rush for Madeline? In fact,
+right after the opening description of the Heroine, there
+follows an ominous sentence such as this:--
+
+"It was this exquisite being whose person Lord Rip de
+Viperous, a man whose reputation had shamed even the most
+licentious court of the age, and had led to his banishment
+from the presence of the king, had sworn to get within
+his power."
+
+Personally I don't blame Lord Rip a particle; it must
+have been very rough on him to have been banished from
+the presence of the king--enough to inflame a man to do
+anything.
+
+With two such characters in the story, the scene was set
+and the plot and adventures followed as a matter of
+course. Lord Rip de Viperous pursued the Heroine. But at
+every step he is frustrated. He decoys Madeline to a
+ruined tower at midnight, her innocence being such and
+the gaps left in her education by the Abbe being so wide,
+that she is unaware of the danger of ruined towers after
+ten thirty P.M. In fact, "tempted by the exquisite clarity
+and fulness of the moon, which magnificent orb at this
+season spread its widest effulgence over all nature, she
+accepts the invitation of her would-be-betrayer to gather
+upon the battlements of the ruined keep the strawberries
+which grew there in wild profusion."
+
+But at the critical moment, Lord de Viperous is balked.
+At the very instant when he is about to seize her in his
+arms, Madeline turns upon him and says in such icy tones,
+"Titled villain that you are, unhand me," that the man
+is "cowed." He slinks down the ruined stairway "cowed."
+And at every later turn, at each renewed attempt, Madeline
+"cows" him in like fashion.
+
+Moreover while Lord de Viperous is being thus cowed by
+Madeline the Heroine, he is also being "dogged" by the
+Hero. This counterpart of Madeline who shared her popularity
+for fifty years can best be described as the Long-winded
+Immaculate Hero. Entirely blameless in his morals, and
+utterly virtuous in his conduct, he possessed at least
+one means of defending himself. He could make speeches.
+This he did on all occasions. With these speeches he
+"dogged" Lord de Viperous. Here is the style of them:--
+
+"'My Lord,' said Markham..." (incidentally let it be
+explained that this particular brand of hero was always
+known by his surname and his surname was always Markham)
+--"'My lord, the sentiments that you express and the
+demeanour which you have evinced are so greatly at variance
+with the title that you bear and the lineage of which
+you spring that no authority that you can exercise and
+no threats that you are able to command shall deter me
+from expressing that for which, however poor and inadequate
+my powers of speech, all these of whom and for what I am
+what I am, shall answer to it for the integrity of that,
+which, whether or not, is at least as it is. My lord, I
+have done. Or shall I speak more plainly still?'"
+
+Is it to be wondered that after this harangue Lord Rip
+sank into a chair, a hideous convulsion upon his face,
+murmuring--"It is enough."
+
+But successful as they were as Hero and Heroine, Markham
+and Madeline presently passed off the scene. Where they
+went to, I do not know. Perhaps Markham got elected in
+the legislature of Massachusetts. At any rate they
+disappeared from fiction.
+
+There followed in place of Madeline, the athletic sunburned
+heroine with the tennis racket. She was generally called
+Kate Middleton, or some such plain, straightforward
+designation. She wore strong walking boots and leather
+leggings. She ate beef steak. She shot with a rifle. For
+a while this Boots and Beef Heroine (of the middle
+nineties) made a tremendous hit. She climbed crags in
+the Rockies. She threw steers in Colorado with a lariat.
+She came out strong in sea scenes and shipwrecks, and on
+sinking steamers, where she "cowed" the trembling stewards
+and "dogged" the mutinous sailors in the same fashion
+that Madeline used to "cow" and "dog" Lord Rip de Viperous.
+
+With the Boots and Beef Heroine went as her running mate
+the out-of-doors man, whose face had been tanned and
+whose muscles had been hardened into tempered steel in
+wild rides over the Pampas of Patagonia, and who had
+learned every art and craft of savage life by living
+among the wild Hoodoos of the Himalayas. This
+Air-and-Grass-man, as he may be called, is generally
+supposed to write the story... He was "I" all through.
+And he had an irritating modesty in speaking of his own
+prowess. Instead of saying straight out that he was the
+strongest and bravest man in the world, he implied it
+indirectly on every page.
+
+Here, for example, is a typical scene in which "I" and
+Kate figure in a desperate adventure in the Rocky Mountains,
+pursued by Indians.
+
+"We are about to descend on a single cord from the summit
+of a lofty crag, our sole chance of escape (and a
+frightfully small chance at that) from the roving band
+of Apaches.
+
+"With my eye I measured the fearsome descent below us.
+
+"'Hold fast to the line, Miss Middleton,' I said as I
+set my foot against a projecting rock. (Please note that
+the Air-and-Grass Hero in these stories always calls the
+Heroine Miss Middleton right up to the very end.)
+
+"The noble girl seized the knotted end of the buckskin
+line. 'All right, Mr. Smith,' she said with quiet
+confidence.
+
+"I braced myself for the effort. My muscles like tempered
+steel responded to the strain. I lowered a hundred fathoms
+of the line. I could already hear the voice of Kate far
+down the cliff.
+
+"Don't let go the line, Miss Middleton,' I called. (Here
+was an excellent piece of advice.)
+
+"The girl's clear voice floated up to me... 'All right,
+Mr. Smith,' she called, 'I won't.'"
+
+Of course they landed safely at the foot of the cliff,
+after the manner of all heroes and heroines. And here
+it is that Kate in her turn comes out strong, at the
+evening encampment, frying bacon over a blazing fire of
+pine branches, while the firelight illuminates her leather
+leggings and her rough but picturesque costume.
+
+The circumstances might seem a little daring and improper.
+But the reader knows that it is all right, because the
+hero and heroine always call one another Miss Middleton
+and Mr. Smith.
+
+Not till right at the end, when they are just getting
+back again to the confines of civilization, do they depart
+from this.
+
+Here is the scene that happens... The hero and heroine
+are on the platform of the way-side depot where they are
+to part... Kate to return to the luxurious home of her
+aunt, Mrs. van der Kyper of New York, and the Air-and-Grass
+Man to start for the pampas of Patagonia to hunt the
+hoopoo. The Air-and-Grass Man is about to say goodbye.
+Then... "'Kate,' I said, as I held the noble girl's gloved
+hand in mine a moment. She looked me in the face with
+the full, frank, fearless gaze of a sister.
+
+"'Yes?' she answered.
+
+"'Kate,' I repeated, 'do you know what I was thinking of
+when I held the line while you were half way down the
+cliff?'
+
+"'No,' she murmured, while a flush suffused her cheek.
+
+"'I was thinking, Kate,' I said, 'that if the rope broke
+I should be very sorry.'
+
+"'Edward!' she exclaimed.
+
+"I clasped her in my arms.
+
+"'Shall I make a confession,' said Kate, looking up
+timidly, half an hour later, as I tenderly unclasped the
+noble girl from my encircling arms, ...'I was thinking
+the same thing too.'"
+
+So Kate and Edward had their day and then, as Tennyson
+says, they "passed," or as less cultivated people put
+it, "they were passed up in the air."
+
+As the years went by they failed to please. Kate was a
+great improvement upon Madeline. But she wouldn't do.
+The truth was, if one may state it openly, Kate wasn't
+TOUGH enough. In fact she wasn't tough at all. She turned
+out to be in reality just as proper and just as virtuous
+as Madeline.
+
+So, too, with the Air-and-Grass Hero. For all of his
+tempered muscles and his lariat and his Winchester rifle,
+he was presently exposed as a fraud. He was just as
+Long-winded and just as Immaculate as the Victorian Hero
+that he displaced.
+
+What the public really wants and has always wanted in
+its books is wickedness. Fiction was recognised in its
+infancy as being a work of the devil.
+
+So the popular novel, despairing of real wickedness among
+the cannibals, and in the ruined tower at midnight, and
+on the open-air of the prairies, shifted its scenes again.
+It came indoors. It came back to the city. And it gave
+us the new crop of heroes and heroines and the scenes
+and settings with which the fiction of to-day has replaced
+the Heroes and Heroines of Yesterday. The Lure of the
+City is its theme. It pursues its course to the music of
+the ukalele, in the strident racket of the midnight
+cabaret. Here move the Harvard graduate in his dinner
+jacket, drunk at one in the morning. Here is the hard
+face of Big Business scowling at its desk; and here the
+glittering Heroine of the hour in her dress of shimmering
+sequins, making such tepid creatures as Madeline and Kate
+look like the small change out of a twenty-five cent
+shinplaster.
+
+
+
+
+3.--The Discovery of America;
+ Being Done into Moving Pictures and Out Again
+
+"No greater power for education," said President Shurman
+the other day, "has come among us during the last forty
+years than the moving picture."
+
+I am not certain that it was President Shurman. And he
+may not have said it the other day. Nor do I feel absolutely
+sure that he referred to the LAST forty years. Indeed
+now that I come to think of it, I don't believe it WAS
+Shurman. In fact it may have been ex-President Eliot. Or
+was it, perhaps, President Hadley of Yale? Or did I say
+it myself? Judging by the accuracy and force of the
+language, I think I must have. I doubt if Shurman or
+Hadley could have put it quite so neatly. There's a touch
+about it that I recognise.
+
+But let that pass. At any rate it is something that
+everybody is saying and thinking. All our educators have
+turned their brains towards the possibility of utilising
+moving pictures for the purpose of education. It is being
+freely said that history and geography, and even arithmetic,
+instead of being taught by the slow and painful process
+of books and memory, can be imparted through the eye.
+
+I had no sooner heard of this idea than I became impassioned
+to put it into practice. I have therefore prepared, or
+am preparing, a film, especially designed for the elementary
+classes of our schools to narrate the story of the
+discovery of America.
+
+This I should like the reader to sit and see with me, in
+the eye of his imagination. But let me first give the
+plain, unvarnished account of the discovery of America
+as I took it from one of our school histories.
+
+ "Christopher Columbus, otherwise Christoforo Colombo,
+ the celebrated discoverer of America, was born of poor
+ but honest parents in the Italian city of Genoa. His
+ mother, Teresa Colombo, seems to have been a woman of
+ great piety and intelligence. Of his father, Bartolomeo
+ Colombo, nothing is recorded. From his earliest youth
+ the boy Christopher developed a passion for mathematics,
+ astronomy, geodesy, and the other sciences of the
+ day..."
+
+But, no,--stop! I am going too fast. The reader will get
+it better if we turn it into pictures bit by bit as we
+go on. Let the reader therefore imagine himself seated
+before the curtain in the lighted theatre. All ready?
+Very good. Let the music begin--Star Spangled Banner,
+please--flip off the lights. Now then.
+
+DISCOVERY OF AMERICA
+AUTHORIZED
+BY THE BOARD OF CENSORS OF
+NEW YORK STATE
+
+There we are. That gives the child the correct historical
+background right away. Now what goes on next? Let me see.
+Ah, yes, of course. We throw an announcement on the
+screen, thus.
+
+CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS.. Mr. Quinn
+
+Here the face of Mr. Quinn (in a bowler hat) is thrown
+on the screen and fades out again.
+
+We follow him up with
+
+SPIRIT OF AMERICA.. Miss E. Dickenson
+
+Now, we are ready to begin in earnest. Let us make the
+scenario together. First idea to be expressed:
+
+"Christopher Columbus was the son of poor but honest parents."
+
+This might seem difficult to a beginner, but to those of
+us who frequent the movies it is nothing. The reel spins
+and we see--a narrow room--(it is always narrow in the
+movies)--to indicate straitened circumstances--cardboard
+furniture--high chairs with carved backs--two cardboard
+beams across the ceiling (all this means the Middle
+Ages)--a long dinner table--all the little Columbuses
+seated at it--Teresa Colombo cutting bread at one end of
+it--gives a slice to each, one slice (that means poverty
+in the movies)--Teresa rolls her eyes up--all the little
+children put their hands together and say grace (this
+registers honesty). The thing is done. Let us turn back
+to the history book and see what is to be put in next.
+
+"...The father of Christopher, Bartolomeo Colombo, was
+a man of no especial talent of whom nothing is recorded."
+
+That's easy. First we announce him on the screen:
+
+BARTOLOMEO COLOMBO.. Mr. Henderson
+
+Then we stick him on the film on a corner of the room,
+leaning up against the cardboard clock and looking at
+the children. This attitude in the movies always indicates
+a secondary character of no importance. His business is
+to look at the others and to indicate forgetfulness of
+self, incompetence, unimportance, vacuity, simplicity.
+Note how this differs from the attitudes of important
+characters. If a movie character--one of importance--is
+plotting or scheming, he seats himself at a little round
+table, drums on it with his fingers, and half closes one
+eye. If he is being talked to, or having a letter or
+document or telegram read to him, he stands "facing full"
+and working his features up and down to indicate emotion
+sweeping over them. If he is being "exposed" (which is
+done by pointing fingers at him), he hunches up like a
+snake in an angle of the room with both eyes half shut
+and his mouth set as if he had just eaten a lemon. But
+if he has none of these things to express and is only in
+the scene as a background for the others, then he goes
+over and leans in an easy attitude against the tall
+cardboard clock.
+
+That then is the place for Bartolomeo Colombo. To the
+clock with him.
+
+Now what comes next?
+
+"...The young Christopher developed at an early age a
+passion for study, and especially for astronomy, geometry,
+geodesy, and the exact science of the day."
+
+Quite easy. On spins the film. Young Christopher in a
+garret room (all movie study is done in garrets). The
+cardboard ceiling slopes within six inches of his head.
+This shows that the boy never rises from his books. He
+can't. On a table in front of him is a little globe and
+a pair of compasses. Christopher spins the globe round.
+Then he makes two circles with the compasses, one after
+the other, very carefully. This is the recognised movie
+symbol for mathematical research.
+
+So there we have Christopher--poor, honest, studious,
+full of circles.
+
+Now to the book again.
+
+"...The young Columbus received his education at the
+monastery of the Franciscan monks at Genoa. Here he spent
+seven years."
+
+Yes, but we can put that on the screen in seven seconds.
+
+Turn on the film.
+
+Movie Monastery--exterior, done in grey cardboard--ding,
+dong, ding, dong (man in the orchestra with triangle and
+stick)--procession of movie friars--faces more like thugs,
+but never mind--they are friars because they walk two
+and two in a procession, singing out of hymn books.
+
+Now for the book again.
+
+"...Fra Giacomo, the prior of the monastery, delighted
+with the boy's progress, encourages his studies."
+
+Wait a minute.
+
+FRA GIACOMO... Mr. Edward Sims
+
+Mr. Sims's face, clean-shaved under a round hat fades in and out.
+Then the picture goes on. Movie monastery interior--young
+Christopher, still at a table with compasses--benevolent friar
+bending over him--Christopher turns the compasses and looks up
+with a what-do-you-know-about-that look--astonishment and delight
+of friar (registered by opening his eyes like a bull frog). All
+this shows study, progress, application. The friars are delighted
+with the boy.
+
+"...Christopher, after seven years of study, reaches the
+firm conviction that the world is round."
+
+Picture. Christopher--with his globe--jumps up from
+table--passes his fingers round and round the
+globe--registers the joy of invention--seats himself at
+table and draws circles with his compasses furiously. He
+fades out.
+
+"...Fired with his discovery Christopher sets out from
+the monastery."
+
+Stop a minute, this is a little hard. Fired. How can we
+show Christopher "fired." We can't. Perhaps he'll be
+fired if the film is no good, but we must omit it just
+now.
+
+"He sets out."
+
+One second only for this. Monastery door (double cardboard
+with iron across it)--Christopher leaving--carries a
+wallet to mean distance. Fra Giacomo blessing him--fade
+out.
+
+"...For eighteen years Columbus vainly travelled through
+the world on foot offering his discovery at the courts
+of Europe, in vain, though asking nothing in return for
+it except a fleet of ships, two hundred men and provisions
+for two years."
+
+To anybody not used to scenarios this looks a large order.
+Eighteen years seems difficult to put on the screen. In
+reality this is exactly where the trained movie man sees
+his chance. Here he can put in anything and everything
+that he likes, bringing in, in a slightly mediaeval form,
+all his favourite movie scenes.
+
+Thus, for example, here we have first the good old midnight
+cabaret supper scene--thinly disguised as the court of
+the King of Sardinia. To turn a cabaret into a court the
+movie men merely exchange their Fifth Avenue evening
+dress for short coats and knee breeches, heavily wadded
+and quilted, and wear large wigs. Quilted pants and wigs
+register courtiers, the courtiers of anybody--Charlemagne,
+Queen Elizabeth, Peter the Great, Louis Quatorze, anybody
+and everybody who ever had courtiers. Just as men with
+bare legs mean Romans, men in pea-jackets mean detectives,
+and young men drunk in evening dress Harvard graduates.
+
+The ladies at the court of Sardinia wear huge paper frills
+round their necks. Otherwise it is the cabaret scene with
+the familiar little tables, and the ukaleles going like
+mad in one corner, and black sarsaparilla being poured
+foaming into the glasses.
+
+In this scene Columbus moves up and down, twirling his
+little globe and looking appealingly in their faces. All
+laugh at him. His part is just the same as that of the
+poor little girl trying to sell up-state violets in the
+midnight cabaret.
+
+The Court of Sardinia fades and the film shows Columbus
+vainly soliciting financial aid from Lorenzo the
+Magnificent.
+
+Stop one minute, please.
+
+LORENZO THE MAGNIFICENT... Mr. L. Evans
+
+This scene again is old and familiar. It is the well-known
+interior representing the Grinding Capitalist, or the
+Bitter Banker refusing aid to the boy genius who has
+invented a patent pea-rake. The only change is that
+Lorenzo wears a huge wig, has no telephone, and handles
+a large quill pen (to register Middle Ages) which he
+wiggles furiously up and down on a piece of parchment.
+
+So the eighteen years, with scenes of this sort turn out
+the easiest part of the whole show.
+
+But let us to the book again.
+
+"...After eighteen years Columbus, now past the prime of
+life, is presented at the Court of Queen Isabella of
+Spain."
+
+Just half a moment.
+
+QUEEN ISABELLA.. Miss Janet Briggs
+
+There will be very probably at this point a slight applause
+from the back of the hall. Miss Briggs was here last
+week, or her astral body was--as Maggie of the Cattle
+Ranges. The impression that she made is passed on to
+Isabella.
+
+"The Queen and her consort, King Ferdinand of Aragon..."
+
+Stop, stick him on the film.
+
+FERDINAND OF ARAGON.. Mr. Edward Giles
+
+(Large wig, flat velvet cap and square whiskers--same
+make-up as for Ferdinand of Bulgaria, Ferdinand of Bohemia,
+or any of the Ferdinands.)
+
+"...were immediately seized with enthusiasm for the
+marvellous discovery of the Genoese adventurer."
+
+Picture. Columbus hands his globe to Isabella and his
+compasses to Ferdinand. They register delight and
+astonishment. The Queen turns the globe round and round
+and holds it up to Ferdinand. Both indicate with their
+faces, well-what-do-you-know-about-this. Ferdinand makes
+a circle with the compasses on a table--the courtiers,
+fickle creatures, crowd around. They are still dressed
+as in Sardinia eighteen years ago. In fact, one recognises
+quite a lot of them. When Ferdinand draws the circle they
+fall back in wild astonishment, gesticulating frantically.
+What they mean is, "It's a circle, it's a circle."
+
+"The King and Queen at once place three ships at the
+disposal of Columbus."
+
+On with the picture. The harbour of the port of Palos--
+ships bobbing up and down (it is really the oyster boats
+in Baltimore Bay but it looks just like Palos, or near
+enough). Notice Queen Isabella on the right, at the top
+of a flight of steps, extending her hand and looking at
+Columbus. Her gesture means, "Pick a ship, any ship you
+like, any colour." Just as if she were saying, "Pick a
+card, any card you like."
+
+We turn again to the history.
+
+"...Christopher Columbus, now arrived at the height of
+his desire, sets out upon his memorable voyage accompanied
+by a hundred companions in three caravels, the Pinta,
+the Nina and the Espiritu Santo."
+
+Ah, here we have the movie work--the real thing. Cardboard
+caravel tossing on black water--seen first right close
+to us--we are almost on board of it. Notice the movie
+sailors with black whiskers and bare feet (bare feet in
+the movies always means a sailor, and black whiskers mean
+Spaniards). Now we see the caravel a little way out--whoop!
+How she bobs up and down! They give her that jolt (it's
+done with the machine itself) to mean danger. There are
+all three caravels--Hoop--er--oo! See them go up and
+down--stormy night coming all right. See the sun setting
+in the west, over the water? They're heading straight
+for it. Good-night Columbus--take care of yourself out
+there in the blackness.
+
+"During the voyage Columbus remained continually on deck.
+Sleeping at the prow, his face towards the new world, he
+saw already in his dreams the accomplishment of his
+hopes."
+
+On goes the picture. Christopher in the prow of the
+caravel (in the movies a prow is made by putting two
+little board fences together and propping up a bowsprit
+lengthwise over them). Columbus sits up, peers intently
+into the darkness, his hand to his brow--registers a
+look. Do I see America? No. Lies down, shuts his eyes
+and falls into an instantaneous movie sleep. His face
+fades out slowly to music, which means that he is going
+to dream. Then on the screen the announcement is shown:
+
+SPIRIT OF AMERICA... Miss E. Dickenson
+
+and here we have Miss Dickenson floating in the air above
+Columbus. She wears nothing except mosquito netting, but
+she has got on enough of it to get past the censor of
+the State of New York. Just enough, apparently.
+
+Miss E. Dickenson is joined by a whole troop of Miss Dickensons
+all in white mosquito netting. They go through a series of
+beautiful evolutions, floating over the sleeping figure of
+Columbus. The dance they do is meant to typify, or rather to
+signify,--as a matter of fact we needn't worry much about what
+it signified. It is an allegory, done in white mosquito netting.
+That is generally held to be quite enough. Let us go back to
+the book--
+
+"After a storm-tossed voyage of three months..."
+
+Wait a bit. Turn on the picture again and toss the caravels
+up and down.
+
+"...during which the food supply threatened to fail..."
+
+Put that on the screen, please. Columbus surrounded by
+ten sailors, dividing up a potato.
+
+"...the caravels arrived in safety at the beautiful island
+of San Salvador. Columbus, bearing the banner of Spain,
+stepped first ashore. Surrounded by a wondering crowd of
+savages he prostrated himself upon the beach and kissed
+the soil of the New World that he had discovered."
+
+All this is so easy that it's too easy. It runs into
+pictures of itself. Anybody, accustomed to the movies,
+can see Columbus with his banner and the movie savages
+hopping up and down around him. Movie savages are gay,
+gladsome creatures anyway, and hopping up and down is
+their chief mode of expressing themselves. Add to them
+a sandy beach, with palm trees waving visibly in the wind
+(it is always windy in the movies) and the thing is done.
+
+Just one further picture is needed to complete the film.
+
+"Columbus who returned to Europe to lay at the feet of
+the Spanish sovereigns the world he had discovered, fell
+presently under the disfavour of the court, and died in
+poverty and obscurity, a victim of the ingratitude of
+princes."
+
+Last picture. Columbus dying under the poignant
+circumstances known only in the movies--a garret
+room--ceiling lower than ever--a truckle bed, narrow
+enough to kill him if all else failed--Teresa Colombo
+his aged mother alone at his bedside--she offers him
+medicine in a long spoon--(this shows, if nothing else
+would, that the man is ill)--he shakes his head--puts
+out his hand and rests it on the little globe--reaches
+feebly for his compasses--can't manage it--rolls up his
+eyes and fades.
+
+The music plays softly and the inexorable film, like
+the reel of life itself, spins on, announcing
+
+ At this theatre
+ All next week
+
+ MAGGIE MAY
+ and
+ WALTER CURRAN
+ in
+ IS IT WORTH IT
+
+And after that I can imagine the audience dispersing,
+and the now educated children going off to their homes
+and one saying as he enters--
+
+"Gee, I seen a great picture show at school to-day."
+
+"Yes?" says his mother, "and what was it?"
+
+"Oh, it was all about a gink that went round the cabarets
+trying to sell an invention what he'd got but nobody
+wouldn't look at it till at last one dame gave him three
+oyster boats, see? and so he and a lot of other guys
+loaded them up and hiked off across the ocean."
+
+"And where did he go to?"
+
+"Africa. And he and the other guys had a great stand in
+with the natives and he'd have sold his invention all
+right but one old dame got him alone in a hut and poisoned
+him and took it off him."
+
+That, I think, is about the way the film would run. When
+it is finished I must get President Shurman, or whoever
+it was, to come and see it.
+
+
+
+
+4.--Politics from Within
+
+To avoid all error as to the point of view, let me say
+in commencing that I am a Liberal Conservative, or, if
+you will, a Conservative Liberal with a strong dash of
+sympathy with the Socialist idea, a friend of Labour,
+and a believer in Progressive Radicalism. I do not desire
+office but would take a seat in the Canadian Senate at
+five minutes notice.
+
+I believe there are ever so many people of exactly this
+way of thinking.
+
+Let me say further than in writing of "politics" I am
+only dealing with the lights and shadows that flicker
+over the surface, and am not trying to discuss, still
+less to decry, the deep and vital issues that lie below.
+
+Yet I will say that vital though the issues may be below
+the surface, there is more clap-trap, insincerity and
+humbug on the surface of politics than over any equal
+area on the face of any institution.
+
+The candidate, as such, is a humbug. The voters, as
+voters--not as fathers, brothers or sons--are humbugs.
+The committees are humbugs. And the speeches to the extent
+of about ninety per cent are pure buncombe. But, oddly
+enough, out of the silly babel of talk that accompanies
+popular government, we get, after all, pretty good
+government--infinitely better than the government of an
+autocratic king. Between democracy and despotic kingship
+lies all the difference between genial humbug and black
+sin.
+
+For the candidate for popular office I have nothing but
+sympathy and sorrow. It has been my fortune to walk round
+at the heels of half a dozen of them in different little
+Canadian towns, watching the candidate try in vain to
+brighten up his face at the glad sight of a party voter.
+
+One, in particular, I remember. Nature had meant him to
+be a sour man, a hard man, a man with but little joy in
+the company of his fellows. Fate had made him a candidate
+for the House of Commons. So he was doing his best to
+belie his nature.
+
+"Hullo, William!" he would call out as a man passed
+driving a horse and buggy, "got the little sorrel out
+for a spin, eh?"
+
+Then he would turn to me and say in a low rasping voice--
+
+"There goes about the biggest skunk in this whole
+constituency."
+
+A few minutes later he would wave his hand over a little
+hedge in friendly salutation to a man working in a garden.
+
+"Hullo, Jasper! That's a fine lot of corn you've got
+there."
+
+Jasper replied in a growl. And when we were well past
+the house the candidate would say between his teeth--
+
+"That's about the meanest whelp in the riding."
+
+Our conversation all down the street was of that pattern.
+
+"Good morning, Edward! Giving the potatoes a dose of
+Paris green, eh?"
+
+And in an undertone--
+
+"I wish to Heaven he'd take a dose of it himself."
+
+And so on from house to house.
+
+I counted up, from one end of the street to the other,
+that there were living in it seven skunks, fourteen low
+whelps, eight mean hounds and two dirty skinflints. And
+all of these merely among the Conservative voters. It
+made me wish to be a Liberal. Especially as the Liberal
+voters, by the law of the perversity of human affairs,
+always seemed to be the finer lot. As they were NOT voting
+for our candidate, they were able to meet him in a fair
+and friendly way, whereas William and Jasper and Edward
+and our "bunch" were always surly and hardly deigned to
+give more than a growl in answer to the candidate's
+greeting, without even looking up at him.
+
+But a Liberal voter would stop him in the street and
+shake hands and say in a frank, cordial way.
+
+"Mr. Grouch, I'm sorry indeed that I can't vote for you,
+and I'd like to be able to wish you success, but of course
+you know I'm on the other side and always have been and
+can't change now."
+
+Whereupon the Candidate would say. "That's all right,
+John, I don't expect you to. I can respect a man's
+convictions all right, I guess."
+
+So they would part excellent friends, the Candidate saying
+as we moved off:
+
+"That man, John Winter, is one of the straightest men in
+this whole county."
+
+Then he would add--
+
+"Now we'll just go into this house for a minute. There's
+a dirty pup in here that's one of our supporters."
+
+My opinion of our own supporters went lower every day,
+and my opinion of the Liberal voters higher, till it so
+happened that I went one day to an old friend of mine
+who was working on the Liberal side. I asked him how he
+liked it.
+
+"Oh, well enough!" he said, "as a sort of game. But in
+this constituency you've got all the decent voters; our
+voters are the lowest bunch of skunks I ever struck."
+
+Just then a man passed in a buggy, and looked sourly at
+my friend the Liberal worker.
+
+"Hullo, John!" he called, with a manufactured hilarity,
+"got the little mare out for a turn, eh?"
+
+John grunted.
+
+"There's one of them," said my friend, "the lowest pup
+in this county, John Winter."
+
+"Come along," said the Candidate to me one morning, "I
+want you to meet my committee."
+
+"You'll find them," he said confidingly, as we started
+down the street towards the committee rooms, "an awful
+bunch of mutts."
+
+"Too bad," I said, "what's wrong with them?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know--they're just a pack of simps. They
+don't seem to have any PUNCH in them. The one you'll meet
+first is the chairman--he's about the worst dub of the
+lot; I never saw a man with so little force in my life.
+He's got no magnetism, that's what's wrong with him--no
+magnetism."
+
+A few minutes later the Candidate was introducing me to
+a roomful of heavy looking Committee men. Committee men
+in politics, I notice, have always a heavy bovine look.
+They are generally in a sort of daze, or doped from
+smoking free cigars.
+
+"Now I want to introduce you first," said the Candidate,
+"to our chairman, Mr. Frog. Mr. Frog is our old battle
+horse in this constituency. And this is our campaign
+secretary Mr. Bughouse, and Mr. Dope, and Mr. Mudd, et
+cetera."
+
+Those may not have been their names.
+
+It is merely what the names sounded like when one was
+looking into their faces.
+
+The Candidate introduced them all as battle horses, battle
+axes, battle leaders, standard bearers, flag-holders,
+and so forth. If he had introduced them as hat-racks or
+cigar holders, it would have been nearer the mark.
+
+Presently the Candidate went out and I was left with the
+battle-axes.
+
+"What do you think of our chances?" I asked.
+
+The battle-axes shook their heads with dubious looks.
+
+"Pretty raw deal," said the Chairman, "the Convention
+wishing HIM on us." He pointed with his thumb over his
+shoulder to indicate the departed Candidate.
+
+"What's wrong with him?" I asked.
+
+Mr. Frog shook his head again.
+
+"No PUNCH," he said.
+
+"None at all," agreed all the battle horses.
+
+"I'll tell you," said the Campaign secretary, Mr. Bughouse,
+a voluble man, with wandering eyes--"the trouble is he
+has no magnetism, no personal magnetism."
+
+"I see," I said.
+
+"Now, you take this man, Shortis, that the Liberals have
+got hold of," continued Mr. Bughouse, "he's full of
+MAGNETISM. He appeals."
+
+All the other Committee men nodded.
+
+"That's so," they murmured, "magnetism, Our man hasn't
+a darned ounce of it."
+
+"I met Shortis the other night in the street," went on
+Mr. Bughouse, "and he said, 'Come on up to my room in
+the hotel.' 'Oh,' I said, 'I can't very well.' 'Nonsense,'
+he said, 'You're on the other side but what does that
+matter?' Well, we went up to his room, and there he had
+whiskey, and gin, and lager,--everything. 'Now,' he says,
+'name your drink--what is it?' There he was, right in
+his room, breaking the law without caring a darn about
+it. Well, you know the voters like that kind of thing.
+It appeals to them."
+
+"Well," said another of the Committee men,--I think it
+was the one called Mr. Dope, "I wouldn't mind that so
+much. But the chief trouble about our man, to my mind,
+is that he can't speak."
+
+"He can't?" I exclaimed.
+
+All the Committee shook their heads.
+
+"Not for sour apples!" asserted Mr. Dope positively.
+"Now, in this riding that won't do. Our people here are
+used to first class speaking, they expect it. I suppose
+there has been better speaking in this Constituency than
+anywhere else in the whole dominion. Not lately, perhaps;
+not in the last few elections. But I can remember, and
+so can some of the boys here, the election when Sir John
+A. spoke here, when the old Mackenzie government went
+out."
+
+He looked around at the circle. Several nodded.
+
+"Remember it as well," assented Mr. Mudd, "as if it were
+yesterday."
+
+"Well, sir," continued Mr. Dope, "I'll never forget Sir
+John A. speaking here in the Odd Fellows' Hall, eh?"
+
+The Committee men nodded and gurgled in corroboration.
+
+"My! but he was PLASTERED. We had him over at Pete
+Robinson's hotel all afternoon, and I tell you he was
+plastered for fair. We ALL were. I remember I was so
+pickled myself I could hardly help Sir John up the steps
+of the platform. So were you, Mudd, do you remember?"
+
+"I certainly was!" said Mr. Mudd proudly. Committee men
+who would scorn to drink lager beer in 1919, take a great
+pride, I have observed, in having been pickled in 1878.
+
+"Yes, sir," continued Mr. Dope, "you certainly were
+pickled. I remember just as well as anything, when they
+opened the doors and let the crowd in: all the boys had
+been bowling up and were pretty well soused. You never
+saw such a crowd. Old Dr. Greenway (boys, you remember
+the old Doc) was in the chair, and he was pretty well
+spifflocated. Well, sir, Sir John A. got up in that hall
+and he made the finest, most moving speech I ever listened
+to. Do you remember when he called old Trelawney an
+ash-barrel? And when he made that appeal for a union of
+hearts and said that the sight of McGuire (the Liberal
+candidate) made him sick? I tell you those were great
+days. You don't get speaking like that now; and you don't
+get audiences like that now either. Not the same calibre."
+
+All the Committee shook their heads.
+
+"Well, anyway, boys," said the Chairman, as he lighted
+a fresh cigar, "to-morrow will decide, one way or the
+other. We've certainly worked hard enough,"--here he
+passed the box of cigars round to the others--"I haven't
+been in bed before two any night since the work started."
+
+"Neither have I," said another of the workers. "I was
+just saying to the wife when I got up this morning that
+I begin to feel as if I never wanted to see the sight of
+a card again."
+
+"Well, I don't regret the work," said the Secretary, "so
+long as we carry the riding. You see," he added in
+explanation to me, "we're up against a pretty hard
+proposition here. This riding really is Liberal: they've
+got the majority of voters though we HAVE once or twice
+swung it Conservative. But whether we can carry it with
+a man like Grouch is hard to say. One thing is certain,
+boys, if he DOES carry it, he doesn't owe it to himself."
+
+All the battle horses agreed on this. A little after that
+we dispersed.
+
+And twenty-four hours later the vote was taken and to my
+intense surprise the riding was carried by Grouch the
+Conservative candidate.
+
+I say, to MY surprise. But apparently not to anybody else.
+
+For it appeared this (was in conversations after the
+election) that Grouch was a man of extraordinary magnetism.
+He had, so they said, "punch." Shortis, the Liberal, it
+seemed, lacked punch absolutely. Even his own supporters
+admitted that he had no personality whatever. Some wondered
+how he had the nerve to run.
+
+But my own theory of how the election was carried is
+quite different.
+
+I feel certain that all the Conservative voters despised
+their candidate so much that they voted Liberal. And all
+the Liberals voted Conservative.
+
+That carried the riding.
+
+Meantime Grouch left the constituency by the first train
+next day for Ottawa. Except for paying taxes on his house,
+he will not be back in the town till they dissolve
+parliament again.
+
+
+
+
+5.--The Lost Illusions of Mr. Sims
+
+In the club to which I belong, in a quiet corner where
+the sunlight falls in sideways, there may be seen sitting
+of an afternoon my good friend of thirty years' standing,
+Mr. Edward Sims. Being somewhat afflicted with gout, he
+generally sits with one foot up on a chair. On a brass
+table beside him are such things as Mr. Sims needs. But
+they are few. Wealthy as he is, the needs of Mr. Sims
+reach scarcely further than Martini cocktails and Egyptian
+cigarettes. Such poor comforts as these, brought by a
+deferential waiter, with, let us say, a folded newspaper
+at five o'clock, suffice for all his wants. Here sits
+Mr. Sims till the shadows fall in the street outside,
+when a limousine motor trundles up to the club and rolls
+him home.
+
+And here of an afternoon Mr. Sims talks to me of his
+college days when he was young. The last thirty years of
+his life have moved in so gentle a current upon so smooth
+a surface that they have been without adventure. It is
+the stormy period of his youth that preoccupies my friend
+as he sits looking from the window of the club at the
+waving leaves in the summer time and the driving snow in
+the winter.
+
+I am of that habit of mind that makes me prone to listen.
+And for this, perhaps, Mr. Sims selects me as the recipient
+of the stories of his college days. It is, it seems, the
+fixed belief of my good friend that when he was young he
+belonged at college to a particularly nefarious crowd or
+group that exists in his mind under the name of the "old
+gang." The same association, or corporate body or whatever
+it should be called, is also designated by Mr. Sims, the
+"old crowd," or more simply and affectionately "the boys."
+In the recollection of my good friend this "old gang"
+were of a devilishness since lost off the earth. Work
+they wouldn't. Sleep they despised. While indoors they
+played poker in a blue haze of tobacco smoke with beer
+in jugs and mugs all round them. All night they were out
+of doors on the sidewalk with linked arms, singing songs
+in chorus and jeering at the city police.
+
+Yet in spite of life such as this, which might appear to
+an outsider wearing to the intellect, the "old gang" as
+recollected by Mr. Sims were of a mental brilliancy that
+eclipses everything previous or subsequent. McGregor of
+the Class of '85 graduated with a gold medal in Philosophy
+after drinking twelve bottles of lager before sitting
+down to his final examination. Ned Purvis, the football
+half-back, went straight from the football field after
+a hard game with his ankle out of joint, drank half a
+bottle of Bourbon Rye and then wrote an examination in
+Greek poetry that drew tears from the President of the
+college.
+
+Mr. Sims is perhaps all the more prone to talk of these
+early days insomuch that, since his youth, life, in the
+mere material sense, has used him all too kindly. At an
+early age, indeed at about the very time of his graduation,
+Mr. Sims came into money,--not money in the large and
+frenzied sense of a speculative fortune, begetting care
+and breeding anxiety, but in the warm and comfortable
+inheritance of a family brewery, about as old and as
+well-established as the Constitution of the United States.
+In this brewery, even to-day, Mr. Sims, I believe, spends
+a certain part, though no great part, of his time. He is
+carried to it, I understand, in his limousine in the
+sunnier hours of the morning; for an hour or so each day
+he moves about among the warm smell of the barley and
+the quiet hum of the machinery murmuring among its dust.
+
+There is, too, somewhere in the upper part of the city
+a huge, silent residence, where a noiseless butler adjusts
+Mr. Sims's leg on a chair and serves him his dinner in
+isolated luxury.
+
+But the residence, and the brewery, and with them the
+current of Mr. Sims's life move of themselves.
+
+Thus has care passed Mr. Sims by, leaving him stranded
+in a club chair with his heavy foot and stick beside him.
+
+Mr. Sims is a bachelor. Nor is he likely now to marry:
+but this through no lack of veneration or respect for
+the sex. It arises, apparently, from the fact that when
+Mr. Sims was young, during his college days, the beauty
+and charm of the girls who dwelt in his college town was
+such as to render all later women mere feeble suggestions
+of what might have been. There was, as there always is,
+one girl in particular. I have not heard my friend speak
+much of her. But I gather that Kate Dashaway was the kind
+of girl who might have made a fit mate even for the sort
+of intellectual giant that flourished at Mr. Sims's college.
+She was not only beautiful. All the girls remembered by
+Mr. Sims were that. But she was in addition "a good head"
+and "a good sport," two of the highest qualities that, in
+Mr. Sims's view, can crown the female sex. She had, he
+said, no "nonsense" about her, by which term Mr. Sims
+indicated religion. She drank lager beer, played tennis as
+well as any man in the college, and smoked cigarettes a
+whole generation in advance of the age.
+
+Mr. Sims, so I gather, never proposed to her, nor came
+within a measurable distance of doing so. A man so prone,
+as is my friend, to spend his time in modest admiration
+of the prowess of others is apt to lag behind. Miss
+Dashaway remains to Mr. Sims, as all else does, a retrospect
+and a regret.
+
+But the chief peculiarities of the old gang--as they
+exist in the mind of Mr. Sims--is the awful fate that
+has overwhelmed them. It is not merely that they are
+scattered to the four corners of the continent. That
+might have been expected. But, apparently, the most awful
+moral ruin has fallen upon them. That, at least, is the
+abiding belief of Mr. Sims.
+
+"Do you ever hear anything of McGregor now?" I ask him
+sometimes.
+
+"No," he says, shaking his head quietly. "I understand
+he went all to the devil."
+
+"How was that?"
+
+"Booze," says Mr. Sims. There is a quiet finality about
+the word that ends all discussion.
+
+"Poor old Curly!" says Mr. Sims, in speaking of another
+of his classmates. "I guess he's pretty well down and
+out these days."
+
+"What's the trouble?" I say.
+
+Mr. Sims moves his eyes sideways as he sits. It is easier
+than moving his head.
+
+"Booze," he says.
+
+Even apparent success in life does not save Mr. Sims's
+friends.
+
+"I see," I said one day, "that they have just made Arthur
+Stewart a Chief Justice out west."
+
+"Poor old Artie," murmured Mr. Sims. "He'll have a hard
+time holding it down. I imagine he's pretty well tanked
+up all the time these days."
+
+When Mr. Sims has not heard of any of his associates for
+a certain lapse of years, he decides to himself that they
+are down and out. It is a form of writing them off. There
+is a melancholy satisfaction in it. As the years go by
+Mr. Sims is coming to regard himself and a few others as
+the lonely survivors of a great flood. All the rest,
+brilliant as they once were, are presumed to be "boozed,"
+"tanked," "burnt out," "bust-up," and otherwise consumed.
+
+After having heard for so many years the reminiscences
+of my good friend about the old gang, it seemed almost
+incredible that one of them should step into actual living
+being before my eyes. Yet so it happened.
+
+I found Mr. Sims at the club one day, about to lunch
+there, a thing contrary to his wont. And with him was a
+friend, a sallow, insignificant man in the middle fifties,
+with ragged, sandy hair, wearing thin.
+
+"Shake hands with Tommy Vidal," said Mr. Sims proudly.
+
+If he had said, "Shake hands with Aristotle," he couldn't
+have spoken with greater pride.
+
+This then was Tommy Vidal, the intellectual giant of whom
+I had heard a hundred times. Tommy had, at college, so
+Mr. Sims had often assured me, the brightest mind known
+since the age of Pericles. He took the prize in Latin
+poetry absolutely "without opening a book." Latin to
+Tommy Vidal had been, by a kind of natural gift, born in
+him. In Latin he was "a whale." Indeed in everything. He
+had passed his graduation examination with first class
+honours; "plastered." He had to be held in his seat, so
+it was recorded, while he wrote.
+
+Tommy, it seemed, had just "blown in" to town that morning.
+It was characteristic of Mr. Sims's idea of the old gang
+that the only way in which any of them were supposed to
+enter a town was to "blow in."
+
+"When did you say you 'blew in,' Tommy?" he asked about
+half a dozen times during our lunch. In reality, the
+reckless, devil-may-care fellow Vidal had "blown in" to
+bring his second daughter to a boarding school--a thing
+no doubt contemplated months ahead. But Mr. Sims insisted
+in regarding Tommy's movements as purely fortuitous, the
+sport of chance. He varied his question by asking "When
+do you expect to 'blow out' Tommy?" Tommy's answers he
+forgot at once.
+
+We sat and talked after lunch, and it pained me to notice
+that Tommy Vidal was restless and anxious to get away.
+Mr. Sims offered him cigars, thick as ropes and black as
+night, but he refused them. It appeared that he had long
+since given up smoking. It affected his eyes, he said.
+The deferential waiter brought brandy and curacoa in long
+thin glasses. But Mr. Vidal shook his head. He hadn't
+had a drink, he said, for twenty years. He found it
+affected his hearing. Coffee, too, he refused. It affected,
+so it seemed, his sense of smell. He sat beside us, ill
+at ease, and anxious, as I could see, to get back to his
+second daughter and her schoolmistresses. Mr. Sims, who
+is geniality itself in his heart, but has no great powers
+in conversation, would ask Tommy if he remembered how he
+acted as Antigone in the college play, and was "plastered"
+from the second act on. Mr. Vidal had no recollection of
+it, but wondered if there was any good book-store in town
+where he could buy his daughter an Algebra. He rose when
+he decently could and left us. As Mr. Sims saw it, he
+"blew out."
+
+Mr. Sims is kindliness itself in his judgments. He passed
+no word of censure on his departed friend. But a week or
+so later he mentioned to me in conversation that Tommy
+Vidal had "turned into a kind of stiff." The vocabulary
+of Mr. Sims holds no term of deeper condemnation than
+the word "stiff." To be a "stiff" is the last form of
+degradation.
+
+It is strange that when a thing happens once, it forthwith
+happens twice or even more. For years no member of the
+"old gang" had come in touch with Mr. Sims. Yet the visit
+of Tommy Vidal was followed at no great distance of time
+by the "blowing in" of Ned Purvis.
+
+"Well, well!" said Mr. Sims, as he opened one afternoon
+a telegram that the deferential waiter brought upon a
+tray. "This beats all! Old Ned Purvis wires that he's
+going to blow in to town to-night at seven."
+
+Forthwith Mr. Sims fell to ordering dinner for the three
+of us in a private room, with enough of an assortment of
+gin cocktails and Scotch highballs to run a distillery,
+and enough Vichy water and imported soda for a bath. "I
+know old Ned!" he said as he added item after item to
+the list.
+
+At seven o'clock the waiter whispered, as in deep
+confidence, that there was a gentleman below for Mr.
+Sims.
+
+It so happened that on that evening my friend's foot was
+in bad shape, and rested on a chair. At his request I
+went from the lounge room of the club downstairs to
+welcome the new arrival.
+
+Purvis I knew all about. My friend had spoken of him a
+thousand times. He had played half-back on the football
+team--a big hulking brute of a fellow. In fact, he was,
+as pictured by Mr. Sims, a perfect colossus. And he played
+football--as did all Mr. Sims's college chums--"plastered."
+"Old Ned," so Mr. Sims would relate, "was pretty well
+'soused' when the game started: but we put a hose at him
+at half-time and got him into pretty good shape." All
+men in any keen athletic contest, as remembered by Mr.
+Sims, were pretty well "tanked up." For the lighter,
+nimbler games such as tennis, they were reported
+"spifflocated" and in that shape performed prodigies of
+agility.
+
+"You'll know Ned," said Mr. Sims, "by his big shoulders."
+I went downstairs.
+
+The reception room below was empty, except for one man,
+a little, gentle-looking man with spectacles. He wore
+black clothes with a waistcoat reaching to the throat,
+a white tie and a collar buttoned on backwards. Ned Purvis
+was a clergyman! His great hulking shoulders had gone
+the way of all my good friend's reminiscences.
+
+I brought him upstairs.
+
+For a moment, in the half light of the room, Mr. Sims
+was still deceived.
+
+"Well, Ned!" he began heartily, with a struggle to rise
+from his chair--then he saw the collar and tie of the
+Rev. Mr. Purvis, and the full horror of the thing dawned
+upon him. Nor did the three gin cocktails, which Mr. Sims
+had had stationed ready for the reunion, greatly help
+its geniality. Yet it had been a maxim, in the recollections
+of Mr. Sims, that when any of the boys blew in anywhere
+the bringing of drinks must be instantaneous and uproarious.
+
+Our dinner that night was very quiet.
+
+Mr. Purvis drank only water. That, with a little salad,
+made his meal. He had a meeting to address that evening
+at eight, a meeting of women--"dear women" he called
+them--who had recently affiliated their society with the
+work that some of the dear women in Mr. Purvis's own town
+were carrying on. The work, as described, boded no good
+for breweries. Mr. Purvis's wife, so it seemed, was with
+him and would also "take the platform."
+
+As best we could we made conversation.
+
+"I didn't know that you were married," said Mr. Sims.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Purvis, "married, and with five dear boys
+and three dear girls." The eight of them, he told us,
+were a great blessing. So, too, was his wife--a great
+social worker, it seemed, in the cause of women's rights
+and a marvellous platform speaker in the temperance
+crusade.
+
+"By the way, Mr. Sims," said Mr. Purvis (they had called
+one another "Mr." after the first five minutes), "you
+may remember my wife. I think perhaps you knew her in
+our college days. She was a Miss Dashaway."
+
+Mr. Sims bowed his head over his plate, as another of
+his lost illusions vanished into thin air.
+
+After Mr. Purvis had gone, my friend spoke out his
+mind--once and once only, and more in regret than anger.
+
+"I'm afraid," he said, "that old Ned has turned into a
+SISSY."
+
+It was only to be expected that the visits of later
+friends--the "boys" who happened to "blow in"--were
+disappointments. Art Hamilton, who came next, and who
+had been one of the most brilliant men of the Class of
+'86 had turned somehow into a "complete mutt." Jake Todd,
+who used to write so brilliantly in the college paper,
+as recollected by Mr. Sims, was now the editor of a big
+New York daily. Good things might have been expected of
+him, but it transpired that he had undergone "wizening
+of the brain." In fact, a number of Mr. Sims's former
+friends had suffered from this cruel disease, consisting
+apparently of a shrinkage or contraction of the cerebellum.
+
+Mr. Sims spoke little of his disappointments. But I knew
+that he thought much about them. They set him wondering.
+There were changes here that to the thoughtful mind called
+for investigation.
+
+So I was not surprised when he informed me that it was
+his intention to visit "the old place" and have a look
+at it. The "old place," called also the "old shop,"
+indicated, as I knew, Mr. Sims's college, the original
+scene of the exploits of the old gang. In the thirty
+years since he had graduated, though separated from it
+only by two hundred miles, Mr. Sims had never revisited
+it. So is it always with the most faithful of the sons
+of learning. The illumination of the inner eye is better
+than the crude light of reality. College reunions are
+but for the noisy lip service of the shallow and the
+interested. The deeper affection glows in the absent
+heart.
+
+My friend invited me to "come along." We would, he said,
+"blow in" upon the place and have a look at it.
+
+It was in the fullness of the spring time that we went,
+when the leaves are out on the college campus, and when
+Commencement draws near, and when all the college, even
+the students, are busy.
+
+Mr. Sims, I noted when I joined him at the train, was
+dressed as for the occasion. He wore a round straw hat
+with a coloured ribbon, and light grey suit, and a necktie
+with the garish colours of the college itself. Thus
+dressed, he leaned as lightly as his foot allowed him
+upon a yellow stick, and dreamed himself again an
+undergraduate.
+
+I had thought the purpose of his visit a mere curiosity
+bred in his disappointment. It appeared that I was wrong.
+On the train Mr. Sims unfolded to me that his idea in
+"blowing in" upon his college was one of benefaction. He
+had it in his mind, he said, to do something for the "old
+place," no less a thing than to endow a chair. He explained
+to me, modestly as was his wont, the origin of his idea.
+The brewing business, it appeared, was rapidly reaching
+a stage when it would have to be wound up. The movement
+of prohibition would necessitate, said Mr. Sims, the
+closing of the plant. The prospect, in the financial
+sense, occasioned my friend but little excitement. I was
+given to understand that prohibition, in the case of Mr.
+Sims's brewery, had long since been "written off" or
+"written up" or at least written somewhere where it didn't
+matter. And the movement itself Mr. Sims does not regard
+as permanent. Prohibition, he says, is bound to be washed
+out by a "turn of the tide"; in fact, he speaks of this
+returning wave of moral regeneration much as Martin Luther
+might have spoken of the Protestant Reformation. But for
+the time being the brewery will close. Mr. Sims had
+thought deeply, it seemed, about putting his surplus
+funds into the manufacture of commercial alcohol, itself
+a noble profession. For some time his mind has wavered
+between that and endowing a chair of philosophy. There
+is, and always has been, a sort of natural connection
+between the drinking of beer and deep quiet thought. Mr.
+Sims, as a brewer, felt that philosophy was the proper
+thing.
+
+We left the train, walked through the little town and
+entered the university gates.
+
+"Gee!" said Mr. Sims, pausing a moment and leaning on
+his stick, "were the gates only as big as that?"
+
+We began to walk up the avenue.
+
+"I thought there were more trees to it than these," said
+Mr. Sims.
+
+"Yes," I answered. "You often said that the avenue was
+a quarter of a mile long."
+
+"So the thing used to be," he murmured.
+
+Then Mr. Sims looked at the campus. "A dinky looking
+little spot," he said.
+
+"Didn't you say," I asked, "that the Arts Building was
+built of white marble?"
+
+"Always thought it was," he answered. "Looks like rough
+cast from here, doesn't it."
+
+"We'll have to go in and see the President, I suppose,"
+continued Mr. Sims. He said it with regret. Something of
+his undergraduate soul had returned to his body. Although
+he had never seen the President (this one) in his life,
+and had only read of his appointment some five years
+before in the newspapers, Mr. Sims was afraid of him.
+
+"Now, I tell you," he went on. "We'll just make a break
+in and then a quick get-away. Don't let's get anchored
+in there, see? If the old fellow gets talking, he'll go
+on for ever. I remember the way it used to be when a
+fellow had to go in to see Prexy in my time. The old guy
+would start mooning away and quoting Latin and keep us
+there half the morning."
+
+At this moment two shabby-looking, insignificant men who
+had evidently come out from one of the buildings, passed
+us on the sidewalk.
+
+"I wonder who those guys are," said Mr. Sims. "Look like
+bums, don't they?"
+
+I shook my head. Some instinct told me that they were
+professors. But I didn't say so.
+
+My friend continued his instructions.
+
+"When the President asks us to lunch," he said, "I'll
+say that we're lunching with a friend down town, see?
+Then we'll make a break and get out. If he says he wants
+to introduce us to the Faculty or anything like that,
+then you say that we have to get the twelve-thirty to
+New York, see? I'm not going to say anything about a
+chair in philosophy to-day. I want to read it up first
+some night so as to be able to talk about it."
+
+To all of this I agreed.
+
+From a janitor we inquired where to find the President.
+
+"In the Administration Building, eh?" said Mr. Sims.
+"That's a new one on me. The building on the right, eh?
+Thank you."
+
+"See the President?" said a young lady in an ante-office.
+"I'm not sure whether you can see him just now. Have you
+an appointment?"
+
+Mr. Sims drew out a card. "Give him that" he said. On
+the card he had scribbled "Graduate of 1887."
+
+In a few minutes we were shown into another room where
+there was a young man, evidently the President's secretary,
+and a number of people waiting.
+
+"Will you kindly sit down," murmured the young man, in
+a consulting-room voice, "and wait? The President is
+engaged just now."
+
+We waited. Through the inner door leading to the President
+people went and came. Mr. Sims, speaking in whispers,
+continued to caution me on the quickness of our get-away.
+
+Presently the young man touched him on the shoulder.
+
+"The President will see you now," he whispered.
+
+We entered the room. The "old guy" rose to meet us, Mr.
+Sims's card in his hand. But he was not old. He was at
+least ten years younger than either of us. He was, in
+fact, what Mr. Sims and I would almost have called a boy.
+In dress and manner he looked as spruce and busy as the
+sales manager of a shoe factory.
+
+"Delighted to see you, gentlemen," he said, shaking hands
+effusively. "We are always pleased to see our old graduates,
+Mr. Samson--No, I beg pardon, Mr. Sims--class of '97, I
+see--No, I beg your pardon, Class of '67, I read it
+wrongly--"
+
+I heard Mr. Sims murmuring something that seemed to
+contain the words "a look around."
+
+"Yes, yes, exactly," said the President. "A look round,
+you'll find a great deal to interest you in looking about
+the place, I'm sure, Mr. Samson, great changes. I'm
+extremely sorry I can't offer to take you round myself,"
+here he snapped a gold watch open and shut, "the truth
+is I have to catch the twelve-thirty to New York--so
+sorry."
+
+Then he shook our hands again, very warmly.
+
+In another moment we were outside the door. The get-away
+was accomplished.
+
+We walked out of the building and towards the avenue.
+
+As we passed the portals of the Arts Building, a noisy,
+rackety crowd of boys--evidently, to our eyes, schoolboys
+--came out, jostling and shouting. They swarmed past us,
+accidentally, no doubt, body-checking Mr. Sims, whose
+straw hat was knocked off and rolled on the sidewalk.
+A janitor picked it up for him as the crowd of boys
+passed.
+
+"What pack of young bums are those?" asked Mr. Sims.
+"You oughtn't to let young roughs like that come into
+the buildings. Are they here from some school or something?"
+
+"No sir," said the janitor. "They're students."
+
+"Students?" repeated Mr. Sims. "And what are they shouting
+like that for?"
+
+"There's a notice up that their professor is ill, and so
+the class is cancelled, sir."
+
+"Class!" said Mr. Sims. "Are those a class?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said the janitor. "That's the Senior Class
+in Philosophy."
+
+Mr. Sims said nothing. He seemed to limp more than his
+custom as we passed down the avenue.
+
+On the way home on the train he talked much of crude
+alcohol and the possibilities of its commercial manufacture.
+
+So far as I know, his only benefaction up to date has
+been the two dollars that he gave to a hackman to drive
+us away from the college.
+
+
+
+
+6.--Fetching the Doctor: From Recollections of
+ Childhood in the Canadian Countryside
+
+We lived far back in the country, such as it used to be
+in Canada, before the days of telephones and motor cars,
+with long lonely roads and snake fences buried in deep
+snow, and with cedar swamps where the sleighs could hardly
+pass two abreast. Here and there, on a winter night, one
+saw the light in a farm house, distant and dim.
+
+Over it all was a great silence such as people who live
+in the cities can never know.
+
+And on us, as on the other families of that lonely
+countryside, there sometimes fell the sudden alarm of
+illness, and the hurrying drive through the snow at night
+to fetch the doctor from the village, seven miles away.
+
+My elder brother and I--there was a long tribe of us, as
+with all country families--would hitch up the horse by
+the light of the stable lantern, eager with haste and
+sick with fear, counting the time till the doctor could
+be there.
+
+Then out into the driving snow, urging the horse that
+knew by instinct that something was amiss, and so mile
+after mile, till we rounded the corner into the single
+street of the silent village.
+
+Late, late at night it was--eleven o'clock, perhaps--and
+the village dark and deep in sleep, except where the
+light showed red against the blinds of the "Surgery" of
+the doctor's rough-cast house behind the spruce trees.
+
+"Doctor," we cried, as we burst in, "hurry and come.
+Jim's ill--"
+
+I can see him still as he sat there in his surgery, the
+burly doctor, rugged and strong for all the sixty winters
+that he carried. There he sat playing chess--always he
+seemed to be playing chess--with his son, a medical
+student, burly and rugged already as himself.
+
+"Shut the door, shut the door!" he called. "Come in,
+boys; here, let me brush that snow off you--it's my move
+Charlie, remember--now, what the devil's the matter?"
+
+Then we would pant out our hurried exclamations, both
+together.
+
+"Bah!" he growled, "ill nothing! Mere belly ache, I
+guess."
+
+That was his term, his favorite word, for an undiagnosed
+disease--"belly ache." They call it supergastral aesthesia
+now. In a city house, it sounds better. Yet how we hung
+upon the doctor's good old Saxon term, yearning and hoping
+that it might be that.
+
+But even as he growled the doctor had taken down a lantern
+from a hook, thrown on a huge, battered fur coat that
+doubled his size, and was putting medicines--a very
+shopful it seemed--into a leather case.
+
+"Your horse is done up," he said. "We'll put my mare in.
+Come and give me a hand, Charlie."
+
+He was his own hostler and stable-man, he and his burly
+son. Yet how quickly and quietly he moved, the lantern
+swinging on his arm, as he buckled the straps. "What kind
+of a damn fool tug is this you've got?" he would say.
+
+Then, in a moment, as it seemed, out into the wind and
+snow again, the great figure of the doctor almost filling
+the seat of the cutter, the two of us crushed in beside
+him, with responsibility, the unbearable burden, gone
+from us, and renewed comfort in our hearts.
+
+Little is said on the way: our heads are bent against
+the storm: the long stride of the doctor's mare eats up
+the flying road.
+
+Then as we near the farm house and see the light in the
+sick-room window, fear clutches our hearts again.
+
+"You boys unhitch," says the doctor. "I'll go right in."
+
+Presently, when we enter the house, we find that he is
+in the sick-room--the door closed. No word of comfort
+has come forth. He has sent out for hot blankets. The
+stoves are to be kept burning. We must sit up. We may be
+needed. That is all.
+
+And there in that still room through the long night, he
+fights single-handed against Death. Behind him is no
+human help, no consultation, no wisdom of the colleges
+to call in; only his own unaided strength, and his own
+firm purpose and that strange instinct in the fight for
+a flickering life, that some higher power than that of
+colleges has planted deep within his soul.
+
+So we watch through the night hours, in dull misery and
+fear, a phantom at the window pane: so must we wait till
+the slow morning shows dim and pale at the windows.
+
+Then he comes out from the room. His face is furrowed
+with the fatigue of his long vigil. But as he speaks the
+tone of his voice is as that of one who has fought and
+conquered.
+
+"There--he'll do now. Give him this when he wakes."
+
+Then a great joy sweeps over us as the phantom flees
+away, and we shudder back into the warm sunshine of life,
+while the sound of the doctor's retreating sleighbells
+makes music to our ears.
+
+And once it was not so. The morning dawned and he did
+not come from the darkened room: only there came to our
+listening ears at times the sound of a sob or moan, and
+the doctor's voice, firm and low, but with all hope gone
+from it.
+
+And when at last he came, his face seemed old and sad as
+we had never seen it. He paused a moment on the threshold
+and we heard him say, "I have done all that I can." Then
+he beckoned us into the darkened room, and, for the first
+time, we knew Death.
+
+All that is forty years ago.
+
+They tell me that, since then, the practice of medicine
+has been vastly improved. There are specialists now, I
+understand, for every conceivable illness and for every
+subdivision of it. If I fall ill, there is a whole battery
+of modern science to be turned upon me in a moment. There
+are X-rays ready to penetrate me in all directions. I
+may have any and every treatment--hypnotic, therapeutic
+or thaumaturgic--for which I am able to pay.
+
+But, oh, my friends, when it shall come to be my lot to
+be ill and stricken--in the last and real sense, with
+the Great Fear upon me, and the Dark Phantom at the
+pane--then let some one go, fast and eager--though it be
+only in the paths of an expiring memory--fast and eager,
+through the driving snow to bring him to my bedside. Let
+me hear the sound of his hurrying sleighbells as he comes,
+and his strong voice without the door--and, if that may
+not be, then let me seem at least to feel the clasp of
+his firm hand to guide me without fear to the Land of
+Shadows, where he has gone before.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Hohenzollerns in America, by Stephen Leacock
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXT THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA ***
+
+This file should be named 4781.txt or 4781.zip
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