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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52875 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52875)
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-Project Gutenberg's Red Paint at Oxford, by Anonymous (AKA Pish and Tush)
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Red Paint at Oxford
- Sketches
-
-Author: Anonymous (AKA Pish and Tush)
-
-Release Date: August 22, 2016 [EBook #52875]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RED PAINT AT OXFORD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- RED PAINT AT
- OXFORD
-
- Sketches
- BY
- “PISH” AND “TUSH”
-
- London
-
- GREENING & CO., LTD.
- 20 CECIL COURT, CHARING CROSS ROAD
- 1904
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-These little sketches must not be taken too seriously, and it must not
-be imagined that they describe the most prominent characteristics of
-the good sportsmen portrayed in them. We have only turned our attention
-to the lightest side of their ’Varsity careers because we think that
-the most amusing; but nearly every one of the Undergrads referred to
-has distinguished himself in some less lurid but more useful way. Five
-‘Blues’ altogether have been amassed among the gentlemen who move about
-and have their being herein; while the Pilot upset the odds of 33 to 1
-freely laid against him, scraped through on the rails with a rush at
-the finish, and secured a creditable ‘First.’ When he is Archbishop of
-Canterbury, Freddy hopes to be in the Cabinet, and, it appears already
-during the short year that has elapsed since we all ‘went down,’ that
-Squiff is well on his way to ruling a Province in India. Who knows
-whether he and the Pilot, in alliance, may not yet be the means of
-converting that most hearty blot of Ink the Rajah of Jellipore!
-
- ONE AUTHOR.
-
- THE OTHER.
-
-LONDON, _May, 1904_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE.
-
- I. ON MOTORING TO TOWN 1
-
- II. A QUIET EVENING 15
-
- III. CONCERNING THE THEATRE 27
-
- IV. THE MUTUAL HELP SOCIETY 53
-
- V. ON THE STRENUOUSNESS OF LIFE 67
-
- VI. RUGGER NIGHT 87
-
- VII. HOW WE RAGGED “THE SUBURBAN” 105
-
- VIII. AN “EIGHTS’ WEEK” 119
-
-
-
-
-RED PAINT AT OXFORD.
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
-ON MOTORING TO TOWN.
-
-
-Freddy said it was very cheap, and so I went, having only seven and
-sixpence, which I had borrowed from our landlady.
-
-Freddy had less.
-
-Soon after eight I was aroused by Freddy’s acrobatic treble and the
-shrieks of an impossible check suit.
-
-He mentioned that he was coming to breakfast with me as the men in his
-digs never came down till ten.
-
-Just then the Pilot announced in a loud and penetrating voice that
-‘a perspiring stinkocar had arrived outside’ and so I hastened on my
-dressing to the accompaniment of ‘The Miller’s Daughter,’ played by
-Freddy with one finger and the loud pedal down.
-
-In the middle of the second kidney there was a loud report from the
-street, and Mrs. MacNab, whose cat consumes an abnormal quantity of our
-whisky, rushed into the room exclaiming that ‘the Chuffer had brought
-round the hengine.’
-
-Hastily rising I ran down into the street and found a pair of legs
-performing strange antics on the kerbstone, while their owner’s head
-appeared to be in the petrol tank, at least a voice from that direction
-declared ‘the whole of the ---- ---- petrol has gone and (adjectived)
-itself away.’
-
-This edifying remark was accompanied by a series of alarming though
-apparently harmless reports which did not in the least affect the
-equanimity of the person under the car.
-
-By this time Freddy, having consumed ‘kidneys and bacon for three,’
-appeared in the doorway, disguised in a mangy fur coat and a pair of
-hideous black goggles.
-
-He straightway proceeded to haul the unknown out of the petrol tank by
-his legs, at the same time enquiring with unnecessary heat ‘Why they
-had not pumped that mess in at the shop?’
-
-To which query the Chauffeur replied that ‘They never did nothink at
-the shop.’
-
-This answer appeared to satisfy Frederick, who boarded the smell-cart
-without further parley, and, having seated the Chauffeur behind,
-pounced upon a sort of lever arrangement, whereupon the car gave two
-awesome leaps, I jumped aboard, and we found ourselves at some distance
-from the house.
-
-The Pilot, who appeared in a dressing-gown at the top window, bestowed
-a pantomimic blessing on us as we shot away, followed by the ironical
-cheers of two small boys and the Swithin’s Hall man from next door,
-who had kept an early chapel and was accordingly most obnoxious.
-
-We had scarcely passed Magdalen when Freddy informed me in a hurried
-gasp that we were bound for London, which communication constrained me
-to remind him that our joint capital only amounted to thirteen and six,
-but he merely muttered something unprintable and put on full speed.
-
-We narrowly missed a milkman in Iffley Road and an early bicyclist only
-just escaped an equally early death.
-
-It was at this point that P.C. Robert Swiller hove in sight; we only
-noticed a red and angry face but failed to catch his remarks, which,
-to judge from the way he stamped on the pavement, must have been of a
-forcible nature.
-
-I think that after this I must have dozed--the Swithin’s Hall man plays
-till 1.30 a.m.--for the next thing I remember was a violent concussion
-which threw a heavy oil-can on to my foot and the Chauffeur into the
-ditch.
-
-Freddy, whose ordinary conversation is sprinkled with epithets that do
-not bear repetition, referred to the ancient rustic whose hay-cart we
-had shattered, as ‘a d--d old crawler,’ and added insult to injury by
-enquiring why his rotten hearse was in the middle of the road.
-
-On the yokel pointing out that our car was in fact in that position,
-and that his cart was almost in the ditch, Freddy repeated his former
-statement and seemed to think that that closed the discussion. Not so
-the rustic, who showed an aggressive desire for compensation, which
-was only appeased by Freddy generously presenting him with my card and
-remarking that I would see he was paid.
-
-After a short inspection of the ruins we proceeded, and no further
-incident occurred until we reached Maidenhead, where we bagged a
-chicken and a small spaniel. Freddy declared that their loss would not
-be felt and we went straight ahead.
-
-In the next village, Freddy, who resembles a blotting-pad in his
-capacity for absorbing liquid, stopped abruptly before the ‘Sow and
-Scissors’ for a reviver.
-
-After this operation, I, mindful of our victims at Maidenhead, firmly
-declined to mount the car again unless Freddy gave up the steering
-wheel to the Chauffeur; this he did, and we soon reached Slough.
-
-Shortly afterwards we entered the village of Little Pudley at thirty
-miles an hour, marking our passage by a slight entanglement with the
-village pump; however Freddy succeeded in jerking off the handle before
-it caught him in the wind, and so no harm was done beyond leaving a
-portion of our splash-board in the well. The calm of our progress
-through Hounslow and Chiswick was unbroken, and I was wiping the dust
-from my eyes preparatory to a gentle snooze, when without any warning
-except a violent shock, which threw my hat into the neighbouring
-gutter, the car stopped abruptly; and although we tried each of the
-handles in turn and subsequently all together, the sparrow-starver
-remained motionless.
-
-Frederick then spoke.
-
-When the air had cleared we discovered that the Chauffeur was again
-seeking the seclusion of his beloved petrol tank, but reappeared with
-astonishing rapidity just in time to avoid a shower of greasy black
-liquid which spread itself about the pavement.
-
-Freddy shrieked ‘jump,’ and we jumped.
-
-Immediately afterwards the car, groaning hideously, made with fearful
-speed for a saddler’s shop, and was only prevented from entering by
-an opportune collision with a lamp-post. This appeared to annoy the
-death-trap, for it blew out its bonnet and then reclined peacefully
-against a metropolitan water-trough, from which all efforts to move it
-were unavailing.
-
-After a hasty palaver we consigned the dam-thing to the Chauffeur and
-made for the Shepherd’s Bush Tube. We journeyed as far as Notting Hill
-Gate, and there Freddy, having borrowed my few remaining shillings,
-left me and went in search of his female cousin. This compelled me
-to lunch with one Timmins, a man of the Inner Temple, honoured by
-my acquaintance, but as he had had no warning of my arrival I was
-obliged to make the best of two old chicken legs and some rather
-older Gorgonzola, and after borrowing a couple of sovereigns from
-him, I treated him to a theatre. On crossing Piccadilly, after the
-performance, we were surprised to see Freddy engaged in altercation
-with a cabman in front of the Criterion. We crossed over to speak to
-him and the guileless one seized the opportunity to borrow half a
-sovereign from Timmins, whose purse and patience are inexhaustible.
-Then having disposed of the quarrelsome Jehu we decided to take
-the Templar to dinner at the Cabanero, which invitation he readily
-accepted, possibly with the idea of getting some return for his money.
-
-To fill up the time Timmins suggested the Aquarium, a place that both
-Freddy and I detest, but as we had borrowed about fifty shillings from
-the unfortunate man, we felt that this was the moment for a graceful
-concession.
-
-On our arrival we let Timmins out of the hansom first, but in spite
-of this subtle move I was compelled to pay the cabby, and then firmly
-resisting an impassioned appeal from a golden-haired lady in the
-entrance to give her a bracelet or something else, we passed the
-turnstiles and made with one accord for the nearest bar.
-
-I am unable to state the precise number of cherry brandies that
-Freddy had consumed during his absence from my care, but his lady
-cousin appeared to have had a distinctly exhilarating effect
-upon him. At any rate after two lagers had been followed by a
-sherry and bitters, he manifested a desire to dance, which was
-only suppressed by the advent of a uniformed attendant with a
-Bow-Street-and-seven-shillings-or-three-days glitter in his eye. The
-small sum of half-a-crown mollified this dignitary, a view of whose
-face was--as Freddy remarked--cheap at the price.
-
-Then, while Freddy and I were watching a lady in scanty costume who
-was advertised to dive from the roof into a six-foot tank, Timmins
-disappeared. After forty minutes’ diligent searching, which involved
-on Freddy’s part a frivolous conversation with the young lady at the
-assorted jewellery stall, we came upon the wanderer.
-
-He was seated in the centre of the crystal maze and a strong odour
-of patchouli, exchanging vows of undying affection with a lady of a
-certain age and uncertain character.
-
-The cab, in which we then set out for the Cabanero, cost me another
-half-crown, and the dinner which followed took nearly all our remaining
-bullion.
-
-However it was a great success.
-
-Towards the end Freddy expressed a violent antipathy to the colour of
-the Turkish gentleman who served us with coffee, and was only quieted
-by the strains of the ‘Girl from Kays’ from the orchestra.
-
-Dinner over, we were going downstairs, when Freddy, who appeared unable
-to find the bannisters, grasped the hand of an ancient and enamelled
-dowager who was laboriously ascending, and, greeting her effusively,
-enquired ‘if her mother knew she was out.’ Leaving the venerable relic
-speechless and perspiring, we saved ourselves from rough treatment at
-the hands of the attendants by bolting hatless into Piccadilly Circus,
-and here we saw the last of Timmins.
-
-He leant into our cab, and after explaining pathetically that he had
-no money to pay his washing bill and that he had pawned his mother’s
-photograph, propped himself wearily against the railings and took no
-further interest in the proceedings.
-
-Our arrival at Paddington a few minutes after nine was marked by wild
-cheers on Freddy’s part and the disbursement of my last eighteenpence.
-A short interview with the station-master resulted in the exchange of
-my card for two third singles to Oxford, and a final shilling’s worth
-at the expense of Blandford, who was returning from the funeral of an
-imaginary aunt, filled up the time till the train left.
-
-After a few minutes’ travelling Freddy remarked that he would feel more
-comfortable in the rack, and proceeded to climb up there. A little
-later we covered him with a seat cushion as he felt cold, and all slept
-peacefully till Didcot.
-
-When we reached the draughty junction Blandford and I left Freddy,
-who appeared to be asleep, in search of lip-salve; but we had barely
-reached the refreshment room when loud crashes, followed by curious
-oaths and several heavy bumps, brought us back to find Freddy
-struggling with an inspector and two porters, while a lamp and the
-window of the third class waiting-room were much the worse for wear.
-
-We conveyed him to our carriage--N.B. I gave the inspector my card--and
-except for throwing out a seat cushion at Culham, he relapsed into
-comparative inaction.
-
-The cab in which we reached 129 St. Aldate’s was paid for by Mrs.
-Corker, and Blandford stayed to see Freddy to bed.
-
-When I arrived at our digs the door was opened by Mrs. MacNab, whose
-cat seemed to have been imbibing with unusual freedom; and I found the
-Pilot, who had just returned from a bridge party, anxiously measuring
-the decanter with a pipe-cleaner.
-
-It just occurred to me, as I was going up to bed, that I had given my
-card to the hay-cart proprietor, to the station-master at Paddington,
-and the inspector at Didcot, all of whom would have to be satisfied in
-the morning, while I had to repay Timmins two pounds odd, and liberally
-fee the Oxford porter whom Freddy had struck somewhere amidships.
-
-Freddy said it would be very cheap; well, perhaps it was.
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-A QUIET EVENING.
-
-
-Accrington called it coffee, but Reggie stipulated for a bottle
-of brandy to be kept in the cupboard. As Freddy and I climbed the
-staircase in the corner of the Quad we heard the strident tones of our
-host proclaiming that he was ‘looking for a needle in a haystack.’
-This, however, did not in any way justify Freddy’s throwing an empty
-tobacco tin at him immediately on entering the room, and it seemed only
-just that the others should show their disapproval of this action by
-throwing their cushions at Freddy. I alone missed him, but the Pilot
-was rude enough to say that I must have aimed at Freddy, because I got
-in a bull’s-eye on a tray containing glasses and syphons which was
-balanced on a Japanese stool in the corner.
-
-When peace had been restored, Reggie, addressing no one in particular,
-remarked, ‘The Pilot was seen at the gathering at Martyrs’ Memorial
-last night.’
-
-‘You’re an artistic liar,’ replied the Pilot, who is not as meek as
-he looks. And the slight struggle that ensued awoke Fatty, who was
-peacefully perusing ‘Pick-me-up’ in the corner.
-
-‘I don’t know whose rooms these are,’ he murmured sleepily, ‘but it
-is customary among gentlemen to offer refreshment to a visitor upon
-arrival;’ and then, after a plaintive pause, ‘I have been here just
-three-quarters of an hour.’ After his thirst had been satisfied he was
-led to the piano, and proceeded to play ‘Hiawatha,’ ‘in order,’ as
-Reggie explained, ‘to get it over.’
-
-‘Henry Dalston,’ said Freddy, addressing the pianist, ‘as a balloon you
-are incomparable, but as an ivory-thumper you only take a gulf, and if
-the same would swallow you up it would be better still.’
-
-‘He takes,’ said Accrington wearily, ‘he takes at least five pounds’
-worth of use out of my piano every term; “Hiawatha” about plays itself
-now.’
-
-‘Then why don’t you make him hire a piano?’ said Reggie.
-
-‘He used to,’ put in Freddy with a gurgling laugh, ‘until we played it
-the night he was in London, and the Dean had it sent out of College
-before he came back.’
-
-These revelations were interrupted by Reggie suggesting bridge.
-
-He once taught a Colonial Governor the game at a Swiss mountain hotel,
-and the Pilot, who was with him, said he made enough to keep them in
-smokes for a week.
-
-‘Reggie’s getting too uppish about bridge,’ I remarked, as Accrington
-produced the cards, ‘he thinks he’s rather an authority.’
-
-‘Nobody,’ replied Reggie, severely, ‘nobody is an authority on any
-game till he can be sure of winning money off his opponents.’
-
-‘How many does it take to play bridge?’ asked Fatty, peevishly, from
-the window-seat; ‘I hate these card games, they’re always so dull.’
-
-‘Then you shan’t be dull, Henry dearest,’ said Freddy, landing upon
-Fatty’s lower chest, and then, as he led him by his starboard ear into
-Accrington’s bedder, ‘Come with your Frederick, and let us cuddle
-together.’
-
-As they disappeared, Accrington, moved by reminiscences of former quiet
-evenings, called after them uneasily:
-
-‘Kindly refrain from throwing my pyjamas out of the window, and do not,
-O do not, spread water about the floor.’
-
-‘The only complaint I have to make against the owner of this
-public-house,’ said Reggie, as the Pilot dealt in the slow and solemn
-manner peculiar to him, ‘is that when I came in at the ordinary
-excursion hour of 1.15 this morning, and demanded a “corpse reviver,”
-the licensed victualler, who had retired to bed, refused to provide me
-with anything.’
-
-‘Freddy, who is doing contracts, says that if you don’t get what
-you want, you may take what you can get, so I took three oranges, a
-brandy-bottle, and my leave. It was only after Maberly had borrowed
-the bottle, and served it out to seven men whom he found sleeping in
-his rooms on his return from the theatre, that Accrington arrived
-in a costume that was hardly decent, to remark that I had taken the
-methylated spirits. Of course we went round to see what could be done,
-but, as Maberly said they had got through three-quarters of the bottle,
-we decided to leave them in peace.’
-
-‘Especially as,’ added Accrington, ‘when we shouted at them from the
-Quad, a coal-box, two boot-trees, and an alarm clock suddenly came
-through the window more or less in our direction.’
-
-‘The only sad thing about it,’ said the Pilot, as he quietly trumped
-his opponent’s trick, ‘is that Accrington must have meant to drink
-those spirits himself, which in one so young is positively painful.’
-
-‘Two in diamonds,’ I said, as I put down the score.
-
-‘And one in the footbath,’ yelled Freddy through the open door, as a
-splash was heard, and Fatty appeared, dripping from the effects of an
-immersion in Accrington’s tub.
-
-I rose from the table and wiped Fatty tenderly down with an
-antimacassar; I have noticed that he always repays attentions like
-these by a sumptuous luncheon, or the gift of a choice cigar imported
-from Borneo by Dalston senior.
-
-‘Your deal, Martha,’ said the Pilot, as Fatty collapsed heavily into
-the best chair.
-
-I had just started when a sound of frenzied yells from the Quad caused
-me to pause for a moment; the shrieks grew louder, and a string of
-guttural oaths in very low German floated up the staircase.
-
-‘Sport the oak,’ shrieked Accrington, but as Freddy reached the door
-it flew open, and the portly form of von Graussman, our Rhodes Scholar
-from the Fatherland, burst in and fell flat upon the floor.
-
-‘I did my best, you fellows,’ panted Cobson, who followed with a red
-and perspiring face, ‘but he’s rather fatigued, and he’s been sitting
-on the flower-bed under the Dean’s window for the last half-hour. We’ve
-put him to bed three times, but he only threw his water-jug out of
-window, and then came down and posed as Adam in the Quad.’
-
-Von Graussman suddenly sat up, and remarked in a disconnected and
-peevish way, ‘Hoch der Kaiser,’ after which patriotic effort he
-mechanically reached for the brandy-bottle on the table near at hand.
-
-As he removed the stopper with a shaky hand, his eye suddenly lighted
-on Fatty, who was gazing dreamily at the ceiling. A sudden crack
-followed, as the decanter caught the unfortunate Henry on the lower
-jaw, and spread its contents down his waistcoat. Fatty rose with a yell
-which would have done credit to a wild Indian, and, picking up the
-poker, made for the German who appeared to be quite unconscious of what
-he had done.
-
-As he had propped himself against the fender and was softly crooning
-the ‘Wacht am Rhein,’ even Fatty saw that violent retaliation was out
-of the question, and having emptied a syphon down von Graussman’s back,
-in order, as he said, to wake him up, he retired to change his suit.
-The silence which followed his disappearance was broken by Cobson
-remarking that it was ‘time to get old Grausser to bed.’
-
-‘Right oh!’ said Freddy, who is always ready for an emergency, ‘just
-you keep a watchful eye upon him while I search for his song-book.’ It
-is well known to all members of Cecil’s, that the only way to get von
-Graussman to bed is to let him sing a song. After he has polished off
-a German students’ drinking chorus, a child of three could manage him
-with ease.
-
-Unfortunately, as we raised the fuddled foreigner to his feet,
-Farmborough, who puts the weight for the ’Varsity, and was practising
-in the Quad, put a clod of earth through our window. Any little trifle
-like this is enough to disconcert von Graussman, who immediately made a
-clear sweep of the ornaments on the mantelpiece, and threw them in one
-clattering cloud on to Farmborough’s head. The immaculate de Beresford,
-who was crossing the Quad, received a bowl of chrysanthemums over his
-new winter waistcoat, while the Junior Porter, who had just emerged
-from the Dean’s staircase, was taken somewhere amidships by a carriage
-clock.
-
-At the first signs of this fresh disturbance, Accrington had hastily
-sported his oak, but the hoarse curses of von Graussman soon drew the
-offended parties to the right door, on which they continued to thump
-with ever-increasing vigour.
-
-The application of a syphon to the letter-slit proved unavailing, and
-as Cobson had to be back in his digs at eleven, it was imperative to
-make a sally. The German, who had seated himself in the coal-scuttle,
-was past help, so we tied him to his throne with a towel, and removed
-all possible missiles from within his reach. Having taken these
-precautions, we armed ourselves with our host’s last two syphons and
-some rotten oranges which we found in the coal bunker, and prepared for
-a sortie.
-
-‘They seem to have left off that d----d row,’ said Freddy, ‘but they’re
-probably waiting for us on the landing, so throw back the portal, and
-we’ll rout the foe.’
-
-As the door swung back we saw a dim figure on the landing. Reggie took
-careful aim and caught it in the face with an elderly orange, Freddy
-bowled a chunk of coal at its feet, while Cobson got in a bull’s-eye
-with a syphon. The sallying party then retired in good order.
-
-‘I say, Martha, who was that?’ queried Freddy as we closed the door.
-
-‘It looked to me like Farmborough,’ I replied.
-
-‘But,’ said the Pilot, who always raises objections, ‘this was in
-evening dress, and Farmborough hasn’t been out.’
-
-Just then some person, or persons, unknown, struck a staggering blow
-on the oak outside. This noise aroused von Graussman, who moved
-into a commanding position opposite the door, unavoidably taking
-the coal-scuttle with him. The next thing was the voice of the Dean
-demanding entrance, which caused the warlike spirit of the company
-to evaporate instantaneously. Accrington, with the skill born of
-long practice, concealed himself beneath the sofa, Reggie and I
-shared his bed, the Pilot, who had taken but a small part in the
-proceedings, sought the seclusion of the coal-bunker, while Freddy and
-Cobson stowed themselves behind the piano. Our efforts to induce von
-Graussman to hide were futile; he still retained his position, and his
-loudly-expressed contempt for all in authority was, I am told, audible
-three staircases off.
-
-The jingling of keys outside announced to the expectant but invisible
-audience, that the Junior Porter was opening the oak, and the Dean
-made an imposing entrance to the strains of the ‘Lustige Brüder,’ as
-rendered, somewhat indistinctly, by the Graf von Graussman.
-
-As the Dean entered, von Graussman rose with some difficulty, and after
-making a low obeisance--accompanied by the coal-scuttle--addressed the
-Rev. Fanny in a short but impressive speech which commenced with ‘Mein
-geliebte und hochwohlgeborn Herr Professor Doktor,’ and ended, after
-indistinct rumblings, with the words, ‘damnable inshult,’ ‘Faderland’
-and ‘Timeforbed.’
-
-After this elocutionary effort was finished, he announced in a feeble
-voice, that he ‘wongohometel morring,’ and then fell heavily into
-the fender. The Dean (who has not used the letter R since childhood)
-remarked nervously, ‘This is a howwid spectacle,’ to which the Porter,
-who makes a point of agreeing with everybody, replied, ‘Yes sir,
-certainly sir, of course sir.’
-
-‘I fear the gentleman is partially, or even totally, inebwiated,’
-continued the Dean, more to himself than the Porter, and then ‘we will
-wemove him to his bedwoom,’ which they proceeded to do.
-
-As soon as the melancholy procession had passed down the staircase, a
-black and dispirited face appeared from the coal-bunker, and suggested
-that the party should leave for some other and less stirring part of
-the College.
-
-‘It’ll be allright for Grausser,’ said Freddy, ‘dear old Fanny had a
-sister who died at twenty-nine from drinking eau-de-cologne, and he’s
-had a friendly feeling for the noble army of thirst quenchers ever
-since.’
-
-‘I should suggest that Accrington takes to his virtuous couch,’ said
-Cobson, as we prepared to depart; ‘if you put a night-shirt over your
-clothes, and get into bed, you will naturally be too sleepy to answer
-any questions the Dean may ask. We’ll turn out the electric.’
-
-We descended the stairs without attracting any attention, and just
-reached the shelter of Fatty’s rooms as the Rev. Fanny and the Junior
-Porter returned to Accrington’s staircase.
-
-Unfortunately, though Accrington was too sleepy, as Cobson predicted,
-to answer the Dean’s questions, Fanny spotted a stiff collar protruding
-from under the surplice, and retired saying that he would draw his own
-conclusions, and leaving a distinct chill behind him. Anyhow it was
-a very pleasant evening, and, as Accrington said, it was cheap at the
-price of four days’ gating. The two pounds which von Graussman paid
-the Sub-Treasurer, and the three weeks during which he remained in
-College after hall, presumably for the good of his health, are they not
-duly recorded in the Chronicles of Cecil College, and of Bartholomew
-Wilkinson, its Dean?
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-CONCERNING THE THEATRE.
-
-
-It was quite sudden.
-
-We were walking down the Corn one Monday morning when a poster in
-front of the Hyde, depicting a lady whose skin was black, whose hair
-was red, and whose clothing consisted of a string of beads, attracted
-our attention. The legend above, ‘The Cannibal Girl, Grand Theatre,
-To-night,’ and the words below in large letters, ‘Queenie Hareham,’
-appeared to move Freddy to tender memories. He gazed at the amazing
-specimen of modern art for fully three minutes, sighed heavily, and
-then went straight off to take tickets for Monday and Saturday.
-
-Squiff, who can celebrate any occasion, even that of his aunt’s death,
-with a light heart and much whisky, happily suggested a large lunch to
-some of the girls.
-
-We decided to give it in Freddy’s digs, for as Squiff, whose real
-name is the O’Rossa and who is descended from Michael, second King of
-Ulster, naïvely said, ‘They’re accustomed to that sort of thing at our
-place.’
-
-Before the curtain fell on Monday evening fifty young gentlemen had
-sent fifty notes inviting one or more of the ladies of the company
-to any or every meal for the coming week. It is not remarkable in
-the light of subsequent events that Miss Kiddy Childe returned an
-unqualified refusal to all invitations and that the guardian of the
-stage-door paid off the back instalments of his rent on the following
-day.
-
-Freddy returned from the performance in a state of ecstatic delight,
-and repeatedly alluded to the good times that were coming.
-
-‘What’s it like?’ I asked.
-
-‘Glorious,’ replied Freddy, ‘and where Eileen takes Venus in the
-private theatricals scene its simply colossal. Here’s the programme.’
-
-And this is what I read:--
-
- THE CANNIBAL GIRL.
-
- _Book by Tottenham Kort. Lyrics by Frederick Freshleigh.
- Music by Peter Pedyll._
-
- JACK WARMLEIGH Mr. Reginald Craven.
- ANGUS MACPHEE, M.D. Mr. Hardoph Erin.
- MAJOR PHILIP FITZGIGGIN, D.S.O. Mr. Fairlie Dunn.
- CAPTAIN TITUS GINSLING (S.S. ‘Oboko’) Mr. Pensell Ingpen.
- THE O’HOOLIGAN (Purser) Mr. Sidney Cruikshank.
- SOTITE (The King’s Executioner) Mr. Freke.
- NOKOP (The Medicine Man) Mr. John Philips.
- HON. ALLAN CHARTERIS, R.N. Mr. P. Gardner.
- JETHRO P. HEEPZOTIN (The minced-meat magnate) Mr. Lyon Fybbe.
- KING CASKOWISKI Mr. Stainer Black.
- DOWAGER COUNTESS BEREHAMPTON Miss Ethel Gay.
- EILEEN MAXWELL Miss Ina Carlton.
- MRS. JACK WARMLEIGH Miss Kiddy Childe.
- LILO } { Miss Tiny Trimmer.
- NOCLO } The King’s favourite wives { Miss Tweenie Tarn.
- TOOTOO } { Miss Ruby Ramsden.
- MRS. MOPPER (Stewardess) Miss Lucinda Tubb.
- LADY BETTY BACKSTAYS Miss Delia Kaardt.
-
- AND
-
- HON. MRS. CHARTERIS (late Pussie Pynkley
- of the Jollity Theatre) Miss Queenie Hareham.
-
- Islanders, Guests, etc.:--Misses Lily Lingery, Legge, Hawke,
- Sharpe, Ferrars, Dacent, Milsom, Hamilton, Bond, Jones; Messrs.
- Davidson, Moss, Lowe, Hart, Isaacs, Disraeli, Braun, Joseffi,
- Sydenham, Hill.
-
- ACT I. The beach at Dufrutus Island.
-
- ACT II, SCENE 1. The fète of the Nogogos at Caskowiski’s Palace.
-
- SCENE 2. Berehampton House, Park Lane.
-
- _Wigs by Sharxon._
-
- _Ladies’ dresses by Maison de Stunim._ _Hats by Madame Misfitte._
-
- _Miss Hareham’s costumes by Idem._
-
-‘Kiddy Childe,’ I said, as I put it down, ‘surely that’s Squiff’s girl?’
-
-‘Right O, right O,’ said Freddy, ‘he’s booked her for the whole week,
-and even now they’re cuddling in a private room at the Hyde.’
-
-‘But,’ burst out the Pilot who was bubbling with suppressed excitement,
-‘I wrote to her and she answered that, owing to a sad bereavement, she
-is not accepting any invitations. Now you say Squiff’s going to have
-her all the week; I believe the only thing she’s been bereft of--’ but
-here a burst of laughter prevented any further explanation; for the
-Pilot, as Freddy coarsely puts it, is going to be a devil-dodger; and
-even his explanation that a clergyman must see all sides of life would
-hardly cover an occasion like this.
-
-‘I’ve invited Ina and the “Three Little Wives” to tea to-morrow,’
-Freddy continued when the laughter had subsided, ‘you see that makes a
-girl for each of us.’
-
-Here Reggie expressed his approval by a loud tattoo on a tobacco tin,
-but broke off very suddenly on Freddy declaring:
-
-‘It must be in your digs, because Squiff’s got lunch for sixteen and
-our landlady says she can’t undertake tea after it.’
-
-‘That’s very good of you,’ said the Pilot solemnly.
-
-‘O don’t mention it,’ said Freddy, ‘we shan’t want your rooms again
-till Saturday, lunch is in Accrington’s on Wednesday and at ours on
-Friday.’
-
-‘By-the-bye Freddy,’ I remarked, ‘tell your girl to bring her
-complexion with her.’
-
-I stooped behind the arm-chair knowing what was coming, and so
-the bacca tin which followed this remark fell harmlessly upon the
-tram-lines outside.
-
-‘It seems to me that this week is likely to be faintly tinged with
-purple,’ observed the Pilot meditatively, ‘and if the rain keeps clear
-of us and we keep clear of the Proctors I prophesy a good time for the
-elect.’
-
-At this point Freddy left hurriedly as the clocks were striking twelve,
-while the rest of us, after a short but pithy conversation through the
-window with O.P. 281, retired to bed.
-
-The Pilot and I spent the morning in the arduous duty of cutting
-lectures, while Reggie went round borrowing money to pay for a theatre
-ticket for the following Saturday.
-
-At lunch in Fatty’s rooms, de Beresford regaled me with a harrowing
-description of Squiff’s misfortunes on the preceding evening.
-
-‘You see,’ he said, ‘poor old Squiff got no answer to the note he sent
-Kiddy Childe in the interval, so after the show he crawled round to the
-stage door and waited for her. I suppose a bull-dog must have spotted
-him, for when they were half-way to her lodgings the Progpiece was seen
-in full chase behind. Squiff clutched her hand and yelled, “Faster,
-faster,” like the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland, and they did the
-record down St. Ebbe’s into Paradise Square, where they got into her
-house unseen. Unfortunately it never struck them that their light was
-the only one in the Square, and this drew the Proctor like a moth.
-Squiff had barely time to get behind Kiddy’s dress-basket and pull a
-cabin trunk in front of him, when the obtrusive official entered the
-house and insisted on looking round the rooms. The dear girl shrieked
-through the door that she was going to bed, and when the Proctor had
-convinced himself of this, he departed, leaving two men to watch the
-house. At least this is how Squiff explained the fact that he didn’t
-reach his digs till 12.19.’
-
-‘And,’ added Fatty, ‘the estimable Corker, who has not yet joined the
-Temperance League, had gone to bed with the door-key in her pocket
-entirely oblivious of the fact that Squiff had not returned, so Freddy
-had to haul him up by a sheet.’
-
-‘If they do these things on the Monday, I shudder to think of
-Saturday,’ I remarked as I left to play against Barabbas’, while the
-others made for the river. I did rather well over the match, for after
-amassing 48 I persuaded Accrington to field for me, and returned for
-our tea-party.
-
-I thought I was fairly punctual, but when I burst into the sitting-room
-I found the ‘Three Little Wives’ in one arm-chair gloating over ‘Gals’
-Gossip.’
-
-‘I must apologize for Lord Gilderdale not being here to receive you,’
-I began, when a lady whom I subsequently discovered to be Miss Tiny
-Trimmer clustered round me and murmured sweetly ‘Oh! don’t let that
-worry you! I suppose you’re Martha?’ From which I gathered that Squiff
-had not spent all his time behind the basket on the preceding evening.
-After the sweet thing had introduced me to Ruby and Tweenie as Mr.
-Martha Cochrane, ‘the friend of Kiddy’s boy,’ we proceeded to make
-ourselves comfortable on the sofa but were immediately disturbed by
-Freddy who burst in like a whirlwind, exclaiming,
-
-‘I’m awfully sorry I’m late, girls, but I see the lady of the house
-has received you,’ and then, ‘where’s Ina?’
-
-‘Oh I expect she’s still on the river with the Rajah,’ said Ruby.
-
-‘What, old Jellipore?’ cried the Pilot, as he came into the room;
-‘curse those Basutos.’
-
-Further introductions were followed by the arrival of Reggie and the
-tea-tray, which was presided over by the Pilot, who seemed rather in
-the cold pending the arrival of Miss Carlton.
-
-During the meal the conversation ranged from Oxford to St. John’s Wood
-via Rhodes’ Will and Protection, and on its conclusion Freddy took Tiny
-into our other sitting-room to inspect my curious collection of birds’
-eggs.
-
-Miss Ina Carlton not yet having arrived, the Pilot improvised on the
-piano while I gave Tweenie Tarn my views on marriage, and Reggie in a
-distant corner discussed the relative merits of Oxford and Cambridge
-with the delicious Ruby Ramsden.
-
-After a bit we discovered that the Pilot had silently departed, and
-then Reggie considerately offered to take the fair Ruby on the river
-for an hour, and they left accordingly.
-
-At half-past six we smoothed out the dents in the sofa, and Tweenie
-said she ‘really must go.’
-
-We thought it kinder not to go into the other sitting-room, but Tweenie
-enquired from the passage if Tiny meant to go home before the show or
-not.
-
-As no answer was forthcoming, after a somewhat protracted farewell in
-the hall, I put Tweenie into a hansom and went up to dress for dinner.
-
-I did not hear Miss Trimmer depart, and when I left the house at seven
-the dining-room door was still closed.
-
-All through the evening the Pilot was in a state of suppressed rage,
-inspired by the unfortunate Rajah of Jellipore, who had, probably quite
-unconsciously, kept Miss Carlton out on the river about three hours too
-long.
-
-The Rajah, whose father’s harem was the finest in the East, early
-acquired a nice taste in chiffon, and is apparently endeavouring to
-form a large acquaintance among the ladies of the stage, obviously, as
-the Pilot bitterly remarked, for recruiting purposes. However, Peter
-had his innings on the following day at Accrington’s lunch, after which
-he carried off Ina for a quiet hour on the Cher, much to his host’s
-disgust. The remainder of the day passed off very quietly.
-
-Thursday was only remarkable for a spirited lecture by the Provost on
-the evils of the stage, delivered to Accrington at the leprous hour of
-9.30 a.m.
-
-Our venerable Head had met the lunch party leaving College on the
-preceding day, and although we all saluted him with the utmost
-politeness, he did not return our greeting, but passed on his way
-combing his beard with his fingers, which is always a sign of impending
-evil.
-
-‘The old bird turned very stuffy,’ said Accrington, relating the
-occurrence afterwards, ‘and said he seriously thought of informing my
-parents that I was wasting my time and money, and doing no good to
-myself or anybody else.’
-
-‘The usual formula,’ remarked Freddy, _en parenthèse_; ‘and finished
-up with the parting slap that no more lunch-leave would be given me
-this term. I’m afraid,’ he concluded, ‘that the last fragments of my
-reputation have dissolved.’
-
-‘A reputation,’ remarked the Pilot, solemnly, ‘is an expensive and
-unnecessary luxury in Oxford, and I can only marvel at the fearful
-efforts daily made by many to retain what was originally only a
-shadow.’ After this sweeping statement the unfortunate Peter was
-carried off to lunch at Luther House by a person with a pale face and
-a black cloak. As we strolled back to digs Reggie informed us that
-the Rajah had monopolised the entire company for the day, and there
-was nothing to do but to look forward to to-morrow’s lunch, which was
-going, in Kruger’s famous phrase, to ‘stagger humanity.’
-
-From an early hour on Friday the antique remnant who wheels about
-Woodman’s cart was engaged in carrying delicacies of every kind, from
-champagne cup to salted almonds, towards 129, and Mrs. Corker, whose
-tongue has solved the problem of perpetual motion, spent the morning in
-listening to and immediately forgetting the numerous instructions which
-Squiff issued from his bedroom.
-
-Freddy, being a Roman Catholic, fasts--on lobster mayonnaise--every
-Friday, so he journeyed to the extreme end of the Banbury Road to get a
-dispensation from Father McGinnis, his spiritual adviser. On my arrival
-at 11.15 with Reggie, an agonized voice from Squiff’s room besought me
-to hurry round to the Purewell Press and demand the menus, which were
-Freddy’s choice, and calculated to make any one sit up. When I returned
-from this errand I found Squiff, who had reached the collar and
-braces stage, issuing his fifth batch of instructions to the muddled
-Corker, who had propped herself against the bannisters and was weeping
-copiously.
-
-At this juncture Freddy did a cake-walk into the room waving the
-dispensation, and we toasted the McGinnis in sherry and bitters. Freddy
-says that no one Roman Catholic priest stays in Oxford for long, the
-confessions are too much for them. While we were still honouring
-the Reverend Father a large crowd in the street below attracted our
-attention, and out of it there emerged Accrington, Reggie and the
-Pilot, carrying between them Farmborough’s bull-pup, the infamous
-Totters, who had apparently had a slight difference of opinion with
-a tram-conductor. Having deposited the ferocious animal in Freddy’s
-bedder they joined us in the drawing-room, where the unfortunate Corker
-met us with the announcement that Woodman had sent round no crockery
-but soup-plates. This horrible catastrophe instantly revealed Squiff’s
-marvellous faculty for dealing with an emergency. Before we had
-finished discussing what to do he had returned from next door bringing
-with him an entire dinner service which he had borrowed from the Hon.
-Lionel Strongi’th’arm, of Thomas’, as the said gentleman was going to
-attend the biterminal lunch of the Swillingdon Club. This promptitude
-so surprised Mrs. Corker that she found it necessary to have a cup of
-tea with a slight dash in it, which Squiff readily granted, as he says
-the savoury is always better when the Corker has dipped her beak.
-
-At this moment the Pilot, who was more out of the window than in the
-room, espied our guests coming down St. Aldate’s, whereupon Squiff and
-Freddy ran down to meet them, while Reggie hastily secreted Squiff’s
-seven signed photos of Mabel Amoore, on account, as he explained,
-of professional jealousy. Freddy had only just directed them to his
-bedroom to leave their hats, when several loud shrieks followed by
-heavy thumps heralded the entrance of Miss Tiny Trimmer, with Totters
-firmly attached to her under petticoat. As they got inside the door
-they parted company, and Totters leapt upon the sofa triumphantly
-shaking in his mouth a piece of frilled yellow silk, which Freddy
-rescued and locked in his private drawer as a memento. The Corker was
-hastily summoned to give professional assistance, after which we sat
-down to lunch, a party of twelve.
-
-The late Mr. Corker’s half-brother, a military gentleman of funereal
-aspect, by the name of Blubb, had kindly consented, for a small
-gratuity, to assist on this occasion; ‘it being,’ as he explained to
-Squiff, ‘not my hordinary vacation, but honly to oblige.’
-
-‘I’m so sorry about that wretched dog,’ said Freddy, as he settled
-himself beside Tiny, ‘but he was always of an enquiring nature.’
-
-‘Oh! he’s not so bad as Jellipore,’ replied Tiny, ‘he sticks like a
-burr. Why, when we told him we were out to every meal on Wednesday, he
-had a special one at half-past eleven in the morning for us, and we had
-to go.’
-
-‘I’ve had over a dozen notes from him since we arrived,’ said Ina
-wearily across the table, ‘and he sends me poppies every day, the one
-flower I loathe.’
-
-‘Would you like to go out to Jellipore as Ranee?’ asked the Pilot.
-
-‘No, thanks,’ replied Ina, ‘I’m going to be the only pebble on my
-beach, and he’s got a regular cartload on his.’
-
-‘You do generally appear to be stony, dear,’ said Ruby, amidst general
-laughter.
-
-‘Ah! I haven’t got so many kind friends as you have,’ retorted Ina.
-
-There is no knowing what this conversation might have led to, had not
-the Blubber appeared at Ina’s elbow with uncanny stealth, and demanded
-in a sepulchral voice:
-
-‘Sherry wine or ’ock, Miss?’
-
-‘D’you like Oxford?’ enquired Accrington, who always makes the most
-obvious remarks.
-
-‘Oh! it’s lovely,’ responded Ruby enthusiastically, ‘and so exciting.
-Why, only yesterday I spent an hour in a man’s cupboard, because his
-aunt paid him a surprise visit on her way home from Scotland.’
-
-‘How very unpleasant for you, dearest,’ put in Lily sweetly, ‘but of
-course you can take care of yourself.’
-
-‘That’s better anyhow,’ replied Ruby tartly, ‘than always wanting one
-of the other sex to perform that duty, like someone I know.’
-
-Here Freddy rapped sharply on the table and cried, ‘Parrot-house next
-door,’ which remark effectually silenced the girls, but seriously upset
-Reggie, who had been preparing a joke for several minutes.
-
-‘I suppose you are a great authority on birds’ eggs now,’ queried the
-Pilot of Tiny, from the bottom of the table, amid a general silence.
-
-‘What do you mean?’ demanded the fair one, who had completely forgotten
-the incident in question.
-
-‘O nothing, only you spent two hours examining Martha’s collection with
-Freddy in our digs on Thursday afternoon.’
-
-As nobody appeared to have anything further to say on this subject a
-holy hush fell upon the company, until Accrington, who had not asked a
-well-worn question for very nearly three minutes, demanded of Tweenie,
-‘Have you seen any Freshers’ delights?’
-
-‘Do you mean Mr. de Beresford’s canary-coloured waistcoat?’ she asked.
-
-‘’Pon my word you’re rather hard on poor D.B.,’ said Accrington,
-‘didn’t I see you driving over with him to----?’
-
-Here the Blubber, with involuntary tact, created a sufficient diversion
-by dropping a meringue and then standing on it.
-
-When Freddy had withered the old man with a glance, and more champagne
-had been dealt out all round, Squiff, who had been carrying on a _sotto
-voce_ conversation with Miss Childe since the beginning of the meal,
-suddenly looked up and remarked, ‘Kiddy’s going to dance the “Can-can”
-for us after lunch.’
-
-When I noticed the startling change which passed over the features of
-the Blubber, I fancied that he must have seen this graceful display of
-agility before, and I subsequently found the aged reprobate with his
-eye glued to the keyhole.
-
-Freddy then proposed the health of the ‘Cannibal Girl’ Company in a
-neat little speech, in the course of which he mentioned that he never
-knew Cannibal girls wore so many clothes before.
-
-‘I haven’t noticed anything excessive,’ put in Reggie, who had hitherto
-been obscured by the shapely form of Miss Trimmer. He mentioned that he
-thought three such pretty wives were entirely wasted on an old Mormon
-like Caskowiski, especially as some of us hadn’t even one apiece.
-
-After this the tables were hastily cleared, and a few minutes later
-the Bursar of Thomas’, as he passed up St. Aldate’s, was edified by
-the spectacle of a large and interested crowd collected in front of
-the Maison Squiff. At the first glance he could only make out the
-back portion of someone who appeared to be conducting an orchestra, a
-hideous discord proceeding from the room; but on putting on his glasses
-he descried a gentleman standing on a chair and holding a top hat,
-which a lady, who was making a marvellous display of lingerie, kicked
-with astounding frequency amid loud applause. ‘The whole forming,’
-as he subsequently remarked to his friend, a genial Tutor, ‘A motht
-degwading thpectacle for the undegwaduate, though, between ourthelves,
-I’ve theldom theen it better done, even at the Folies Berthères. I
-hope,’ he added plaintively, ‘that thethe young thcoundrelth didn’t
-thee me watching from the other thide of the threet.’ The Tutor, a
-request for more details meeting with no response, clutched his hat and
-started hastily for St. Aldate’s.
-
-After the dance was finished, it was discovered that Ruby and Reggie
-had silently left the room, ‘in order,’ as he subsequently explained,
-‘to talk over Freddy’s stamp collection.’ We left them in possession
-of the drawing room, and departed in couples for the river, most of us
-turning up again just in time for Hall.
-
-On the following day we could see nothing of the dear girls as they had
-a matinée, and the Rajah succeeded in capturing them for tea. Owing to
-this I was able to meet Freddy, who was coming from his law lecture
-at St. Spirits’, about 12 o’clock, at Carfax: and having picked up
-Accrington at the O.U.D.S., we made our way to Butler’s, the florist’s.
-Here we encountered one of those startling obstacles that turn the
-brightest sunshine into overwhelming darkness.
-
-‘We are very sorry, sir, but our Mr. Butler says he can’t possibly send
-any more bouquets round to the theatre on credit,’ said the slim young
-person in charge of the shop, with a weary air. As we could not manage
-to make up the requisite amount between us, Freddy, after a little
-tactful persuasion, induced her to fetch the proprietor from his lunch.
-
-The sight of one of the Earl of Paunbrough’s cards, of which Freddy
-keeps a large stock for cases analogous to this, produced an immediate
-effect upon the obsequious Butler, and he readily consented to supply
-us with three arum lilies, some moss and a furlong of wire, the whole
-done up most artistically with the College ribbon, for the absurdly
-small price of two guineas. This arduous duty successfully performed,
-we returned to our respective luncheons promising to meet again at the
-Hyde at 6.30, when a few of us were going to dine together. On my way
-home I saw Verimisti, the Italian Count from King’s, who was madly
-in love with Lucinda Tubb, a lady whose youth has long been out of
-sight, though she still keeps it in mind, and often refers to it. That
-afternoon the Unregenerate narrowly escaped a terrible calamity which
-might have thrown us all into the deepest mourning and put a sudden
-end to our innocent jollity. Squiff, who was fielding out in the deep,
-had been standing at ease for about half-an-hour, when he suddenly
-bethought him of a photograph of the fair Kiddy in his pocket, and
-having extracted it, was gazing at it with soulful intensity, when the
-ball descending like a meteor, struck him violently on the head; but
-thanks to a cabbage-leaf in his hat and an abnormally thick skull no
-great damage was done.
-
-We assembled as arranged at 6.30, a large but select party, though
-Verimisti who had had a champagne tea with Jellipore and the ladies,
-had already reached the confidential stage, and after twice shaking
-hands warmly with everybody, at once started on Accrington with a
-pointless Italian story which lasted all through dinner. In addition
-to our crowd from Cecil’s we had Blandford of Barabbas’, a prominent
-sportsman, who contributes very generously to the University Chest per
-the Proctors, St. Quentin of Mary’s, and finally de Beresford. I am not
-very clear as to the events of that night after we reached the theatre;
-but I recollect quite distinctly that at dinner we emptied a prodigious
-number of bottles, chiefly in health-drinking, and that Verimisti’s
-speech in replying for Italy was a triumph of incomprehensibility. When
-our party of ten finally landed at the theatre in a most hilarious mood
-and all wearing purple carnations, the performance had already started,
-for we heard the first song being roughly handled by a crowded and
-enthusiastic house. As we filed into our seats, some of our friends
-in the dress circle cheered, and we had much difficulty in preventing
-Verimisti from replying. Blandford created the first diversion of
-the evening by omitting to turn down his seat, and collapsing with
-some suddenness on the floor. A large party of twenty-firsters from
-Barabbas’--most of whom knew Blandford--rose and cheered heartily,
-the chorus of female savages who occupied the stage passing entirely
-unnoticed. The entrance of Nokop--the King’s physician--however was
-greeted with great applause and the popular chorus of his song:--
-
- We’ve potions and pills,
- Curing all ills,
- Dispensed by the great Nokop,
-
-was taken up by everyone regardless of time and tune. We were
-particularly pleased with a gentleman in the second row who conducted
-the song with much greater success than the salaried official before
-the footlights. After the third encore, several entire strangers in the
-second row rose and shook his hand, while a person in a brown bowler
-hat and knicker-bockers appeared in the wings and made frantic signals
-to refuse further demands. Von Graussman, who seemed to be feeling the
-heat in the dress circle, here endeavoured to address the audience
-to the exclusion of King Caskowiski, who had just made an imposing
-entrance, and the following dialogue ensued:--
-
- K.C. (_in a dignified manner_), ‘Welcome my dusky subjects.’
-
- V.G. (_suddenly struck by K.C.’s state robes_), ‘You vas a
- Broctor.’
-
- K.C. (_continues_), ‘Let our wives attend us to the palace.’
-
- V.G. (_apparently reassured on the former subject_), ‘My
- vriends he vas a Mormon.’
-
-At this point a bulky and uniformed official intervened and von
-Graussman’s companion, a spectacled scholar of Cecil’s, was hustled out
-of the theatre without a chance of explanation, just as Sotite came
-forward to sing his famous song. The chorus of this, beginning:
-
- ‘It’s tails I win and heads you lose,’
-
-is peculiarly tricky, and even the energetic sportsman in front was
-unable to keep the field altogether, for the orchestra finished first
-by a short bar, followed by Sotite and the Barabbas party, the rest
-of us being left at the post. Verimisti indeed, continued to sing the
-refrain through the whole of the next verse.
-
-The landing and entrance of the English party created immense
-enthusiasm, though I failed to see why the Hon. Mrs. Charteris should
-come ashore in a skirt considerably above her knees, and Angus
-MacPhee’s topper and frock-coat seemed peculiarly out of place on a
-Cannibal Island. After the inevitable chorus, there followed the ‘Three
-Wives’ song, which received seven encores, and then Freddy, who, we
-understand had seen the piece before, declared that there was nothing
-of interest to follow, and drove us outside, ‘being,’ as he remarked,
-‘Called to the Bar.’ Before we could regain our seats the curtain had
-fallen on the first act, and finding it impossible to remain in the
-crowded saloon, we paraded the street for ten minutes. When we got in
-again we found the second act in full swing, Ginsling and a chorus of
-female cabin-boys in a cake-walk receiving repeated encores, after
-which the self-appointed conductor went out to drown the microbes,
-returning just in time for Mrs. Mopper’s song on the perils of the
-ocean. The last verse of this was entirely lost through the attempted
-entrance of four members of the Snorters’ Club from Tydvil College,
-who were eventually ejected--after having embroiled most of the
-audience near the door--by four uniformed officials, assisted by the
-box-office clerk and two programme boys. But we afterwards discovered
-that Ironsides, the heavy-weight champion, left a limb of the law on
-the door mat, while a programme boy who had clung to him was deposited
-on a hay-cart in the yard of the Hyde. The sympathies of the audience
-were all with the Snorters, and after a brief though stirring speech
-from Reggie on the rights of Englishmen, the Barabbas men behind rose
-en masse and demanded somebody’s blood; but when the popular manager
-explained that the Lessees had gone home in a hansom they were appeased
-and resumed their seats for Queenie Hareham’s favourite song ‘They all
-of them have tried it on with me.’ After this the plot, in the fashion
-of musical comedies, was recklessly abandoned, and Jack Warmleigh did
-a Coon dance with Lady Betty Backstays. But the Hon. Alan Charteris,
-R.N., who attempted to sing a love song totally unconnected with the
-piece, was greeted with loud shouts of ‘Go off’; and then ensued a
-general mystification of the audience by dressing every character as
-some one else, including Mrs. Charteris’ appearance as the Cannibal
-Girl, which finished the first scene and gave another interval for
-lip-salve. Our little refreshment cost us nothing this time, as
-a complete stranger from the dress circle, who described himself
-in quavering tones as the ‘Great Mogul,’ absolutely insisted upon
-providing us all with lotion, though Freddy’s back teeth were already
-under water. Owing to a free fight which took place in the ladies’
-cloak-room between de Beresford and a most indigestible looking person
-from Llewellyn’s, whose face he said annoyed him, we did not regain
-our seats until the next act was well under weigh. A gentleman from
-Barabbas’, after having kissed my hand, insisted upon my sitting on his
-knee, and addressed me fondly as ‘The Queen of the May.’ Owing to this
-and a tired feeling which came over me about this time, I saw nothing
-for quite ten minutes. When I next looked at the stage I found that the
-theatricals at Berehampton House were going strong, and the tableau
-representing Eileen Mervyn as Venus with King Caskowiski as Apollo
-balancing an apple on his head, was hailed with rapturous applause. The
-next tableau showed a lady wrapped in little else but mystery pointing
-to the sky, but before I had time to enquire what she was supposed to
-be, the gentleman on whose knee I was sitting suddenly shifted his
-position and I fell rather heavily to the floor. During the tableaux
-a fearful din prevented any songs reaching us, while the party from
-Barabbas’ appeared to be having a concert to themselves. At last the
-curtain fell amid cries of ‘Speech’ from all sides, and something in
-dress clothes with an enormous paste stud and a Roman nose advanced in
-front of the members of the Company and their respective bouquets. His
-lips appeared to be moving, but as there was no abatement of noise the
-curtain soon fell for the last time and we felt our way out while two
-King’s men strove heroically to remove the big bassoon.
-
-We enjoyed a most successful supper with our lady friends, at which
-Verimisti failed to put in an appearance. On our way home we danced
-the Lancers at Carfax, and after vainly demanding a speech from the
-Principal of Barabbas’, whose house looks onto the High, retired to bed.
-
-Reggie said the departure of the Company on the following morning
-reminded him of a Roman General’s triumph, and proved a positive
-harvest time for the cabbies. The smallest computation put the number
-of undergraduates present at a hundred and twenty, but the Proctor on
-his arrival only succeeded in entrapping eleven, of whom three had
-leave to go to town and one had come to meet his uncle.
-
-The state of Accrington’s clothes, after spending half-an-hour in
-the lamp-room, was the cause of much profanity, while Squiff, who
-had climbed into a coal-truck, proved quite unrecognisable. But the
-adventures of the immaculate de Beresford put these misfortunes
-quite into the shade, for he was carried off in a horse-box to
-Stow-on-the-Wold, and only returned about 10 p.m. minus his watch-chain
-and cigarette-case, which he left at that remote spot as security for
-his dinner and return ticket.
-
-However, even the solemn Pilot admitted that it was a very good week.
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
-THE MUTUAL HELP SOCIETY.
-
-
-The credit of the idea must be given to Reggie; he suggested it at a
-time when we were all in low water and when his birthday gifts from
-loving uncles and aunts had just poured into Reggie’s receptive hands,
-so no mercenary motives can be imputed to him. If the idea did not turn
-out the brilliant success we anticipated, that was due to faults in the
-system, and not in the promoters.
-
-We were all in Reggie’s rooms one day, forming a small committee of
-Ways and Means, with, as Squiff said, plenty of ways and no means, when
-Reggie suddenly remarked, ‘Why shouldn’t we have a fund?’
-
-The Pilot, who conceals a tendency to make obvious and painful
-puns behind a solemn demeanour, had just begun, ‘The fundamental
-principle--,’ when Reggie remarked sadly, ‘I am serious.’
-
-When the Pilot had been suppressed with two cushions and a syphon;
-Squiff inquired, ‘A fund, what for?’
-
-‘For mutual help,’ answered Reggie.
-
-‘Oh! a sort of coal-and-clothing-mothers’-meeting-keep-the-baby-warm
-kind of article,’ put in Freddy.
-
-‘Not at all,’ said Reggie, ‘it will be something like this. I propose
-that each member--’
-
-‘Who are the members to be?’ interrupted Squiff.
-
-‘That,’ replied Reggie with an airy wave of the hand, ‘we can settle
-later. Each member shall contribute say five or eight pounds a term,
-which will be handed to the Treasurer and kept by him--’
-
-‘If Squiff is made Treasurer the money will certainly be kept by him,’
-interjected the Pilot.
-
-After I had picked up the china ornament and the table-leg which were
-broken in the subsequent scuffle, Reggie continued, ‘The money will be
-kept by the Treasurer, who will not be a paid official, and used in
-time of stress by the members. For instance, supposing a summons has to
-be paid, or a railway-fare to town is required, the member needing the
-money will go to the Treasurer, and after pledging his word that the
-circumstances are urgent shall withdraw just as much as is needed and
-no more. There will also be special rules about repayment.’
-
-‘They will be needed,’ I remarked; ‘and we must also have “urgent
-circumstances” clearly defined, as I foresee trouble on that score.’
-
-‘Well,’ said Squiff, ‘if every one is agreed, that some such Society is
-needed, let us draw up the rules at once. If an undertaking like this
-is left under discussion after the first week of term the subscriptions
-will have to be lowered to five shillings, and that won’t be much use.’
-
-‘Rule 1,’ said Reggie, tapping the table with a paper-knife, ‘That this
-Society be known as the “Cecil College Mutual Help Society.”’
-
-Rule 2, ‘That the terminal subscription be five pounds with no
-entrance-fee, but that the membership be strictly limited.’
-
-‘I think--’ began the Pilot.
-
-‘Wait a moment till I have read out what I’ve written down and then we
-can discuss it,’ said Reggie.
-
-Rule 3, ‘That all repayments of amounts drawn out over and above a
-member’s own subscription be made within eight weeks.’
-
-Rule 4, ‘That every member before drawing out money must pledge his
-word that the circumstances are urgent. Such urgent circumstances must
-be taken to mean the entire lack of money on the borrower’s part, and
-the immediate necessity for a loan. Urgent circumstances do not include
-the need of theatre tickets, bouquets, suppers, payments of accounts
-before a solicitor’s letter has been received, or payment to any tailor
-or photographer.’
-
-Rule 5, ‘That no money be borrowed during the first two weeks of term,
-and that no member who has failed to make repayment within eight weeks
-may avail himself of the privileges of membership until such repayment
-be made.’
-
-Rule 6, ‘That in the event of all funds being exhausted before the last
-week of term, the Treasurer--who shall be elected terminally--shall
-call a meeting to announce the fact.’
-
-Rule 7, ‘That any money left over--’
-
-‘We can dispense with that rule,’ remarked Squiff, ‘there never will be
-any money left over.’
-
-‘That’s all I’ve got down,’ said Reggie, ‘discussion may now commence.’
-
-‘Supposing,’ remarked the Pilot, who is always ready with an objection,
-‘supposing that the Treasurer himself borrows all the available funds
-at the beginning of the third week, or that he goes away leaving the
-money locked up, what is to happen?’
-
-‘I propose rule seven,’ said Squiff. ‘The Treasurer to be unable to
-borrow without consulting two members, and in case of absence to
-appoint a deputy.’
-
-‘Of course he must keep accounts,’ said Freddy; ‘and is responsible for
-collecting repayments and subscriptions.’
-
-‘It’s a good idea,’ I said; ‘but will it work?’
-
-‘We can but try,’ replied Reggie. ‘It saves incessant borrowing and is
-simple; both of which are great points in its favour. Are we all agreed
-on these seven Rules?’
-
-‘Oughtn’t we to limit the borrowing powers of each member?’ asked
-Freddy.
-
-‘That wouldn’t be any use,’ said Reggie; ‘but we can frame rule eight.
-That each member only borrow sufficient for his urgent need, and give
-to the Treasurer a statement of his reason for borrowing. That ought to
-be sufficient.’
-
-‘I think so,’ agreed Freddy; ‘but we ought to exclude betting from the
-Urgent Circumstances.’
-
-‘Right!’ said the Pilot, ‘and now for the members. There are five of
-us, Accrington will be six, von Graussman seven, and Fatty eight: that
-gives us forty pounds, which will do to start on. Suppose we appoint
-Fatty treasurer, he has a good head for figures.’
-
-This proposal was unanimously carried, as Fatty was not present to
-decline the honour, and the meeting adjourned till the following
-evening in Fatty’s rooms. In the meanwhile the objects of the Club were
-explained to the other three in moving terms, and they promised their
-adherence. Von Graussman, whose father is a great Austrian financier,
-had grave doubts about the scheme, and wrote to his people for advice;
-meanwhile however, we collared his subscription, and he became, however
-unwillingly, a member.
-
-A proposal by Fatty, who does not play cards, to exclude Bridge from
-the list of Urgent Circumstances was negatived by seven to one. The
-Pilot also was as usual full of objections, but these were overruled,
-and the Cecil’s Mutual Help Society started on its brief, but bright,
-career.
-
-The first fortnight of the term was uneventful, and marked only by
-sustained attacks on the integrity of the Treasurer, by bribery and
-threats in order to induce him to break rule five. These having failed
-there was nothing to do but wait. On the first morning of the third
-week--it was a Saturday--Accrington and Squiff met at 9.15 at the
-bottom of the Treasurer’s staircase, and a race ensued for Fatty’s
-bedroom. The official however declared with unnecessary heat that
-business hours did not begin till 10.30, and so they were obliged
-to retire till then. At a quarter past ten, Squiff, who is an adept
-at manœuvring, returned and began a conversation with Fatty who
-was at breakfast, which lasted till the clock struck half-past and
-Accrington’s step sounded on the staircase, and then he jumped up and
-remarked quietly ‘I want two tenners out of the Fund.’ Accrington,
-who arrived almost breathless, only required a modest fiver. Fatty
-took a seat at table with a large account-book and a stylo. He took
-Accrington’s case first as being the simpler, and was quite ready to
-advance the money, but some difficulty occurred in interpreting the
-rules.
-
-‘How does one pledge one’s word within the meaning of the Act?’
-enquired the Treasurer plaintively.
-
-‘I should make him swear horribly,’ remarked Squiff; ‘I don’t think
-he’s the sort of person I should trust with the funds of any Club.’
-
-The roll which Accrington threw at him did not hit him, but finished
-the career of a small china dog which had belonged to Fatty’s
-grandmother, and smashed two liqueur-glasses into fragments. When peace
-had been restored, Accrington produced a summons from Tuneham and
-Keighley--the piano-people in the High--for ‘the hire of piano for two
-years, tuning, replacing broken keys, do. wires, do. candlesticks, do.
-pedals, £5/2/: paid by cash, 2/-. Total owing. £5.’ This convinced
-Fatty, who handed over a cheque for five pounds without demur, and
-Accrington left rejoicing.
-
-Squiff’s case was harder:
-
-‘At the end of last term,’ he explained to Fatty, who had assumed a
-judicial aspect, ‘I had to raise money on my motor in order to have
-four nights in town and do the Rugger Match properly. It is still in
-Goldstein’s clutches: yesterday I got a telegram to say that my Uncle
-Terence--Sir Terence MacGurkin, my mater’s brother--who gave me the
-car, is coming down here, and wants me to take him for some nice spins.
-If he finds I’ve pawned it, there’ll be the devil to pay, and the uncle
-certainly won’t pay him, nor me. I shall have to run up to town to-day,
-get the mo-mo, pay Goldstein, and drive it down here, ready for Uncle
-Terence to-morrow; and,’ he concluded rapidly, ‘if the urgency isn’t
-apparent even to you’--‘Don’t be rude,’ interpolated Fatty--‘then
-nothing will ever penetrate your brain.’
-
-‘I think,’ Fatty had begun, when hurried steps sounded on the stairs
-and von Graussman appeared clad in a most curious costume, and with
-unbrushed hair. To him Squiff immediately said, ‘I don’t think, old
-chap, that you ought to present yourself in a costume like that before
-the Treasurer of the Cecil’s Mutual Help Society, you look as if you
-hadn’t been to bed all night, and then had got up too early, if such a
-thing is possible.’
-
-‘It vos alright perhaps that I must be given nineteen
-pounds by Mr. Fatty from the moneys of the lately
-formed-and-much-to-be-commended-by-needy-gentlemens-’Elp-Clubs,’ he
-remarked in one breath.
-
-‘Once more!’ shrieked Squiff ecstatically.
-
-‘I vos not repeading,’ replied von Graussman with dignity, ‘in der
-worts of Bilate vot I vos say I had shpoken.’
-
-‘What Pilate really said--’ began Squiff, when Fatty who had sunk into
-a sort of reverie, suddenly awoke and thumped on the table vigorously.
-‘The valuable time of the Treasurer is being frittered away,’ he
-remarked solemnly. ‘The case of the O’Rossa is under consideration. He
-has explained his need for twenty pounds; the only remaining formality
-is the pledging of his word. When he has done that I will hand over
-the cheque.’ Squiff, who had been speaking to von Graussman, hurriedly
-pledged his word and left to catch the 12.10 to town, while von
-Graussman proceeded to pour into Fatty’s ears a long and disconnected
-tale in which the words, ‘Boliceman,’ ‘damnable,’ ‘fraulein,’ and
-‘gompensations,’ appeared frequently, so Fatty gathered that it had
-some reference to an escapade in town during the week before term.
-However, as von Graussman was prepared to swear to the urgency of
-the circumstances, he saw no reason why he should not advance the
-amount, but discovered to his horror that there were only fifteen
-pounds left. He explained this to the German, who replied that ‘he
-could sew der matters up mit so much,’ and went off with the Club’s
-last money. Fatty, who saw in this a speedy ending to the worries of a
-Treasurership, contentedly entered the amounts in his book, and then
-took a cab to his History Lecture at James’.
-
-It was only when Freddy casually applied for two pounds to pay Foundry
-deceased--on account--that he discovered that the end of the money did
-not imply the end of his troubles.
-
-‘You lent twenty pounds to Squiff,’ screamed Freddy; ‘why, you know
-he’s overdrawn his next month’s allowance and pawned his dressing case.’
-
-‘I didn’t know,’ replied Fatty placidly, ‘besides, it seems to me that
-those are the very circumstances in which the Club becomes useful and
-even necessary.’
-
-‘Yes, but,’ retorted Freddy, ‘he won’t be able to pay it back for
-weeks, and I know I shall want to borrow next week.’
-
-‘Come early and leave early,’ remarked the Treasurer irritatingly. ‘If
-you’d come at half-past ten when the office opens you might have got
-something. As it is you must wait till some one pays in.’
-
-‘Anyhow,’ remarked Freddy, ‘by rule six you must call a meeting and
-announce that all funds are exhausted, and I don’t envy you the job, as
-I know Martha was coming round to borrow in the morning, and Reggie is
-sure to be hard up as well.’
-
-The meeting fulfilled the expectation of Freddy; it was stormy on the
-part of Reggie and myself, placid on Fatty’s, and calmly indifferent
-on the part of the original borrowers. Freddy demanded a further
-subscription which Squiff and von Graussman opposed. Eventually we
-arranged a compromise by which everybody was to pay in three pounds
-within three days, and the meeting broke up. For the next few days
-events progressed quietly until another meeting was suddenly summoned
-to report that Reggie and I having borrowed a tenner each, and Fatty
-himself--by permission--the remaining four pounds, funds were again
-exhausted, and as the time for repayment had not nearly expired we were
-once more at a standstill. Eventually a motion was passed by six to
-two, Squiff and von Graussman dissenting, that the time for repayment
-of the original loans should expire on the following Saturday. This
-caused great perturbation among the borrowers, but by the help of
-an overdraft at the bank von Graussman scraped up the money, and
-Accrington paid in his five pounds without any difficulty. The real
-blow to our Club fell upon us on the Sunday when the third meeting
-within three weeks was called to announce the absence of funds: this
-positively staggered us, but we had not counted on Squiff’s presence of
-mind. On the day before, which was fixed for paying in, he had given
-Fatty his cheque for twenty pounds, and had immediately afterwards
-drawn out the available twenty pounds--paid in by von Graussman and
-Accrington--on the plea of Urgent Necessity, which we discovered to be
-the paying of the overdraft which he knew he must have at his bank, but
-as the overdraft turned out to his great surprise to be some forty
-pounds, of course they would not cash his last cheque, and the funds
-of the Club shrank to a worthless cheque for twenty pounds: this last
-manœuvre gave Squiff, as Freddy foolishly pointed out to him, another
-six weeks in which to pay off his debt to the Club, and a proposal
-to make all loans repayable in three days was lost by one vote. The
-numbers were equal, all who had borrowed voting against, and all who
-were free of debt, for the proposal. However, as Fatty had the casting
-vote, and owed the Club four pounds, the motion was lost. Our attempts
-to find a method of putting the Society on its legs again failed, and
-we agreed that we must bury it in the depths of forgetfulness.
-
-As a gallant attempt to find a solution to a most pressing question it
-was very praiseworthy, but as a working institution it was a regular
-fiasco. Fatty explained his subsequent failure in Divvers as the result
-of having to settle up the somewhat confused accounts of the defunct
-Club; myself, I attribute it to the fact that he defined Lydia--the
-purple seller of Thyatira--as ‘a province in Asia Minor.’
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-ON THE STRENUOUSNESS OF LIFE.
-
-
-It was on a Wednesday morning that I repaired to the Maison Squiff and
-found Freddy in a well-worn blazer perusing a coroneted letter signed
-‘Paunbrough,’ which he silently handed me to read. I discovered that it
-was a communication from the noble owner of Coffington Castle, County
-Down, enclosing Butler’s bill with a dirty card attached. The latter
-enquired in terms more direct than polite why the hot place Freddy had
-been distributing his father’s cards about Oxford, and stated that he,
-the noble Earl, was condemned if he would pay thirty shillings for a
-bouquet to a low ballet girl. It concluded with the final slap that
-Messrs. Swindell and Rooke, the family solicitors, had instructions
-not to pay over another monthly allowance until they received Butler’s
-bill receipted. This crushing communication was pointedly signed ‘Your
-loving father,’ and a postscript demanded the return of any more of his
-Lordship’s cards which Freddy might have purloined.
-
-‘Rather rough,’ I said, ‘but you can go on for another month anyhow,
-yesterday was the First.’
-
-‘Not much,’ said Freddy, ‘the governor’s sharper than you’d think to
-look at him, and he telegraphed to the sharks to stop my instalment
-yesterday.’
-
-While we were discussing this trying situation, Mrs. Corker appeared
-bearing a blue envelope which she shot into my lap. It was addressed
-to--
-
- Viscount Gilderdale,
-
- 129 St. Aldate’s, Oxford,
-
-and so I handed it on to Freddy, who courageously opened it. The
-contents proved to be merely an official confirmation of the noble
-lord’s own letter, which, as Freddy ruefully observed, was ‘rather like
-rubbing it in.’
-
-‘Can you pay Butler for me, and then I’ll get my thirty quidlets?’ he
-asked.
-
-‘I haven’t got a penny,’ I replied, ‘but can’t Squiff supply the
-needful?’
-
-‘Oh! he’s worse off than we are; but I’m sure he wouldn’t mind our
-taking his silver candlesticks round to Ranger’s “for one night only,”’
-said Frederick. ‘They ought to fetch thirty shillings, and then we
-shall get thirty pounds, and twenty to one are good enough odds for me.’
-
-‘Well, at any rate,’ I said, ‘Let’s try the Pilot first, and
-Accrington.’
-
-‘Whatever we do, must be done quickly,’ said Freddy, as he searched
-frantically for a note-book, ‘I’m in for Contracts next week, and Anson
-is heavy on my chest.’
-
-‘Let’s go along to College,’ I suggested, ‘Accrington’s working day and
-night for his second shot at Mods., so he’s sure to be in.’
-
-As we reached Cecil’s the Pilot emerged from the porch carrying Cook’s
-Commentary on Habakkuk, and three large red notebooks; he is in for
-Honour Theology, but as in a recent essay he explained the word
-Gamaliel as meaning ‘the Pavement,’ while Gabbatha became ‘the lady who
-died after knitting coats and garments,’ we fear he is not very far
-advanced. Without any preamble we demanded thirty shillings, but the
-Pilot, whose money affairs are in fearful confusion, explained that he
-had just borrowed three pounds off his tailor, and could not possibly
-lend us anything.
-
-We accordingly hurried on into College, and found Accrington surveying
-two summonses spread out on Hawkins’ Handbook to Logic, which
-invaluable work he was endeavouring to learn by heart before Monday.
-
-Freddy had just begun ‘Can you lend,’ when his eye fell upon the blue
-documents, and the request died upon his lips.
-
-‘No, I’m very sorry I can’t,’ said Accrington, ‘can you?’ But nobody
-laughed at this; the situation was altogether too grave.
-
-It appeared from a perusal of these documents that Messrs. Hooper, of
-the High, and Daniel Dickens and Co., the picture dealers, had taken
-out a summons signed by a certain Frank Bolton, Mandatory,--whatever
-that might be--which bade ‘Stephen Kirkbury Accrington appear
-personally or by his proctor at the Apodyterium of the Convocation
-House to answer the plaintiff’s claim.’
-
-Some paragraphs on the back remarked ‘that if the debt claimed is more
-than six years old, that if you were then or are now a married woman,
-or have been discharged under the Bankruptcy Act, notice must be given
-three days before the hearing.’
-
-These parting shots did not appear to give Accrington any comfort, and
-he said that he was trying to raise a loan from the family lawyer.
-We condoled with him, and then seeing clearly that there was no hope
-for us in that quarter, hastened back to pawn the candlesticks before
-Squiff’s return.
-
-On the stairs of their digs we met Mrs. Corker, who was, as usual with
-her during working hours, very much out of breath, but she managed to
-pant at Freddy,
-
-‘’Ave you seen Mr. O’Roozer, me lord?’
-
-‘No,’ said Freddy, ‘has he been in?’
-
-‘O yes, me lord,’ replied the old lady, ‘’e came in about ’arf an hour
-ago and asked for your lordship, ’e said as ’ow ’e wanted to see your
-lordship most pertickler.’
-
-‘But about ten minutes ago,’ she continued, now in a tone of mingled
-wonder and indignation, ‘as I was a-goin up these ’ere stairs, I met
-’im a comin’ down with them there ’andsome candlesticks under ’is
-harm, and when I says, “I’ll clean ’em for yer, Mr. O’Roozer, if that’s
-what yer wants,” ’e said, “No thank yer, Mrs. Corker, I’m afraid
-nothin’ what you could do wouldn’t be no use, I think I shall ’ave
-to soak them,” and then blessed if ’e didn’t rush out of the front
-door an’ get into a cab, silver candlesticks an’ all, a laughin’ most
-haffable.’
-
-There might have been more of these appalling revelations to follow,
-but at that moment I caught sight of Freddy’s face, on which there
-had settled a blank look of consternation, and we marched upstairs
-together, much sadder if wiser men.
-
-‘Well, what the deuce we are going to do now, I’ll be shot if I know,’
-he said as we shut the door behind us. ‘Squiff’s gone and popped the
-only marketable commodity in the house, and there are thirty precious
-pounds in London simply waiting for me to send for them.’
-
-‘I know,’ I said; ‘couldn’t Webster, your old scout in College, lend
-you thirty shillings for one day? I’ve been told that he runs a house
-at Margate, and is worth nearly five hundred a year. Some of these
-College servants are regular Croesuses.’
-
-‘Yes, that’s not half a bad idea, Martha; in fact it’s about the only
-thing we can do; let’s go round and interview the old bird at once.’
-
-So saying we descended the well-worn stairs again, and hurried round to
-see the mysterious Webster, who wears a coat like a banker, and always
-takes front seats at the best concerts.
-
-The worthy man readily lent us the needful, and so that little trouble
-came to an end.
-
-Misfortunes, however, never come singly, and only that evening Reggie
-and I and the Pilot were progged in the Hyde, and requested in the
-politest manner to call on the Junior Proctor at Gloucester at 9.30
-next morning.
-
-‘I suppose,’ said the Pilot, mournfully, as we moved off, ‘that this
-is a quid-touch, but where my adjectived quid is to come from I don’t
-know.’
-
-‘_Je ne sais pas, you don’t sais pas, and he doesn’t sai pas_,’ quoted
-Reggie.
-
-‘Freddy gets his oof to-morrow, but certainly not by nine,’ I said.
-
-‘Then the only thing to be done is to ask the man to wait a day, and
-borrow the money from Freddy when he gets his cheque,’ remarked the
-Pilot, cheerfully.
-
-On the following morning we dropped anchor in the Gluggins porch at
-9.30, and asked for the J.P.’s rooms, which we found in the well-known
-row of cottages on the left of the garden, with three bull-dogs
-guarding the door. When our names had been taken, Reggie went in, and
-came out smiling after a short interview.
-
-‘Told me to let him have it by one o’clock,’ muttered Reggie, as the
-Pilot passed in. ‘I said I expected a remittance from my aunt.’
-
-In a moment the Pilot also returned looking as solemn as usual. ‘He
-got rather angry when I mentioned a remittance from my aunt, but let me
-off till one o’clock,’ he remarked.
-
-When I was shown in, I found the J.P., a round and pompous little man,
-robed and banded, standing by the table.
-
-‘I suppose, Mr. Cochrane,’ he began at once, ‘that you, like the other
-two gentlemen whom I have just seen, are expecting a remittance from
-your aunt.’
-
-‘No, sir,’ I replied meekly, ‘my great uncle always attends to these
-matters, but I am certainly expecting a remittance from him.’
-
-This soft answer, instead of turning away the dignitary’s wrath, caused
-him to grow purple in the face, but he controlled his temper very
-creditably and merely said,
-
-‘Very well, Mr. Cochrane, I give you till one o’clock, but if the
-twenty shillings are not in my hands by that time I shall communicate
-with your Provost and make matters unpleasant for you, er--good
-morning.’
-
-I joined the other two, and Reggie returned with me to breakfast, but
-the Pilot, who had to attend the Dean’s lecture at ten, put off his
-meal till eleven.
-
-As we made our way through the buttered eggs it became more and more
-clear that Reggie had a grievance, and at last it came out.
-
-‘Here am I, a working man’--this is where I coughed, but Reggie did not
-appear to notice it--‘with two lectures between now and lunch, both of
-which I am compelled to cut because an unfeeling Proctor is dunning me
-for a pound, which I must borrow from some one before one o’clock.’
-
-‘Yes, it is very hard,’ I agreed. ‘But still I believe you have
-occasionally steeled your heart to cut a lecture even when there has
-been no Proctor in the background, and after all he can’t help it, it’s
-his business; I daresay if you knew him you’d find that he smoked a
-meerschaum and swore very much like other people.’
-
-‘Yes, I know, that’s all right,’ said Reggie, who never likes to pursue
-an argument after he has got his own particular complaint off his
-chest, ‘we’ll wait for the Pilot to have his brekker and then go round
-to see Freddy.’
-
-‘He’s sure to have his cheque by then,’ I said, ‘and of course he’ll
-lend us the wherewithal.’
-
-The Pilot finished breakfast at 11.20 precisely, and then after
-carefully perusing the current society divorce case, we made our way to
-St. Aldate’s.
-
-We found Freddy crouching in an arm-chair murmuring to himself passages
-from Anson, and instantly demanded if the money had arrived.
-
-‘Oh, I dare say it’ll come some time to-day,’ said Freddy, crossly, and
-muttered to himself, ‘Agents of Necessity.’
-
-‘That’s no earthly good,’ replied the Pilot, ‘we must find three quid
-by one o’clock and the oof-tree bears no fruit at this time of year.’
-
-‘What’s the money for?’ demanded Freddy.
-
-‘Progged in the “Shades,”’ responded Reggie laconically, ‘and you are
-going to pay the fine.’
-
-‘I didn’t know it before,’ Freddy answered, ‘but of course if the money
-comes in time it’s yours.’
-
-‘We must manage it somehow,’ I said, ‘when’s the next post?’
-
-‘Ring and ask the Corker, I don’t know.’
-
-‘Which it sometimes comes at a quarter to one, and sometimes at ’arf
-past,’ said the old lady on being interrogated.
-
-When he heard this the Pilot collapsed heavily into an arm-chair, while
-Freddy, who did not yet fully appreciate the gravity of the situation,
-went upstairs to search for a note-book in the other sitting-room.
-
-Soon after he had left the room a raucous voice was heard downstairs
-enquiring for Milord Gilderdale, and the Corker appeared to be engaged
-in an animated discussion with the owner thereof.
-
-From two heavy thumps on the ceiling I gathered that Freddy had heard
-the caller’s voice and did not desire to interview him.
-
-Mrs. Corker now appeared, and after expressing surprise at Freddy’s
-absence, asked me to interview, and if possible dispose of ‘that there
-houtrageous man in the ’all.’
-
-On descending I found a corpulent man, with a rubicund face and no
-perceptible chin, standing with a sheaf of documents in his hand.
-
-‘Good mornin’, sir,’ he said, ‘Hi come from Dopin and Bleeder’s the
-’orse-dealers, and I’ve got a little bill ’ere for yer, honly a matter
-of fifteen pounds, as I’ll trouble you to settle.’
-
-‘Doping and Bleeder,’ I murmured, ‘I don’t know the people.’
-
-‘Now look ’ere, sir,’ he said with an expression which betokened sorrow
-rather than anger, ‘none o’ these little games, you’re Lord Gilderdale,
-haren’t you?’
-
-‘Certainly not,’ I replied crossly, ‘next time perhaps you will make
-sure of whom you are talking to before you descend to impertinence, my
-man; little games indeed.’
-
-‘Ho, then you’re the O’Roozer,’ he remarked, ‘I’ve got a bill for you
-for twenty-three pounds seventeen and fourpence.’
-
-‘What’s the fourpence for?’ I queried, but by this time the portly
-gentleman was getting somewhat angry.
-
-‘Never yer mind, sir, it’s for value received, hand given,’ he
-said, ‘an’ our Mr. Bleeder says as ’ow ’e ’opes you’ll see your
-way to lettin’ ’im ’ave the money this week, or ’e’ll ’ave to take
-proceedings, which is always most repugnant both for you and hus.’
-
-‘Now you’ve got that off your chest, you can go,’ I said, ‘I’m not Mr.
-O’Rossa nor am I Lord Gilderdale. Good-day.’
-
-But the worthy representative of Messrs. Doping and Bleeder was not so
-easily disposed of.
-
-‘Now look ’ere,’ he said, ‘Hi believe that it’s hall a bloomin’ ’oax,
-if yer aint Wiscount Gilderdale, an’ yer hain’t the Ho Roozer ’oo the
-blazes are yer?’
-
-At this stage of the proceedings I opened the door and beckoned O.P.
-281, who was lounging against the wall of the Town Hall opposite, to
-advance.
-
-‘I give this person into custody,’ I began, but this proved sufficient,
-the man from D. and B.’s had fled with unprecedented speed, and so
-after pouring palm oil into the ever-ready hand of the worthy officer,
-I went upstairs.
-
-I found the other three gazing anxiously at the clock, which pointed to
-a quarter to one, and appeared to be advancing terribly quickly.
-
-‘Hadn’t we better call a cab,’ said the Pilot; ‘supposing the oof does
-turn up about five to, we shall have to drive to the bank before we can
-go to the Proctor.’
-
-‘Yes, my aunt, I’d never thought of that,’ said Reggie, ‘It’ll take
-fully another minute and a quarter, say even one and a half, and
-minutes are exceptionally precious just now.’
-
-At this juncture the Corker, who was as excited as anybody, rushed
-breathlessly into the room and gasped, ‘The postman ’as just left
-Thomas,’ me lord, an’ ’e’ll be ’ere in a minute.’
-
-‘No, by Jingo, that’s ripping,’ cried Freddy, ‘we must be getting off
-then,’ and as he spoke we all rushed downstairs together.
-
-While we were picking our caps out of the collection in the hall, the
-Pilot, who always acts the part of Job’s comforter on these occasions,
-remarked slowly, ‘I say, what shall we do if the draft doesn’t come?’
-
-‘We shan’t do anything, we shall be done,’ I said.
-
-‘Well, anyhow, here’s the postman and we shall know our fate,’ put
-in Freddy running to the door, as footsteps shuffled on the pavement
-outside. He threw it open, and clutched a packet of letters from the
-hands of the postman, and then for the first time for many a long day,
-he fearlessly tore open a long blue envelope, extracting a letter which
-he dropped on the floor, and a cheque for thirty pounds, which he
-carefully examined.
-
-We then got into Morgan’s hansom and drove at an alarming speed to the
-Bank, but to our horror we found the doors closed when we got there,
-and the grey-haired man, who was sweeping the steps outside, informed
-us, what we ought to have remembered, that the bank shuts at one
-o’clock on Thursdays, and it was just striking the hour on Carfax.
-
-‘Gloucester,’ shrieked Freddy, as we bundled into the cab, and shot
-down the Corn at a fearful rate in the direction of Gluggins. The black
-clock over the archway pointed to four minutes past as we got out, I
-clutching the draft, while Freddy waited in the cab, discussing the
-prospects of the National with Morgan through the trap in the roof.
-
-The J.P. received us with a frown, and remarked coldly, ‘Punctuality is
-the politeness of princes, Mr. Arlington.’
-
-‘I am afraid we put our trust in postmen, not princes,’ replied Reggie;
-‘and ours was late this morning; however, if you wouldn’t mind
-changing this cheque, sir, we’re ready to pay you.’
-
-‘Really, sir, your conduct in this matter is most surprising,’ said
-the Proctor; ‘first you come here unpunctually, and now you offer me
-a large cheque on behalf of yourself and your companions, whom I am
-afraid are no better than you are.’
-
-‘But the bank is closed,’ put in Reggie.
-
-‘How do you mean the bank is closed, Mr. Arlington?’
-
-‘It’s Thursday, sir,’ chimed in the Pilot.
-
-‘Well, Mr. Meredith, I don’t see, if the bank closes at one o’clock,
-why you didn’t go there before.’
-
-‘But Freddy’s--I mean Lord Gilderdale’s--cheque didn’t arrive till one
-o’clock,’ said Reggie.
-
-‘I fail to understand what connection Lord Gilderdale has with this
-matter,’ said the Proctor.
-
-‘Oh,’ said Reggie, ‘none of us had any money just at present, but we
-knew Gilderdale expected a cheque from his solicitors this morning, and
-he promised to lend us a sovereign each.’
-
-‘Oh, then, I am really fining Lord Gilderdale for your delinquencies;
-this is a very fine situation, Mr. Arlington,’ said the Proctor, with a
-nearer approach to geniality than we had hitherto seen.
-
-‘Well, sir, hardly that,’ I put in; ‘you see all three of us really
-are expecting remittances of our own as we told you this morning, but
-as Lord Gilderdale’s arrived before any of ours he very kindly lent us
-three pounds.’
-
-‘Very well then, gentlemen,’ said the Proctor, ‘I don’t know that this
-arrangement is quite regular, or that it would exactly meet with the
-approval of the Vice-Chancellor, but after all you have produced the
-amount of your fines, and it is no business of mine to enquire how
-you obtained that amount. I am sorry to say that I believed at first
-that your slight unpunctuality was due to disrespect, and that you
-were trying to do what I believe the present generation would call
-“pulling my leg” over these cheques, but I see that I misjudged you,
-and shall ask you to bring the money at ten to-morrow. Good morning,
-Mr. Arlington; good morning, gentlemen, good morning,’ and so saying
-the little man collapsed into his arm-chair, while we departed on our
-way more or less rejoicing.
-
-Freddy, to whom we communicated the result of the interview, soothed
-our consciences with the very plausible, if somewhat immoral, argument:
-
-‘It don’t do to give that sort of bird too much truth all in a lump, he
-ain’t accustomed to it; besides, if you start bringin’ him up on it,
-he’ll always expect it.’
-
-On our return to 129 St. Aldate’s we took Squiff to task severely for
-daring to dispose of his own silver candlesticks on the previous day;
-as Freddy remarked, ‘What are things coming to when a man can do as he
-likes with his own property?’
-
-‘I know where things are going to,’ responded Squiff, ‘and that is to
-Ranger’s in Beerage Street, I’ve had a breezy time lately; thank heaven
-term is nearly over.’
-
-‘Ditto, ditto,’ remarked the Pilot mournfully; ‘if one looks back at
-the end of any term, there always seem to be so many things which one
-might have done and hasn’t; and such a lot of entirely unnecessary
-things which have come off most successfully. When I remember that, out
-of 751 allotted pages of Cook’s Commentary on Habakkuk, I have read
-exactly 57, the hollowness of life comes upon me with crushing reality.’
-
-‘Poor old Pilot,’ laughed Squiff, ‘he’s got “the recollections” badly.’
-
-‘I shall shortly have “the Collections” much worse,’ replied the Pilot.
-
-‘Thank goodness,’ remarked Reggie fervently, ‘that terminal reports are
-not sent home to our “parents or guardians” from this University; what
-awful shocks they’d get.’
-
-‘A printed record of gate-sconces and fines during residence should be
-given to every one on their departure, and the number of windows broken
-by the future B.A. should be certified by the Provost,’ I said.
-
-‘Or even better,’ replied the Pilot, ‘a record of theatres attended,
-with musical comedies marked in red, should be sent to every Dean at
-the end of each term, by the theatre people.’
-
-‘Great Scott, what revelations there’d be; why, some of the most
-respectable people would lose their characters at once. Poor old de
-Beresford, who went six times to “San Toy” and seven to “Florodora,” is
-supposed to be a model character.’ This from Reggie.
-
-‘Chiefly,’ I remarked, ‘because he never cuts the Dean and always pays
-the Treasurer “the exact amount of his battels, not requiring change,”
-see College Rules.’
-
-‘If we could all acquire good reputations as easily, how happy we
-should be,’ murmured the Pilot pensively; ‘somehow I never have been
-able to get the authorities to take me seriously.’
-
-‘You must start by taking yourself seriously,’ replied Freddy, ‘but
-it all shows how little our Dons really know about us. Look at old
-von Graussman, noisy and addicted to beer, but hard-working and
-conscientious. His character among the Dons is “lazy, rowdy, and
-conscienceless”: you know after a row he’s always sent for first. Then
-take, as I said before, de Beresford, or Accrington, who conceals
-behind a constant attendance at early chapel and a habit of going about
-with a logic book in his hand, the most villainous and demoniacal mind
-and a rooted hatred of all in authority; he’s at the bottom of most
-ructions in College.’
-
-‘It’s quite true,’ I said, ‘I am afraid on the whole we’re a bad and
-unvirtuous lot.’
-
-‘Looking back on the past term, I see,’ remarked the Pilot pointing out
-of window, ‘a blue haze over everything; I can dimly descry several
-theatres, three twenty-firsters, many large dinners, four Saturday
-nights, and a couple of outings to town; these, with a slight admixture
-of lectures and a row in College, constitutes the employment of most
-of us for the last term; one or two have had schools, but for the rest
-this is “le monde ou l’on s’amuse.”’
-
-‘True, O King,’ said Squiff, ‘but I am going to turn you all out now,
-as I’ve got to pack. I’ve got leave to go down to-morrow: I suppose,
-by-the-bye, I shall see you all in town on Saturday at the Rugger
-Match.’
-
-‘If not at it, at least afterwards,’ I said; ‘we’ll say the Royal
-Leicester for choice, I think, and supper at--?’
-
-‘We can settle that later; you must go now,’ said Squiff hastily,
-and so we departed, promising to speed the O’Rossa on his way at the
-station. The chronicles of the Rugger Match, and what happened after
-it, and before it, and how we all got to it, require a fresh chapter
-and a new pen.
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
-RUGGER NIGHT.
-
-
-It was Friday, the day before the Rugger Match, and every one was
-considering how to get away, as the College Collections were going on
-all the morning, and the match began at two o’clock. Those who had
-been in the Schools, of course, had no difficulty in getting leave;
-but the excuses offered by the rest were more numerous than truthful.
-The number of dentists with whom urgent appointments had been made was
-simply phenomenal, while several men had relatives who had chosen that
-exact day to leave for the Riviera, or to return from South Africa.
-The rush by the 12.52, which arrived almost in time for the match,
-was unprecedented. Freddy, who had been in for a Viva that morning,
-arrived at the station just before the train started, with a shirt in
-his coat pocket, and two ties and a collar rolled up in a copy of the
-_Daily Mail_. He also brought two bags stuffed with unnecessary things,
-bulging and unlocked; he is, I think, the most untidy person in Oxford.
-The Pilot, Reggie, de Beresford, Accrington and I were waiting for him
-on the platform; and de B. had just offered five to one against his
-turning up, but, unfortunately no one had taken him, owing to Freddy’s
-known unpunctuality. We secured by the use of palm-oil, a carriage
-to ourselves, and played poker on the way up. We finished soon after
-Reading, and then the Pilot, who had been in an utterly penniless
-condition for two days previously, explained for our benefit how he had
-secured the necessary funds for this expedition.
-
-‘You know,’ he began, ‘that picture “The Golden Dream,” by Dicksee;
-well, I bought that at Gill and Manser’s in the Corn, when I came up,
-and it cost me four guineas. Since then the value of the thing has gone
-up, and I got nearly seven pounds for it when I sold it to Pickington
-and Bluster. So I kept the fiver for this little trip; and sent the
-other people something on account.’
-
-‘How did you know the thing would go up?’ inquired Freddy.
-
-‘I didn’t,’ replied the Pilot. ‘But I knew it wouldn’t go down.’
-
-On our arrival at Paddington we separated for various destinations:
-Freddy and I drove straight to Queen’s to meet Squiff who had been up
-overnight, and found the match had already started; so we made for
-our seats and proceeded to enjoy the game. It was an excellent fight,
-but resulted in a draw, which I always consider most unsatisfactory.
-However, the last ten minutes were so hard fought, and the relief so
-great, that Squiff, when the whistle was blown, out of pure joy planted
-his fist through the topper of an elderly and portly person with a gold
-chain, who was sitting in front; the old boy (who had been dancing on
-one leg and gurgling ‘Cambridge’ loudly) took no notice, but continued
-to yell, so we left him, and squeezed our way out. I got into a cab
-with Freddy and Squiff, and drove off to the ‘Cabin’ for tea.
-
-‘Poor old Verimisti, who came to town with me yesterday, isn’t up yet,’
-Squiff informed us; ‘he was very tired last night, didn’t arrive at
-the ‘Knavesmire’ till 4.30 a.m., and then gave the cabby sixpence and
-expected him to be satisfied. I had to come down in jimmies, pay the
-cabby, and help him to disembark. When I looked him up this morning he
-was having his fourth Laager, and at the mere mention of ham he turned
-a rich yellow.’
-
-‘I gather, we’re all dining at the ‘Sphere’ at 7.30,’ I said, ‘we shall
-be the old crew plus Verimisti (if he’s well enough to come) and de
-Beresford. Is Fatty up?’
-
-‘No,’ answered Freddy, ‘Fatty’s got a wealthy uncle in town who
-insisted on seeing the Bodleian and James’ Gardens this afternoon; but
-he’s going to shunt the old man at five, and coming up ready dressed by
-the 5.50.’
-
-‘I shall go back and unpack after tea,’ I said, ‘where are the others
-staying?’
-
-‘We’re at the Knavesmire,’ replied Squiff, ‘but von Graussman, and
-the Pilot and Reggie are at the Haverstock, while de Beresford and
-Accrington are doing themselves proud at the Great Trafalgar.’
-
-The Cabin was crowded, but after some time we got a table, but no
-chairs, so I leaned against the wall, while Freddy sat on Squiff’s
-knee. This seemed to cause some surprise, until we found ourselves
-obliged to give our only seat to a lady who was standing, and as
-we couldn’t sit on the floor we left hurriedly and tealess. Two
-shillings-worth all round at the American bar at the ‘Cri’ seemed to
-revive us wonderfully, and after this it was time to dress, so we
-hurried home to the Knavesmire. When we had finished we found Verimisti
-painfully dressing, assisted by the boots, and looking very yellow
-about the gills.
-
-‘Oh! Freddy,’ he cried when he saw us, ‘I have my tongue so like
-sulphur, and have my twelfth laager just drunk, and still thirsty am I!’
-
-We both laughed most unfeelingly, and after he had bathed his aching
-brow in cold water, led him gently downstairs, and, having packed
-ourselves into two hansoms, made for the Sphere, which we reached,
-according to our invariable custom, ten minutes late.
-
-We found the rest of the party already assembled in the big hall, and
-made our way to a table for ten which had been reserved for us. The
-whole family, especially von Graussman, were in a highly excitable
-state, and the stirring selections of cake-walks and musical comedies
-that were played by the band caused some of the parties who were dining
-in the room to perform most extraordinary antics. A popular Sousa march
-was accompanied by clapping of hands, while ‘Sammy’ was sung by the
-entire company.
-
-‘Well! here’s confusion to the Examiners,’ said Freddy, as he drained
-his glass after the fish; and when Freddy begins drinking--confusion or
-otherwise--after the fish, I know what is likely to ensue. Freddy had
-also just been ploughed in Contracts.
-
-‘To ’Ell mit dem,’ added von Graussman, who had missed Law Prelim.
-again.
-
-These sentiments having been duly honoured, we turned our attention to
-‘Ponichets de Volaille,’ which Verimisti, who had got through a quart
-of moselle cup on his own, insisted on eating with a table-spoon.
-
-‘There’ll be quite a clearance next term, I’m afraid,’ remarked Squiff;
-‘such a number of the Unregenerate have failed in Law Prelim. or Mods.,
-and they’re sure to be sent down.’
-
-‘Yes, I was gone to drive mit a gountry vicar, next week,’ remarked von
-Graussman pensively, ‘and, oh! but the dullnesses vos ’orrible. Dere
-vos only von publig-house vour miles away, and dat they closes at ten
-hours. But,’ he added triumphantly, ‘I vos not a Brotestant, and I do
-not rise for der service at eight hours morning.’
-
-‘Well, anyhow, we’ll make things hum in the summer,’ said Freddy;
-‘it’ll be my last term, and Squiff’s and Reggie’s and several others,
-so we must create an impression, and a good one if possible, before we
-leave the ’Varsity.’
-
-‘Don’t try and make an impression on the pavement outside the Royal
-Leicester to-night,’ said de Beresford mockingly, ‘it’s asphalt and
-very hard. I know,’ he added feelingly, ‘I’ve tried it.’
-
-‘Anyhow, let’s make this a record night,’ said Accrington, who bubbled
-with excitement.
-
-This sentiment met with a cordial reception. Verimisti rose carefully
-from the table and commenced a long and rambling speech which was ended
-by the arrival of what the Pilot somewhat coarsely calls ‘The Settler.’
-Its real name is Ponche Romaine, and it acts as an appetiser, enabling
-one to begin again hungry on the second part of the dinner. This
-proceeded somewhat more rapidly, as we found it was getting late. We
-honoured several toasts, including ‘Conspuez les dons’ from Verimisti,
-‘Hoch der Kaiser!’ from von Graussman, and ‘The Unregenerate’ from
-Freddy, and then rather unsteadily the party made its way to the
-cloak-room, and got into its outer garments.
-
-A slight sensation was caused by Squiff kissing the girl who sold
-buttonholes in the entrance hall, while Verimisti’s attempt to embrace
-the stately official outside caused that personage both surprise and
-annoyance.
-
-The arrival of the party at the Leicester was accompanied by much
-noise, and loud cheers on the part of several other parties who were
-also disembarking. As we went up the steps, somebody clutched my arm,
-and turning round I found it was Blandford of Barrabas’.
-
-‘Hullo,’ I said, ‘are you coming in?’
-
-‘That’s the question,’ he replied. It appeared that he had already been
-thrown out, but wanted to come in with our party again. ‘If I cram my
-hat down on my nose, and button up my coat, I’m sure they’ll pass me; I
-only want you to say I belong to you.’
-
-‘I’ll try,’ I said dubiously, and we walked on to the barrier where I
-presented our ticket for Box 10 and our party passed in, accompanied by
-the audible comments of one of the officials on the size of the party.
-De Beresford, who came last, was stopped and had to take a five-bob
-ticket, for, as the man said, ‘Hi’ve passed hin nine gents for that
-borx already, and hits only meant to ’old six or seving.’
-
-The scene within, well, everybody must know it; the ‘five-bob ring’
-was absolutely full, ’Varsity men and members of the tender sex being
-nearly equal in number.
-
-As we passed along to our box a person with a purple nose and a
-battered top-hat was singing about the brokers, and this was about all
-we saw of the performance that evening. We left our hats and coats
-in the box and then sallied out in a body in search of spirits both
-kindred and otherwise.
-
-Owing to the very crowded state of the promenade we were unable to
-hold together, and I soon found myself sandwiched between Verimisti
-and von Graussman bound for an adjacent bar. As we were turning into
-the desired haven the Italian observed a small notice saying ‘No
-ladies served in this bar,’ and immediately sheered off with a pained
-expression on his very expressive face.
-
-‘We are not ladies, but all the identical we cannot without female
-society be,’ he remarked in an injured tone and hustled us rapidly on
-to the passage at the further end of the promenade, where a uniformed
-official gave us tickets outside the big bar.
-
-This was a scene of indescribable confusion, and as we entered two
-porters came forward leading between them a well-known member of the
-Cambridge team. He was very talkative, but his eloquence did not appear
-to move his captors in the least degree, possibly because none of his
-remarks were at all intelligible. After them there followed several
-more Cambridge blues and an elderly gentleman with a bucolic face who
-appeared to be very irate. The procession passed us with some speed,
-but we subsequently found the talkative Cantab singing a song on the
-floor of another bar, and discovered that this was due to the influence
-of the bucolic gentleman who was an old ’Varsity man and a legal
-luminary of very great brilliancy.
-
-The front of the bar itself was hidden by two lines of ’Varsity men,
-nearly all asking for different things but all at the same time.
-However, I soon found a suitable inlet, and all was going well with
-us when one of the fair nymphs behind the bar unfortunately shot von
-Graussman in the nose with a lemonade or soda cork, producing an
-entirely unexpected effect.
-
-The German fell into the lap of a lady sitting close behind exclaiming
-‘Ach? I vos mortified.’ Her cloak covered his head for a moment, but
-extricating himself he tendered her his admission-ticket, and begged
-her in very broken English to let him out of the cloak-room. To his
-impassioned appeal she replied very volubly in German, and an affecting
-scene ensued when he fell upon her neck, and loudly claimed her as his
-long-lost mother. Within the space of two minutes a large and noisy
-crowd had gathered round, and were hoarsely cheering, so it was some
-time before Verimisti and I could push our way through. When we did
-get to the front, the lady was assuring von Graussman in a penetrating
-whisper, that though she was not his mother, she was willing to be his
-wife.
-
-Von Graussman, whose impressionable heart was once captured in
-Buda Pesth and only redeemed at considerable expense, sheered off
-immediately, and confidentially informed us afterwards that ‘she vos a
-dam dangerous woman.’
-
-Having made a vain attempt to approach the bar again, we fought our
-way back to the promenade, and discovered that ‘Mephisto’ was about to
-loop the loop. As everyone was anxious to see this, we regained our
-box, which we found crowded to suffocation, and by standing on chairs
-at the back got a view of the exciting item. Freddy, who having leant
-against the electric bell and ordered drinks round, had gone away and
-forgotten to pay, could not be found; so Verimisti shelled out, and
-after drinking his health, we moved out again. I may mention that this
-was the only item on the programme of which I have any recollection, as
-soon afterwards all became dim for a short time, and I only revived
-in the further bar with Freddy and Accrington beside me. In the
-meanwhile it appears that Squiff and de Beresford, both of whom were
-‘among the breakers,’ had made a determined attempt to throw one of the
-chuckers-out downstairs, and were now repenting their mistake in the
-cool air of Leicester Square; but they subsequently returned in a very
-dishevelled condition ‘by some secret way known to all but themselves.’
-
-I am told that I had begun to make skilful arrangements for looping the
-loop with the help of two round topped tables, when a stalwart official
-requested Squiff and de Beresford to calm me down, which they had
-succeeded in doing with a handkerchief soaked in soda-water.
-
-As soon as my sight was thoroughly restored we returned to the box, but
-did not feel well enough to take any interest in the performance.
-
-Moreover, just at that moment we were alarmed by thunderous crashes
-on the door which Blandford hastily opened, and Verimisti rushed in
-followed by a heated and indignant official; he rushed to the front of
-the box and began to climb out, endeavouring to drop into the stalls,
-explaining meanwhile that he ‘must escape dese awful mens in uneform
-who put themselves upon my nerve.’
-
-He became very indignant when Accrington caught him by the collar, and,
-in his subsequent struggles to escape, his dress coat was ripped up
-astern from top to bottom and part of his braces gave way.
-
-The functionary who had chased him demanded his immediate expulsion,
-but when Reggie explained that he belonged to our box he retired
-peacefully after accepting a gin-cocktail that had grown upon the floor
-by some mysterious means.
-
-As the door closed upon the officer, the voice of Fatty was heard from
-underneath a pile of coats in the corner.
-
-‘I don’t know what is happening,’ he remarked plaintively, ‘but if
-somebody will fetch me an Angostura and ginger-beer and pay for it, I
-shall be quite happy for half-an-hour.’
-
-‘Don’t be an ass,’ said Freddy, who was steadying himself by a clothes
-peg, ‘who is to fetch you anything; besides, if they did, do you
-suppose they’d get it here in safety?’
-
-‘Yes,’ put in Blandford, ‘the person in pink plush with white
-extremities lost seven drinks off his tray on the way to the next box
-just now.’
-
-Here a lady, whose only known name was Girlie, and who had been
-dumped down in the box by some member of our party who had completely
-forgotten her, demanded a sherry and bitters.
-
-‘Who’s that?’ remarked Freddy unsteadily, as he let go one hat peg and
-caught another after two vain efforts. ‘Whashedoinere?’
-
-‘Can’t imagine,’ replied Fatty; and then Freddy having incautiously
-lost his grip on his sole means of support and fallen against the
-bell, the conversation was terminated by the appearance of the waiter.
-
-‘This lady,’ said Accrington to the waiter, ‘wants to stand us drinks
-all round.’
-
-Girlie then rose and commenced a protest which was more forcible than
-polite; but Accrington waved her aside with a regal gesture.
-
-‘I daresay you didn’t mean to say so m’dear,’ he added, ‘but there are
-somanyqueerpeopleretnight.’
-
-After the offended Girlie had left the box, Fatty was just proceeding
-to order the terrible mixture dear to his heart, when Freddy addressed
-the waiter as ‘Puddle darling,’ and enquired if he was going to
-Hardtopp-on-Sands for the mixed bathing.
-
-The waiter’s reply was to slam the door from the outside, and Fatty’s
-ginger-beered Angostura vanished into the dim and distant future.
-
-At this moment the last turn concluded, and the orchestra gave tongue
-to the National Anthem, which was caught up vigorously in all parts of
-the house.
-
-It took us quite a quarter of an hour to collect our party, but when
-this had been done we made hastily for Jacques’ to make sure of
-getting something to eat and drink before closing time. Blandford,
-who belongs to the New Lyric, invited the whole party to sup there,
-but I dissuaded him; and as we afterwards found that the Club was
-closed indefinitely, my wisdom was justified. Crossing the Circus we
-lost Reggie; who subsequently scandalised the habitués of the Great
-Trafalgar by reappearing about 11.30 next morning in evening dress with
-an improbable tale of a cousin from Peckham Rye, who had taken him in
-for the night.
-
-At the entrance to the Restaurant, Freddy sighted an awful looking
-object with an eye-glass, which subsequently caused him much
-perturbation. An appeal to the presiding genius of the lobster bar to
-have the offensive person removed proved unavailing, and so we made
-for the supper room endeavouring to forget his glassy eye and pinched
-waist. Since it was no longer as early as it had been, the room was
-nearly full, each table being occupied by one or more young gentlemen
-enjoying assorted confectionery. Before we had time to do anything
-a fight between two ladies, late of Hamburg, but now of Aphrodite
-Mansions, according to the waiter, engrossed our attention. The
-subject of dispute was a weak-looking little man with pince-nez who
-gazed helplessly at the combatants, evidently wondering if his fate
-would be that of the baby in the case adjudicated by the late Solomon
-of Jerusalem! The end came quite suddenly, for a herculean official
-unobstrusively removed the two ladies, leaving the poor little man to
-consume a double portion of rum omelette in solitude.
-
-By running two tables together we managed to keep our party united,
-and an invaluable waiter who appeared to know our wants by instinct,
-dumped down several dishes of devilled kidneys and two magnums of the
-best, which were consumed as though none of us had had a meal for a
-week. We were doing very nicely, thank you, and Freddy and Fatty had
-already fallen into a comatose condition when the room was electrified
-by the appearance of Ironsides of Tydvil carrying the offensive
-eye-glass person upside down by one leg. Several waiters clung unheeded
-to his trousers, and the manager followed giving vent to frenzied
-ejaculations. The creature’s disengaged leg had only just collided
-with the head waiter’s face, and swept three glasses off a buffet when
-the lights went out, and simultaneously a piece of grilled haddock
-found a lodgement in my eye. Those in authority raised a melancholy
-chorus of ‘time, gentlemen, please,’ with a foreign accent, and Freddy,
-having tucked a magnum under each arm, led the procession to the door,
-supported by Accrington with the bill pinned on to his coat-tail.
-
-The subsequent adventures of the party were too varied to be described
-in full, with the exception of Fatty, whom we sent straight back to
-the hotel in a hansom, and who was discovered by the charwoman at 6.30
-asleep under the billiard table.
-
-The party that breakfasted at the Great Trafalgar next morning about
-lunch-time was reduced in number and unusually thoughtful; the latter,
-partly because it is extremely difficult to raise money in London on
-Sunday, and partly owing to the frequent lubrication on the previous
-evening. Freddy had already left by the Holyhead express for Coffington
-Castle, Co. Down. In the brief message left with the night porter for
-Squiff, he explained that he had been to see the sunrise from Notting
-Hill, and had only just had time to fetch his luggage. Von Graussman
-and de Beresford, who had slept in an hotel in New Oxford Street, left
-by the Pullman train at 11.0 for Brighton to recruit, as they said they
-had both had too much pastry the night before. All traces had been
-entirely lost of Blandford; it is only known that he arrived home three
-days later with a broken bowler and a couple of ladies’ cloak-room
-tickets, and went to bed for several days. The rest of us returned to
-Oxford to pack and go through Vivas. I think I endorse the opinion of
-Fatty, who afterwards remarked that ‘The wicked flourish like a green
-bay tree, though they much prefer the dew of Glenlivet to that of
-Hermon.’
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
-HOW WE RAGGED THE SUBURBAN.
-
-
-Owing to the awful scenes on the last night of the ‘Cannibal Girl,’
-musical comedies had become exceedingly unpopular with the authorities,
-and so we had to rely upon the Suburban for what Squiff calls ‘an
-occasional divarsion.’
-
-It all began with the Fresher’s lunch in Wykeham’s. The Fresher is
-exceedingly fresh for, well, for a fresher, and his lunch, like the
-Miller’s daughter, ‘was fresher still.’ The party was a genial one,
-though, with the exception of Reggie and Accrington, most of the
-sportsmen present were recruited from circles outside that of the
-Elect. I regret to say that I arrived last of all, but then I generally
-do. I don’t think any of the best people would know me now if I came in
-first to a public function; they’d think it was my double.
-
-When I entered the Fresher’s room I found Lord St. Ronots and another
-St. Union’s man called Hawkes, Downey of Lichfield, and a certain
-Italian Count by the name of Imarisa. Reggie and Accrington had also
-come in, but as they were busily engaged playing different tunes upon
-the same piano, I do not include them among the respectable people.
-As we commenced operations upon the inevitable lobster salad, and the
-Fresher succeeded in inducing his scout, who had three other parties
-on the staircase, to attend to us for fully two consecutive minutes,
-St. Ronots remarked that the panto at the Suburban was not covered with
-dust to any appreciable extent, which for St. Ronots, and still more
-for the Suburban, is a great concession. Downey said that he intended
-going to see the show, and when Reggie in his usual charming way
-mentioned that I was going with him and several other people, I began
-to realise that most of the very best would patronise the Suburban that
-night. We decided to make a circular tour of the ancient and moth-eaten
-city after lunch for the purpose of beating up recruits, but meanwhile
-we were perforce constrained to turn our attention to the ‘savoury
-viands’--as the late W. Shakespeare would probably have said.
-
-There was no lack of incident to vary the monotony of mere eating, for
-the Fresher persisted in consuming noxious Virginian cigarettes between
-each dish, while Reggie accompanied every entry of the scout by martial
-airs upon the piano. It may perhaps be as well to mention that this did
-not necessitate any exceptional exertion on Reggie’s part, or he would
-certainly never have done it, but he merely leant back in his chair and
-played the piano with ease, the dimensions of the Fresher’s apartment
-being somewhat restricted.
-
-After lunch was over we all went round in a body to St. Union’s and
-other Colleges in search of joyful souls to join us for the evening’s
-jaunt, and while passing through the Corn on our way to Thomas’, we met
-Elgar of King’s and two titled foreigners, who informed us that they
-were ‘looking for trouble.’ This sounded promising, and so we enlisted
-their services immediately and invited them to coffee at our digs after
-dinner. We extended a like invitation to most of the other people we
-met that afternoon, and then hastened back to the Pilot-House--as
-Reggie now calls our establishment--to order a festive little dinner.
-
-Our dinner party was a small one. There were only de Beresford, Evelyn,
-and Farmborough, besides our three selves, but the real fun began when
-Elgar turned up about half-past seven with an old pair of pyjamas,
-which he proceeded to don, and then treated us to a wild breakdown,
-regardless of the surrounding crockery and the unfortunate Mary
-Ellen, who waited upon us in fear and trembling. As Mrs. McNab often
-says to the Pilot, ‘It ain’t you three gentlemen what makes all the
-rampagingses, but it’s them there harum scarum friends of yours,’ which
-only shows how skilfully we conceal our little weaknesses from the
-powers below, who are in this case the Dig-Master and his wife. When
-we reached the coffee stage our little party increased very rapidly.
-Many of the gentlemen assembled appeared to find coffee insipid, and it
-was at this juncture that I discovered a bottle of Chartreuse in the
-cellarette, which I seized with the intention of serving out a few
-liqueurs, but there was no need for thimble glasses, as Stanhope and
-Freddy took their allowance in coffee, Squiff mixed his with champagne
-in equal proportions, while Elgar, who couldn’t find anything smaller,
-lapped up a half tumbler of the fire-water with much pomp. Finding that
-the bottle was quite empty I went to the window to see if any more
-visitors were in sight, and beheld for the first time an enormous array
-of cabs stretching for quite a healthy distance up and down the High.
-As the liquid refreshment was completely exhausted and it was growing
-late, I suggested an adjournment to the Suburban, and we left for that
-festive old barn in a body, three men in each hansom. On our arrival we
-soon skipped out and arranged to owe our cab fares, but taking tickets
-was a slower affair. The ticket office at the Suburban is modelled
-exactly upon those at railway stations, that is to say, it is placed so
-as to present the minimum of accessibility with the maximum of draught,
-but by dint of a little perseverance we eventually obtained two dozen
-stalls and streamed along the passage to the door of the House. When we
-got inside we were astonished to find more than a hundred Undergrads,
-instead of the usual contingent of anything from five to half-a-dozen,
-and this crowding unfortunately compelled us to divide our party. We
-exchanged friendly greetings with the various people known to us, and
-placed Elgar in an unobtrusive seat where he would not readily catch
-the Manager’s eye, and then prepared to watch the show itself. A most
-remarkable sort of Sister Anne person made his appearance upon the
-stage soon after our arrival, and some people who were outside the
-pale of the Elect assailed him with certain strange missiles, chiefly
-horticultural specimens, which must have stirred up Woodbine the
-manager, for immediately there descended upon us a shower of leaflets
-setting forth that ‘nothing must be thrown upon the stage,’ that
-‘bouquets left at the office would be handed on to their destination,’
-and that any one guilty of disorderly conduct ‘Would be Instantly
-Ejected.’ This unfortunate notice had exactly the contrary effect to
-what was intended, and two Gloucester men near me, who had brought
-a liberal supply of tangerines, immediately prepared for action. It
-was patent to the meanest intelligence that trouble was brewing, and
-Woodbine’s myrmidons closed up their serried ranks adjacent to the
-door. I noticed that our little party was sadly scattered, but was
-glad to see that Elgar was surrounded by several most stalwart allies.
-At this moment Downey, who was sitting in front of me and close to
-the outside of the House, on the left, rose in his seat and proceeded
-to conduct the orchestra with a folded programme. Now, though this
-is a form of amusement by no means uncommon at the Suburban, and not
-altogether unknown even at the theatre, it is often allowed to pass
-unnoticed and never evokes anything more than a polite remonstrance,
-but on this particular occasion the melancholy Woodbine is evidently on
-the war-path.
-
-He advances to Downey, but instead of requesting him to leave off his
-peculiar amusement, snatches wildly at the programme itself, and in his
-anger falls over the men in front of him; then finding his own efforts
-unavailing, he summons the staff of porters who wear the livery of the
-establishment, and directs them to eject the self-appointed conductor.
-As this motley crew advances, and Woodbine himself very cautiously
-concentrates upon the rear, all the ’Varsity men in that part of the
-House rise in their places and make it impossible for the mercenaries
-to reach Downey, who is in the middle of a row, unless they first clear
-the intervening seats by force. Woodbine, foiled a second time, now
-summons O.P. 134, an enormous ‘peeler,’ who has been standing just
-outside the door on the other side of the House. The Bobby advances and
-endeavours to reach Downey, but is prevented by the men before him, who
-have resumed their seats, but make an impassable barrier by setting up
-their legs against the seats in front.
-
-The officer of the law does not attempt to force his way through,
-but enters the row behind, where the inhabitants are disinterested
-strangers, and seizes Downey; then meeting with no opposition from the
-occupants of that row, he grips his victim firmly by the collar, and,
-pulling him over the back and top of his seat, proceeds to remove him
-from the House.
-
-But at this moment St. Ronots, who conceals a desperate character
-beneath a mild and almost saintly exterior, took two flying leaps and
-caught the Bobby round the neck while Hawkes jerked him neatly off
-his feet. The gentleman in blue, as I have mentioned before, was of
-colossal height, and also suitably proportioned, so that his sudden
-fall brought down and completely demolished two rows of stalls, while
-some dozen chairs were carried away by a sudden rush of the men behind,
-who feared the impact of such an Herculean mass.
-
-At this juncture I feared a really serious tumult, which would
-undoubtedly have ensued but for two reasons. In the first place Downey
-was seated quite close to the further exit, and, secondly, most of our
-mightiest men of valour were too far from the scene of action to take a
-hand. Though, as Accrington afterwards remarked, ‘It’s a cold deal that
-leaves me out.’
-
-This was a very cold deal, for poor Downey was only a carcase in the
-grip of the monumental policeman, who soon regained the perpendicular
-and hustled him out of the auditorium with most creditable speed. The
-tumult, however, was not quelled in an instant, and Woodbine, who had
-incautiously anticipated the Bobby’s victory, received a chair-back
-just amidships, and went down among the dead men, to the detriment of
-his pince-nez and eternal cigarette. Reggie, having nobly retained his
-grip on Downey’s leg, was cut off by the sudden and quite unintentional
-fall of a respected greengrocer, who tumbled off his chair and bore
-poor Rex to the ground, while Hawkes, who had been endeavouring with
-Elgar and St. Ronots to release Downey from the grip of the law, was
-struck violently in the eye by something with the regulation number
-of features. After these casualties, O.P. 134 got his man out into
-the entrance, where he and No. 154 mounted guard over him until the
-Proctor, for whom Woodbine had telegraphed, should arrive.
-
-We could not induce the Bobbies, who were civil enough, to release
-their prisoner. I tried reasoning with Woodbine, but he perpetually
-shifted his ground, while his assessment of the probable amount of
-damage at over forty pounds was so unreasonable that it was useless to
-attempt to come to terms.
-
-De Beresford, who had disappeared mysteriously, returned very soon with
-a brandy and soda which he bestowed upon Downey, and then finding all
-remonstrances with Woodbine quite unavailing, we resumed our seats, St.
-Ronots, Elgar and everybody who had taken an active part in the fracas,
-having executed a masterly retreat to their respective Colleges,
-directly they heard that the Manager had telephoned for the Proctor.
-
-I found a resting place on the wreckage of some stalls beside de
-Beresford and Evelyn, with Reggie just in front of us, and we sat thus
-until the familiar face of the most genial of the Proctors, followed
-by a singularly funereal bull-dog, appeared in the doorway. At this
-juncture Freddy, Accrington and Stanhope, together with about a couple
-of score more ’Varsity men, whose faces we knew by sight but not to
-speak to, departed comfortably and without any undue haste by the extra
-exit. Most of us however who had perfectly clear consciences sat tight
-and gave our names to the Proctor, not with any idea of ultimately
-contributing to the University Chest, but merely as a guarantee of good
-faith. As soon as we had performed our own particular share of this
-little formality, Reggie and I with de Beresford left the house in
-search of our first liquid refreshment, picking up on our way Stanhope
-and Freddy who had been carefully concealed in the pit. We reached that
-admirable institution, the Cowley Bowling Club, of which most of us
-are members, and were enjoying a little well-earned refreshment, when
-to our amazement the ubiquitous Proctor with the iniquitous bull-dogs
-appeared in the entrance. Houseman advanced and was about to address
-Reggie, who was surveying him with no very friendly expression, when
-the excellent barman appeared suddenly from the back-room and asked the
-Proctor if he was a member of the Club, which honour he was compelled
-to disclaim, but expressed a desire to speak with some of the young
-gentlemen present. The wily barman however asked if Houseman had a
-warrant to enter the club, and on hearing that he had not, asked him
-most politely to withdraw at once. The Proctor complied with this
-request with the best grace possible under the circumstances, but I
-have seldom seen bull-dogs look more malevolent than Houseman’s two
-attendants. No, not even when a pair of them tracked me four weary
-miles on foot only to find that the fair lady with whom I had been
-sharing a cab at midnight was indeed my second cousin.
-
-Having congratulated ourselves and the barman upon his presence of
-mind, we finished our drinks and returned to the Suburban, where the
-show seemed to be going on peacefully. Two bicyclists were chasing one
-another round and round upon a sloping circular track at a tremendous
-rate, and whenever they stopped for breath the showman filled in the
-interval with an explanatory speech.
-
-Unfortunately this same showman was an extremely sour looking person
-and presented a most remarkable appearance. He had a brown bowler
-hat and trousers, green waistcoat, and black expression, which ‘tout
-ensemble’ constrained St. Ronots to cheer--though not very lustily--at
-the wrong moment, thereby greatly enraging the human kaleidoscope, who
-signalled to Woodbine to remove the Hereditary Legislator from the
-House. That individual advanced with some circumspection and requested
-St. Ronots peremptorily to ‘go outside quietly,’ but our friend who
-had really done nothing wrong, not unnaturally declined to comply with
-his request, and so the Manager was compelled to fall back upon his
-oleaginous smile and the Proctor. That gentleman came across to the
-Hereditary Legislator and exchanged a word or two with him and then
-appeared to metaphorically put Woodbine through the mangle, for he
-departed sadly to the Temperance Bar for another cigarette while the
-Proctor went quietly home. For the remaining hour or so, we really
-watched the performance, which was rather diverting, and leaving in a
-body at about eleven o’clock, finished the evening in our rooms.
-
-On Monday morning, in response to urgent notices from the Junior
-Proctor, a large party assembled at the leprous hour of nine in
-his rooms at James’. We noticed, as we entered the ante-room, the
-Assistant Manager of the Suburban Palace of Varieties clad in the usual
-check cycling-suit and bowler hat, besides several promising looking
-criminals who were obviously witnesses in various cases coming up for
-investigation. After exchanging greetings with Squiff and Accrington,
-Reggie and I selected the two most comfortable chairs and sat down to
-wait, while the party were passed in one by one to the torture-chamber.
-More and more people continued to arrive, including Bob Parclane,
-arrayed in the inevitable eye-glass and check-coat, who was conducting
-a party accused of throwing bottles out of a window at an elderly
-citizen. There were also two gentlemen of our acquaintance, who had
-been so indiscreet as to empty the contents of a syphon upon some
-wayfarer’s head below their windows in Unity.
-
-After waiting an interminable time, during which the crowd at the
-door never seemed to grow less, I was ushered in and questioned, but
-on disclaiming any share in the riot, was politely bowed out. Reggie,
-who followed me, could not truthfully say this, and was noted down
-for further reference, and a share in the damages. By this time it was
-ten o’clock, and we hurried off to join St. Ronots, who was waiting to
-breakfast with us at the O.U.D.S., and to take tickets for the next
-musical comedy, which was nothing less than the ever popular ‘Cinq
-Demi-Vierges.’ In the course of the day every one who had attended the
-Proctorial Levée received a notice regretting that the J.P. must ask us
-to pay a pound apiece by that evening, which we accordingly did. It was
-suggested that an indignation meeting of the shareholders in Bridgeley,
-Houseman & Co., Proctors and General Collectors, should be summoned
-to demand a statement of accounts, and Reggie, who had just paid four
-golden sovereigns into the concern, waxed most eloquent upon the
-subject, but nothing ever came of it. As the Pilot cheerfully remarked
-on his return from taking a pound share, ‘It is indeed wonderful how we
-put up with our Pastors and Masters.’
-
-
-
-
-VIII.
-
-AN EIGHTS’ WEEK.
-
-
-‘This,’ said Freddy wearily, as he threw a cream coloured envelope
-upon the table, ‘is too much of a good thing; here’s an official
-announcement from Aunt Julia that she and her companion, a cheery
-young thing of sixty-five, are coming up for a fortnight to enjoy the
-‘boating-races;’ she casually remarks that the girls have only one day
-vacant and that a Sunday, so that it will not be worth while their
-putting in an appearance.’ ‘Her postscript,’ he added, with a look of
-the deepest disgust, ‘runs as follows: “Dear Ophelia”--that’s the old
-girl’s satellite--“is very anxious to see something of real Oxford
-life, and hopes that you will arrange a visit with some nice young
-fellows to the Bodleian or the Martyrs’ Memorial.”’
-
-‘Pouff,’ blew the Pilot expressively, ‘what are our relations coming
-to; but, if it isn’t rude, who is Aunt Julia?’
-
-‘Julia Claudia Letitia Fanny, Dowager Lady Blitherington,’ recited
-Freddy, ‘her husband was Sir Hophni Jenkins of the _Weekly Eraser_, who
-bought a peerage by settling a Minister’s cab fares about forty years
-ago. But seriously, we must get the girls.’
-
-‘Oh yes, we must get the girls,’ echoed Squiff. ‘They’re awful
-sportswomen, I met them last year at the Addison Ball.’
-
-‘Oh yes, I remember them too,’ said Reggie. ‘They nearly ran me off
-my feet, and I finally settled with Maisie in the Senior Tutor’s
-rooms, where we sat out a considerable portion of the programme,
-and incidentally consumed all the strawberries left on the Reverend
-gentleman’s table.’
-
-‘I fancy,’ said Freddy reflectively, ‘that they go rather too fast for
-Aunt Julia, who, despite the decidedly _risqué_ tone of the _Weekly
-Eraser_, is not as enlightened as she should be. I must write to Muriel
-myself, I expect they’ve only got some wretched country visit which
-they can easily put off. We couldn’t stand Aunt Julia unadulterated.’
-
-‘Where did Miss Ophelia spring from?’ put in the Pilot, whose curiosity
-is insatiable.
-
-‘Oh, she was one of the bathing attendants at Margate when Aunt Julia
-went down there in sixty-five, and she took such a fancy to her that
-she’s kept her ever since.’
-
-‘We’d better arrange a joint picnic for all our relatives one day,’
-remarked Reggie, who often has these brilliant inspirations; ‘it will
-save a lot of trouble, and they’ll all be pleased.’
-
-‘They won’t be pleased with Ophelia,’ remarked Freddy unpleasantly,
-‘but have it your own way,’ and he retired to write letters.
-
-This conversation took place on the Sunday before Eights, after
-breakfast, and having settled nothing as usual, we went out on the
-river. On Tuesday afternoon at 6 o’clock Freddy, supported by Squiff
-and myself, fetched up at the station to meet Aunt Julia. The train had
-stopped fully two minutes before we saw a phenomenally unattractive
-female descend from a first-class carriage carrying several handbags
-and a diseased-looking spaniel.
-
-‘That’s the Bugg,’ remarked Freddy dismally, as he slowly advanced to
-the carriage from which Miss Bugg and a porter were heaving out an
-inanimate mass clad in furs, lace and silk. Freddy placed his arms
-gingerly around this relic and kissed it twice somewhere near the top.
-By the time Squiff and I reached them, the object had begun to speak.
-‘My dear Frederick,’ it was saying in feeble tones, ‘such a terrible
-journey; poor Jacob was so ill, and Ophelia actually forgot the
-curative capsules.’
-
-‘The O’Rossa, Mr. Cochrane, Lady Blitherington,’ murmured Freddy, but
-her Ladyship was busily engaged in administering to Jacob a capsule
-which the Bugg had just discovered.
-
-‘The O’Rossa, Mr. Cochrane, Miss Bugg,’ screamed Freddy, glaring at
-Ophelia.
-
-‘I’m so felicitous to meet you,’ replied the lady with a contortion
-intended for a friendly smile.
-
-‘I’m glad to see you’ve brought good weather with you,’ remarked
-Squiff to Aunt Julia, ‘at one time it looked rather like a bad week.’
-
-The Dowager was just about to reply when the arrival of her dutiful
-nephew, vicariously laden with luggage, put an end to conversation, and
-we helped the ladies into the Granville bus, accompanied by Freddy.
-
-On our way back we spent a pleasant half-hour at the King’s Restaurant,
-and so when we reached the Squifferies Freddy was already there.
-
-He greeted us with unnecessary noise and stuffed a telegram into my
-hand, which said: ‘Righto Thursday for a week be good Maisie,’ and
-Squiff, having read the message over my shoulder, whistled softly
-‘there’s a good time coming, boys,’ which Freddy interrupted by saying
-to both of us,
-
-‘If you can stand any more of the menagerie to-night come to dinner
-with us at eight.’
-
-We accepted, and arrived fairly punctually, to find Ophelia and Jacob
-in possession of the private sitting-room.
-
-Freddy of course was late.
-
-‘O, Mr. O’Rossa,’ she began as Squiff advanced towards her, ‘do tell me
-all about your daily provocations at Oxford.’
-
-‘That’s rather a large order, Miss Bugg,’ said Squiff smilingly, ‘where
-shall I begin?’
-
-‘At the very beginning, please,’ she said, ‘say at your early morning
-Church.’
-
-‘Well, Miss Bugg,’ said Squiff, ‘you give me an account of how you
-think we spend our day, and I’ll correct you if you go wrong.’
-
-‘Very well. I’ve read such a lot about Oxford you know, I always took
-such an interest in the dear Collegiates. I hear you rise at seven
-thirty, and then all those boys who have lodgings within the walls
-go to Church at eight, and afterwards a Parthian breakfast with your
-friends; now tell me,’ she continued, ‘I am so interested in all these
-things, do you perform your abductions at home or are there public
-baths? And then,’ she went on, giving us no time to think what she
-meant, ‘from 9 to 1 you attend the Professors, and the afternoon is
-spent in some form of aesthetics, or anthropological research. At seven
-you have dinner, and they tell me that the food is plentiful but bad;’
-‘hear! hear!’ I remarked; she beamed and continued, ‘I’ve looked in
-Verdant Green and the Student’s guide to Oxford, but I can’t get a
-clear idea of how you spend your evenings.’
-
-‘Chiefly in study,’ began Squiff solemnly, when he was interrupted by a
-roar from Freddy, whose face appeared round the door.
-
-‘What ho, Ophelia!’ he cried, as he came into the room; ‘On the go
-again? Don’t you believe all they tell you.’
-
-‘On the contrary,’ I interrupted, as Ophelia began a protest. ‘Miss
-Bugg was instructing us.’
-
-‘Your remark is somewhat exiguous, Mr. Cocklin,’ began the Bugg, when
-the inner door opened gently and Lady Blitherington sailed in.
-
-‘Good evening, Frederick,’ she said, and bowed to us, ‘I am glad you’re
-more punctual than usual; poor dear Hophni used to say that if your
-Uncle William had only been more punctual he might have risen to be a
-credit to the family.’
-
-‘Rather an unlikely contingency,’ remarked Freddy after we had put
-the ladies into the lift, ‘considering that the old scoundrel drove
-his wife into an asylum and then eloped to New York with a milliner’s
-assistant.’
-
-‘I suppose you’ve instructed Ophelia in all the Oxford customs,’
-remarked the dowager as she sat down.
-
-‘She doesn’t need any instructions,’ replied Squiff with a bow towards
-the Bugg, ‘she’s read all the best authorities, Lady Blitherington.’
-
-‘By the way, Aunt,’ said Freddy suddenly, ‘I’ve just had a wire from
-Maisie, she and Muriel are coming here on Thursday for a week, isn’t it
-jolly?’
-
-‘Goodness gracious me, Frederick,’ exclaimed the old lady, ‘but never
-mind, I suppose if they think nothing of putting off their visit to
-the dear Archdeacon, I mustn’t bother about it; still it is too bad of
-them.’
-
-‘O no, Aunt, it’s very good of them,’ said Freddy, ‘think how they’ll
-liven up the place.’
-
-‘I don’t doubt that for a minute,’ said Aunt Julia, and snapped her
-teeth with unusual decision.
-
-‘Are you out in Chambers or in the College, Mr. Cockerel?’ enquired the
-Bugg with a pleasant smile.
-
-‘I’m sorry to say it’s my last year, Miss Bugg,’ I replied, ‘and I’m
-out in digs, you must come and see them some day.’
-
-‘I should love it,’ replied the companion with a rapturous gaze at the
-electric light.
-
-‘My dear Ophelia,’ interjected a warning voice from the top of the
-table, ‘you can’t go without a chaperon!’
-
-At this remark I heard a suppressed gurgle beside me and turned in
-time to see Freddy hide his face in a napkin, while a soup spoon waved
-feebly in his nerveless fingers.
-
-Squiff, however, who has marvellous self-control, relieved the
-situation by complimenting Lady Blitherington on the possession of
-Jacob.
-
-‘The smartest little King Charles I have ever seen,’ he said with
-apparent sincerity.
-
-‘Ah! Mr. O’Rossa, Ophelia will be pleased to hear you say that,’ said
-the old lady, ‘she has tended that dog like a baby for the last ten
-years.’
-
-‘Do you care for dogs, Mr. O’Rossa?’ queried the Bugg.
-
-‘I’m very fond of them, Miss Bugg,’ he replied, ‘I keep several at
-home.’
-
-‘How nice,’ said the Bugg feelingly, ‘then you must try White Rose soap
-with them, I’ll give you a cake of it, there’s nothing better.’
-
-‘I should be surprised,’ said Squiff emphatically.
-
-Ophelia, however, did not appear to be troubled by the inanity of his
-reply, but immediately passed on to discussing the ‘rowing races’ with
-Freddy, who gave her exceedingly novel explanations of those innocent
-affairs.
-
-‘I suppose, Mr. Cochrane,’ said Lady Blitherington to me with a kindly
-smile, ‘I suppose you may stay out till ten o’clock?’
-
-‘Certainly, Lady Blitherington,’ I assented, but forbore to mention how
-far she had undershot the mark.
-
-‘Very well, then I will order tea for you before you go. I suppose you
-like tea after dinner, Mr. O’Rossa?’
-
-‘Very much, indeed, my Lady,’ said Squiff, courteously, ‘I esteem it
-immensely;’ and this answer appeared to agitate Freddy afresh, as he
-doubtless reflected that Squiff never touches anything milder than
-Green Chartreuse after dinner except on very rare occasions, when he
-condescends to a cup of thick Turkish coffee at the Trocadero.
-
-Before Freddy had reappeared from the shelter of his napkin, Miss
-Bugg, who had been endeavouring to shew me a new way of preparing
-strawberries with a steel knife, cut herself, and left the dining
-room in great haste, but we soon followed, and found her seated in an
-arm-chair, with Jacob fast asleep in her lap and the promised cake of
-White Rose soap in their immediate neighbourhood.
-
-Lady Blitherington ensconced herself in the other arm-chair, while
-Squiff, who has a fair baritone voice, sang us ‘Father O’Flynn’ with
-more vigour than accuracy.
-
-Just before ten an English waiter--born in Hamburg--appeared with
-what Ophelia persisted in calling ‘a dish of tea,’ and that good soul
-disappeared in search of Jacob’s own saucer in order that he too might
-enjoy a little light refreshment before retiring to the elaborately
-quilted basket awaiting him in her room.
-
-I parted from Freddy and Squiff at Carfax, and on entering our rooms
-found Reggie and the Pilot enveloped in a positive cloud of smoke,
-discussing everything in general and nothing in particular.
-
-‘Accrington’s people are coming up on Thursday, Martha,’ said Reggie,
-as I entered the room.
-
-‘Rot, Reggie,’ said the Pilot, ‘You mean Sybil Accrington is coming;
-I don’t suppose you care whether her father and mother come here or
-remain in Liverchester.’
-
-‘It seems to me, Reggie,’ I said, ‘that what with Maisie and Sybil
-Accrington and others, your hands will be pretty full this week.’
-
-‘The pressing problem of the moment,’ said the Pilot, gravely, as
-he spread himself in front of the fireplace, ‘is, how many pounds
-of strawberries are required to feed five healthy English girls,
-three elderly ladies, two lapdogs, and last but not least, eight
-undergraduates. Freddy’s arranged a picnic for Sunday, and left me to
-cater for it with his usual cheek.’
-
-‘Which is his usual cheek, Pilot?’ asked Reggie in his most irritating
-manner.
-
-‘O the right if it’s left, but if that isn’t right the left,’ said the
-Pilot gravely, as he heaved a book at Reggie and a sigh to himself, and
-drifted off to bed.
-
-When Reggie and I came down at 10.30 next morning we found the Pilot
-interrogating Mrs. McNab as to how she thought trifle and Charlotte
-Russe would go with cold lamb and salmon mayonnaise.
-
-The worthy lady, whose brain already reeled at the thought of the
-entertainments to be given at our lodgings during the week, was
-standing in the doorway murmuring to herself ‘hadd a piece of nutmeg an
-bile the ’ole in a pudden’ clorth.’
-
-Soon after she had gone, a large brake stopped at our door and the
-occupants in no mild terms requested Reggie and the Pilot to come out
-at once, if they did not wish to go where the refrigerator is of no
-avail.
-
-They obeyed the call, but the Pilot in addition to his cricket bag
-carried several wine lists and Hooper’s catalogue of ‘cold dishes for
-picnic parties.’
-
-In order to avoid a meeting with the Bugg, of whom I foresaw we
-should see a great deal, I motored over to Banbury for lunch with de
-Beresford. Thus it befell that I missed the most exciting scene of
-the day when Jacob fell into the river and was rescued by a Humane
-Society’s man, while the Bugg who had fainted on the Barabbas’ barge
-was revived by a drop of the bargeman’s private store of brandy.
-
-The crowd at the station, when we got there next day to receive
-Blitherington and the girls, was something terrific. Nearly every
-member of the University appeared to be expecting female relations,
-and most of them must have been satisfied, for the crowd by the 11.50
-was simply colossal, though our cheery trio were conspicuous by their
-absence. After two or three minutes of unavailing search we secured a
-harassed official who was buzzing round the mouth of the guard’s van,
-and he assured us that a relief train would arrive in ten minutes, so
-we possessed ourselves in patience and admired our friends’ sisters.
-
-We were presented to Mrs. and Miss Accrington and had just caught sight
-of de Beresford escorting his mother and her niece, the Honourable
-Violet McNeill, who is generally admitted to be the most charming
-débutante of the season, when the relief train steamed in and a second
-scene of confusion ensued. Freddy, who is very quick in all things,
-sorted out from a first-class carriage a faultlessly dressed young man
-with a monocle and a pink-and-white complexion and two extremely pretty
-girls, whom he introduced as my cousins Miss Coffington, Miss Muriel
-Coffington, and Lord Blitherington.
-
-His lordship created the first sensation by enquiring, ‘Is there a
-really good pawnshop down here?’
-
-‘Yes,’ said Maisie, ‘we picked him up in the Burlington Arcade
-yesterday, kept him till this morning, gave him sixpence for a shave
-and brought him down here, and now we’re all three cleaned out; but
-he’s brought his gold-mounted dressing case to stay with a local
-Hebrew, and so it’ll be pay day for everybody to-morrow. Now let’s get
-up to the village inn.’
-
-‘Don’t be in such a hurry, young woman,’ said Blitherington slowly,
-‘always reconnoitre your country before advancing your main body; is
-Ophelia with our Lady Aunt?’
-
-‘Very much so,’ said Freddy.
-
-‘Good-bye then, I’m going back to town,’ said his lordship as he
-proceeded to climb back into the carriage: but on our pointing out that
-he had no money, he was persuaded to accompany us to the hotel.
-
-‘Only I warn you,’ he said with a weary smile, ‘if Ophelia commences
-telling me about Jacob I shall either take to drink or emigrate.’
-
-We could not return to the Granville to lunch, as Freddy and I had
-promised to lunch with Cobson, and Reggie, who had been persuaded to
-speak at the Union that evening, had his speech to prepare; however we
-arranged to meet the girls and Blitherington in the gateway of Thomas’
-at four o’clock for the races. As we were walking down St. Aldate’s
-in the afternoon, Freddy, who professes a great indifference to the
-charms of his fair cousins, announced his intention of walking with
-Blitherington, so that Reggie and I were allotted to Maisie and Muriel.
-
-We had only been waiting about ten minutes when the trio hove in sight,
-Blitherington in a splendid flannel suit--he certainly does know how
-to dress--and the girls in exceedingly light fluffy chiffons, which
-always win my heart.
-
-Freddy was inclined to be sarcastic at their little lapse in
-punctuality, but Maisie at once said to him, ‘Now run along you quaint
-old thing and try to make Blithers behave himself; can’t you see Mr.
-Cochrane and I want to be alone?’
-
-I had intended taking Muriel, who though very pretty is said to be
-quieter than her sister, and giving Reggie the pleasure of Maisie’s
-decidedly effervescent conversation, but after this how could I resist
-taking her under my wing.
-
-‘We had a lot of difficulty in shunting Ophelia,’ she said complacently
-as we started off for the river, ‘the dear old thing is so keen on
-seeing the boating-races, as she calls them.’
-
-‘Yes,’ chimed in Muriel who wasn’t far behind, ‘we had to send a note
-round to Charlie Hanbury at Barabbas’, who had already got half a dozen
-maiden aunts encamped around him, and he promised to take her with them
-onto the Barabbas’ barge at tea-time.’
-
-‘Well now, Mr. Cochrane,’ began Maisie, ‘we’ve heard a lot about you
-from Freddy; he says you’d make a cat laugh.’
-
-‘I hope you don’t consider yourself a cat, Miss Coffington,’ I put in
-quickly.
-
-‘O don’t call me Miss Coffington,’ said Maisie crossly, ‘It’s such a
-mouthful.’
-
-At this moment Accrington and Cobson, who were rowing in our boat, ran
-past us, and Maisie, after a hasty glance at their attire, remarked
-simply, ‘How terribly draughty.’
-
-‘What do you mean, Miss--er--Maisie?’ I asked.
-
-‘Why look at their poor dear knees. Oh, but perhaps Oxford men haven’t
-got knees officially any more than we have legs.’
-
-‘You’ve got hold of a very good joke,’ I said to Reggie, as peals of
-laughter came from behind.
-
-‘Yes, Miss Muriel says,’ began Reggie; when Muriel held up a little
-gloved hand in front of him and said, ‘Oh you horrid man, I shall never
-tell you anything again if you tell them that.’
-
-‘All right, then I won’t,’ said Reggie; and he didn’t till we were back
-at home that night.
-
-We went on to the Thomas’ barge, which as everybody knows is next door
-to the Cecil’s, and found it crowded with the usual assortment of
-Eights’ week relations, some of them surpassingly beautiful, but some
-very much the reverse.
-
-We could not find chairs for the girls, so Maisie sat upon a railing
-with her feet hanging over the edge, till Freddy’s tutor came up from
-below and informed him that it was hardly decent. So we sat down upon
-the steps just as the minute gun went off.
-
-‘What an unpleasant old man,’ said Maisie. ‘He’s obviously got no
-daughters of his own or he’d be in better training.’
-
-‘Oh yes he has,’ said Freddy, ‘but one’s the Professor of Archæology
-at Girton and the other edits “Clippings for Careful Housewives.”’
-
-‘Oh yes, I know,’ said Maisie, ‘if I scrubbed my face till it shone and
-wore red flannel petticoats he’d have smiled upon me.’
-
-At this juncture the starting gun boomed out, and very soon after the
-mingled noises of cheering, rattles, horns, and all kinds of unmusical
-instruments floated up the stream.
-
-‘Are they coming yet?’ asked Muriel excitedly, as in her efforts to
-get a better view she trod upon the hat of a lady on a lower step who
-looked, as she subsequently said, ‘like a ferret with lockjaw’; ‘and
-what boat’s that?’ as the top of the division began to appear by the
-’Varsity boat-house.
-
-‘Gloucester, I think,’ Reggie said. ‘Yes it must be, and there’s our
-boat close behind.’
-
-‘I think you’ll get them all right,’ said Freddy who with Blitherington
-was suspended from the awning just above our heads.
-
-‘I lay you a dollar they don’t,’ said the other, ‘why the beggars are
-as blown as glass.’
-
-Conversation then ceased as the two leading boats of the division came
-closer into view. Gloucester were about a quarter of a length ahead
-and rowing fairly evenly, while the Cecil’s crew appeared rather the
-worse for wear, but in spite of this the fact of being opposite their
-own barge and other people’s sisters nerved them up to such an extent
-that they shot up level with the rudder of the Gloucester boat just
-as they passed us. I caught sight of the face of the Cecil’s stroke,
-a little man who splendidly exemplifies the old adage that ‘the best
-goods are done up in the smallest parcels,’ and noticed that he at any
-rate did not appear to be completely exhausted as yet. Their little cox
-was rising up in his seat like a soufflé and edging the Gloucester man,
-who had very foolishly taken the inner berth, closer and closer into
-the bank. At last the oar of number two in the Gloucester boat grazed
-the rushes and their cox was obliged to pull out into the stream, so
-Cecil’s gained their bump just opposite the Lichfield barge and hardly
-two lengths from the end of the course. The other boats all rowed over,
-that being the only bump in the division.
-
-When the Cecil’s boat returned to their barge next door to us we all
-set up a tremendous cheer, and Reggie departed in great haste to
-congratulate Miss Accrington, who was clapping her little hands with
-the most sisterly devotion. I scrambled down below with Freddy to get
-some tea, but this was a very hazardous business and it was nearer
-twenty minutes than ten before I secured two cups for the girls, and we
-waited patiently for the first division.
-
-About half-past five the Thomas’ men came out on the raft just beneath
-us and stepped gingerly into their boat which was the eighth in the
-first division. Maisie fell violently in love with the cox, who though
-exceptionally diminutive was possessed of a megaphonic voice which as
-Freddy coarsely remarked, ‘Fetches the girls every time.’
-
-The boat put off into mid stream, and when the cox repeated the usual
-formula of ‘Forward, are you ready, paddle!’ in stentorian tones,
-Maisie was so moved that I thought for a minute she was actually going
-to jump in after him.
-
-Blitherington, who had been down below consuming something which was
-not tea, now reappeared and said, ‘Can’t we go down the river in a punt
-for this division, Freddy?’
-
-‘Oh, yes, certainly if you like,’ he answered, ‘I haven’t got a punt,
-but we’ll soon get one.’
-
-We all trooped down the steps, and Freddy pirated the punt of some
-unknown scholar, while Reggie fetched the Pilot’s cushions from the
-adjoining barge.
-
-‘Now who’s going to pole?’ said Maisie.
-
-‘O, Martha’ll punt,’ said Freddy, ‘he rather likes it.’
-
-‘All right, I’ll take her down,’ I said, ‘if you’ll bring us back,
-Freddy.’
-
-This struck me as rather a cute dodge, for the stream will take anybody
-down, whereas punting back up the river through about a hundred other
-boats is a serious task.
-
-Freddy however assented immediately, and we got under weigh, leaving
-Reggie with Accrington’s sister. After we had secured a place in the
-long line down the tow-path side we spent the time very pleasantly in
-consuming sponge rusks borrowed from a Barabbas’ man next door who had
-a tea-party in full swing. This same party was amalgamated with that
-of Hanbury, and from the bottom of his punt the Bugg suddenly bobbed
-up and hailed us effusively. Blitherington wanted to move on at once,
-but we pointed out that we should not get such a good position anywhere
-else, and also that the Barabbas’ rusks were very delectable.
-
-We had been there fully five minutes when Miss Bugg gave vent to
-a terrible screech, and we noticed that Jacob’s back was blazing
-furiously with blue fire from the spirit lamp which the Bugg had upset
-over him. She took off her cloak and endeavoured to smother the flames,
-but Hanbury very unfeelingly threw Jacob into the water to the great
-distress of Ophelia, who screamed louder than ever. We might have had
-every canoe and punt in the river paddling up to ascertain who was
-being murdered, but Blitherington quietly drew a cushion from beneath
-Muriel’s head and with a well directed shot caught Ophelia in the back
-of the neck. This treatment appeared to soothe Miss Bugg, though the
-aforementioned six maiden aunts made some remark about ‘an unmannerly
-young cub,’ and we had to persuade the Pilot, who passed at that moment
-in a Canader, to take his lordship with him.
-
-Soon after this all the first division except Thomas’ and Lichfield
-rowed by us, the former having bumped the latter just above the Gut.
-Immediately the last boat had gone by we pulled up our pole and started
-up stream under the energetic if erratic guidance of Freddy. When we
-came opposite the ’Varsity Boat-house we collided with a punt which
-contained three elderly ladies and a harassed-looking clergyman, punted
-by a meek individual who must have come from Park Temple.
-
-Freddy, having bumped the Parson’s elbow, sheered off in the opposite
-direction and ran into the stern of a canoe, the owner of which quietly
-ladled a few quarts of water over Maisie’s dress.
-
-‘Drat the man,’ she said, ‘Why can’t he--’ And then as he lifted his
-hat and apologised profusely, ‘O pray don’t mention it, water can’t
-possibly do any harm,’ and we went on our way, though perhaps not
-rejoicing. The Thomas’ barge was too full of people thumping their
-eightsmen upon the back, so we landed on the Cecil’s raft and walked
-slowly back up the fine avenue, which was crowded with youth and beauty
-all going in one direction.
-
-There was no great excitement that night, and as Muriel complained
-of being tired, the ladies retired early, while Blitherington kindly
-organized a poker party in my rooms after the Union debate, and carried
-off thirty shillings from our united funds. With the exception of
-one and twopence this had all disappeared by the following morning,
-for while I was in Freddy’s digs at about sherry-and-bitter time,
-Blitherington came in to ask if he might put half-a-dozen collars and a
-silk handkerchief down to his account at Sampson’s.
-
-That afternoon we took the girls out in canoes for the Eights
-and Maisie fell to me, while Freddy sacrificed himself to the
-extent of taking Lady Blitherington and Ophelia out in a large and
-equably-balanced punt. Squiff disappeared with Muriel in another canoe;
-while Blitherington, to whom the sight of Ophelia is as a red rag to a
-bull, persuaded Reggie to take him out in a punt alone.
-
-‘What are you going to do with me this afternoon?’ said Maisie as
-she settled herself in my Canader, ‘don’t you think we ought to have
-brought Miss Bugg as chaperon?’
-
-I suppose my face must have expressed my feelings, for she laughed and
-added, ‘Well, we’ll compromise by taking Jacob,’ which we did.
-
-‘I’m a firm believer in laziness, aren’t you, Mr. Cochrane,’ she said
-as we turned up the Cher; ‘let’s get into some quiet nook and watch the
-people passing.’
-
-‘I like Oxford,’ she added after a short pause, ‘I can say what I like
-without everybody thinking I mean something else. That’s sometimes so
-unpleasant. I wonder,’ she remarked musingly, ‘who I’m going to marry;
-what sort of person do you think would suit me, Mr. Cochrane?’
-
-‘I should put you down for a Sir William Shipton or something like
-that, Miss Maisie,’ I answered.
-
-‘Oh! the money part of that is all right, but I want a respectable and
-presentable person, not an aitchless remnant with a squint and large
-feet.’
-
-‘Oh! I suppose a decent sort of Englishman who bathes daily and plays
-most games would do you,’ I suggested.
-
-‘Yes I think so, but he must be big and strong to satisfy me.’
-
-‘There are some of them to be found even in these hard times,’ I
-assented.
-
-‘Thank the Lord,’ said Maisie piously; and we changed the subject.
-
-‘Look,’ she cried suddenly, as a punt containing a portly and
-painted dowager shot past, propelled by a weedy-looking youth with
-pince-nez, ‘that’s old Lady Dombonpoint, the widow of Sir Herbert
-of the celebrated ‘Aurol for Aching Ears.’ She’s as rich as they
-make them, and yet she only allowed her son, that sickly-looking
-youth, half-a-crown a week for pocket money at Eton, and bought his
-clothes from a slop-shop in Tottenham Court Road. But you know,’ she
-continued in a whisper, although no one was near,--and when Maisie
-whispers I know what to expect,--‘she was awfully gone on Blitherington
-last season, and followed him all round the Park, not to speak of
-country-houses and restaurants; he had a wretched time till she finally
-proposed to him at Ascot on a coach. Of course he rejected her, and
-then she fainted. He told me he might have stood her for a year, but
-he was sure she was what he calls a “stayer,” and would live to a
-hundred.’ Before I had time to make any comment on this extraordinary
-episode in the life of the youthful peer, the Bugg’s voice penetrated
-to our shelter and we caught the words, ‘I told him he was an idiot to
-oppose the Plural Dean, and no wonder they call it the Church Irritant
-if he is a curate.’ And the punt containing the inimitable Ophelia
-passed on. ‘There!’ said Maisie explosively, ‘that’s a nice thing to
-have tacked on to me, isn’t it? She’s Blithers’ bête noir; why one day
-she told him that he oughtn’t to smoke, as it produced a weakness in
-the pneumatic nerve!’
-
-‘Yes,’ I said, ‘I’m sorry for you, but still you must admit she answers
-the description that a certain paper bestowed on itself not long ago,
-“Funny without being vulgar.”’
-
-‘I don’t know,’ said Maisie doubtfully, ‘why I could tell you some
-things she’s said that--well perhaps I’d better not.’
-
-‘Oh! do,’ I said, ‘why not collect Buggisms.’
-
-‘Why not, indeed,’ said Maisie, and thereafter a thoughtful silence
-ensued.
-
-‘I think it’s about time we went back,’ I said, having occupied the
-interval in gazing at Maisie’s very shapely ankles; ‘I should like to
-stay here for ever, but--’
-
-‘Of course you’re bound to say that,’ interrupted Maisie, as I began to
-rise ready to pole, ‘but the question is, do you really mean it?’
-
-I was in the act of pushing off when a fearful shock sent me flying
-into Maisie’s lap, and her parasol into the water. Maisie was just
-preparing to utter her favourite ‘cuss-word,’ as she calls it, when a
-cheerful and inane voice from the offending boat remarked languidly,
-‘Hullo! Maisie, what do you stick your old hearse in the light for?’
-
-‘It’s not a hearse,’ retorted Maisie, angrily, ‘and Mr. Cochrane has
-been very kind and attentive to me.’
-
-‘Oh! I’m sure of it,’ chuckled Blitherington, for it was he and Reggie
-in another punt, though neither of them seemed to be punting, and
-their boat was drifting broadside on down stream. ‘All the world,’
-he continued, solemnly, ‘is attentive to its friends’ sisters and
-cousins.’
-
-‘If we want to see the Eights we must move on,’ I interrupted hastily,
-as I saw Reggie beginning to give utterance to some home-truth, and
-Reggie’s home-truths are the most unpleasant that I know. Fortunately
-Blitherington assented, and so we all punted down to the barge
-together. The races were most exciting to all but Cecil’s, who rowed
-over hopelessly, being behind the bump of James’ and Llewellyn’s. It
-was decided not to watch the first division, as Blithers had arranged
-to drive a large party out in a coach to sup at Woodstock and return by
-moonlight.
-
-The supper in The Lion was an enormous success, and it is not wonderful
-that on the return journey there was a great scramble for the inside
-of the coach, the four places being eventually secured by Freddy,
-Muriel, Reggie, and Sybil Accrington. As to what occurred I am unable
-to make any definite statement, though Reggie insists that Freddy
-kissed him by mistake in the dark, and this Freddy denies, like Peter,
-‘with an oath’; however from the silence inside I gathered that
-they were all enjoying themselves. Outside Maisie and I, Blithers,
-Farmborough, the Pilot, Miss MacNeill and de Beresford sang comic songs
-with ever-increasing vigour, while the Bugg, who had come as general
-chaperon, rhapsodised into the unheeding ears of the Pilot, who had, as
-he afterwards admitted, fallen asleep through weariness.
-
-The next day was devoted to an inspection of the various colleges,
-monuments, and points of interest, with tea afterwards in different
-rooms, ‘a regular field-day for the Bugg,’ as Freddy aptly remarked.
-On being questioned later as to what she had seen, she mixed up the
-Martyrs’ Memorial with St. Peter’s-in-the-East, and stated at dinner
-that she considered the Sheldonian ‘such an ornament to the Parks.’
-In the evening Freddy and I conveyed the Famille Blitherington to the
-O.U.D.S. performance in Gloucester Gardens, in which Fatty sustained a
-prominent part very creditably, and Cobson did wonderful quick changes
-as ‘2nd Lord, serving man, knight, soldier, citizen, and apprentice.’
-Blitherington afterwards remarked to him, ‘My dear old native, if you
-went on at the Pav. in town as Ratsini, the quick-change man, you’d
-make your fortune, and probably marry some light of the variety stage
-into the bargain. Try it!’
-
-This _al fresco_ entertainment was over earlier than such affairs
-usually are, and so soon after ten o’clock we left the Dowager and her
-suite at the Granville and returned to our digs. As we ascended the
-stairs we heard peels of laughter coming from the room, and Reggie’s
-raucous voice enquiring, ‘Do you open’?
-
-‘Lord, yes,’ said a lady’s voice, ‘I’ll let you in for twopence.’
-
-A cheery poker party was gathered round the table, consisting of
-Reggie, the Pilot, de Beresford, Accrington, and a very smart little
-lady whose face was unknown to us.
-
-‘Hullo, you birds, I didn’t expect you quite so early,’ Reggie
-cried, ‘let me introduce you to my friend Mrs. Jack Lomond, Lord
-Blitherington, Mr. Cochrane.’
-
-The lady removed a jewelled cigarette tube from her mouth, and enquired
-with a smile, ‘Won’t you join the dance, as they say in “Alice in
-Wonderland.”’
-
-‘Oh, don’t let us spoil your game,’ returned Blithers, ‘five’s the best
-number for poker.’
-
-‘That’s all right,’ said the Pilot, ‘we were just finishing this when
-you came. Let’s turn it into Bank, if Mrs. Lomond has no objection.’
-
-‘Oh, whatever you like,’ the lady put in with a smile; ‘you must be
-rather surprised at my appearance here,’ she continued, addressing me,
-‘but Reggie asked me down for the picnic to-morrow, and I hadn’t time
-to reply, so I came in person, which is perhaps better.’
-
-As we settled down at the historical round table to play Bank, I
-observed that Blithers carefully commandeered the chair next to Mrs.
-Lomond, and she enquired of him at once, ‘Are you any relation to
-Billy Jenkins of the 110th? I used to know him when I was in India.’
-
-‘Oh yes,’ returned Blithers cheerfully, ‘he’s my uncle, and a very
-good sort too, but,’ he added with sudden apprehension, ‘please don’t
-mention him to my aunt to-morrow, he’s the black sheep of the family.’
-
-‘Poor old Jenks,’ Mrs. Lomond remarked reflectively, ‘I used to tell
-him when we were at Jumbulpore that he’d never come to a good end. His
-affections were too shifting; he never stuck to one love for more than
-a month.’
-
-‘Not even his wife,’ remarked Blithers solemnly, as play proceeded,
-accompanied by much frivolous conversation.
-
-Soon after 11.30 Mrs. Lomond rose to go, remarking, ‘It’s very good
-of you all to have given me such a pleasant evening. See you in the
-morning, Reggie.’
-
-‘Half a mo, Mrs. Lomond,’ said Blithers, as he skipped down the
-staircase after her, ‘I’m going your way, may I see you home?’ And they
-left together.
-
-‘Jolly little woman, isn’t she?’ said Reggie. ‘And clever too; she’s
-got all the diplomatic posts attached to her petticoat, and Secretaries
-of State attend her like lap dogs. Her husband is, I believe, in
-Northern Nigeria,’ he added reflectively as we moved up to bed, ‘and
-the date of his return is quite uncertain.’
-
-The next day, Sunday, was that fixed for the great picnic up at
-Marston, for which the unwilling Pilot had been appointed Caterer and
-General Manager. A regular fleet of punts had been chartered to convey
-the party, and cushions were piled in stacks, while Woodman’s express
-toiled down soon after breakfast under an immense load of eat- and
-drinkables. It required our utmost efforts to arouse de Beresford, who
-had finished the previous day and commenced this by an all-night poker
-sitting lasting till daylight. By the time Freddy had got his aunt and
-Ophelia under weigh, and we had shepherded the girls from the Cathedral
-to the barge, it was very nearly mid-day. The stowing process took some
-time, though as I had already secured Muriel, Maisie and Reggie for
-my punt, I did not much mind what happened. We headed the procession,
-carrying, I fancy, most of the liquid refreshment, and punted up stream
-at a fearful rate under Reggie’s guidance. We had scarcely passed the
-Thomas’ ferry when a fearful yell announced that the Bugg’s parasol
-had caught in the rope, and been carried down stream. It was rescued
-by a man in a Canader and brought back to Ophelia, who beamed on the
-canoeist and said, ‘So kind of you to have reprieved my sunshade.’ This
-remark was passed down to the other punts, and reduced Blithers to such
-a hopeless state that he declared himself unable to punt any longer,
-and retired in favour of Accrington, who continued to propel the boat
-for the rest of the day.
-
-The party progressed without incident for some time, during which
-Reggie, who had contrived that I should punt, engaged the girls in
-conversation, which appeared to afford them immense amusement, but
-which I could not catch; and though I repeatedly begged to share the
-joke, their only reply was to shout in chorus, ‘Now do punt up, we’re
-hardly moving.’ Their unsympathetic treatment at length moved me to
-give up punting, and balance the pole carefully on Reggie, who after a
-while bestirred himself to work.
-
-‘I wonder,’ remarked Maisie contemplatively, as I seated myself
-beside her, ‘whether anything liquid and cool is obtainable in this
-department.’
-
-‘I will see,’ I said, as I foraged in the end and discovered a jar of
-Moselle Cup. ‘How’s that?’
-
-‘Great,’ said Muriel and Maisie in chorus, as they each held out a
-glass.
-
-‘Ah!’ continued Maisie, as she gulped it down and paused to think,
-‘I feel just like that mythological undraped person, who was always
-drinking and never satisfied.’
-
-‘There must have been lots of them, both the thirsty and the undraped,’
-I said, ‘your description is rather vague.’
-
-‘Yes, perhaps it is,’ she replied, ‘but anyhow I wish we adhered to
-those ancient customs now, except perhaps that one about not being
-satisfied.’
-
-‘I think----,’ I began, when it struck me that my thoughts had better
-be suppressed, and I relapsed into silence.
-
-By this time we had pretty nearly reached the Rollers, so we waited for
-the other punts to come up, that containing Accrington, de Beresford
-and Ophelia being easily last.
-
-‘Hullo Ophelia!’ cried Freddy as they came up, ‘I didn’t think it
-of you, waiting there under the bushes for such a time with de B.
-I suppose you felt rather out of it as gooseberry,’ he continued
-addressing Accrington.
-
-‘My dear Frederick,’ called out Lady Blitherington from a punt
-propelled by the perspiring Pilot, ‘pray do not suggest such awful
-things. I am surprised at you.’
-
-‘Well, Aunt, if Ophelia will be such a giddy old thing, what can you
-expect?’ Freddy answered, as amid general confusion we disembarked at
-the Rollers.
-
-The Bugg had got as far as ‘You’re that pernicious to annoy one--’
-when her boat hit the landing stage with a heavy thump, and her
-further remarks were lost. I noticed that in the general re-sorting
-which took place, the Pilot contrived that Accrington should have the
-honour of punting Lady Blitherington while he himself embarked with
-Miss MacNeill, who is sometimes described as ‘amusing’ and sometimes
-‘forward,’ it all depends on the age and sex of the speaker. The Pilot,
-who is universally known as an old woman, says that a mean between the
-two would probably suit the case.
-
-‘O Reggie,’ said Mrs. Lomond, as she stepped carefully out of Freddy’s
-canoe, ‘do come here for a minute, the bottom of that canoe was all
-wet.’
-
-Reggie trotted gaily forward and marshalled her towards a disused
-bathing box following himself with a dish-cloth, but she gripped the
-door firmly and said ‘Oh no, you must send me a girl, this isn’t your
-innings, go and field outside.’
-
-Reg commandeered Muriel, and Mrs. Lomond soon reappeared smiling, and
-murmured to me as I helped her into a punt, ‘I’ll pay Reggie out for
-that dish-cloth afterwards.’
-
-We paddled round to pick up the ladies, and I found myself in de
-Beresford’s punt with Sybil Accrington and the Bugg, who positively
-declined to move into any other craft, though we all declared that the
-boat was dangerously full. Miss Accrington and I held pleasant converse
-amidships, while Ophelia, propped up by a four-gallon jar of claret cup
-and two hampers, chattered cheerfully to de Beresford, who was punting
-most skilfully. It is the one form of exercise that the dear old thing
-is addicted to, and so we are very careful never to deprive him of
-any opportunity to reduce his circumference. Among other things, I
-discovered, to my great gratification, that Sybil would be at the same
-place with us in the Vac.--pretty name Sybil.
-
-The sun was shining brightly, the birds were twittering, and everything
-was going beautifully, when the irresponsible Miss Bugg was nearly
-guilty of the manslaughter of all four of us.
-
-‘Mr. de Beresford,’ she murmured with an ingratiating smile, ‘do you
-know I never care to see a musical comedy.’
-
-‘Indeed, Miss Bugg, and how is that?’ the Pharisee enquired politely,
-as he carefully wiped one sleeve and thereby allowed the water to
-trickle on to the other.
-
-‘Well, you see, I disapprove most strongly of all those ballet girls
-looking like Lady Saliva in the streets of Coventry.’
-
-De Beresford surveyed her solemnly for half a minute and then dropped
-the pole and collapsed heavily on to a heap of cushions, while Miss
-Bugg, who takes herself very seriously, prattled on about the elevating
-influence of Shakespeare.
-
-We glided quietly and peacefully into the bank, and there we stuck
-till the Pilot came along and pulled us off, but the Pharisee was too
-exhausted to renew his labours, and I was obliged to take his place
-till we reached Marston. We arrived there first with the Pilot, and the
-others turned up at intervals, each punt bringing a goodly assortment
-of hampers and stone jars.
-
-At last we had all assembled, the cloths were laid on a nice piece of
-level grass, and the Dowager was comfortably settled on an air pillow
-and a collection of punt cushions, when Ophelia emitted a melancholy
-gurgle and cried tearfully,
-
-‘I’ve forgotten Lady Blitherington’s little flask.’
-
-‘Pas beaucoup, Ophelia,’ chortled his lordship, as he produced a very
-diminutive silver bottle from the lining of his panama and gave it to
-the Bugg. ‘I knew you’d lose it, old girl, so I just took the liberty
-of removing it from your pocket when we landed at the rollers.’
-
-Ophelia heaved a sigh of satisfaction and settled down beside the
-Dowager, while we all bestowed ourselves conveniently around the cloth,
-each one as far as possible next to the lady of his choice.
-
-‘A little of the pink fish with the yellow blanket, thank you, Mr.
-Cochrane,’ said Maisie cheerfully as I offered her a variety of tasty
-dishes; the Pilot talked a lot about that picnic, but he certainly
-managed it very well all the same.
-
-Blitherington, who was seated only a few feet off, in fact just the
-other side of Muriel, was what Maisie described as ‘on the war-path,’
-and we heard him asking Miss MacNeill some most exciting riddles. He
-absolutely refused to share them with us, until Reggie handed him a
-dish of cold chicken and ham, and then after looking at it solemnly
-for half a minute he turned his anxious gaze on me and enquired ‘Do
-you know, my ancient lord of creation, why hotel chickens are like
-ballet-girls?’
-
-‘No,’ I answered feebly, I always seem to say ‘no,’ when I’m asked
-anything catchy, I don’t think a fine frank open nature like mine is
-adapted to discovering puzzles.
-
-The incorrigible Blithers just chirruped ungrammatically ‘It’s because
-they’re all legs;’ and by the time Lady Blitherington had turned her
-lorgnettes in his direction he was busily engaged carving a saddle of
-lamb for his fair neighbour.
-
-‘Don’t encourage him, Mr. Cochrane,’ Muriel whispered to me, ‘If
-Blithers once gets loose he’s apt to travel quite a distance, and he
-only begins where Auntie draws the line.’
-
-‘What’s that about drawing the line?’ asked Miss MacNeill, leaning
-across towards Muriel with a bewitching smile.
-
-‘Oh, I only said Blitherington goes a long way before he thinks it
-necessary to draw it,’ Muriel replied.
-
-‘It all depends what sort of a line you are talking about,’
-Blitherington put in, ‘I know some ladies in evening dress who never
-seem to be going to draw a line at all.’
-
-‘Tut, Blithers,’ said Muriel, ‘you’d pervert an ecclesiastical synod.’
-
-‘Not much,’ returned the incorrigible peer, ‘I couldn’t spare the time.
-Suffering Sosthenes,’ he added after a pause, ‘just listen to Ophelia,
-she mixes her metaphors like those Reading birds do their biscuits.’
-
-At this moment Reggie, who had risen to search for the salt, created
-a sufficient diversion by sitting down in the remains of the salmon
-mayonnaise, and was accordingly compelled to take off his coat and
-wear Mr. Accrington’s aquascutum for the rest of the day. Lady
-Blitherington, who was much exercised by the unfortunate contretemps,
-very kindly offered him her purple velvet cloak, but he declined the
-proffered honour with thanks. The general attention was distracted from
-the unfortunate Reggie by Blithers, who had discovered Accrington and
-Muriel seated behind a tree discussing rabbit-pie and other things.
-
-The most amusing thing about Accrington is the changefulness of his
-affections; he has, as Reggie remarked not long ago, the most expansive
-and expensive heart in Oxford. Only a week ago two of his ‘best girls’
-arrived together quite unexpectedly and held prolonged and wordy
-warfare in his rooms until they caught sight of some photos of a third
-‘best girl,’ when they buried the hatchet and tore up the other girl’s
-photos together. It may be added that when the third girl herself
-arrived a day or two later, her rage at finding none of her portraits
-on exhibition was only appeased by an even more costly gift than usual.
-These facts being well known among his friends, we were not a little
-amused to see that he had attached himself like a leech to Muriel for
-the last three days, weather and Reggie permitting.
-
-‘What about the Babes in the Wood?’ yelled Blitherington with his most
-aggravating smile, as Muriel peered round the corner.
-
-‘Oh! they haven’t arrived yet,’ she replied, ‘but what do you mean?’
-
-Unfortunately this mystery was never cleared up, as Blithers returned
-to the family circle and was busily engaged in feeding Jacob on
-chocolate creams, which the faithful animal, to employ a euphemism,
-soon contrived to unswallow in a secluded portion of the meadow.
-
-As I turned to help Mrs. Accrington, who was most usefully employed
-in showing an awkward squad how to wash dishes, a voice behind me
-murmured,
-
-‘Oh, Mr. Cochrane, please take me somewhere and give me a cigarette, I
-simply daren’t smoke before the Dowager.’
-
-Personally I always affect a certain brand of leaf-covered invention
-known to the trade as cigarillos, but I obtained a supply of thin
-gold-tipped cigarettes from Reggie, who always keeps a selection of
-strange apparatus in his cigarette-case.
-
-As we climbed over a gate and sat down behind the nearest hedge Mrs.
-Lomond remarked, ‘Good boy, Reggie, I met him when I was out at Cannes
-for the Ladies golf matches; he did everything for me except sign my
-card.’
-
-‘He’s a born organizer,’ I said; ‘the anti-dons campaign that he
-arranged in Cecil’s prospered as no such enterprise has ever done
-before, and he doped the porter so successfully that the only name
-found on his black book next morning was that of an inoffensive Scholar
-who was visiting a sick aunt in Penzance.’
-
-‘I wish,’ she said, ‘that you and he would come up to town next week,
-and help me run our theatricals at the “Regality” in aid of the “Home
-for Helpless Hairdressers;” it’s bound to be a great success, the Duke
-is coming at half-time, and I’ll introduce you to some of the prettiest
-girls. If you like to wear an apron and carry a shaving brush in your
-hand you might even sell programmes,’ she added with the air of one who
-makes a great concession.
-
-‘That’s all right for me,’ I put in, ‘but don’t you think that
-Reggie’s heart is full enough already, and yet stay,’ I added, ‘there
-is still room for a few more in bin twenty-three.’
-
-‘How much do you expect to clear,’ I asked her after a short pause.
-
-‘O several thousand,’ she said cheerfully. ‘You see the Duchess of
-Dopingburgh is kissing all comers at half-a-crown a time, and Violet
-MacNeill is going to serve at the American bar. But I think we’d better
-be going back,’ she added, ‘if we don’t want to be left here for the
-night.’
-
-As we regained the scene of the orgy, Freddy gathered up all the
-remaining cloths and thrust them into a small trunk, while Mr.
-Accrington sat upon it and tried to turn the lock without much success.
-
-‘There they are,’ cried Blithers as we appeared, ‘now let’s be going.’
-
-‘What punt are you going in, Ophelia?’ Freddy enquired.
-
-‘Oh, I’ll go in the most aggressive one,’ Miss Bugg replied with a
-pleasant smile, ‘I’m all for going fast.’
-
-And so we embarked in a most amiable mood. The return journey was more
-or less uneventful, though my conversation with Violet MacNeill was
-quite the reverse. The unfortunate de Beresford who punted us down must
-have had a very poor time, for Blithers and Mrs. Lomond were much too
-busily engaged to pay any attention to him.
-
-As we proceeded up the Broad Walk Mrs. Accrington sidled up to me
-and enquired with evident anxiety, ‘How do you think Steve is getting
-on with his work? he writes us such cheering letters, but we saw Mr.
-Yelland to-day and he seemed most despondent.’
-
-‘O the Yelper is always a Job’s Comforter, Mrs. Accrington,’ I said,
-‘besides poor old Stephen’s quite a model worker.’
-
-This seemed to satisfy the anxious parent, and I guided the
-conversation into less dangerous channels. Before the various families
-split up we made arrangements for a round of sight seeing on the
-following day, which was to finish with the James’ Ball. On the morrow
-all my time was taken up with an old friend of the family who had come
-down for the day, and I had to undergo all the sufferings of a hired
-guide round Oxford who doesn’t know his subject well. I contrived
-however to send her off soon after tea, and gained comparative rest by
-a couple of hours’ bridge in Farmborough’s rooms. We all dined with Mr.
-Accrington at the Hyde, and started about 9.0 for the ball, gathering
-the famille Blitherington as we passed their hotel. After introducing
-as many people as possible to all the girls, I completely lost track
-of the party till about supper-time, being mostly engaged with my No.
-1. girl from Somerville who is a very cheery little body but suffers
-from worker’s conscience, a most distressing weakness which prevents me
-seeing very much of her except at occasional dances. A ball at Oxford
-is a wonderfully pretty sight, and well calculated to impress anybody
-seeing one for the first time. All the men and the girls are young and
-fresh, and there is a complete absence of the doddering old men and
-young women of fifty who give a sad tone to big dances in London and
-elsewhere. The handsome quads of James’ were most artistically lighted
-with myriads of fairy lights and Chinese lanterns, and the beautiful
-old-world gardens twinkled, though not too brightly, with wonderful
-devices in red and yellow. Supper was laid in the fine hall of the
-College and I secured two seats for Muriel and myself under a famous
-Archbishop who has been dead for over three hundred years, and beside
-Blithers and Mrs. Lomond, who were very much alive.
-
-‘Martha,’ said Blitherington, as I sat down, ‘try some of this fizz,
-it’s quite innocuous.’
-
-‘What is it,’ I said, ‘Robinson pere et fils?’
-
-‘O no,’ he replied, ‘it’s one of the non-poisonous varieties this time.’
-
-However, Blitherington was apparently at fault, for I heard a warning
-voice behind me saying, ‘I wouldn’t try none o’ that, if I was you,
-sir,’ and I turned to see our old scout Webster who had apparently
-been imported for the evening, ‘There’s somethin’ hin the Buttery as
-might suit you, sir,’ he added. ‘There’s honly heighteen bottles been
-hordered an them for the Committee, but I dessay as ’ow I can get yer
-two.’
-
-I clearly saw that this meant a Christmas-box to Webster, but readily
-assented as one always does on such occasions, and the two bottles were
-speedily forthcoming.
-
-After supper I had a peaceful waltz with Miss Accrington; and
-subsequently conducted Miss MacNeill to a dark staircase in the second
-Quad.
-
-‘It seems to me,’ she remarked after we had mounted a flight and
-settled ourselves in someone’s rooms, ‘It seems to me that the world is
-about equally divided between the loved and the unloved, and the great
-thing is to avoid being in the second class.’
-
-‘Well, of course we know which lot you’re in,’ I replied quickly.
-
-‘That’s very nice of you, Marth--, I mean Mr. Cochrane, but I was just
-thinking of the terrible number of girls who go through all this kind
-of thing and linger on to become sour old maids.’
-
-Although at that particular moment I happened to be holding Miss
-MacNeill’s hand in order to keep it warm, it is quite impossible that
-that could have been any reason for her squeezing it affectionately,
-and sighing softly; however, it was very stimulating, and I went on to
-say,
-
-‘I believe the proportion of men to women in the world is about two
-to three, even including black men, and I’m sure you wouldn’t marry a
-Fijian or a Sandwichman.’
-
-‘Oh, why not,’ she put in, ‘I think a Pacific islander would make
-such a desirable husband. You’d know such a lot about him before your
-marriage.’
-
-‘Whatever do you mean, Violet?’ I asked.
-
-‘On, no,’ she said, ‘I only mean that on a little coral island
-everybody would be sure to know all about their neighbours, so that you
-wouldn’t be likely to get hold of a post-nuptial surprise packet, and
-anyhow, he’d be bound to be Pacific.’
-
-It was at this precise moment that Feltham, the owner of the rooms and
-a distant cousin of mine, arrived and remarked apologetically, ‘I’m
-awfully sorry that there’s only that one chair in the room, but the
-fact is they’ve commandeered all my best for the Ladies’ Cloaker at the
-bottom of the staircase--’, but here I noticed that Violet had departed
-with unusual shyness, and so I too withdrew hastily, leaving the owner
-surveying his apartment with a puzzled expression.
-
-As I reached the Quad a soft little hand was linked in to my arm, and
-Violet enquired anxiously, ‘Do you think he thought anything?’
-
-‘Oh no,’ I replied, ‘he couldn’t have, besides he wouldn’t say anything
-if he did.’
-
-‘Oh, all right, take me to get an ice, will you, Frank,’ she said
-shyly, ‘it was so awfully hot up there, wasn’t it?’
-
-I satisfied the fair lady with a marvellous icy rose with vanilla
-petals and strawberry leaves in a little white frilling of Japanese
-paper, and soon afterwards found myself dancing a most energetic set of
-lancers with Maisie.
-
-As we were leaving the floor after it was over, Maisie said to me with
-a bewitching smile, ‘Have you found my cosy corner?’
-
-‘I don’t see how anybody could find one with so many people about,’ I
-very naturally responded.
-
-‘O yes you can,’ she said, ‘come along, I’ll soon show it you.’ And she
-guided me to a most beautiful arbour in the garden, where we watched
-the mysterious romantic world outside crawling in and out among the
-countless little red lights like a scene out of some worm and fire-fly
-carnival.
-
-‘Here it is,’ she said as she settled herself carefully and with an eye
-to effect. I should always have thought that Maisie would have been
-rather a careless girl, but you ought never to attempt to judge women
-till you have seen a good deal of them; and even then you are apt to be
-a bit previous.
-
-I enjoyed myself immensely, and Maisie’s behaviour was most improper,
-in fact I don’t know what her Aunt would have said, for she consumed
-three cigarettes.
-
-However, all good things must come to an end, and after wasting two
-waltzes and a barn-dance on me, Maisie said that we really must return
-to the Ball-tent.
-
-This was the first Quad, which had been entirely roofed over, and a
-beautifully swung floor put in, while all the passages and archways
-were carpeted and the grim old walls hung with flags and festooned
-draperies of the James’ colours.
-
-Lady Blitherington had enjoyed her evening, for the Bursar of James’
-was a former tutor in her family and had behaved like a hero to her and
-Ophelia throughout the dance; as the Bugg said to me on our way home:
-‘It was one of the most absorbent evenings I have ever spent.’
-
-After Freddy and I had seen the old ladies back to the Granville we
-returned to James’ for the photo, which was taken in the second Quad
-by three separate photographers, who spent about twenty minutes over
-preliminaries and only as many seconds over the actual operation.
-
-It had long been daylight when I regained our digs and crept quietly
-into my room without awaking the Pilot or Reggie, not that either of
-them deserved any consideration, for the Pilot who sleeps next to
-me snores like a foghorn, while Reggie very frequently returns from
-town by the Dons’ lubricator about two a.m. and makes enough noise to
-stampede a herd of wild bulls.
-
-Tired as everyone must have been, we were all up by 12, and saw the
-Accringtons off for Manchester, being especially dismal on saying
-farewell to the charming Sybil.
-
-There was a general move again in the afternoon, when the Dowager and
-her party left for town by the 4.20, only leaving behind Blitherington
-who, on hearing that Mrs. Lomond did not go till Wednesday, refused to
-budge. Miss Bugg’s last remark to the effect that ‘her head was going
-round like one of those aerated fans,’ failed to raise even a smile
-from Reggie.
-
-The Dowager extended a cordial invitation to all of us to visit her
-in town, which was seconded warmly in my case by Maisie, on whom I
-flatter myself--but no I won’t say what I thought, lest I be accused of
-vanity, besides there is Sybil as well.
-
-It seemed, as the Pilot remarked, very dull after they had all gone;
-and the horrible flirtation carried on by Mrs. Lomond and her admirer
-failed to arouse us from the depths of despondency, only partially
-lightened by Cecil’s doing its fourth bump on Wednesday afternoon,
-and the prospect of what Reggie called a ‘roaring old bump-supper.’
-Perhaps, as Squiff said, when I suddenly discovered my Finals to be
-only two weeks distant, ‘If you have your fun you must expect to pay
-for it.’ So I consider a drop from a possible second in Law to a
-certain third was not expensive.
-
- OXFORD
- BURROWS AND DOE, PRINTERS
- THE HOLYWELL PRESS
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Red Paint at Oxford, by
-Anonymous (AKA Pish and Tush)
-
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-Project Gutenberg's Red Paint at Oxford, by Anonymous (AKA Pish and Tush)
-
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-Title: Red Paint at Oxford
- Sketches
-
-Author: Anonymous (AKA Pish and Tush)
-
-Release Date: August 22, 2016 [EBook #52875]
-
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RED PAINT AT OXFORD ***
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-</pre>
-
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">RED PAINT AT<br />
-OXFORD</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">Sketches</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">“Pish” and “Tush”</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">London<br />
-GREENING &amp; CO., LTD.<br />
-20 CECIL COURT, CHARING CROSS ROAD<br />
-1904</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p>These little sketches must not be taken too seriously, and it
-must not be imagined that they describe the most prominent
-characteristics of the good sportsmen portrayed in them. We
-have only turned our attention to the lightest side of their
-’Varsity careers because we think that the most amusing; but
-nearly every one of the Undergrads referred to has distinguished
-himself in some less lurid but more useful way. Five ‘Blues’
-altogether have been amassed among the gentlemen who move
-about and have their being herein; while the Pilot upset the
-odds of 33 to 1 freely laid against him, scraped through on the
-rails with a rush at the finish, and secured a creditable ‘First.’
-When he is Archbishop of Canterbury, Freddy hopes to be in
-the Cabinet, and, it appears already during the short year that
-has elapsed since we all ‘went down,’ that Squiff is well on his
-way to ruling a Province in India. Who knows whether he and
-the Pilot, in alliance, may not yet be the means of converting
-that most hearty blot of Ink the Rajah of Jellipore!</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcapuc">ONE AUTHOR.</span></p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcapuc">THE OTHER.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">London</span>, <i>May, 1904</i>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"></td><td class="tdr smaller">PAGE.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#I">I.</a></td><td>ON MOTORING TO TOWN</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#II">II.</a></td><td>A QUIET EVENING</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#III">III.</a></td><td>CONCERNING THE THEATRE</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#IV">IV.</a></td><td>THE MUTUAL HELP SOCIETY</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#V">V.</a></td><td>ON THE STRENUOUSNESS OF LIFE</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#VI">VI.</a></td><td>RUGGER NIGHT</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#VII">VII.</a></td><td>HOW WE RAGGED “THE SUBURBAN”</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#VIII">VIII.</a></td><td>AN “EIGHTS’ WEEK”</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>RED PAINT AT OXFORD.</h1>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="I">I.<br />
-<span class="smaller">ON MOTORING TO TOWN.</span></h2>
-
-<p>Freddy said it was very cheap, and so I went, having
-only seven and sixpence, which I had borrowed from
-our landlady.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy had less.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after eight I was aroused by Freddy’s acrobatic
-treble and the shrieks of an impossible check suit.</p>
-
-<p>He mentioned that he was coming to breakfast with
-me as the men in his digs never came down till ten.</p>
-
-<p>Just then the Pilot announced in a loud and penetrating
-voice that ‘a perspiring stinkocar had arrived
-outside’ and so I hastened on my dressing to the accompaniment
-of ‘The Miller’s Daughter,’ played by Freddy
-with one finger and the loud pedal down.</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of the second kidney there was a loud
-report from the street, and Mrs. MacNab, whose cat
-consumes an abnormal quantity of our whisky, rushed
-into the room exclaiming that ‘the Chuffer had brought
-round the hengine.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Hastily rising I ran down into the street and found
-a pair of legs performing strange antics on the kerbstone,
-while their owner’s head appeared to be in the
-petrol tank, at least a voice from that direction declared
-‘the whole of the &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; petrol has gone and (adjectived)
-itself away.’</p>
-
-<p>This edifying remark was accompanied by a series of
-alarming though apparently harmless reports which did
-not in the least affect the equanimity of the person under
-the car.</p>
-
-<p>By this time Freddy, having consumed ‘kidneys and
-bacon for three,’ appeared in the doorway, disguised in
-a mangy fur coat and a pair of hideous black goggles.</p>
-
-<p>He straightway proceeded to haul the unknown out
-of the petrol tank by his legs, at the same time enquiring
-with unnecessary heat ‘Why they had not pumped that
-mess in at the shop?’</p>
-
-<p>To which query the Chauffeur replied that ‘They never
-did nothink at the shop.’</p>
-
-<p>This answer appeared to satisfy Frederick, who
-boarded the smell-cart without further parley, and,
-having seated the Chauffeur behind, pounced upon a
-sort of lever arrangement, whereupon the car gave two
-awesome leaps, I jumped aboard, and we found ourselves
-at some distance from the house.</p>
-
-<p>The Pilot, who appeared in a dressing-gown at the
-top window, bestowed a pantomimic blessing on us as
-we shot away, followed by the ironical cheers of two
-small boys and the Swithin’s Hall man from next door,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-who had kept an early chapel and was accordingly most
-obnoxious.</p>
-
-<p>We had scarcely passed Magdalen when Freddy informed
-me in a hurried gasp that we were bound for
-London, which communication constrained me to remind
-him that our joint capital only amounted to thirteen and
-six, but he merely muttered something unprintable and
-put on full speed.</p>
-
-<p>We narrowly missed a milkman in Iffley Road and an
-early bicyclist only just escaped an equally early death.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this point that P.C. Robert Swiller hove in
-sight; we only noticed a red and angry face but failed
-to catch his remarks, which, to judge from the way he
-stamped on the pavement, must have been of a forcible
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>I think that after this I must have dozed&mdash;the Swithin’s
-Hall man plays till 1.30 a.m.&mdash;for the next thing I remember
-was a violent concussion which threw a heavy
-oil-can on to my foot and the Chauffeur into the ditch.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy, whose ordinary conversation is sprinkled with
-epithets that do not bear repetition, referred to the ancient
-rustic whose hay-cart we had shattered, as ‘a d&mdash;d
-old crawler,’ and added insult to injury by enquiring why
-his rotten hearse was in the middle of the road.</p>
-
-<p>On the yokel pointing out that our car was in fact in
-that position, and that his cart was almost in the ditch,
-Freddy repeated his former statement and seemed to
-think that that closed the discussion. Not so the rustic,
-who showed an aggressive desire for compensation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-which was only appeased by Freddy generously presenting
-him with my card and remarking that I would
-see he was paid.</p>
-
-<p>After a short inspection of the ruins we proceeded,
-and no further incident occurred until we reached
-Maidenhead, where we bagged a chicken and a small
-spaniel. Freddy declared that their loss would not be
-felt and we went straight ahead.</p>
-
-<p>In the next village, Freddy, who resembles a blotting-pad
-in his capacity for absorbing liquid, stopped abruptly
-before the ‘Sow and Scissors’ for a reviver.</p>
-
-<p>After this operation, I, mindful of our victims at
-Maidenhead, firmly declined to mount the car again
-unless Freddy gave up the steering wheel to the Chauffeur;
-this he did, and we soon reached Slough.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly afterwards we entered the village of Little
-Pudley at thirty miles an hour, marking our passage
-by a slight entanglement with the village pump; however
-Freddy succeeded in jerking off the handle before
-it caught him in the wind, and so no harm was done
-beyond leaving a portion of our splash-board in the
-well. The calm of our progress through Hounslow and
-Chiswick was unbroken, and I was wiping the dust from
-my eyes preparatory to a gentle snooze, when without
-any warning except a violent shock, which threw my
-hat into the neighbouring gutter, the car stopped
-abruptly; and although we tried each of the handles
-in turn and subsequently all together, the sparrow-starver
-remained motionless.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Frederick then spoke.</p>
-
-<p>When the air had cleared we discovered that the
-Chauffeur was again seeking the seclusion of his beloved
-petrol tank, but reappeared with astonishing
-rapidity just in time to avoid a shower of greasy black
-liquid which spread itself about the pavement.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy shrieked ‘jump,’ and we jumped.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately afterwards the car, groaning hideously,
-made with fearful speed for a saddler’s shop, and was
-only prevented from entering by an opportune collision
-with a lamp-post. This appeared to annoy the death-trap,
-for it blew out its bonnet and then reclined peacefully
-against a metropolitan water-trough, from which
-all efforts to move it were unavailing.</p>
-
-<p>After a hasty palaver we consigned the dam-thing
-to the Chauffeur and made for the Shepherd’s Bush
-Tube. We journeyed as far as Notting Hill Gate, and
-there Freddy, having borrowed my few remaining
-shillings, left me and went in search of his female
-cousin. This compelled me to lunch with one Timmins,
-a man of the Inner Temple, honoured by my
-acquaintance, but as he had had no warning of my
-arrival I was obliged to make the best of two old
-chicken legs and some rather older Gorgonzola, and
-after borrowing a couple of sovereigns from him, I
-treated him to a theatre. On crossing Piccadilly, after
-the performance, we were surprised to see Freddy
-engaged in altercation with a cabman in front of the
-Criterion. We crossed over to speak to him and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-guileless one seized the opportunity to borrow half a
-sovereign from Timmins, whose purse and patience
-are inexhaustible. Then having disposed of the quarrelsome
-Jehu we decided to take the Templar to dinner
-at the Cabanero, which invitation he readily accepted,
-possibly with the idea of getting some return for his
-money.</p>
-
-<p>To fill up the time Timmins suggested the Aquarium,
-a place that both Freddy and I detest, but as we had
-borrowed about fifty shillings from the unfortunate
-man, we felt that this was the moment for a graceful
-concession.</p>
-
-<p>On our arrival we let Timmins out of the hansom
-first, but in spite of this subtle move I was compelled
-to pay the cabby, and then firmly resisting an impassioned
-appeal from a golden-haired lady in the entrance
-to give her a bracelet or something else, we passed the
-turnstiles and made with one accord for the nearest bar.</p>
-
-<p>I am unable to state the precise number of cherry
-brandies that Freddy had consumed during his absence
-from my care, but his lady cousin appeared to have had
-a distinctly exhilarating effect upon him. At any rate
-after two lagers had been followed by a sherry and
-bitters, he manifested a desire to dance, which was
-only suppressed by the advent of a uniformed attendant
-with a Bow-Street-and-seven-shillings-or-three-days
-glitter in his eye. The small sum of half-a-crown
-mollified this dignitary, a view of whose face was&mdash;as
-Freddy remarked&mdash;cheap at the price.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then, while Freddy and I were watching a lady in
-scanty costume who was advertised to dive from the
-roof into a six-foot tank, Timmins disappeared. After
-forty minutes’ diligent searching, which involved on
-Freddy’s part a frivolous conversation with the young
-lady at the assorted jewellery stall, we came upon the
-wanderer.</p>
-
-<p>He was seated in the centre of the crystal maze and
-a strong odour of patchouli, exchanging vows of undying
-affection with a lady of a certain age and uncertain
-character.</p>
-
-<p>The cab, in which we then set out for the Cabanero,
-cost me another half-crown, and the dinner which followed
-took nearly all our remaining bullion.</p>
-
-<p>However it was a great success.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the end Freddy expressed a violent antipathy
-to the colour of the Turkish gentleman who served us
-with coffee, and was only quieted by the strains of the
-‘Girl from Kays’ from the orchestra.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner over, we were going downstairs, when Freddy,
-who appeared unable to find the bannisters, grasped the
-hand of an ancient and enamelled dowager who was
-laboriously ascending, and, greeting her effusively, enquired
-‘if her mother knew she was out.’ Leaving the
-venerable relic speechless and perspiring, we saved ourselves
-from rough treatment at the hands of the attendants
-by bolting hatless into Piccadilly Circus, and here
-we saw the last of Timmins.</p>
-
-<p>He leant into our cab, and after explaining pathetically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-that he had no money to pay his washing bill and
-that he had pawned his mother’s photograph, propped
-himself wearily against the railings and took no further
-interest in the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>Our arrival at Paddington a few minutes after nine
-was marked by wild cheers on Freddy’s part and the
-disbursement of my last eighteenpence. A short interview
-with the station-master resulted in the exchange
-of my card for two third singles to Oxford, and a final
-shilling’s worth at the expense of Blandford, who was
-returning from the funeral of an imaginary aunt, filled
-up the time till the train left.</p>
-
-<p>After a few minutes’ travelling Freddy remarked that
-he would feel more comfortable in the rack, and proceeded
-to climb up there. A little later we covered
-him with a seat cushion as he felt cold, and all slept
-peacefully till Didcot.</p>
-
-<p>When we reached the draughty junction Blandford
-and I left Freddy, who appeared to be asleep, in search
-of lip-salve; but we had barely reached the refreshment
-room when loud crashes, followed by curious oaths and
-several heavy bumps, brought us back to find Freddy
-struggling with an inspector and two porters, while a
-lamp and the window of the third class waiting-room
-were much the worse for wear.</p>
-
-<p>We conveyed him to our carriage&mdash;N.B. I gave the
-inspector my card&mdash;and except for throwing out a seat
-cushion at Culham, he relapsed into comparative inaction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The cab in which we reached 129 St. Aldate’s was
-paid for by Mrs. Corker, and Blandford stayed to see
-Freddy to bed.</p>
-
-<p>When I arrived at our digs the door was opened
-by Mrs. MacNab, whose cat seemed to have been imbibing
-with unusual freedom; and I found the Pilot,
-who had just returned from a bridge party, anxiously
-measuring the decanter with a pipe-cleaner.</p>
-
-<p>It just occurred to me, as I was going up to bed,
-that I had given my card to the hay-cart proprietor,
-to the station-master at Paddington, and the inspector
-at Didcot, all of whom would have to be satisfied in
-the morning, while I had to repay Timmins two pounds
-odd, and liberally fee the Oxford porter whom Freddy
-had struck somewhere amidships.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy said it would be very cheap; well, perhaps
-it was.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="II">II.<br />
-<span class="smaller">A QUIET EVENING.</span></h2>
-
-<p>Accrington called it coffee, but Reggie stipulated for
-a bottle of brandy to be kept in the cupboard. As
-Freddy and I climbed the staircase in the corner of
-the Quad we heard the strident tones of our host proclaiming
-that he was ‘looking for a needle in a haystack.’
-This, however, did not in any way justify Freddy’s
-throwing an empty tobacco tin at him immediately on
-entering the room, and it seemed only just that the
-others should show their disapproval of this action by
-throwing their cushions at Freddy. I alone missed
-him, but the Pilot was rude enough to say that I must
-have aimed at Freddy, because I got in a bull’s-eye on a
-tray containing glasses and syphons which was balanced
-on a Japanese stool in the corner.</p>
-
-<p>When peace had been restored, Reggie, addressing
-no one in particular, remarked, ‘The Pilot was seen
-at the gathering at Martyrs’ Memorial last night.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re an artistic liar,’ replied the Pilot, who is not
-as meek as he looks. And the slight struggle that
-ensued awoke Fatty, who was peacefully perusing
-‘Pick-me-up’ in the corner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know whose rooms these are,’ he murmured
-sleepily, ‘but it is customary among gentlemen to offer
-refreshment to a visitor upon arrival;’ and then, after a
-plaintive pause, ‘I have been here just three-quarters of
-an hour.’ After his thirst had been satisfied he was led
-to the piano, and proceeded to play ‘Hiawatha,’ ‘in
-order,’ as Reggie explained, ‘to get it over.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Henry Dalston,’ said Freddy, addressing the pianist,
-‘as a balloon you are incomparable, but as an ivory-thumper
-you only take a gulf, and if the same would
-swallow you up it would be better still.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He takes,’ said Accrington wearily, ‘he takes at
-least five pounds’ worth of use out of my piano every
-term; “Hiawatha” about plays itself now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then why don’t you make him hire a piano?’ said
-Reggie.</p>
-
-<p>‘He used to,’ put in Freddy with a gurgling laugh,
-‘until we played it the night he was in London, and the
-Dean had it sent out of College before he came back.’</p>
-
-<p>These revelations were interrupted by Reggie suggesting
-bridge.</p>
-
-<p>He once taught a Colonial Governor the game at a
-Swiss mountain hotel, and the Pilot, who was with
-him, said he made enough to keep them in smokes for
-a week.</p>
-
-<p>‘Reggie’s getting too uppish about bridge,’ I remarked,
-as Accrington produced the cards, ‘he thinks
-he’s rather an authority.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nobody,’ replied Reggie, severely, ‘nobody is an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-authority on any game till he can be sure of winning
-money off his opponents.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How many does it take to play bridge?’ asked Fatty,
-peevishly, from the window-seat; ‘I hate these card
-games, they’re always so dull.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then you shan’t be dull, Henry dearest,’ said
-Freddy, landing upon Fatty’s lower chest, and then, as
-he led him by his starboard ear into Accrington’s
-bedder, ‘Come with your Frederick, and let us cuddle
-together.’</p>
-
-<p>As they disappeared, Accrington, moved by reminiscences
-of former quiet evenings, called after them
-uneasily:</p>
-
-<p>‘Kindly refrain from throwing my pyjamas out of the
-window, and do not, O do not, spread water about the
-floor.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The only complaint I have to make against the owner
-of this public-house,’ said Reggie, as the Pilot dealt in
-the slow and solemn manner peculiar to him, ‘is that
-when I came in at the ordinary excursion hour of 1.15
-this morning, and demanded a “corpse reviver,” the
-licensed victualler, who had retired to bed, refused to
-provide me with anything.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Freddy, who is doing contracts, says that if you
-don’t get what you want, you may take what you can
-get, so I took three oranges, a brandy-bottle, and my
-leave. It was only after Maberly had borrowed the
-bottle, and served it out to seven men whom he found
-sleeping in his rooms on his return from the theatre,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-that Accrington arrived in a costume that was hardly
-decent, to remark that I had taken the methylated
-spirits. Of course we went round to see what could be
-done, but, as Maberly said they had got through three-quarters
-of the bottle, we decided to leave them in peace.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Especially as,’ added Accrington, ‘when we shouted
-at them from the Quad, a coal-box, two boot-trees, and
-an alarm clock suddenly came through the window
-more or less in our direction.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The only sad thing about it,’ said the Pilot, as he
-quietly trumped his opponent’s trick, ‘is that Accrington
-must have meant to drink those spirits himself, which in
-one so young is positively painful.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Two in diamonds,’ I said, as I put down the score.</p>
-
-<p>‘And one in the footbath,’ yelled Freddy through the
-open door, as a splash was heard, and Fatty appeared,
-dripping from the effects of an immersion in Accrington’s
-tub.</p>
-
-<p>I rose from the table and wiped Fatty tenderly down
-with an antimacassar; I have noticed that he always
-repays attentions like these by a sumptuous luncheon,
-or the gift of a choice cigar imported from Borneo by
-Dalston senior.</p>
-
-<p>‘Your deal, Martha,’ said the Pilot, as Fatty collapsed
-heavily into the best chair.</p>
-
-<p>I had just started when a sound of frenzied yells from
-the Quad caused me to pause for a moment; the shrieks
-grew louder, and a string of guttural oaths in very low
-German floated up the staircase.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Sport the oak,’ shrieked Accrington, but as Freddy
-reached the door it flew open, and the portly form of
-von Graussman, our Rhodes Scholar from the Fatherland,
-burst in and fell flat upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p>‘I did my best, you fellows,’ panted Cobson, who followed
-with a red and perspiring face, ‘but he’s rather
-fatigued, and he’s been sitting on the flower-bed under
-the Dean’s window for the last half-hour. We’ve put
-him to bed three times, but he only threw his water-jug
-out of window, and then came down and posed as Adam
-in the Quad.’</p>
-
-<p>Von Graussman suddenly sat up, and remarked in a
-disconnected and peevish way, ‘Hoch der Kaiser,’ after
-which patriotic effort he mechanically reached for the
-brandy-bottle on the table near at hand.</p>
-
-<p>As he removed the stopper with a shaky hand, his
-eye suddenly lighted on Fatty, who was gazing dreamily
-at the ceiling. A sudden crack followed, as the decanter
-caught the unfortunate Henry on the lower jaw, and
-spread its contents down his waistcoat. Fatty rose
-with a yell which would have done credit to a wild
-Indian, and, picking up the poker, made for the German
-who appeared to be quite unconscious of what he had
-done.</p>
-
-<p>As he had propped himself against the fender and
-was softly crooning the ‘Wacht am Rhein,’ even Fatty
-saw that violent retaliation was out of the question, and
-having emptied a syphon down von Graussman’s back,
-in order, as he said, to wake him up, he retired to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-change his suit. The silence which followed his disappearance
-was broken by Cobson remarking that it
-was ‘time to get old Grausser to bed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Right oh!’ said Freddy, who is always ready for an
-emergency, ‘just you keep a watchful eye upon him
-while I search for his song-book.’ It is well known to
-all members of Cecil’s, that the only way to get von
-Graussman to bed is to let him sing a song. After he
-has polished off a German students’ drinking chorus,
-a child of three could manage him with ease.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, as we raised the fuddled foreigner to
-his feet, Farmborough, who puts the weight for the
-’Varsity, and was practising in the Quad, put a clod of
-earth through our window. Any little trifle like this
-is enough to disconcert von Graussman, who immediately
-made a clear sweep of the ornaments on the
-mantelpiece, and threw them in one clattering cloud on
-to Farmborough’s head. The immaculate de Beresford,
-who was crossing the Quad, received a bowl of chrysanthemums
-over his new winter waistcoat, while the Junior
-Porter, who had just emerged from the Dean’s staircase,
-was taken somewhere amidships by a carriage clock.</p>
-
-<p>At the first signs of this fresh disturbance, Accrington
-had hastily sported his oak, but the hoarse curses of
-von Graussman soon drew the offended parties to the
-right door, on which they continued to thump with ever-increasing
-vigour.</p>
-
-<p>The application of a syphon to the letter-slit proved
-unavailing, and as Cobson had to be back in his digs at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-eleven, it was imperative to make a sally. The German,
-who had seated himself in the coal-scuttle, was past
-help, so we tied him to his throne with a towel, and
-removed all possible missiles from within his reach.
-Having taken these precautions, we armed ourselves
-with our host’s last two syphons and some rotten
-oranges which we found in the coal bunker, and prepared
-for a sortie.</p>
-
-<p>‘They seem to have left off that d&mdash;&mdash;d row,’ said
-Freddy, ‘but they’re probably waiting for us on the
-landing, so throw back the portal, and we’ll rout the foe.’</p>
-
-<p>As the door swung back we saw a dim figure on the
-landing. Reggie took careful aim and caught it in the
-face with an elderly orange, Freddy bowled a chunk of
-coal at its feet, while Cobson got in a bull’s-eye with
-a syphon. The sallying party then retired in good
-order.</p>
-
-<p>‘I say, Martha, who was that?’ queried Freddy as we
-closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>‘It looked to me like Farmborough,’ I replied.</p>
-
-<p>‘But,’ said the Pilot, who always raises objections,
-‘this was in evening dress, and Farmborough hasn’t
-been out.’</p>
-
-<p>Just then some person, or persons, unknown, struck
-a staggering blow on the oak outside. This noise aroused
-von Graussman, who moved into a commanding position
-opposite the door, unavoidably taking the coal-scuttle
-with him. The next thing was the voice of the Dean
-demanding entrance, which caused the warlike spirit of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-the company to evaporate instantaneously. Accrington,
-with the skill born of long practice, concealed himself
-beneath the sofa, Reggie and I shared his bed, the
-Pilot, who had taken but a small part in the proceedings,
-sought the seclusion of the coal-bunker, while Freddy
-and Cobson stowed themselves behind the piano. Our
-efforts to induce von Graussman to hide were futile; he
-still retained his position, and his loudly-expressed contempt
-for all in authority was, I am told, audible three
-staircases off.</p>
-
-<p>The jingling of keys outside announced to the expectant
-but invisible audience, that the Junior Porter
-was opening the oak, and the Dean made an imposing
-entrance to the strains of the ‘Lustige Brüder,’ as
-rendered, somewhat indistinctly, by the Graf von
-Graussman.</p>
-
-<p>As the Dean entered, von Graussman rose with some
-difficulty, and after making a low obeisance&mdash;accompanied
-by the coal-scuttle&mdash;addressed the Rev. Fanny in
-a short but impressive speech which commenced with
-‘Mein geliebte und hochwohlgeborn Herr Professor
-Doktor,’ and ended, after indistinct rumblings, with the
-words, ‘damnable inshult,’ ‘Faderland’ and ‘Timeforbed.’</p>
-
-<p>After this elocutionary effort was finished, he announced
-in a feeble voice, that he ‘wongohometel
-morring,’ and then fell heavily into the fender. The
-Dean (who has not used the letter R since childhood)
-remarked nervously, ‘This is a howwid spectacle,’ to
-which the Porter, who makes a point of agreeing with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-everybody, replied, ‘Yes sir, certainly sir, of course
-sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I fear the gentleman is partially, or even totally,
-inebwiated,’ continued the Dean, more to himself than
-the Porter, and then ‘we will wemove him to his
-bedwoom,’ which they proceeded to do.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the melancholy procession had passed
-down the staircase, a black and dispirited face appeared
-from the coal-bunker, and suggested that the party
-should leave for some other and less stirring part of
-the College.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’ll be allright for Grausser,’ said Freddy, ‘dear old
-Fanny had a sister who died at twenty-nine from
-drinking eau-de-cologne, and he’s had a friendly feeling
-for the noble army of thirst quenchers ever since.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I should suggest that Accrington takes to his virtuous
-couch,’ said Cobson, as we prepared to depart; ‘if you
-put a night-shirt over your clothes, and get into bed,
-you will naturally be too sleepy to answer any questions
-the Dean may ask. We’ll turn out the electric.’</p>
-
-<p>We descended the stairs without attracting any
-attention, and just reached the shelter of Fatty’s rooms
-as the Rev. Fanny and the Junior Porter returned to
-Accrington’s staircase.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, though Accrington was too sleepy, as
-Cobson predicted, to answer the Dean’s questions,
-Fanny spotted a stiff collar protruding from under the
-surplice, and retired saying that he would draw his own
-conclusions, and leaving a distinct chill behind him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-Anyhow it was a very pleasant evening, and, as Accrington
-said, it was cheap at the price of four days’ gating.
-The two pounds which von Graussman paid the Sub-Treasurer,
-and the three weeks during which he remained
-in College after hall, presumably for the good
-of his health, are they not duly recorded in the Chronicles
-of Cecil College, and of Bartholomew Wilkinson,
-its Dean?</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="III">III.<br />
-<span class="smaller">CONCERNING THE THEATRE.</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was quite sudden.</p>
-
-<p>We were walking down the Corn one Monday morning
-when a poster in front of the Hyde, depicting a lady
-whose skin was black, whose hair was red, and whose
-clothing consisted of a string of beads, attracted our
-attention. The legend above, ‘The Cannibal Girl, Grand
-Theatre, To-night,’ and the words below in large letters,
-‘Queenie Hareham,’ appeared to move Freddy to tender
-memories. He gazed at the amazing specimen of
-modern art for fully three minutes, sighed heavily, and
-then went straight off to take tickets for Monday and
-Saturday.</p>
-
-<p>Squiff, who can celebrate any occasion, even that of
-his aunt’s death, with a light heart and much whisky,
-happily suggested a large lunch to some of the girls.</p>
-
-<p>We decided to give it in Freddy’s digs, for as Squiff,
-whose real name is the O’Rossa and who is descended
-from Michael, second King of Ulster, naïvely said,
-‘They’re accustomed to that sort of thing at our place.’</p>
-
-<p>Before the curtain fell on Monday evening fifty young
-gentlemen had sent fifty notes inviting one or more of
-the ladies of the company to any or every meal for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-coming week. It is not remarkable in the light of subsequent
-events that Miss Kiddy Childe returned an unqualified
-refusal to all invitations and that the guardian
-of the stage-door paid off the back instalments of his
-rent on the following day.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy returned from the performance in a state of
-ecstatic delight, and repeatedly alluded to the good times
-that were coming.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s it like?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Glorious,’ replied Freddy, ‘and where Eileen takes
-Venus in the private theatricals scene its simply colossal.
-Here’s the programme.’</p>
-
-<p>And this is what I read:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center larger">THE CANNIBAL GIRL.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Book by Tottenham Kort. Lyrics by Frederick Freshleigh.
-Music by Peter Pedyll.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="Cast">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Jack Warmleigh</span></td><td class="tdr">Mr. Reginald Craven.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Angus MacPhee, M.D.</span></td><td class="tdr">Mr. Hardoph Erin.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Major Philip FitzGiggin, D.S.O.</span></td><td class="tdr">Mr. Fairlie Dunn.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Captain Titus Ginsling</span> (S.S. ‘Oboko’)</td><td class="tdr">Mr. Pensell Ingpen.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">The O’Hooligan</span> (Purser)</td><td class="tdr">Mr. Sidney Cruikshank.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Sotite</span> (The King’s Executioner)</td><td class="tdr">Mr. Freke.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Nokop</span> (The Medicine Man)</td><td class="tdr">Mr. John Philips.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Hon. Allan Charteris, R.N.</span></td><td class="tdr">Mr. P. Gardner.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Jethro P. Heepzotin</span> (The minced-meat magnate)</td><td class="tdr">Mr. Lyon Fybbe.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">King Caskowiski</span></td><td class="tdr">Mr. Stainer Black.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span><span class="smcap">Dowager Countess Berehampton</span></td><td class="tdr">Miss Ethel Gay.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Eileen Maxwell</span></td><td class="tdr">Miss Ina Carlton.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Jack Warmleigh</span></td><td class="tdr">Miss Kiddy Childe.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Lilo</span></td><td rowspan="3" class="valign"><span class="bracket">}</span> <span class="bracket-compensation">The King’s favourite wives</span> <span class="bracket">{</span></td><td class="tdr">Miss Tiny Trimmer.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Noclo</span></td><td class="tdr">Miss Tweenie Tarn.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Tootoo</span></td><td class="tdr">Miss Ruby Ramsden.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Mopper</span> (Stewardess)</td><td class="tdr">Miss Lucinda Tubb.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Lady Betty Backstays</span></td><td class="tdr">Miss Delia Kaardt.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcapuc">AND</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Hon. Mrs. Charteris</span> (late Pussie Pynkley<br />of the Jollity Theatre)</td><td class="tdr">Miss Queenie Hareham.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Islanders, Guests, etc.:&mdash;Misses Lily Lingery, Legge, Hawke,
-Sharpe, Ferrars, Dacent, Milsom, Hamilton, Bond, Jones; Messrs.
-Davidson, Moss, Lowe, Hart, Isaacs, Disraeli, Braun, Joseffi, Sydenham,
-Hill.</p>
-
-<table summary="Acts and scenes">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcap">ACT I.</span></td><td>The beach at Dufrutus Island.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcap">ACT II, Scene 1.</span></td><td>The fète of the Nogogos at Caskowiski’s Palace.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="smcap">Scene 2.</span></td><td>Berehampton House, Park Lane.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Wigs by Sharxon.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Ladies’ dresses by Maison de Stunim.</i> <i>Hats by Madame Misfitte.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Miss Hareham’s costumes by Idem.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Kiddy Childe,’ I said, as I put it down, ‘surely that’s
-Squiff’s girl?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Right O, right O,’ said Freddy, ‘he’s booked her
-for the whole week, and even now they’re cuddling in a
-private room at the Hyde.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But,’ burst out the Pilot who was bubbling with suppressed
-excitement, ‘I wrote to her and she answered
-that, owing to a sad bereavement, she is not accepting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-any invitations. Now you say Squiff’s going to have
-her all the week; I believe the only thing she’s been
-bereft of&mdash;’ but here a burst of laughter prevented any
-further explanation; for the Pilot, as Freddy coarsely
-puts it, is going to be a devil-dodger; and even his explanation
-that a clergyman must see all sides of life
-would hardly cover an occasion like this.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve invited Ina and the “Three Little Wives” to tea
-to-morrow,’ Freddy continued when the laughter had
-subsided, ‘you see that makes a girl for each of us.’</p>
-
-<p>Here Reggie expressed his approval by a loud tattoo
-on a tobacco tin, but broke off very suddenly on Freddy
-declaring:</p>
-
-<p>‘It must be in your digs, because Squiff’s got lunch for
-sixteen and our landlady says she can’t undertake tea
-after it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s very good of you,’ said the Pilot solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>‘O don’t mention it,’ said Freddy, ‘we shan’t want
-your rooms again till Saturday, lunch is in Accrington’s
-on Wednesday and at ours on Friday.’</p>
-
-<p>‘By-the-bye Freddy,’ I remarked, ‘tell your girl to
-bring her complexion with her.’</p>
-
-<p>I stooped behind the arm-chair knowing what was
-coming, and so the bacca tin which followed this remark
-fell harmlessly upon the tram-lines outside.</p>
-
-<p>‘It seems to me that this week is likely to be faintly
-tinged with purple,’ observed the Pilot meditatively,
-‘and if the rain keeps clear of us and we keep clear of
-the Proctors I prophesy a good time for the elect.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At this point Freddy left hurriedly as the clocks were
-striking twelve, while the rest of us, after a short but
-pithy conversation through the window with O.P. 281,
-retired to bed.</p>
-
-<p>The Pilot and I spent the morning in the arduous
-duty of cutting lectures, while Reggie went round borrowing
-money to pay for a theatre ticket for the following
-Saturday.</p>
-
-<p>At lunch in Fatty’s rooms, de Beresford regaled me
-with a harrowing description of Squiff’s misfortunes on
-the preceding evening.</p>
-
-<p>‘You see,’ he said, ‘poor old Squiff got no answer to
-the note he sent Kiddy Childe in the interval, so after
-the show he crawled round to the stage door and waited
-for her. I suppose a bull-dog must have spotted him,
-for when they were half-way to her lodgings the Progpiece
-was seen in full chase behind. Squiff clutched her
-hand and yelled, “Faster, faster,” like the Red Queen in
-Alice in Wonderland, and they did the record down St.
-Ebbe’s into Paradise Square, where they got into her
-house unseen. Unfortunately it never struck them that
-their light was the only one in the Square, and this drew
-the Proctor like a moth. Squiff had barely time to get
-behind Kiddy’s dress-basket and pull a cabin trunk
-in front of him, when the obtrusive official entered
-the house and insisted on looking round the rooms.
-The dear girl shrieked through the door that she was
-going to bed, and when the Proctor had convinced himself
-of this, he departed, leaving two men to watch the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-house. At least this is how Squiff explained the fact
-that he didn’t reach his digs till 12.19.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And,’ added Fatty, ‘the estimable Corker, who has
-not yet joined the Temperance League, had gone to bed
-with the door-key in her pocket entirely oblivious of the
-fact that Squiff had not returned, so Freddy had to haul
-him up by a sheet.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If they do these things on the Monday, I shudder to
-think of Saturday,’ I remarked as I left to play against
-Barabbas’, while the others made for the river. I did
-rather well over the match, for after amassing 48 I persuaded
-Accrington to field for me, and returned for our
-tea-party.</p>
-
-<p>I thought I was fairly punctual, but when I burst into
-the sitting-room I found the ‘Three Little Wives’ in
-one arm-chair gloating over ‘Gals’ Gossip.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I must apologize for Lord Gilderdale not being here
-to receive you,’ I began, when a lady whom I subsequently
-discovered to be Miss Tiny Trimmer clustered
-round me and murmured sweetly ‘Oh! don’t let that
-worry you! I suppose you’re Martha?’ From which I
-gathered that Squiff had not spent all his time behind the
-basket on the preceding evening. After the sweet thing
-had introduced me to Ruby and Tweenie as Mr. Martha
-Cochrane, ‘the friend of Kiddy’s boy,’ we proceeded to
-make ourselves comfortable on the sofa but were immediately
-disturbed by Freddy who burst in like a
-whirlwind, exclaiming,</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m awfully sorry I’m late, girls, but I see the lady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-of the house has received you,’ and then, ‘where’s
-Ina?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh I expect she’s still on the river with the Rajah,’
-said Ruby.</p>
-
-<p>‘What, old Jellipore?’ cried the Pilot, as he came into
-the room; ‘curse those Basutos.’</p>
-
-<p>Further introductions were followed by the arrival of
-Reggie and the tea-tray, which was presided over by the
-Pilot, who seemed rather in the cold pending the arrival
-of Miss Carlton.</p>
-
-<p>During the meal the conversation ranged from Oxford
-to St. John’s Wood via Rhodes’ Will and Protection,
-and on its conclusion Freddy took Tiny into our other
-sitting-room to inspect my curious collection of birds’
-eggs.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Ina Carlton not yet having arrived, the Pilot improvised
-on the piano while I gave Tweenie Tarn my
-views on marriage, and Reggie in a distant corner discussed
-the relative merits of Oxford and Cambridge with
-the delicious Ruby Ramsden.</p>
-
-<p>After a bit we discovered that the Pilot had silently
-departed, and then Reggie considerately offered to take
-the fair Ruby on the river for an hour, and they left
-accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>At half-past six we smoothed out the dents in the
-sofa, and Tweenie said she ‘really must go.’</p>
-
-<p>We thought it kinder not to go into the other sitting-room,
-but Tweenie enquired from the passage if Tiny
-meant to go home before the show or not.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As no answer was forthcoming, after a somewhat
-protracted farewell in the hall, I put Tweenie into a
-hansom and went up to dress for dinner.</p>
-
-<p>I did not hear Miss Trimmer depart, and when I left
-the house at seven the dining-room door was still
-closed.</p>
-
-<p>All through the evening the Pilot was in a state of
-suppressed rage, inspired by the unfortunate Rajah of
-Jellipore, who had, probably quite unconsciously, kept
-Miss Carlton out on the river about three hours too long.</p>
-
-<p>The Rajah, whose father’s harem was the finest in the
-East, early acquired a nice taste in chiffon, and is apparently
-endeavouring to form a large acquaintance among
-the ladies of the stage, obviously, as the Pilot bitterly
-remarked, for recruiting purposes. However, Peter had
-his innings on the following day at Accrington’s lunch,
-after which he carried off Ina for a quiet hour on the
-Cher, much to his host’s disgust. The remainder of
-the day passed off very quietly.</p>
-
-<p>Thursday was only remarkable for a spirited lecture by
-the Provost on the evils of the stage, delivered to Accrington
-at the leprous hour of 9.30 a.m.</p>
-
-<p>Our venerable Head had met the lunch party leaving
-College on the preceding day, and although we all
-saluted him with the utmost politeness, he did not
-return our greeting, but passed on his way combing his
-beard with his fingers, which is always a sign of impending
-evil.</p>
-
-<p>‘The old bird turned very stuffy,’ said Accrington,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-relating the occurrence afterwards, ‘and said he seriously
-thought of informing my parents that I was
-wasting my time and money, and doing no good to
-myself or anybody else.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The usual formula,’ remarked Freddy, <i>en parenthèse</i>;
-‘and finished up with the parting slap that no more
-lunch-leave would be given me this term. I’m afraid,’ he
-concluded, ‘that the last fragments of my reputation
-have dissolved.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A reputation,’ remarked the Pilot, solemnly, ‘is an
-expensive and unnecessary luxury in Oxford, and I can
-only marvel at the fearful efforts daily made by many
-to retain what was originally only a shadow.’ After this
-sweeping statement the unfortunate Peter was carried
-off to lunch at Luther House by a person with a pale
-face and a black cloak. As we strolled back to digs
-Reggie informed us that the Rajah had monopolised the
-entire company for the day, and there was nothing to
-do but to look forward to to-morrow’s lunch, which
-was going, in Kruger’s famous phrase, to ‘stagger
-humanity.’</p>
-
-<p>From an early hour on Friday the antique remnant
-who wheels about Woodman’s cart was engaged in carrying
-delicacies of every kind, from champagne cup to
-salted almonds, towards 129, and Mrs. Corker, whose
-tongue has solved the problem of perpetual motion,
-spent the morning in listening to and immediately forgetting
-the numerous instructions which Squiff issued
-from his bedroom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Freddy, being a Roman Catholic, fasts&mdash;on lobster
-mayonnaise&mdash;every Friday, so he journeyed to the extreme
-end of the Banbury Road to get a dispensation
-from Father McGinnis, his spiritual adviser. On my arrival
-at 11.15 with Reggie, an agonized voice from Squiff’s
-room besought me to hurry round to the Purewell Press
-and demand the menus, which were Freddy’s choice,
-and calculated to make any one sit up. When I returned
-from this errand I found Squiff, who had reached
-the collar and braces stage, issuing his fifth batch of
-instructions to the muddled Corker, who had propped
-herself against the bannisters and was weeping copiously.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture Freddy did a cake-walk into the
-room waving the dispensation, and we toasted the
-McGinnis in sherry and bitters. Freddy says that no
-one Roman Catholic priest stays in Oxford for long,
-the confessions are too much for them. While we were
-still honouring the Reverend Father a large crowd in
-the street below attracted our attention, and out of it
-there emerged Accrington, Reggie and the Pilot, carrying
-between them Farmborough’s bull-pup, the infamous
-Totters, who had apparently had a slight difference of
-opinion with a tram-conductor. Having deposited the
-ferocious animal in Freddy’s bedder they joined us in
-the drawing-room, where the unfortunate Corker met
-us with the announcement that Woodman had sent
-round no crockery but soup-plates. This horrible
-catastrophe instantly revealed Squiff’s marvellous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-faculty for dealing with an emergency. Before we had
-finished discussing what to do he had returned from
-next door bringing with him an entire dinner service
-which he had borrowed from the Hon. Lionel Strongi’th’arm,
-of Thomas’, as the said gentleman was going
-to attend the biterminal lunch of the Swillingdon Club.
-This promptitude so surprised Mrs. Corker that she
-found it necessary to have a cup of tea with a slight dash
-in it, which Squiff readily granted, as he says the
-savoury is always better when the Corker has dipped
-her beak.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the Pilot, who was more out of the
-window than in the room, espied our guests coming
-down St. Aldate’s, whereupon Squiff and Freddy ran
-down to meet them, while Reggie hastily secreted
-Squiff’s seven signed photos of Mabel Amoore, on account,
-as he explained, of professional jealousy. Freddy had
-only just directed them to his bedroom to leave their
-hats, when several loud shrieks followed by heavy
-thumps heralded the entrance of Miss Tiny Trimmer,
-with Totters firmly attached to her under petticoat.
-As they got inside the door they parted company, and
-Totters leapt upon the sofa triumphantly shaking in his
-mouth a piece of frilled yellow silk, which Freddy
-rescued and locked in his private drawer as a memento.
-The Corker was hastily summoned to give professional
-assistance, after which we sat down to lunch, a party of
-twelve.</p>
-
-<p>The late Mr. Corker’s half-brother, a military gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-of funereal aspect, by the name of Blubb, had
-kindly consented, for a small gratuity, to assist on this
-occasion; ‘it being,’ as he explained to Squiff, ‘not my
-hordinary vacation, but honly to oblige.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m so sorry about that wretched dog,’ said Freddy,
-as he settled himself beside Tiny, ‘but he was always of
-an enquiring nature.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! he’s not so bad as Jellipore,’ replied Tiny, ‘he
-sticks like a burr. Why, when we told him we were
-out to every meal on Wednesday, he had a special one
-at half-past eleven in the morning for us, and we had
-to go.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve had over a dozen notes from him since we
-arrived,’ said Ina wearily across the table, ‘and he sends
-me poppies every day, the one flower I loathe.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Would you like to go out to Jellipore as Ranee?’
-asked the Pilot.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, thanks,’ replied Ina, ‘I’m going to be the only
-pebble on my beach, and he’s got a regular cartload on
-his.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You do generally appear to be stony, dear,’ said
-Ruby, amidst general laughter.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah! I haven’t got so many kind friends as you
-have,’ retorted Ina.</p>
-
-<p>There is no knowing what this conversation might
-have led to, had not the Blubber appeared at Ina’s
-elbow with uncanny stealth, and demanded in a sepulchral
-voice:</p>
-
-<p>‘Sherry wine or ’ock, Miss?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘D’you like Oxford?’ enquired Accrington, who
-always makes the most obvious remarks.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! it’s lovely,’ responded Ruby enthusiastically,
-‘and so exciting. Why, only yesterday I spent an
-hour in a man’s cupboard, because his aunt paid him
-a surprise visit on her way home from Scotland.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How very unpleasant for you, dearest,’ put in Lily
-sweetly, ‘but of course you can take care of yourself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s better anyhow,’ replied Ruby tartly, ‘than
-always wanting one of the other sex to perform that
-duty, like someone I know.’</p>
-
-<p>Here Freddy rapped sharply on the table and cried,
-‘Parrot-house next door,’ which remark effectually
-silenced the girls, but seriously upset Reggie, who
-had been preparing a joke for several minutes.</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose you are a great authority on birds’ eggs
-now,’ queried the Pilot of Tiny, from the bottom of the
-table, amid a general silence.</p>
-
-<p>‘What do you mean?’ demanded the fair one, who
-had completely forgotten the incident in question.</p>
-
-<p>‘O nothing, only you spent two hours examining
-Martha’s collection with Freddy in our digs on Thursday
-afternoon.’</p>
-
-<p>As nobody appeared to have anything further to say
-on this subject a holy hush fell upon the company, until
-Accrington, who had not asked a well-worn question for
-very nearly three minutes, demanded of Tweenie,
-‘Have you seen any Freshers’ delights?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Do you mean Mr. de Beresford’s canary-coloured
-waistcoat?’ she asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘’Pon my word you’re rather hard on poor D.B.,’ said
-Accrington, ‘didn’t I see you driving over with him to&mdash;&mdash;?’</p>
-
-<p>Here the Blubber, with involuntary tact, created
-a sufficient diversion by dropping a meringue and then
-standing on it.</p>
-
-<p>When Freddy had withered the old man with a glance,
-and more champagne had been dealt out all round,
-Squiff, who had been carrying on a <i>sotto voce</i> conversation
-with Miss Childe since the beginning of the meal,
-suddenly looked up and remarked, ‘Kiddy’s going to
-dance the “Can-can” for us after lunch.’</p>
-
-<p>When I noticed the startling change which passed
-over the features of the Blubber, I fancied that he must
-have seen this graceful display of agility before, and
-I subsequently found the aged reprobate with his eye
-glued to the keyhole.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy then proposed the health of the ‘Cannibal
-Girl’ Company in a neat little speech, in the course of
-which he mentioned that he never knew Cannibal girls
-wore so many clothes before.</p>
-
-<p>‘I haven’t noticed anything excessive,’ put in Reggie,
-who had hitherto been obscured by the shapely form of
-Miss Trimmer. He mentioned that he thought three
-such pretty wives were entirely wasted on an old Mormon
-like Caskowiski, especially as some of us hadn’t
-even one apiece.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After this the tables were hastily cleared, and a few
-minutes later the Bursar of Thomas’, as he passed up
-St. Aldate’s, was edified by the spectacle of a large and
-interested crowd collected in front of the Maison Squiff.
-At the first glance he could only make out the back
-portion of someone who appeared to be conducting an
-orchestra, a hideous discord proceeding from the room;
-but on putting on his glasses he descried a gentleman
-standing on a chair and holding a top hat, which a lady,
-who was making a marvellous display of lingerie, kicked
-with astounding frequency amid loud applause. ‘The
-whole forming,’ as he subsequently remarked to his
-friend, a genial Tutor, ‘A motht degwading thpectacle
-for the undegwaduate, though, between ourthelves,
-I’ve theldom theen it better done, even at the Folies
-Berthères. I hope,’ he added plaintively, ‘that thethe
-young thcoundrelth didn’t thee me watching from the
-other thide of the threet.’ The Tutor, a request for more
-details meeting with no response, clutched his hat and
-started hastily for St. Aldate’s.</p>
-
-<p>After the dance was finished, it was discovered that
-Ruby and Reggie had silently left the room, ‘in order,’
-as he subsequently explained, ‘to talk over Freddy’s
-stamp collection.’ We left them in possession of the
-drawing room, and departed in couples for the river,
-most of us turning up again just in time for Hall.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day we could see nothing of the
-dear girls as they had a matinée, and the Rajah succeeded
-in capturing them for tea. Owing to this I was able to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-meet Freddy, who was coming from his law lecture at
-St. Spirits’, about 12 o’clock, at Carfax: and having
-picked up Accrington at the O.U.D.S., we made our way
-to Butler’s, the florist’s. Here we encountered one of
-those startling obstacles that turn the brightest sunshine
-into overwhelming darkness.</p>
-
-<p>‘We are very sorry, sir, but our Mr. Butler says he
-can’t possibly send any more bouquets round to the
-theatre on credit,’ said the slim young person in charge
-of the shop, with a weary air. As we could not manage
-to make up the requisite amount between us, Freddy,
-after a little tactful persuasion, induced her to fetch
-the proprietor from his lunch.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of one of the Earl of Paunbrough’s cards, of
-which Freddy keeps a large stock for cases analogous
-to this, produced an immediate effect upon the obsequious
-Butler, and he readily consented to supply us with
-three arum lilies, some moss and a furlong of wire, the
-whole done up most artistically with the College ribbon,
-for the absurdly small price of two guineas. This
-arduous duty successfully performed, we returned to our
-respective luncheons promising to meet again at the
-Hyde at 6.30, when a few of us were going to dine
-together. On my way home I saw Verimisti, the Italian
-Count from King’s, who was madly in love with Lucinda
-Tubb, a lady whose youth has long been out of sight,
-though she still keeps it in mind, and often refers to it.
-That afternoon the Unregenerate narrowly escaped a
-terrible calamity which might have thrown us all into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-the deepest mourning and put a sudden end to our
-innocent jollity. Squiff, who was fielding out in the deep,
-had been standing at ease for about half-an-hour, when
-he suddenly bethought him of a photograph of the fair
-Kiddy in his pocket, and having extracted it, was gazing
-at it with soulful intensity, when the ball descending
-like a meteor, struck him violently on the head; but
-thanks to a cabbage-leaf in his hat and an abnormally
-thick skull no great damage was done.</p>
-
-<p>We assembled as arranged at 6.30, a large but select
-party, though Verimisti who had had a champagne tea
-with Jellipore and the ladies, had already reached the
-confidential stage, and after twice shaking hands warmly
-with everybody, at once started on Accrington with a
-pointless Italian story which lasted all through dinner.
-In addition to our crowd from Cecil’s we had Blandford
-of Barabbas’, a prominent sportsman, who contributes
-very generously to the University Chest per the Proctors,
-St. Quentin of Mary’s, and finally de Beresford. I am
-not very clear as to the events of that night after we
-reached the theatre; but I recollect quite distinctly that
-at dinner we emptied a prodigious number of bottles,
-chiefly in health-drinking, and that Verimisti’s speech in
-replying for Italy was a triumph of incomprehensibility.
-When our party of ten finally landed at the theatre in a
-most hilarious mood and all wearing purple carnations,
-the performance had already started, for we heard the
-first song being roughly handled by a crowded and enthusiastic
-house. As we filed into our seats, some of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-our friends in the dress circle cheered, and we had
-much difficulty in preventing Verimisti from replying.
-Blandford created the first diversion of the evening by
-omitting to turn down his seat, and collapsing with
-some suddenness on the floor. A large party of twenty-firsters
-from Barabbas’&mdash;most of whom knew Blandford&mdash;rose
-and cheered heartily, the chorus of female savages
-who occupied the stage passing entirely unnoticed. The
-entrance of Nokop&mdash;the King’s physician&mdash;however was
-greeted with great applause and the popular chorus of
-his song:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">We’ve potions and pills,</div>
-<div class="verse">Curing all ills,</div>
-<div class="verse">Dispensed by the great Nokop,</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">was taken up by everyone regardless of time and tune.
-We were particularly pleased with a gentleman in the
-second row who conducted the song with much greater
-success than the salaried official before the footlights.
-After the third encore, several entire strangers in the
-second row rose and shook his hand, while a person
-in a brown bowler hat and knicker-bockers appeared in
-the wings and made frantic signals to refuse further
-demands. Von Graussman, who seemed to be feeling
-the heat in the dress circle, here endeavoured to address
-the audience to the exclusion of King Caskowiski, who
-had just made an imposing entrance, and the following
-dialogue ensued:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>K.C. (<i>in a dignified manner</i>), ‘Welcome my dusky
-subjects.’</p>
-
-<p>V.G. (<i>suddenly struck by K.C.’s state robes</i>), ‘You vas
-a Broctor.’</p>
-
-<p>K.C. (<i>continues</i>), ‘Let our wives attend us to the
-palace.’</p>
-
-<p>V.G. (<i>apparently reassured on the former subject</i>), ‘My
-vriends he vas a Mormon.’</p></div>
-
-<p>At this point a bulky and uniformed official intervened
-and von Graussman’s companion, a spectacled scholar
-of Cecil’s, was hustled out of the theatre without a
-chance of explanation, just as Sotite came forward to
-sing his famous song. The chorus of this, beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">‘It’s tails I win and heads you lose,’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">is peculiarly tricky, and even the energetic sportsman in
-front was unable to keep the field altogether, for the
-orchestra finished first by a short bar, followed by
-Sotite and the Barabbas party, the rest of us being left
-at the post. Verimisti indeed, continued to sing the refrain
-through the whole of the next verse.</p>
-
-<p>The landing and entrance of the English party created
-immense enthusiasm, though I failed to see why the
-Hon. Mrs. Charteris should come ashore in a skirt considerably
-above her knees, and Angus MacPhee’s topper
-and frock-coat seemed peculiarly out of place on a
-Cannibal Island. After the inevitable chorus, there
-followed the ‘Three Wives’ song, which received seven
-encores, and then Freddy, who, we understand had seen
-the piece before, declared that there was nothing of
-interest to follow, and drove us outside, ‘being,’ as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-remarked, ‘Called to the Bar.’ Before we could regain
-our seats the curtain had fallen on the first act, and
-finding it impossible to remain in the crowded saloon,
-we paraded the street for ten minutes. When we got
-in again we found the second act in full swing, Ginsling
-and a chorus of female cabin-boys in a cake-walk receiving
-repeated encores, after which the self-appointed
-conductor went out to drown the microbes, returning
-just in time for Mrs. Mopper’s song on the perils of the
-ocean. The last verse of this was entirely lost through
-the attempted entrance of four members of the Snorters’
-Club from Tydvil College, who were eventually ejected&mdash;after
-having embroiled most of the audience near the
-door&mdash;by four uniformed officials, assisted by the box-office
-clerk and two programme boys. But we afterwards
-discovered that Ironsides, the heavy-weight
-champion, left a limb of the law on the door mat,
-while a programme boy who had clung to him was deposited
-on a hay-cart in the yard of the Hyde. The
-sympathies of the audience were all with the Snorters,
-and after a brief though stirring speech from Reggie on
-the rights of Englishmen, the Barabbas men behind rose
-en masse and demanded somebody’s blood; but when
-the popular manager explained that the Lessees had
-gone home in a hansom they were appeased and resumed
-their seats for Queenie Hareham’s favourite song ‘They
-all of them have tried it on with me.’ After this the plot,
-in the fashion of musical comedies, was recklessly
-abandoned, and Jack Warmleigh did a Coon dance with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-Lady Betty Backstays. But the Hon. Alan Charteris,
-R.N., who attempted to sing a love song totally unconnected
-with the piece, was greeted with loud shouts
-of ‘Go off’; and then ensued a general mystification of
-the audience by dressing every character as some one
-else, including Mrs. Charteris’ appearance as the Cannibal
-Girl, which finished the first scene and gave another interval
-for lip-salve. Our little refreshment cost us
-nothing this time, as a complete stranger from the dress
-circle, who described himself in quavering tones as the
-‘Great Mogul,’ absolutely insisted upon providing us all
-with lotion, though Freddy’s back teeth were already
-under water. Owing to a free fight which took place in
-the ladies’ cloak-room between de Beresford and a most
-indigestible looking person from Llewellyn’s, whose face
-he said annoyed him, we did not regain our seats until the
-next act was well under weigh. A gentleman from Barabbas’,
-after having kissed my hand, insisted upon my sitting
-on his knee, and addressed me fondly as ‘The Queen of
-the May.’ Owing to this and a tired feeling which
-came over me about this time, I saw nothing for quite
-ten minutes. When I next looked at the stage I found
-that the theatricals at Berehampton House were going
-strong, and the tableau representing Eileen Mervyn as
-Venus with King Caskowiski as Apollo balancing an
-apple on his head, was hailed with rapturous applause.
-The next tableau showed a lady wrapped in little else
-but mystery pointing to the sky, but before I had time
-to enquire what she was supposed to be, the gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-on whose knee I was sitting suddenly shifted his position
-and I fell rather heavily to the floor. During the tableaux
-a fearful din prevented any songs reaching us,
-while the party from Barabbas’ appeared to be having
-a concert to themselves. At last the curtain fell amid
-cries of ‘Speech’ from all sides, and something in dress
-clothes with an enormous paste stud and a Roman
-nose advanced in front of the members of the Company
-and their respective bouquets. His lips appeared to be
-moving, but as there was no abatement of noise the
-curtain soon fell for the last time and we felt our way
-out while two King’s men strove heroically to remove
-the big bassoon.</p>
-
-<p>We enjoyed a most successful supper with our lady
-friends, at which Verimisti failed to put in an appearance.
-On our way home we danced the Lancers at
-Carfax, and after vainly demanding a speech from the
-Principal of Barabbas’, whose house looks onto the
-High, retired to bed.</p>
-
-<p>Reggie said the departure of the Company on the
-following morning reminded him of a Roman General’s
-triumph, and proved a positive harvest time for the
-cabbies. The smallest computation put the number of
-undergraduates present at a hundred and twenty, but
-the Proctor on his arrival only succeeded in entrapping
-eleven, of whom three had leave to go to town and one
-had come to meet his uncle.</p>
-
-<p>The state of Accrington’s clothes, after spending half-an-hour
-in the lamp-room, was the cause of much profanity,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-while Squiff, who had climbed into a coal-truck,
-proved quite unrecognisable. But the adventures of the
-immaculate de Beresford put these misfortunes quite
-into the shade, for he was carried off in a horse-box
-to Stow-on-the-Wold, and only returned about 10 p.m.
-minus his watch-chain and cigarette-case, which he left
-at that remote spot as security for his dinner and return
-ticket.</p>
-
-<p>However, even the solemn Pilot admitted that it was
-a very good week.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="IV">IV.<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE MUTUAL HELP SOCIETY.</span></h2>
-
-<p>The credit of the idea must be given to Reggie; he
-suggested it at a time when we were all in low water
-and when his birthday gifts from loving uncles and
-aunts had just poured into Reggie’s receptive hands,
-so no mercenary motives can be imputed to him. If
-the idea did not turn out the brilliant success we anticipated,
-that was due to faults in the system, and not
-in the promoters.</p>
-
-<p>We were all in Reggie’s rooms one day, forming a
-small committee of Ways and Means, with, as Squiff
-said, plenty of ways and no means, when Reggie suddenly
-remarked, ‘Why shouldn’t we have a fund?’</p>
-
-<p>The Pilot, who conceals a tendency to make obvious
-and painful puns behind a solemn demeanour, had just
-begun, ‘The fundamental principle&mdash;,’ when Reggie
-remarked sadly, ‘I am serious.’</p>
-
-<p>When the Pilot had been suppressed with two
-cushions and a syphon; Squiff inquired, ‘A fund,
-what for?’</p>
-
-<p>‘For mutual help,’ answered Reggie.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! a sort of coal-and-clothing-mothers’-meeting-keep-the-baby-warm
-kind of article,’ put in Freddy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Not at all,’ said Reggie, ‘it will be something like
-this. I propose that each member&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>‘Who are the members to be?’ interrupted Squiff.</p>
-
-<p>‘That,’ replied Reggie with an airy wave of the
-hand, ‘we can settle later. Each member shall contribute
-say five or eight pounds a term, which will be
-handed to the Treasurer and kept by him&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>‘If Squiff is made Treasurer the money will certainly
-be kept by him,’ interjected the Pilot.</p>
-
-<p>After I had picked up the china ornament and the
-table-leg which were broken in the subsequent scuffle,
-Reggie continued, ‘The money will be kept by the
-Treasurer, who will not be a paid official, and used in
-time of stress by the members. For instance, supposing
-a summons has to be paid, or a railway-fare to
-town is required, the member needing the money will
-go to the Treasurer, and after pledging his word that
-the circumstances are urgent shall withdraw just as
-much as is needed and no more. There will also be
-special rules about repayment.’</p>
-
-<p>‘They will be needed,’ I remarked; ‘and we must
-also have “urgent circumstances” clearly defined, as
-I foresee trouble on that score.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ said Squiff, ‘if every one is agreed, that some
-such Society is needed, let us draw up the rules at
-once. If an undertaking like this is left under discussion
-after the first week of term the subscriptions will
-have to be lowered to five shillings, and that won’t
-be much use.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Rule 1,’ said Reggie, tapping the table with a paper-knife,
-‘That this Society be known as the “Cecil College
-Mutual Help Society.”’</p>
-
-<p>Rule 2, ‘That the terminal subscription be five pounds
-with no entrance-fee, but that the membership be strictly
-limited.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think&mdash;’ began the Pilot.</p>
-
-<p>‘Wait a moment till I have read out what I’ve written
-down and then we can discuss it,’ said Reggie.</p>
-
-<p>Rule 3, ‘That all repayments of amounts drawn out
-over and above a member’s own subscription be made
-within eight weeks.’</p>
-
-<p>Rule 4, ‘That every member before drawing out
-money must pledge his word that the circumstances
-are urgent. Such urgent circumstances must be taken
-to mean the entire lack of money on the borrower’s
-part, and the immediate necessity for a loan. Urgent
-circumstances do not include the need of theatre tickets,
-bouquets, suppers, payments of accounts before a solicitor’s
-letter has been received, or payment to any tailor
-or photographer.’</p>
-
-<p>Rule 5, ‘That no money be borrowed during the first
-two weeks of term, and that no member who has failed
-to make repayment within eight weeks may avail himself
-of the privileges of membership until such repayment
-be made.’</p>
-
-<p>Rule 6, ‘That in the event of all funds being exhausted
-before the last week of term, the Treasurer&mdash;who
-shall be elected terminally&mdash;shall call a meeting
-to announce the fact.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rule 7, ‘That any money left over&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>‘We can dispense with that rule,’ remarked Squiff,
-‘there never will be any money left over.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s all I’ve got down,’ said Reggie, ‘discussion
-may now commence.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Supposing,’ remarked the Pilot, who is always ready
-with an objection, ‘supposing that the Treasurer himself
-borrows all the available funds at the beginning of the
-third week, or that he goes away leaving the money
-locked up, what is to happen?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I propose rule seven,’ said Squiff. ‘The Treasurer
-to be unable to borrow without consulting two members,
-and in case of absence to appoint a deputy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course he must keep accounts,’ said Freddy;
-‘and is responsible for collecting repayments and subscriptions.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s a good idea,’ I said; ‘but will it work?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We can but try,’ replied Reggie. ‘It saves incessant
-borrowing and is simple; both of which are great points
-in its favour. Are we all agreed on these seven Rules?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oughtn’t we to limit the borrowing powers of each
-member?’ asked Freddy.</p>
-
-<p>‘That wouldn’t be any use,’ said Reggie; ‘but we
-can frame rule eight. That each member only borrow
-sufficient for his urgent need, and give to the Treasurer
-a statement of his reason for borrowing. That ought to
-be sufficient.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think so,’ agreed Freddy; ‘but we ought to exclude
-betting from the Urgent Circumstances.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Right!’ said the Pilot, ‘and now for the members.
-There are five of us, Accrington will be six, von Graussman
-seven, and Fatty eight: that gives us forty pounds,
-which will do to start on. Suppose we appoint Fatty
-treasurer, he has a good head for figures.’</p>
-
-<p>This proposal was unanimously carried, as Fatty was
-not present to decline the honour, and the meeting adjourned
-till the following evening in Fatty’s rooms. In
-the meanwhile the objects of the Club were explained
-to the other three in moving terms, and they promised
-their adherence. Von Graussman, whose father is a
-great Austrian financier, had grave doubts about the
-scheme, and wrote to his people for advice; meanwhile
-however, we collared his subscription, and he became,
-however unwillingly, a member.</p>
-
-<p>A proposal by Fatty, who does not play cards, to
-exclude Bridge from the list of Urgent Circumstances
-was negatived by seven to one. The Pilot also was
-as usual full of objections, but these were overruled,
-and the Cecil’s Mutual Help Society started on its brief,
-but bright, career.</p>
-
-<p>The first fortnight of the term was uneventful, and
-marked only by sustained attacks on the integrity of
-the Treasurer, by bribery and threats in order to induce
-him to break rule five. These having failed there was
-nothing to do but wait. On the first morning of the
-third week&mdash;it was a Saturday&mdash;Accrington and Squiff
-met at 9.15 at the bottom of the Treasurer’s staircase,
-and a race ensued for Fatty’s bedroom. The official<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-however declared with unnecessary heat that business
-hours did not begin till 10.30, and so they were obliged
-to retire till then. At a quarter past ten, Squiff, who is
-an adept at manœuvring, returned and began a conversation
-with Fatty who was at breakfast, which lasted
-till the clock struck half-past and Accrington’s step
-sounded on the staircase, and then he jumped up and
-remarked quietly ‘I want two tenners out of the Fund.’
-Accrington, who arrived almost breathless, only required
-a modest fiver. Fatty took a seat at table with a large
-account-book and a stylo. He took Accrington’s case
-first as being the simpler, and was quite ready to advance
-the money, but some difficulty occurred in interpreting
-the rules.</p>
-
-<p>‘How does one pledge one’s word within the meaning
-of the Act?’ enquired the Treasurer plaintively.</p>
-
-<p>‘I should make him swear horribly,’ remarked Squiff;
-‘I don’t think he’s the sort of person I should trust
-with the funds of any Club.’</p>
-
-<p>The roll which Accrington threw at him did not hit
-him, but finished the career of a small china dog which
-had belonged to Fatty’s grandmother, and smashed two
-liqueur-glasses into fragments. When peace had been
-restored, Accrington produced a summons from Tuneham
-and Keighley&mdash;the piano-people in the High&mdash;for
-‘the hire of piano for two years, tuning, replacing
-broken keys, do. wires, do. candlesticks, do. pedals,
-£5/2/: paid by cash, 2/-. Total owing. £5.’ This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-convinced Fatty, who handed over a cheque for five
-pounds without demur, and Accrington left rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p>Squiff’s case was harder:</p>
-
-<p>‘At the end of last term,’ he explained to Fatty, who
-had assumed a judicial aspect, ‘I had to raise money
-on my motor in order to have four nights in town
-and do the Rugger Match properly. It is still in
-Goldstein’s clutches: yesterday I got a telegram to
-say that my Uncle Terence&mdash;Sir Terence MacGurkin,
-my mater’s brother&mdash;who gave me the car, is coming
-down here, and wants me to take him for some nice
-spins. If he finds I’ve pawned it, there’ll be the devil
-to pay, and the uncle certainly won’t pay him, nor me.
-I shall have to run up to town to-day, get the mo-mo,
-pay Goldstein, and drive it down here, ready for Uncle
-Terence to-morrow; and,’ he concluded rapidly, ‘if the
-urgency isn’t apparent even to you’&mdash;‘Don’t be rude,’
-interpolated Fatty&mdash;‘then nothing will ever penetrate
-your brain.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think,’ Fatty had begun, when hurried steps
-sounded on the stairs and von Graussman appeared
-clad in a most curious costume, and with unbrushed
-hair. To him Squiff immediately said, ‘I don’t think,
-old chap, that you ought to present yourself in a costume
-like that before the Treasurer of the Cecil’s
-Mutual Help Society, you look as if you hadn’t been
-to bed all night, and then had got up too early, if
-such a thing is possible.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It vos alright perhaps that I must be given nineteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-pounds by Mr. Fatty from the moneys of the lately
-formed-and-much-to-be-commended-by-needy-gentlemens-’Elp-Clubs,’
-he remarked in one breath.</p>
-
-<p>‘Once more!’ shrieked Squiff ecstatically.</p>
-
-<p>‘I vos not repeading,’ replied von Graussman with
-dignity, ‘in der worts of Bilate vot I vos say I had
-shpoken.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What Pilate really said&mdash;’ began Squiff, when Fatty
-who had sunk into a sort of reverie, suddenly awoke
-and thumped on the table vigorously. ‘The valuable
-time of the Treasurer is being frittered away,’ he remarked
-solemnly. ‘The case of the O’Rossa is under
-consideration. He has explained his need for twenty
-pounds; the only remaining formality is the pledging
-of his word. When he has done that I will hand over
-the cheque.’ Squiff, who had been speaking to von
-Graussman, hurriedly pledged his word and left to
-catch the 12.10 to town, while von Graussman proceeded
-to pour into Fatty’s ears a long and disconnected
-tale in which the words, ‘Boliceman,’ ‘damnable,’
-‘fraulein,’ and ‘gompensations,’ appeared frequently,
-so Fatty gathered that it had some reference to an
-escapade in town during the week before term. However,
-as von Graussman was prepared to swear to the
-urgency of the circumstances, he saw no reason why he
-should not advance the amount, but discovered to his
-horror that there were only fifteen pounds left. He explained
-this to the German, who replied that ‘he could
-sew der matters up mit so much,’ and went off with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-Club’s last money. Fatty, who saw in this a speedy
-ending to the worries of a Treasurership, contentedly
-entered the amounts in his book, and then took a cab
-to his History Lecture at James’.</p>
-
-<p>It was only when Freddy casually applied for two
-pounds to pay Foundry deceased&mdash;on account&mdash;that
-he discovered that the end of the money did not imply
-the end of his troubles.</p>
-
-<p>‘You lent twenty pounds to Squiff,’ screamed Freddy;
-‘why, you know he’s overdrawn his next month’s
-allowance and pawned his dressing case.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I didn’t know,’ replied Fatty placidly, ‘besides, it
-seems to me that those are the very circumstances in
-which the Club becomes useful and even necessary.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, but,’ retorted Freddy, ‘he won’t be able to pay
-it back for weeks, and I know I shall want to borrow
-next week.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Come early and leave early,’ remarked the Treasurer
-irritatingly. ‘If you’d come at half-past ten
-when the office opens you might have got something.
-As it is you must wait till some one pays in.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Anyhow,’ remarked Freddy, ‘by rule six you must
-call a meeting and announce that all funds are exhausted,
-and I don’t envy you the job, as I know
-Martha was coming round to borrow in the morning,
-and Reggie is sure to be hard up as well.’</p>
-
-<p>The meeting fulfilled the expectation of Freddy; it
-was stormy on the part of Reggie and myself, placid
-on Fatty’s, and calmly indifferent on the part of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-original borrowers. Freddy demanded a further subscription
-which Squiff and von Graussman opposed.
-Eventually we arranged a compromise by which everybody
-was to pay in three pounds within three days, and
-the meeting broke up. For the next few days events
-progressed quietly until another meeting was suddenly
-summoned to report that Reggie and I having borrowed
-a tenner each, and Fatty himself&mdash;by permission&mdash;the
-remaining four pounds, funds were again exhausted,
-and as the time for repayment had not nearly expired
-we were once more at a standstill. Eventually
-a motion was passed by six to two, Squiff and von
-Graussman dissenting, that the time for repayment of
-the original loans should expire on the following
-Saturday. This caused great perturbation among the
-borrowers, but by the help of an overdraft at the bank
-von Graussman scraped up the money, and Accrington
-paid in his five pounds without any difficulty. The real
-blow to our Club fell upon us on the Sunday when
-the third meeting within three weeks was called to announce
-the absence of funds: this positively staggered
-us, but we had not counted on Squiff’s presence of mind.
-On the day before, which was fixed for paying in, he
-had given Fatty his cheque for twenty pounds, and had
-immediately afterwards drawn out the available twenty
-pounds&mdash;paid in by von Graussman and Accrington&mdash;on
-the plea of Urgent Necessity, which we discovered
-to be the paying of the overdraft which he knew he
-must have at his bank, but as the overdraft turned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-out to his great surprise to be some forty pounds, of
-course they would not cash his last cheque, and the funds
-of the Club shrank to a worthless cheque for twenty
-pounds: this last manœuvre gave Squiff, as Freddy
-foolishly pointed out to him, another six weeks in which
-to pay off his debt to the Club, and a proposal to make
-all loans repayable in three days was lost by one vote.
-The numbers were equal, all who had borrowed voting
-against, and all who were free of debt, for the proposal.
-However, as Fatty had the casting vote, and owed the
-Club four pounds, the motion was lost. Our attempts
-to find a method of putting the Society on its legs again
-failed, and we agreed that we must bury it in the depths
-of forgetfulness.</p>
-
-<p>As a gallant attempt to find a solution to a most
-pressing question it was very praiseworthy, but as a
-working institution it was a regular fiasco. Fatty explained
-his subsequent failure in Divvers as the result
-of having to settle up the somewhat confused accounts
-of the defunct Club; myself, I attribute it to the fact
-that he defined Lydia&mdash;the purple seller of Thyatira&mdash;as
-‘a province in Asia Minor.’</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="V">V.<br />
-<span class="smaller">ON THE STRENUOUSNESS OF LIFE.</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was on a Wednesday morning that I repaired to
-the Maison Squiff and found Freddy in a well-worn
-blazer perusing a coroneted letter signed ‘Paunbrough,’
-which he silently handed me to read. I discovered that
-it was a communication from the noble owner of Coffington
-Castle, County Down, enclosing Butler’s bill
-with a dirty card attached. The latter enquired in
-terms more direct than polite why the hot place Freddy
-had been distributing his father’s cards about Oxford,
-and stated that he, the noble Earl, was condemned if he
-would pay thirty shillings for a bouquet to a low ballet
-girl. It concluded with the final slap that Messrs.
-Swindell and Rooke, the family solicitors, had instructions
-not to pay over another monthly allowance until
-they received Butler’s bill receipted. This crushing
-communication was pointedly signed ‘Your loving
-father,’ and a postscript demanded the return of any
-more of his Lordship’s cards which Freddy might have
-purloined.</p>
-
-<p>‘Rather rough,’ I said, ‘but you can go on for another
-month anyhow, yesterday was the First.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Not much,’ said Freddy, ‘the governor’s sharper
-than you’d think to look at him, and he telegraphed
-to the sharks to stop my instalment yesterday.’</p>
-
-<p>While we were discussing this trying situation, Mrs.
-Corker appeared bearing a blue envelope which she
-shot into my lap. It was addressed to&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Viscount Gilderdale,</p>
-
-<p class="indent4">129 St. Aldate’s, Oxford,</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and so I handed it on to Freddy, who courageously
-opened it. The contents proved to be merely an official
-confirmation of the noble lord’s own letter, which, as
-Freddy ruefully observed, was ‘rather like rubbing it
-in.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Can you pay Butler for me, and then I’ll get my
-thirty quidlets?’ he asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘I haven’t got a penny,’ I replied, ‘but can’t Squiff
-supply the needful?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! he’s worse off than we are; but I’m sure he
-wouldn’t mind our taking his silver candlesticks round
-to Ranger’s “for one night only,”’ said Frederick.
-‘They ought to fetch thirty shillings, and then we shall
-get thirty pounds, and twenty to one are good enough
-odds for me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, at any rate,’ I said, ‘Let’s try the Pilot first,
-and Accrington.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Whatever we do, must be done quickly,’ said Freddy,
-as he searched frantically for a note-book, ‘I’m in for
-Contracts next week, and Anson is heavy on my
-chest.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Let’s go along to College,’ I suggested, ‘Accrington’s
-working day and night for his second shot at
-Mods., so he’s sure to be in.’</p>
-
-<p>As we reached Cecil’s the Pilot emerged from the
-porch carrying Cook’s Commentary on Habakkuk,
-and three large red notebooks; he is in for Honour
-Theology, but as in a recent essay he explained the
-word Gamaliel as meaning ‘the Pavement,’ while
-Gabbatha became ‘the lady who died after knitting
-coats and garments,’ we fear he is not very far advanced.
-Without any preamble we demanded thirty
-shillings, but the Pilot, whose money affairs are in
-fearful confusion, explained that he had just borrowed
-three pounds off his tailor, and could not possibly
-lend us anything.</p>
-
-<p>We accordingly hurried on into College, and found
-Accrington surveying two summonses spread out on
-Hawkins’ Handbook to Logic, which invaluable work
-he was endeavouring to learn by heart before Monday.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy had just begun ‘Can you lend,’ when his
-eye fell upon the blue documents, and the request
-died upon his lips.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, I’m very sorry I can’t,’ said Accrington, ‘can
-you?’ But nobody laughed at this; the situation was
-altogether too grave.</p>
-
-<p>It appeared from a perusal of these documents that
-Messrs. Hooper, of the High, and Daniel Dickens and
-Co., the picture dealers, had taken out a summons
-signed by a certain Frank Bolton, Mandatory,&mdash;whatever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-that might be&mdash;which bade ‘Stephen Kirkbury
-Accrington appear personally or by his proctor at the
-Apodyterium of the Convocation House to answer the
-plaintiff’s claim.’</p>
-
-<p>Some paragraphs on the back remarked ‘that if the
-debt claimed is more than six years old, that if you were
-then or are now a married woman, or have been discharged
-under the Bankruptcy Act, notice must be
-given three days before the hearing.’</p>
-
-<p>These parting shots did not appear to give Accrington
-any comfort, and he said that he was trying to raise
-a loan from the family lawyer. We condoled with
-him, and then seeing clearly that there was no hope
-for us in that quarter, hastened back to pawn the
-candlesticks before Squiff’s return.</p>
-
-<p>On the stairs of their digs we met Mrs. Corker, who
-was, as usual with her during working hours, very
-much out of breath, but she managed to pant at
-Freddy,</p>
-
-<p>‘’Ave you seen Mr. O’Roozer, me lord?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ said Freddy, ‘has he been in?’</p>
-
-<p>‘O yes, me lord,’ replied the old lady, ‘’e came in
-about ’arf an hour ago and asked for your lordship,
-’e said as ’ow ’e wanted to see your lordship most
-pertickler.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But about ten minutes ago,’ she continued, now in a
-tone of mingled wonder and indignation, ‘as I was
-a-goin up these ’ere stairs, I met ’im a comin’ down
-with them there ’andsome candlesticks under ’is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-harm, and when I says, “I’ll clean ’em for yer, Mr.
-O’Roozer, if that’s what yer wants,” ’e said, “No
-thank yer, Mrs. Corker, I’m afraid nothin’ what you
-could do wouldn’t be no use, I think I shall ’ave to
-soak them,” and then blessed if ’e didn’t rush out of
-the front door an’ get into a cab, silver candlesticks
-an’ all, a laughin’ most haffable.’</p>
-
-<p>There might have been more of these appalling revelations
-to follow, but at that moment I caught sight of
-Freddy’s face, on which there had settled a blank look
-of consternation, and we marched upstairs together,
-much sadder if wiser men.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, what the deuce we are going to do now, I’ll
-be shot if I know,’ he said as we shut the door behind
-us. ‘Squiff’s gone and popped the only marketable
-commodity in the house, and there are thirty precious
-pounds in London simply waiting for me to send for
-them.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I know,’ I said; ‘couldn’t Webster, your old scout
-in College, lend you thirty shillings for one day? I’ve
-been told that he runs a house at Margate, and is worth
-nearly five hundred a year. Some of these College servants
-are regular Croesuses.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, that’s not half a bad idea, Martha; in fact it’s
-about the only thing we can do; let’s go round and
-interview the old bird at once.’</p>
-
-<p>So saying we descended the well-worn stairs again,
-and hurried round to see the mysterious Webster, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-wears a coat like a banker, and always takes front seats
-at the best concerts.</p>
-
-<p>The worthy man readily lent us the needful, and so
-that little trouble came to an end.</p>
-
-<p>Misfortunes, however, never come singly, and only
-that evening Reggie and I and the Pilot were progged
-in the Hyde, and requested in the politest manner to
-call on the Junior Proctor at Gloucester at 9.30 next
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose,’ said the Pilot, mournfully, as we moved
-off, ‘that this is a quid-touch, but where my adjectived
-quid is to come from I don’t know.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Je ne sais pas, you don’t sais pas, and he doesn’t sai
-pas</i>,’ quoted Reggie.</p>
-
-<p>‘Freddy gets his oof to-morrow, but certainly not by
-nine,’ I said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then the only thing to be done is to ask the man to
-wait a day, and borrow the money from Freddy when
-he gets his cheque,’ remarked the Pilot, cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>On the following morning we dropped anchor in the
-Gluggins porch at 9.30, and asked for the J.P.’s rooms,
-which we found in the well-known row of cottages on
-the left of the garden, with three bull-dogs guarding the
-door. When our names had been taken, Reggie went
-in, and came out smiling after a short interview.</p>
-
-<p>‘Told me to let him have it by one o’clock,’ muttered
-Reggie, as the Pilot passed in. ‘I said I expected a
-remittance from my aunt.’</p>
-
-<p>In a moment the Pilot also returned looking as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-solemn as usual. ‘He got rather angry when I mentioned
-a remittance from my aunt, but let me off till
-one o’clock,’ he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>When I was shown in, I found the J.P., a round
-and pompous little man, robed and banded, standing
-by the table.</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose, Mr. Cochrane,’ he began at once, ‘that
-you, like the other two gentlemen whom I have just
-seen, are expecting a remittance from your aunt.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, sir,’ I replied meekly, ‘my great uncle always
-attends to these matters, but I am certainly expecting
-a remittance from him.’</p>
-
-<p>This soft answer, instead of turning away the dignitary’s
-wrath, caused him to grow purple in the face,
-but he controlled his temper very creditably and merely
-said,</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well, Mr. Cochrane, I give you till one o’clock,
-but if the twenty shillings are not in my hands by that
-time I shall communicate with your Provost and make
-matters unpleasant for you, er&mdash;good morning.’</p>
-
-<p>I joined the other two, and Reggie returned with me
-to breakfast, but the Pilot, who had to attend the Dean’s
-lecture at ten, put off his meal till eleven.</p>
-
-<p>As we made our way through the buttered eggs it
-became more and more clear that Reggie had a grievance,
-and at last it came out.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here am I, a working man’&mdash;this is where I coughed,
-but Reggie did not appear to notice it&mdash;‘with two lectures
-between now and lunch, both of which I am compelled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-to cut because an unfeeling Proctor is dunning
-me for a pound, which I must borrow from some one
-before one o’clock.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, it is very hard,’ I agreed. ‘But still I believe
-you have occasionally steeled your heart to cut a lecture
-even when there has been no Proctor in the background,
-and after all he can’t help it, it’s his business; I daresay
-if you knew him you’d find that he smoked a meerschaum
-and swore very much like other people.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I know, that’s all right,’ said Reggie, who never
-likes to pursue an argument after he has got his own
-particular complaint off his chest, ‘we’ll wait for the
-Pilot to have his brekker and then go round to see
-Freddy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s sure to have his cheque by then,’ I said, ‘and
-of course he’ll lend us the wherewithal.’</p>
-
-<p>The Pilot finished breakfast at 11.20 precisely, and
-then after carefully perusing the current society divorce
-case, we made our way to St. Aldate’s.</p>
-
-<p>We found Freddy crouching in an arm-chair murmuring
-to himself passages from Anson, and instantly demanded
-if the money had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, I dare say it’ll come some time to-day,’ said
-Freddy, crossly, and muttered to himself, ‘Agents of
-Necessity.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s no earthly good,’ replied the Pilot, ‘we must
-find three quid by one o’clock and the oof-tree bears no
-fruit at this time of year.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the money for?’ demanded Freddy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Progged in the “Shades,”’ responded Reggie laconically,
-‘and you are going to pay the fine.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I didn’t know it before,’ Freddy answered, ‘but of
-course if the money comes in time it’s yours.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We must manage it somehow,’ I said, ‘when’s the
-next post?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ring and ask the Corker, I don’t know.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Which it sometimes comes at a quarter to one, and
-sometimes at ’arf past,’ said the old lady on being interrogated.</p>
-
-<p>When he heard this the Pilot collapsed heavily into
-an arm-chair, while Freddy, who did not yet fully appreciate
-the gravity of the situation, went upstairs to search
-for a note-book in the other sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after he had left the room a raucous voice was
-heard downstairs enquiring for Milord Gilderdale, and
-the Corker appeared to be engaged in an animated discussion
-with the owner thereof.</p>
-
-<p>From two heavy thumps on the ceiling I gathered that
-Freddy had heard the caller’s voice and did not desire to
-interview him.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Corker now appeared, and after expressing surprise
-at Freddy’s absence, asked me to interview, and
-if possible dispose of ‘that there houtrageous man in
-the ’all.’</p>
-
-<p>On descending I found a corpulent man, with a rubicund
-face and no perceptible chin, standing with a sheaf
-of documents in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>‘Good mornin’, sir,’ he said, ‘Hi come from Dopin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-and Bleeder’s the ’orse-dealers, and I’ve got a little bill
-’ere for yer, honly a matter of fifteen pounds, as I’ll
-trouble you to settle.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Doping and Bleeder,’ I murmured, ‘I don’t know the
-people.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Now look ’ere, sir,’ he said with an expression which
-betokened sorrow rather than anger, ‘none o’ these little
-games, you’re Lord Gilderdale, haren’t you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Certainly not,’ I replied crossly, ‘next time perhaps
-you will make sure of whom you are talking to before you
-descend to impertinence, my man; little games indeed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho, then you’re the O’Roozer,’ he remarked, ‘I’ve
-got a bill for you for twenty-three pounds seventeen
-and fourpence.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the fourpence for?’ I queried, but by this time
-the portly gentleman was getting somewhat angry.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never yer mind, sir, it’s for value received, hand
-given,’ he said, ‘an’ our Mr. Bleeder says as ’ow ’e
-’opes you’ll see your way to lettin’ ’im ’ave the money
-this week, or ’e’ll ’ave to take proceedings, which is
-always most repugnant both for you and hus.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Now you’ve got that off your chest, you can go,’
-I said, ‘I’m not Mr. O’Rossa nor am I Lord Gilderdale.
-Good-day.’</p>
-
-<p>But the worthy representative of Messrs. Doping and
-Bleeder was not so easily disposed of.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now look ’ere,’ he said, ‘Hi believe that it’s hall a
-bloomin’ ’oax, if yer aint Wiscount Gilderdale, an’ yer
-hain’t the Ho Roozer ’oo the blazes are yer?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At this stage of the proceedings I opened the door
-and beckoned O.P. 281, who was lounging against the
-wall of the Town Hall opposite, to advance.</p>
-
-<p>‘I give this person into custody,’ I began, but this
-proved sufficient, the man from D. and B.’s had fled
-with unprecedented speed, and so after pouring palm
-oil into the ever-ready hand of the worthy officer, I
-went upstairs.</p>
-
-<p>I found the other three gazing anxiously at the clock,
-which pointed to a quarter to one, and appeared to be
-advancing terribly quickly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hadn’t we better call a cab,’ said the Pilot; ‘supposing
-the oof does turn up about five to, we shall
-have to drive to the bank before we can go to the Proctor.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, my aunt, I’d never thought of that,’ said
-Reggie, ‘It’ll take fully another minute and a quarter,
-say even one and a half, and minutes are exceptionally
-precious just now.’</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture the Corker, who was as excited as
-anybody, rushed breathlessly into the room and gasped,
-‘The postman ’as just left Thomas,’ me lord, an’ ’e’ll be
-’ere in a minute.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, by Jingo, that’s ripping,’ cried Freddy, ‘we must
-be getting off then,’ and as he spoke we all rushed downstairs
-together.</p>
-
-<p>While we were picking our caps out of the collection
-in the hall, the Pilot, who always acts the part of Job’s
-comforter on these occasions, remarked slowly, ‘I say,
-what shall we do if the draft doesn’t come?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘We shan’t do anything, we shall be done,’ I said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, anyhow, here’s the postman and we shall know
-our fate,’ put in Freddy running to the door, as footsteps
-shuffled on the pavement outside. He threw it open,
-and clutched a packet of letters from the hands of the
-postman, and then for the first time for many a long
-day, he fearlessly tore open a long blue envelope, extracting
-a letter which he dropped on the floor, and a
-cheque for thirty pounds, which he carefully examined.</p>
-
-<p>We then got into Morgan’s hansom and drove at an
-alarming speed to the Bank, but to our horror we found
-the doors closed when we got there, and the grey-haired
-man, who was sweeping the steps outside, informed us,
-what we ought to have remembered, that the bank shuts
-at one o’clock on Thursdays, and it was just striking the
-hour on Carfax.</p>
-
-<p>‘Gloucester,’ shrieked Freddy, as we bundled into
-the cab, and shot down the Corn at a fearful rate in
-the direction of Gluggins. The black clock over the
-archway pointed to four minutes past as we got out,
-I clutching the draft, while Freddy waited in the cab,
-discussing the prospects of the National with Morgan
-through the trap in the roof.</p>
-
-<p>The J.P. received us with a frown, and remarked
-coldly, ‘Punctuality is the politeness of princes, Mr.
-Arlington.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am afraid we put our trust in postmen, not princes,’
-replied Reggie; ‘and ours was late this morning; however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-if you wouldn’t mind changing this cheque, sir,
-we’re ready to pay you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Really, sir, your conduct in this matter is most surprising,’
-said the Proctor; ‘first you come here unpunctually,
-and now you offer me a large cheque on
-behalf of yourself and your companions, whom I am
-afraid are no better than you are.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But the bank is closed,’ put in Reggie.</p>
-
-<p>‘How do you mean the bank is closed, Mr. Arlington?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s Thursday, sir,’ chimed in the Pilot.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Mr. Meredith, I don’t see, if the bank closes at
-one o’clock, why you didn’t go there before.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But Freddy’s&mdash;I mean Lord Gilderdale’s&mdash;cheque
-didn’t arrive till one o’clock,’ said Reggie.</p>
-
-<p>‘I fail to understand what connection Lord Gilderdale
-has with this matter,’ said the Proctor.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh,’ said Reggie, ‘none of us had any money just at
-present, but we knew Gilderdale expected a cheque from
-his solicitors this morning, and he promised to lend us
-a sovereign each.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, then, I am really fining Lord Gilderdale for your
-delinquencies; this is a very fine situation, Mr. Arlington,’
-said the Proctor, with a nearer approach to geniality
-than we had hitherto seen.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir, hardly that,’ I put in; ‘you see all three
-of us really are expecting remittances of our own as we
-told you this morning, but as Lord Gilderdale’s arrived
-before any of ours he very kindly lent us three pounds.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Very well then, gentlemen,’ said the Proctor, ‘I don’t
-know that this arrangement is quite regular, or that it
-would exactly meet with the approval of the Vice-Chancellor,
-but after all you have produced the amount of
-your fines, and it is no business of mine to enquire how
-you obtained that amount. I am sorry to say that I believed
-at first that your slight unpunctuality was due to
-disrespect, and that you were trying to do what I believe
-the present generation would call “pulling my leg” over
-these cheques, but I see that I misjudged you, and shall
-ask you to bring the money at ten to-morrow. Good
-morning, Mr. Arlington; good morning, gentlemen,
-good morning,’ and so saying the little man collapsed
-into his arm-chair, while we departed on our way more
-or less rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy, to whom we communicated the result of the
-interview, soothed our consciences with the very plausible,
-if somewhat immoral, argument:</p>
-
-<p>‘It don’t do to give that sort of bird too much truth
-all in a lump, he ain’t accustomed to it; besides, if you
-start bringin’ him up on it, he’ll always expect it.’</p>
-
-<p>On our return to 129 St. Aldate’s we took Squiff to
-task severely for daring to dispose of his own silver
-candlesticks on the previous day; as Freddy remarked,
-‘What are things coming to when a man can do as he
-likes with his own property?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I know where things are going to,’ responded Squiff,
-‘and that is to Ranger’s in Beerage Street, I’ve had a
-breezy time lately; thank heaven term is nearly over.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Ditto, ditto,’ remarked the Pilot mournfully; ‘if one
-looks back at the end of any term, there always seem
-to be so many things which one might have done and
-hasn’t; and such a lot of entirely unnecessary things
-which have come off most successfully. When I remember
-that, out of 751 allotted pages of Cook’s Commentary
-on Habakkuk, I have read exactly 57, the
-hollowness of life comes upon me with crushing reality.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor old Pilot,’ laughed Squiff, ‘he’s got “the recollections”
-badly.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall shortly have “the Collections” much worse,’
-replied the Pilot.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank goodness,’ remarked Reggie fervently, ‘that
-terminal reports are not sent home to our “parents
-or guardians” from this University; what awful shocks
-they’d get.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A printed record of gate-sconces and fines during
-residence should be given to every one on their departure,
-and the number of windows broken by the future
-B.A. should be certified by the Provost,’ I said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Or even better,’ replied the Pilot, ‘a record of
-theatres attended, with musical comedies marked in
-red, should be sent to every Dean at the end of each
-term, by the theatre people.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Great Scott, what revelations there’d be; why, some
-of the most respectable people would lose their characters
-at once. Poor old de Beresford, who went six
-times to “San Toy” and seven to “Florodora,” is supposed
-to be a model character.’ This from Reggie.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Chiefly,’ I remarked, ‘because he never cuts the Dean
-and always pays the Treasurer “the exact amount of his
-battels, not requiring change,” see College Rules.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If we could all acquire good reputations as easily,
-how happy we should be,’ murmured the Pilot pensively;
-‘somehow I never have been able to get the
-authorities to take me seriously.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You must start by taking yourself seriously,’ replied
-Freddy, ‘but it all shows how little our Dons really
-know about us. Look at old von Graussman, noisy
-and addicted to beer, but hard-working and conscientious.
-His character among the Dons is “lazy, rowdy,
-and conscienceless”: you know after a row he’s always
-sent for first. Then take, as I said before, de Beresford,
-or Accrington, who conceals behind a constant attendance
-at early chapel and a habit of going about with
-a logic book in his hand, the most villainous and demoniacal
-mind and a rooted hatred of all in authority;
-he’s at the bottom of most ructions in College.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s quite true,’ I said, ‘I am afraid on the whole
-we’re a bad and unvirtuous lot.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Looking back on the past term, I see,’ remarked
-the Pilot pointing out of window, ‘a blue haze over
-everything; I can dimly descry several theatres, three
-twenty-firsters, many large dinners, four Saturday
-nights, and a couple of outings to town; these, with
-a slight admixture of lectures and a row in College,
-constitutes the employment of most of us for the last
-term; one or two have had schools, but for the rest
-this is “le monde ou l’on s’amuse.”’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘True, O King,’ said Squiff, ‘but I am going to turn
-you all out now, as I’ve got to pack. I’ve got leave to
-go down to-morrow: I suppose, by-the-bye, I shall see
-you all in town on Saturday at the Rugger Match.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If not at it, at least afterwards,’ I said; ‘we’ll say the
-Royal Leicester for choice, I think, and supper at&mdash;?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We can settle that later; you must go now,’ said
-Squiff hastily, and so we departed, promising to speed
-the O’Rossa on his way at the station. The chronicles
-of the Rugger Match, and what happened after it, and
-before it, and how we all got to it, require a fresh chapter
-and a new pen.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VI">VI.<br />
-<span class="smaller">RUGGER NIGHT.</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was Friday, the day before the Rugger Match, and
-every one was considering how to get away, as the
-College Collections were going on all the morning, and
-the match began at two o’clock. Those who had been
-in the Schools, of course, had no difficulty in getting
-leave; but the excuses offered by the rest were more
-numerous than truthful. The number of dentists with
-whom urgent appointments had been made was simply
-phenomenal, while several men had relatives who had
-chosen that exact day to leave for the Riviera, or to
-return from South Africa. The rush by the 12.52, which
-arrived almost in time for the match, was unprecedented.
-Freddy, who had been in for a Viva that morning,
-arrived at the station just before the train started, with
-a shirt in his coat pocket, and two ties and a collar
-rolled up in a copy of the <i>Daily Mail</i>. He also brought
-two bags stuffed with unnecessary things, bulging and
-unlocked; he is, I think, the most untidy person in
-Oxford. The Pilot, Reggie, de Beresford, Accrington
-and I were waiting for him on the platform; and de B.
-had just offered five to one against his turning up, but,
-unfortunately no one had taken him, owing to Freddy’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-known unpunctuality. We secured by the use of palm-oil,
-a carriage to ourselves, and played poker on the way
-up. We finished soon after Reading, and then the
-Pilot, who had been in an utterly penniless condition
-for two days previously, explained for our benefit how
-he had secured the necessary funds for this expedition.</p>
-
-<p>‘You know,’ he began, ‘that picture “The Golden
-Dream,” by Dicksee; well, I bought that at Gill and
-Manser’s in the Corn, when I came up, and it cost me
-four guineas. Since then the value of the thing has
-gone up, and I got nearly seven pounds for it when I
-sold it to Pickington and Bluster. So I kept the fiver
-for this little trip; and sent the other people something
-on account.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How did you know the thing would go up?’ inquired
-Freddy.</p>
-
-<p>‘I didn’t,’ replied the Pilot. ‘But I knew it wouldn’t
-go down.’</p>
-
-<p>On our arrival at Paddington we separated for various
-destinations: Freddy and I drove straight to Queen’s
-to meet Squiff who had been up overnight, and found
-the match had already started; so we made for our seats
-and proceeded to enjoy the game. It was an excellent
-fight, but resulted in a draw, which I always consider
-most unsatisfactory. However, the last ten minutes
-were so hard fought, and the relief so great, that Squiff,
-when the whistle was blown, out of pure joy planted
-his fist through the topper of an elderly and portly
-person with a gold chain, who was sitting in front; the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-old boy (who had been dancing on one leg and gurgling
-‘Cambridge’ loudly) took no notice, but continued to
-yell, so we left him, and squeezed our way out. I got
-into a cab with Freddy and Squiff, and drove off to the
-‘Cabin’ for tea.</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor old Verimisti, who came to town with me
-yesterday, isn’t up yet,’ Squiff informed us; ‘he was
-very tired last night, didn’t arrive at the ‘Knavesmire’ till
-4.30 a.m., and then gave the cabby sixpence and expected
-him to be satisfied. I had to come down in jimmies,
-pay the cabby, and help him to disembark. When I
-looked him up this morning he was having his fourth
-Laager, and at the mere mention of ham he turned
-a rich yellow.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I gather, we’re all dining at the ‘Sphere’ at 7.30,’
-I said, ‘we shall be the old crew plus Verimisti (if he’s
-well enough to come) and de Beresford. Is Fatty up?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ answered Freddy, ‘Fatty’s got a wealthy uncle
-in town who insisted on seeing the Bodleian and James’
-Gardens this afternoon; but he’s going to shunt the old
-man at five, and coming up ready dressed by the 5.50.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall go back and unpack after tea,’ I said, ‘where
-are the others staying?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We’re at the Knavesmire,’ replied Squiff, ‘but von
-Graussman, and the Pilot and Reggie are at the Haverstock,
-while de Beresford and Accrington are doing
-themselves proud at the Great Trafalgar.’</p>
-
-<p>The Cabin was crowded, but after some time we got
-a table, but no chairs, so I leaned against the wall,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-while Freddy sat on Squiff’s knee. This seemed to
-cause some surprise, until we found ourselves obliged
-to give our only seat to a lady who was standing, and
-as we couldn’t sit on the floor we left hurriedly and
-tealess. Two shillings-worth all round at the American
-bar at the ‘Cri’ seemed to revive us wonderfully, and
-after this it was time to dress, so we hurried home to
-the Knavesmire. When we had finished we found
-Verimisti painfully dressing, assisted by the boots, and
-looking very yellow about the gills.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! Freddy,’ he cried when he saw us, ‘I have my
-tongue so like sulphur, and have my twelfth laager just
-drunk, and still thirsty am I!’</p>
-
-<p>We both laughed most unfeelingly, and after he had
-bathed his aching brow in cold water, led him gently
-downstairs, and, having packed ourselves into two
-hansoms, made for the Sphere, which we reached,
-according to our invariable custom, ten minutes late.</p>
-
-<p>We found the rest of the party already assembled in
-the big hall, and made our way to a table for ten which
-had been reserved for us. The whole family, especially
-von Graussman, were in a highly excitable state, and
-the stirring selections of cake-walks and musical comedies
-that were played by the band caused some of the
-parties who were dining in the room to perform most
-extraordinary antics. A popular Sousa march was
-accompanied by clapping of hands, while ‘Sammy’ was
-sung by the entire company.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well! here’s confusion to the Examiners,’ said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-Freddy, as he drained his glass after the fish; and
-when Freddy begins drinking&mdash;confusion or otherwise&mdash;after
-the fish, I know what is likely to ensue. Freddy
-had also just been ploughed in Contracts.</p>
-
-<p>‘To ’Ell mit dem,’ added von Graussman, who had
-missed Law Prelim. again.</p>
-
-<p>These sentiments having been duly honoured, we
-turned our attention to ‘Ponichets de Volaille,’ which
-Verimisti, who had got through a quart of moselle cup
-on his own, insisted on eating with a table-spoon.</p>
-
-<p>‘There’ll be quite a clearance next term, I’m afraid,’
-remarked Squiff; ‘such a number of the Unregenerate
-have failed in Law Prelim. or Mods., and they’re sure
-to be sent down.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I was gone to drive mit a gountry vicar, next
-week,’ remarked von Graussman pensively, ‘and, oh!
-but the dullnesses vos ’orrible. Dere vos only von
-publig-house vour miles away, and dat they closes at ten
-hours. But,’ he added triumphantly, ‘I vos not a
-Brotestant, and I do not rise for der service at eight
-hours morning.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, anyhow, we’ll make things hum in the summer,’
-said Freddy; ‘it’ll be my last term, and Squiff’s and
-Reggie’s and several others, so we must create an
-impression, and a good one if possible, before we leave
-the ’Varsity.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t try and make an impression on the pavement
-outside the Royal Leicester to-night,’ said de Beresford<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-mockingly, ‘it’s asphalt and very hard. I know,’ he
-added feelingly, ‘I’ve tried it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Anyhow, let’s make this a record night,’ said Accrington,
-who bubbled with excitement.</p>
-
-<p>This sentiment met with a cordial reception. Verimisti
-rose carefully from the table and commenced a long
-and rambling speech which was ended by the arrival of
-what the Pilot somewhat coarsely calls ‘The Settler.’
-Its real name is Ponche Romaine, and it acts as an
-appetiser, enabling one to begin again hungry on the
-second part of the dinner. This proceeded somewhat
-more rapidly, as we found it was getting late. We
-honoured several toasts, including ‘Conspuez les dons’
-from Verimisti, ‘Hoch der Kaiser!’ from von Graussman,
-and ‘The Unregenerate’ from Freddy, and then
-rather unsteadily the party made its way to the cloak-room,
-and got into its outer garments.</p>
-
-<p>A slight sensation was caused by Squiff kissing the
-girl who sold buttonholes in the entrance hall, while
-Verimisti’s attempt to embrace the stately official outside
-caused that personage both surprise and annoyance.</p>
-
-<p>The arrival of the party at the Leicester was accompanied
-by much noise, and loud cheers on the part of several other
-parties who were also disembarking. As we went up
-the steps, somebody clutched my arm, and turning round
-I found it was Blandford of Barrabas’.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hullo,’ I said, ‘are you coming in?’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s the question,’ he replied. It appeared that he
-had already been thrown out, but wanted to come in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-with our party again. ‘If I cram my hat down on my
-nose, and button up my coat, I’m sure they’ll pass me;
-I only want you to say I belong to you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ll try,’ I said dubiously, and we walked on to the
-barrier where I presented our ticket for Box 10 and our
-party passed in, accompanied by the audible comments
-of one of the officials on the size of the party. De
-Beresford, who came last, was stopped and had to take
-a five-bob ticket, for, as the man said, ‘Hi’ve passed hin
-nine gents for that borx already, and hits only meant to
-’old six or seving.’</p>
-
-<p>The scene within, well, everybody must know it; the
-‘five-bob ring’ was absolutely full, ’Varsity men and
-members of the tender sex being nearly equal in number.</p>
-
-<p>As we passed along to our box a person with a purple
-nose and a battered top-hat was singing about the
-brokers, and this was about all we saw of the performance
-that evening. We left our hats and coats in the
-box and then sallied out in a body in search of spirits
-both kindred and otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the very crowded state of the promenade
-we were unable to hold together, and I soon found myself
-sandwiched between Verimisti and von Graussman
-bound for an adjacent bar. As we were turning into
-the desired haven the Italian observed a small notice
-saying ‘No ladies served in this bar,’ and immediately
-sheered off with a pained expression on his very expressive
-face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘We are not ladies, but all the identical we cannot
-without female society be,’ he remarked in an injured
-tone and hustled us rapidly on to the passage at the
-further end of the promenade, where a uniformed official
-gave us tickets outside the big bar.</p>
-
-<p>This was a scene of indescribable confusion, and as
-we entered two porters came forward leading between
-them a well-known member of the Cambridge team.
-He was very talkative, but his eloquence did not appear
-to move his captors in the least degree, possibly because
-none of his remarks were at all intelligible. After them
-there followed several more Cambridge blues and an
-elderly gentleman with a bucolic face who appeared to
-be very irate. The procession passed us with some
-speed, but we subsequently found the talkative Cantab
-singing a song on the floor of another bar, and discovered
-that this was due to the influence of the bucolic
-gentleman who was an old ’Varsity man and a legal
-luminary of very great brilliancy.</p>
-
-<p>The front of the bar itself was hidden by two lines of
-’Varsity men, nearly all asking for different things but
-all at the same time. However, I soon found a suitable
-inlet, and all was going well with us when one of the
-fair nymphs behind the bar unfortunately shot von
-Graussman in the nose with a lemonade or soda cork,
-producing an entirely unexpected effect.</p>
-
-<p>The German fell into the lap of a lady sitting close
-behind exclaiming ‘Ach? I vos mortified.’ Her cloak
-covered his head for a moment, but extricating himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-he tendered her his admission-ticket, and begged her in
-very broken English to let him out of the cloak-room.
-To his impassioned appeal she replied very volubly in
-German, and an affecting scene ensued when he fell
-upon her neck, and loudly claimed her as his long-lost
-mother. Within the space of two minutes a large and
-noisy crowd had gathered round, and were hoarsely
-cheering, so it was some time before Verimisti and I
-could push our way through. When we did get to the
-front, the lady was assuring von Graussman in a penetrating
-whisper, that though she was not his mother,
-she was willing to be his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Von Graussman, whose impressionable heart was
-once captured in Buda Pesth and only redeemed at considerable
-expense, sheered off immediately, and confidentially
-informed us afterwards that ‘she vos a dam
-dangerous woman.’</p>
-
-<p>Having made a vain attempt to approach the bar
-again, we fought our way back to the promenade, and
-discovered that ‘Mephisto’ was about to loop the loop.
-As everyone was anxious to see this, we regained our
-box, which we found crowded to suffocation, and by
-standing on chairs at the back got a view of the exciting
-item. Freddy, who having leant against the electric
-bell and ordered drinks round, had gone away and forgotten
-to pay, could not be found; so Verimisti shelled
-out, and after drinking his health, we moved out again.
-I may mention that this was the only item on the programme
-of which I have any recollection, as soon afterwards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-all became dim for a short time, and I only
-revived in the further bar with Freddy and Accrington
-beside me. In the meanwhile it appears that Squiff and
-de Beresford, both of whom were ‘among the breakers,’
-had made a determined attempt to throw one of the
-chuckers-out downstairs, and were now repenting their
-mistake in the cool air of Leicester Square; but they
-subsequently returned in a very dishevelled condition
-‘by some secret way known to all but themselves.’</p>
-
-<p>I am told that I had begun to make skilful arrangements
-for looping the loop with the help of two round
-topped tables, when a stalwart official requested Squiff
-and de Beresford to calm me down, which they had
-succeeded in doing with a handkerchief soaked in soda-water.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as my sight was thoroughly restored we
-returned to the box, but did not feel well enough to
-take any interest in the performance.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, just at that moment we were alarmed by
-thunderous crashes on the door which Blandford hastily
-opened, and Verimisti rushed in followed by a heated and
-indignant official; he rushed to the front of the box and
-began to climb out, endeavouring to drop into the stalls,
-explaining meanwhile that he ‘must escape dese awful
-mens in uneform who put themselves upon my nerve.’</p>
-
-<p>He became very indignant when Accrington caught
-him by the collar, and, in his subsequent struggles to
-escape, his dress coat was ripped up astern from top to
-bottom and part of his braces gave way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The functionary who had chased him demanded his
-immediate expulsion, but when Reggie explained that
-he belonged to our box he retired peacefully after
-accepting a gin-cocktail that had grown upon the
-floor by some mysterious means.</p>
-
-<p>As the door closed upon the officer, the voice of
-Fatty was heard from underneath a pile of coats in
-the corner.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know what is happening,’ he remarked plaintively,
-‘but if somebody will fetch me an Angostura and
-ginger-beer and pay for it, I shall be quite happy for
-half-an-hour.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t be an ass,’ said Freddy, who was steadying
-himself by a clothes peg, ‘who is to fetch you anything;
-besides, if they did, do you suppose they’d get it here
-in safety?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ put in Blandford, ‘the person in pink plush
-with white extremities lost seven drinks off his tray on
-the way to the next box just now.’</p>
-
-<p>Here a lady, whose only known name was Girlie,
-and who had been dumped down in the box by some
-member of our party who had completely forgotten her,
-demanded a sherry and bitters.</p>
-
-<p>‘Who’s that?’ remarked Freddy unsteadily, as he let
-go one hat peg and caught another after two vain
-efforts. ‘Whashedoinere?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Can’t imagine,’ replied Fatty; and then Freddy
-having incautiously lost his grip on his sole means of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-support and fallen against the bell, the conversation
-was terminated by the appearance of the waiter.</p>
-
-<p>‘This lady,’ said Accrington to the waiter, ‘wants to
-stand us drinks all round.’</p>
-
-<p>Girlie then rose and commenced a protest which was
-more forcible than polite; but Accrington waved her
-aside with a regal gesture.</p>
-
-<p>‘I daresay you didn’t mean to say so m’dear,’ he
-added, ‘but there are somanyqueerpeopleretnight.’</p>
-
-<p>After the offended Girlie had left the box, Fatty was
-just proceeding to order the terrible mixture dear to his
-heart, when Freddy addressed the waiter as ‘Puddle
-darling,’ and enquired if he was going to Hardtopp-on-Sands
-for the mixed bathing.</p>
-
-<p>The waiter’s reply was to slam the door from the
-outside, and Fatty’s ginger-beered Angostura vanished
-into the dim and distant future.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the last turn concluded, and the
-orchestra gave tongue to the National Anthem, which
-was caught up vigorously in all parts of the house.</p>
-
-<p>It took us quite a quarter of an hour to collect our
-party, but when this had been done we made hastily for
-Jacques’ to make sure of getting something to eat and
-drink before closing time. Blandford, who belongs to
-the New Lyric, invited the whole party to sup there,
-but I dissuaded him; and as we afterwards found that
-the Club was closed indefinitely, my wisdom was
-justified. Crossing the Circus we lost Reggie; who
-subsequently scandalised the habitués of the Great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-Trafalgar by reappearing about 11.30 next morning
-in evening dress with an improbable tale of a cousin
-from Peckham Rye, who had taken him in for the night.</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance to the Restaurant, Freddy sighted an
-awful looking object with an eye-glass, which subsequently
-caused him much perturbation. An appeal
-to the presiding genius of the lobster bar to have the
-offensive person removed proved unavailing, and so we
-made for the supper room endeavouring to forget his
-glassy eye and pinched waist. Since it was no longer
-as early as it had been, the room was nearly full, each
-table being occupied by one or more young gentlemen
-enjoying assorted confectionery. Before we had time
-to do anything a fight between two ladies, late of
-Hamburg, but now of Aphrodite Mansions, according
-to the waiter, engrossed our attention. The subject of
-dispute was a weak-looking little man with pince-nez
-who gazed helplessly at the combatants, evidently
-wondering if his fate would be that of the baby in the
-case adjudicated by the late Solomon of Jerusalem!
-The end came quite suddenly, for a herculean official
-unobstrusively removed the two ladies, leaving the poor
-little man to consume a double portion of rum omelette
-in solitude.</p>
-
-<p>By running two tables together we managed to keep
-our party united, and an invaluable waiter who appeared
-to know our wants by instinct, dumped down several
-dishes of devilled kidneys and two magnums of the
-best, which were consumed as though none of us had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-had a meal for a week. We were doing very nicely,
-thank you, and Freddy and Fatty had already fallen
-into a comatose condition when the room was electrified
-by the appearance of Ironsides of Tydvil carrying the
-offensive eye-glass person upside down by one leg.
-Several waiters clung unheeded to his trousers, and the
-manager followed giving vent to frenzied ejaculations.
-The creature’s disengaged leg had only just collided
-with the head waiter’s face, and swept three glasses off
-a buffet when the lights went out, and simultaneously
-a piece of grilled haddock found a lodgement in my eye.
-Those in authority raised a melancholy chorus of ‘time,
-gentlemen, please,’ with a foreign accent, and Freddy,
-having tucked a magnum under each arm, led the procession
-to the door, supported by Accrington with the
-bill pinned on to his coat-tail.</p>
-
-<p>The subsequent adventures of the party were too
-varied to be described in full, with the exception of
-Fatty, whom we sent straight back to the hotel in
-a hansom, and who was discovered by the charwoman
-at 6.30 asleep under the billiard table.</p>
-
-<p>The party that breakfasted at the Great Trafalgar
-next morning about lunch-time was reduced in number
-and unusually thoughtful; the latter, partly because it
-is extremely difficult to raise money in London on
-Sunday, and partly owing to the frequent lubrication
-on the previous evening. Freddy had already left by
-the Holyhead express for Coffington Castle, Co. Down.
-In the brief message left with the night porter for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-Squiff, he explained that he had been to see the sunrise
-from Notting Hill, and had only just had time to fetch
-his luggage. Von Graussman and de Beresford, who
-had slept in an hotel in New Oxford Street, left by the
-Pullman train at 11.0 for Brighton to recruit, as they
-said they had both had too much pastry the night before.
-All traces had been entirely lost of Blandford; it is only
-known that he arrived home three days later with a
-broken bowler and a couple of ladies’ cloak-room tickets,
-and went to bed for several days. The rest of us returned
-to Oxford to pack and go through Vivas. I
-think I endorse the opinion of Fatty, who afterwards
-remarked that ‘The wicked flourish like a green bay
-tree, though they much prefer the dew of Glenlivet to
-that of Hermon.’</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VII">VII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">HOW WE RAGGED THE SUBURBAN.</span></h2>
-
-<p>Owing to the awful scenes on the last night of the
-‘Cannibal Girl,’ musical comedies had become exceedingly
-unpopular with the authorities, and so we had to
-rely upon the Suburban for what Squiff calls ‘an occasional
-divarsion.’</p>
-
-<p>It all began with the Fresher’s lunch in Wykeham’s.
-The Fresher is exceedingly fresh for, well, for a fresher,
-and his lunch, like the Miller’s daughter, ‘was fresher
-still.’ The party was a genial one, though, with the
-exception of Reggie and Accrington, most of the sportsmen
-present were recruited from circles outside that of
-the Elect. I regret to say that I arrived last of all, but
-then I generally do. I don’t think any of the best people
-would know me now if I came in first to a public function;
-they’d think it was my double.</p>
-
-<p>When I entered the Fresher’s room I found Lord St.
-Ronots and another St. Union’s man called Hawkes,
-Downey of Lichfield, and a certain Italian Count by the
-name of Imarisa. Reggie and Accrington had also come
-in, but as they were busily engaged playing different
-tunes upon the same piano, I do not include them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-among the respectable people. As we commenced
-operations upon the inevitable lobster salad, and the
-Fresher succeeded in inducing his scout, who had three
-other parties on the staircase, to attend to us for fully
-two consecutive minutes, St. Ronots remarked that the
-panto at the Suburban was not covered with dust to
-any appreciable extent, which for St. Ronots, and still
-more for the Suburban, is a great concession. Downey
-said that he intended going to see the show, and when
-Reggie in his usual charming way mentioned that I was
-going with him and several other people, I began to
-realise that most of the very best would patronise the
-Suburban that night. We decided to make a circular
-tour of the ancient and moth-eaten city after lunch for
-the purpose of beating up recruits, but meanwhile we
-were perforce constrained to turn our attention to the
-‘savoury viands’&mdash;as the late W. Shakespeare would
-probably have said.</p>
-
-<p>There was no lack of incident to vary the monotony
-of mere eating, for the Fresher persisted in consuming
-noxious Virginian cigarettes between each dish, while
-Reggie accompanied every entry of the scout by martial
-airs upon the piano. It may perhaps be as well to mention
-that this did not necessitate any exceptional exertion
-on Reggie’s part, or he would certainly never have done
-it, but he merely leant back in his chair and played the
-piano with ease, the dimensions of the Fresher’s apartment
-being somewhat restricted.</p>
-
-<p>After lunch was over we all went round in a body to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-St. Union’s and other Colleges in search of joyful souls
-to join us for the evening’s jaunt, and while passing
-through the Corn on our way to Thomas’, we met Elgar
-of King’s and two titled foreigners, who informed us
-that they were ‘looking for trouble.’ This sounded
-promising, and so we enlisted their services immediately
-and invited them to coffee at our digs after dinner. We
-extended a like invitation to most of the other people we
-met that afternoon, and then hastened back to the Pilot-House&mdash;as
-Reggie now calls our establishment&mdash;to order
-a festive little dinner.</p>
-
-<p>Our dinner party was a small one. There were only
-de Beresford, Evelyn, and Farmborough, besides our
-three selves, but the real fun began when Elgar turned
-up about half-past seven with an old pair of pyjamas,
-which he proceeded to don, and then treated us to a
-wild breakdown, regardless of the surrounding crockery
-and the unfortunate Mary Ellen, who waited upon us
-in fear and trembling. As Mrs. McNab often says to
-the Pilot, ‘It ain’t you three gentlemen what makes all
-the rampagingses, but it’s them there harum scarum
-friends of yours,’ which only shows how skilfully we
-conceal our little weaknesses from the powers below,
-who are in this case the Dig-Master and his wife.
-When we reached the coffee stage our little party increased
-very rapidly. Many of the gentlemen assembled
-appeared to find coffee insipid, and it was at this
-juncture that I discovered a bottle of Chartreuse in the
-cellarette, which I seized with the intention of serving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-out a few liqueurs, but there was no need for thimble
-glasses, as Stanhope and Freddy took their allowance
-in coffee, Squiff mixed his with champagne in equal
-proportions, while Elgar, who couldn’t find anything
-smaller, lapped up a half tumbler of the fire-water
-with much pomp. Finding that the bottle was quite
-empty I went to the window to see if any more visitors
-were in sight, and beheld for the first time an enormous
-array of cabs stretching for quite a healthy distance up
-and down the High. As the liquid refreshment was
-completely exhausted and it was growing late, I suggested
-an adjournment to the Suburban, and we left for
-that festive old barn in a body, three men in each hansom.
-On our arrival we soon skipped out and arranged
-to owe our cab fares, but taking tickets was a slower
-affair. The ticket office at the Suburban is modelled
-exactly upon those at railway stations, that is to say,
-it is placed so as to present the minimum of accessibility
-with the maximum of draught, but by dint of a
-little perseverance we eventually obtained two dozen
-stalls and streamed along the passage to the door of the
-House. When we got inside we were astonished to find
-more than a hundred Undergrads, instead of the usual
-contingent of anything from five to half-a-dozen, and
-this crowding unfortunately compelled us to divide our
-party. We exchanged friendly greetings with the
-various people known to us, and placed Elgar in an
-unobtrusive seat where he would not readily catch the
-Manager’s eye, and then prepared to watch the show<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-itself. A most remarkable sort of Sister Anne person
-made his appearance upon the stage soon after our
-arrival, and some people who were outside the pale of
-the Elect assailed him with certain strange missiles,
-chiefly horticultural specimens, which must have stirred
-up Woodbine the manager, for immediately there descended
-upon us a shower of leaflets setting forth that
-‘nothing must be thrown upon the stage,’ that ‘bouquets
-left at the office would be handed on to their destination,’
-and that any one guilty of disorderly conduct
-‘Would be Instantly Ejected.’ This unfortunate notice
-had exactly the contrary effect to what was intended,
-and two Gloucester men near me, who had brought a
-liberal supply of tangerines, immediately prepared for
-action. It was patent to the meanest intelligence that
-trouble was brewing, and Woodbine’s myrmidons closed
-up their serried ranks adjacent to the door. I noticed
-that our little party was sadly scattered, but was glad
-to see that Elgar was surrounded by several most stalwart
-allies. At this moment Downey, who was sitting
-in front of me and close to the outside of the House, on
-the left, rose in his seat and proceeded to conduct the
-orchestra with a folded programme. Now, though this
-is a form of amusement by no means uncommon at the
-Suburban, and not altogether unknown even at the
-theatre, it is often allowed to pass unnoticed and never
-evokes anything more than a polite remonstrance, but
-on this particular occasion the melancholy Woodbine is
-evidently on the war-path.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He advances to Downey, but instead of requesting
-him to leave off his peculiar amusement, snatches wildly
-at the programme itself, and in his anger falls over the
-men in front of him; then finding his own efforts
-unavailing, he summons the staff of porters who wear
-the livery of the establishment, and directs them to
-eject the self-appointed conductor. As this motley
-crew advances, and Woodbine himself very cautiously
-concentrates upon the rear, all the ’Varsity men in that
-part of the House rise in their places and make it impossible
-for the mercenaries to reach Downey, who is
-in the middle of a row, unless they first clear the intervening
-seats by force. Woodbine, foiled a second time,
-now summons O.P. 134, an enormous ‘peeler,’ who
-has been standing just outside the door on the other
-side of the House. The Bobby advances and endeavours
-to reach Downey, but is prevented by the men before
-him, who have resumed their seats, but make an impassable
-barrier by setting up their legs against the
-seats in front.</p>
-
-<p>The officer of the law does not attempt to force his
-way through, but enters the row behind, where the
-inhabitants are disinterested strangers, and seizes
-Downey; then meeting with no opposition from the
-occupants of that row, he grips his victim firmly by the
-collar, and, pulling him over the back and top of his
-seat, proceeds to remove him from the House.</p>
-
-<p>But at this moment St. Ronots, who conceals a
-desperate character beneath a mild and almost saintly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-exterior, took two flying leaps and caught the Bobby
-round the neck while Hawkes jerked him neatly off his
-feet. The gentleman in blue, as I have mentioned
-before, was of colossal height, and also suitably proportioned,
-so that his sudden fall brought down and
-completely demolished two rows of stalls, while some
-dozen chairs were carried away by a sudden rush of
-the men behind, who feared the impact of such an
-Herculean mass.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture I feared a really serious tumult,
-which would undoubtedly have ensued but for two
-reasons. In the first place Downey was seated quite
-close to the further exit, and, secondly, most of our
-mightiest men of valour were too far from the scene of
-action to take a hand. Though, as Accrington afterwards
-remarked, ‘It’s a cold deal that leaves me
-out.’</p>
-
-<p>This was a very cold deal, for poor Downey was
-only a carcase in the grip of the monumental policeman,
-who soon regained the perpendicular and hustled
-him out of the auditorium with most creditable speed.
-The tumult, however, was not quelled in an instant,
-and Woodbine, who had incautiously anticipated the
-Bobby’s victory, received a chair-back just amidships,
-and went down among the dead men, to the detriment
-of his pince-nez and eternal cigarette. Reggie,
-having nobly retained his grip on Downey’s leg, was
-cut off by the sudden and quite unintentional fall of
-a respected greengrocer, who tumbled off his chair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-and bore poor Rex to the ground, while Hawkes, who
-had been endeavouring with Elgar and St. Ronots to
-release Downey from the grip of the law, was struck
-violently in the eye by something with the regulation
-number of features. After these casualties, O.P. 134
-got his man out into the entrance, where he and
-No. 154 mounted guard over him until the Proctor,
-for whom Woodbine had telegraphed, should arrive.</p>
-
-<p>We could not induce the Bobbies, who were civil
-enough, to release their prisoner. I tried reasoning
-with Woodbine, but he perpetually shifted his ground,
-while his assessment of the probable amount of
-damage at over forty pounds was so unreasonable
-that it was useless to attempt to come to terms.</p>
-
-<p>De Beresford, who had disappeared mysteriously, returned
-very soon with a brandy and soda which he
-bestowed upon Downey, and then finding all remonstrances
-with Woodbine quite unavailing, we resumed
-our seats, St. Ronots, Elgar and everybody who had
-taken an active part in the fracas, having executed a
-masterly retreat to their respective Colleges, directly
-they heard that the Manager had telephoned for the
-Proctor.</p>
-
-<p>I found a resting place on the wreckage of some stalls
-beside de Beresford and Evelyn, with Reggie just in
-front of us, and we sat thus until the familiar face of the
-most genial of the Proctors, followed by a singularly
-funereal bull-dog, appeared in the doorway. At this
-juncture Freddy, Accrington and Stanhope, together<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-with about a couple of score more ’Varsity men, whose
-faces we knew by sight but not to speak to, departed
-comfortably and without any undue haste by the
-extra exit. Most of us however who had perfectly clear
-consciences sat tight and gave our names to the Proctor,
-not with any idea of ultimately contributing to the
-University Chest, but merely as a guarantee of good
-faith. As soon as we had performed our own particular
-share of this little formality, Reggie and I with de
-Beresford left the house in search of our first liquid
-refreshment, picking up on our way Stanhope and
-Freddy who had been carefully concealed in the pit.
-We reached that admirable institution, the Cowley
-Bowling Club, of which most of us are members, and
-were enjoying a little well-earned refreshment, when to
-our amazement the ubiquitous Proctor with the iniquitous
-bull-dogs appeared in the entrance. Houseman advanced
-and was about to address Reggie, who was surveying
-him with no very friendly expression, when the
-excellent barman appeared suddenly from the back-room
-and asked the Proctor if he was a member of the
-Club, which honour he was compelled to disclaim, but
-expressed a desire to speak with some of the young
-gentlemen present. The wily barman however asked if
-Houseman had a warrant to enter the club, and on hearing
-that he had not, asked him most politely to withdraw
-at once. The Proctor complied with this request with
-the best grace possible under the circumstances, but I
-have seldom seen bull-dogs look more malevolent than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-Houseman’s two attendants. No, not even when a pair
-of them tracked me four weary miles on foot only to
-find that the fair lady with whom I had been sharing a
-cab at midnight was indeed my second cousin.</p>
-
-<p>Having congratulated ourselves and the barman upon
-his presence of mind, we finished our drinks and returned
-to the Suburban, where the show seemed to be
-going on peacefully. Two bicyclists were chasing one
-another round and round upon a sloping circular track
-at a tremendous rate, and whenever they stopped for
-breath the showman filled in the interval with an explanatory
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately this same showman was an extremely
-sour looking person and presented a most remarkable
-appearance. He had a brown bowler hat and trousers,
-green waistcoat, and black expression, which ‘tout
-ensemble’ constrained St. Ronots to cheer&mdash;though not
-very lustily&mdash;at the wrong moment, thereby greatly enraging
-the human kaleidoscope, who signalled to Woodbine
-to remove the Hereditary Legislator from the
-House. That individual advanced with some circumspection
-and requested St. Ronots peremptorily to ‘go
-outside quietly,’ but our friend who had really done
-nothing wrong, not unnaturally declined to comply with
-his request, and so the Manager was compelled to fall
-back upon his oleaginous smile and the Proctor. That
-gentleman came across to the Hereditary Legislator and
-exchanged a word or two with him and then appeared to
-metaphorically put Woodbine through the mangle, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-he departed sadly to the Temperance Bar for another
-cigarette while the Proctor went quietly home. For the
-remaining hour or so, we really watched the performance,
-which was rather diverting, and leaving in a body
-at about eleven o’clock, finished the evening in our rooms.</p>
-
-<p>On Monday morning, in response to urgent notices
-from the Junior Proctor, a large party assembled at the
-leprous hour of nine in his rooms at James’. We noticed,
-as we entered the ante-room, the Assistant Manager
-of the Suburban Palace of Varieties clad in the
-usual check cycling-suit and bowler hat, besides several
-promising looking criminals who were obviously witnesses
-in various cases coming up for investigation.
-After exchanging greetings with Squiff and Accrington,
-Reggie and I selected the two most comfortable chairs
-and sat down to wait, while the party were passed in
-one by one to the torture-chamber. More and more
-people continued to arrive, including Bob Parclane,
-arrayed in the inevitable eye-glass and check-coat, who
-was conducting a party accused of throwing bottles out
-of a window at an elderly citizen. There were also two
-gentlemen of our acquaintance, who had been so indiscreet
-as to empty the contents of a syphon upon some
-wayfarer’s head below their windows in Unity.</p>
-
-<p>After waiting an interminable time, during which the
-crowd at the door never seemed to grow less, I was
-ushered in and questioned, but on disclaiming any share
-in the riot, was politely bowed out. Reggie, who followed
-me, could not truthfully say this, and was noted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-down for further reference, and a share in the damages.
-By this time it was ten o’clock, and we hurried off to
-join St. Ronots, who was waiting to breakfast with us
-at the O.U.D.S., and to take tickets for the next musical
-comedy, which was nothing less than the ever popular
-‘Cinq Demi-Vierges.’ In the course of the day every
-one who had attended the Proctorial Levée received a
-notice regretting that the J.P. must ask us to pay
-a pound apiece by that evening, which we accordingly
-did. It was suggested that an indignation meeting of
-the shareholders in Bridgeley, Houseman &amp; Co., Proctors
-and General Collectors, should be summoned to
-demand a statement of accounts, and Reggie, who had
-just paid four golden sovereigns into the concern, waxed
-most eloquent upon the subject, but nothing ever came
-of it. As the Pilot cheerfully remarked on his return
-from taking a pound share, ‘It is indeed wonderful how
-we put up with our Pastors and Masters.’</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="VIII">VIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller">AN EIGHTS’ WEEK.</span></h2>
-
-<p>‘This,’ said Freddy wearily, as he threw a cream
-coloured envelope upon the table, ‘is too much of a
-good thing; here’s an official announcement from Aunt
-Julia that she and her companion, a cheery young thing
-of sixty-five, are coming up for a fortnight to enjoy the
-‘boating-races;’ she casually remarks that the girls
-have only one day vacant and that a Sunday, so that
-it will not be worth while their putting in an appearance.’
-‘Her postscript,’ he added, with a look of the
-deepest disgust, ‘runs as follows: “Dear Ophelia”&mdash;that’s
-the old girl’s satellite&mdash;“is very anxious to see
-something of real Oxford life, and hopes that you will
-arrange a visit with some nice young fellows to the
-Bodleian or the Martyrs’ Memorial.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pouff,’ blew the Pilot expressively, ‘what are our
-relations coming to; but, if it isn’t rude, who is
-Aunt Julia?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Julia Claudia Letitia Fanny, Dowager Lady Blitherington,’
-recited Freddy, ‘her husband was Sir Hophni
-Jenkins of the <i>Weekly Eraser</i>, who bought a peerage
-by settling a Minister’s cab fares about forty years ago.
-But seriously, we must get the girls.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Oh yes, we must get the girls,’ echoed Squiff.
-‘They’re awful sportswomen, I met them last year at
-the Addison Ball.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh yes, I remember them too,’ said Reggie. ‘They
-nearly ran me off my feet, and I finally settled with
-Maisie in the Senior Tutor’s rooms, where we sat out
-a considerable portion of the programme, and incidentally
-consumed all the strawberries left on the Reverend
-gentleman’s table.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I fancy,’ said Freddy reflectively, ‘that they go
-rather too fast for Aunt Julia, who, despite the decidedly
-<i>risqué</i> tone of the <i>Weekly Eraser</i>, is not as enlightened
-as she should be. I must write to Muriel myself, I
-expect they’ve only got some wretched country visit
-which they can easily put off. We couldn’t stand Aunt
-Julia unadulterated.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Where did Miss Ophelia spring from?’ put in the
-Pilot, whose curiosity is insatiable.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, she was one of the bathing attendants at Margate
-when Aunt Julia went down there in sixty-five,
-and she took such a fancy to her that she’s kept her
-ever since.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We’d better arrange a joint picnic for all our relatives
-one day,’ remarked Reggie, who often has these brilliant
-inspirations; ‘it will save a lot of trouble, and they’ll all
-be pleased.’</p>
-
-<p>‘They won’t be pleased with Ophelia,’ remarked
-Freddy unpleasantly, ‘but have it your own way,’ and
-he retired to write letters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This conversation took place on the Sunday before
-Eights, after breakfast, and having settled nothing as
-usual, we went out on the river. On Tuesday afternoon
-at 6 o’clock Freddy, supported by Squiff and myself,
-fetched up at the station to meet Aunt Julia. The train
-had stopped fully two minutes before we saw a phenomenally
-unattractive female descend from a first-class
-carriage carrying several handbags and a diseased-looking
-spaniel.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s the Bugg,’ remarked Freddy dismally, as he
-slowly advanced to the carriage from which Miss Bugg
-and a porter were heaving out an inanimate mass clad
-in furs, lace and silk. Freddy placed his arms gingerly
-around this relic and kissed it twice somewhere near
-the top. By the time Squiff and I reached them, the
-object had begun to speak. ‘My dear Frederick,’ it was
-saying in feeble tones, ‘such a terrible journey; poor
-Jacob was so ill, and Ophelia actually forgot the curative
-capsules.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The O’Rossa, Mr. Cochrane, Lady Blitherington,’
-murmured Freddy, but her Ladyship was busily engaged
-in administering to Jacob a capsule which the
-Bugg had just discovered.</p>
-
-<p>‘The O’Rossa, Mr. Cochrane, Miss Bugg,’ screamed
-Freddy, glaring at Ophelia.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m so felicitous to meet you,’ replied the lady with
-a contortion intended for a friendly smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m glad to see you’ve brought good weather with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-you,’ remarked Squiff to Aunt Julia, ‘at one time it
-looked rather like a bad week.’</p>
-
-<p>The Dowager was just about to reply when the arrival
-of her dutiful nephew, vicariously laden with luggage,
-put an end to conversation, and we helped the ladies
-into the Granville bus, accompanied by Freddy.</p>
-
-<p>On our way back we spent a pleasant half-hour at the
-King’s Restaurant, and so when we reached the Squifferies
-Freddy was already there.</p>
-
-<p>He greeted us with unnecessary noise and stuffed a
-telegram into my hand, which said: ‘Righto Thursday
-for a week be good Maisie,’ and Squiff, having read the
-message over my shoulder, whistled softly ‘there’s a
-good time coming, boys,’ which Freddy interrupted by
-saying to both of us,</p>
-
-<p>‘If you can stand any more of the menagerie to-night
-come to dinner with us at eight.’</p>
-
-<p>We accepted, and arrived fairly punctually, to find
-Ophelia and Jacob in possession of the private sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy of course was late.</p>
-
-<p>‘O, Mr. O’Rossa,’ she began as Squiff advanced towards
-her, ‘do tell me all about your daily provocations
-at Oxford.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s rather a large order, Miss Bugg,’ said Squiff
-smilingly, ‘where shall I begin?’</p>
-
-<p>‘At the very beginning, please,’ she said, ‘say at your
-early morning Church.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Miss Bugg,’ said Squiff, ‘you give me an account<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-of how you think we spend our day, and I’ll
-correct you if you go wrong.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well. I’ve read such a lot about Oxford you
-know, I always took such an interest in the dear
-Collegiates. I hear you rise at seven thirty, and then
-all those boys who have lodgings within the walls go
-to Church at eight, and afterwards a Parthian breakfast
-with your friends; now tell me,’ she continued, ‘I am so
-interested in all these things, do you perform your abductions
-at home or are there public baths? And then,’
-she went on, giving us no time to think what she meant,
-‘from 9 to 1 you attend the Professors, and the afternoon
-is spent in some form of aesthetics, or anthropological
-research. At seven you have dinner, and they tell
-me that the food is plentiful but bad;’ ‘hear! hear!’ I
-remarked; she beamed and continued, ‘I’ve looked in
-Verdant Green and the Student’s guide to Oxford, but
-I can’t get a clear idea of how you spend your evenings.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Chiefly in study,’ began Squiff solemnly, when he
-was interrupted by a roar from Freddy, whose face
-appeared round the door.</p>
-
-<p>‘What ho, Ophelia!’ he cried, as he came into the
-room; ‘On the go again? Don’t you believe all they
-tell you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘On the contrary,’ I interrupted, as Ophelia began a
-protest. ‘Miss Bugg was instructing us.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Your remark is somewhat exiguous, Mr. Cocklin,’
-began the Bugg, when the inner door opened gently
-and Lady Blitherington sailed in.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Good evening, Frederick,’ she said, and bowed to
-us, ‘I am glad you’re more punctual than usual; poor
-dear Hophni used to say that if your Uncle William
-had only been more punctual he might have risen to
-be a credit to the family.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Rather an unlikely contingency,’ remarked Freddy
-after we had put the ladies into the lift, ‘considering
-that the old scoundrel drove his wife into an asylum
-and then eloped to New York with a milliner’s assistant.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose you’ve instructed Ophelia in all the Oxford
-customs,’ remarked the dowager as she sat down.</p>
-
-<p>‘She doesn’t need any instructions,’ replied Squiff
-with a bow towards the Bugg, ‘she’s read all the best
-authorities, Lady Blitherington.’</p>
-
-<p>‘By the way, Aunt,’ said Freddy suddenly, ‘I’ve just
-had a wire from Maisie, she and Muriel are coming here
-on Thursday for a week, isn’t it jolly?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Goodness gracious me, Frederick,’ exclaimed the old
-lady, ‘but never mind, I suppose if they think nothing
-of putting off their visit to the dear Archdeacon, I mustn’t
-bother about it; still it is too bad of them.’</p>
-
-<p>‘O no, Aunt, it’s very good of them,’ said Freddy,
-‘think how they’ll liven up the place.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t doubt that for a minute,’ said Aunt Julia, and
-snapped her teeth with unusual decision.</p>
-
-<p>‘Are you out in Chambers or in the College, Mr.
-Cockerel?’ enquired the Bugg with a pleasant smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m sorry to say it’s my last year, Miss Bugg,’ I replied,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-‘and I’m out in digs, you must come and see them
-some day.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I should love it,’ replied the companion with a rapturous
-gaze at the electric light.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Ophelia,’ interjected a warning voice from
-the top of the table, ‘you can’t go without a chaperon!’</p>
-
-<p>At this remark I heard a suppressed gurgle beside me
-and turned in time to see Freddy hide his face in
-a napkin, while a soup spoon waved feebly in his
-nerveless fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Squiff, however, who has marvellous self-control, relieved
-the situation by complimenting Lady Blitherington
-on the possession of Jacob.</p>
-
-<p>‘The smartest little King Charles I have ever seen,’
-he said with apparent sincerity.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah! Mr. O’Rossa, Ophelia will be pleased to hear
-you say that,’ said the old lady, ‘she has tended that
-dog like a baby for the last ten years.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you care for dogs, Mr. O’Rossa?’ queried the
-Bugg.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m very fond of them, Miss Bugg,’ he replied, ‘I
-keep several at home.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How nice,’ said the Bugg feelingly, ‘then you must
-try White Rose soap with them, I’ll give you a cake of
-it, there’s nothing better.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I should be surprised,’ said Squiff emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>Ophelia, however, did not appear to be troubled by
-the inanity of his reply, but immediately passed on to
-discussing the ‘rowing races’ with Freddy, who gave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-her exceedingly novel explanations of those innocent
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose, Mr. Cochrane,’ said Lady Blitherington
-to me with a kindly smile, ‘I suppose you may stay
-out till ten o’clock?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Certainly, Lady Blitherington,’ I assented, but
-forbore to mention how far she had undershot the mark.</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well, then I will order tea for you before
-you go. I suppose you like tea after dinner, Mr.
-O’Rossa?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very much, indeed, my Lady,’ said Squiff, courteously,
-‘I esteem it immensely;’ and this answer appeared
-to agitate Freddy afresh, as he doubtless
-reflected that Squiff never touches anything milder
-than Green Chartreuse after dinner except on very rare
-occasions, when he condescends to a cup of thick Turkish
-coffee at the Trocadero.</p>
-
-<p>Before Freddy had reappeared from the shelter of
-his napkin, Miss Bugg, who had been endeavouring
-to shew me a new way of preparing strawberries
-with a steel knife, cut herself, and left the dining
-room in great haste, but we soon followed, and found
-her seated in an arm-chair, with Jacob fast asleep in
-her lap and the promised cake of White Rose soap
-in their immediate neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Blitherington ensconced herself in the other
-arm-chair, while Squiff, who has a fair baritone voice,
-sang us ‘Father O’Flynn’ with more vigour than accuracy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Just before ten an English waiter&mdash;born in Hamburg&mdash;appeared
-with what Ophelia persisted in calling
-‘a dish of tea,’ and that good soul disappeared in
-search of Jacob’s own saucer in order that he too
-might enjoy a little light refreshment before retiring
-to the elaborately quilted basket awaiting him in her
-room.</p>
-
-<p>I parted from Freddy and Squiff at Carfax, and on
-entering our rooms found Reggie and the Pilot enveloped
-in a positive cloud of smoke, discussing
-everything in general and nothing in particular.</p>
-
-<p>‘Accrington’s people are coming up on Thursday,
-Martha,’ said Reggie, as I entered the room.</p>
-
-<p>‘Rot, Reggie,’ said the Pilot, ‘You mean Sybil Accrington
-is coming; I don’t suppose you care whether
-her father and mother come here or remain in Liverchester.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It seems to me, Reggie,’ I said, ‘that what with
-Maisie and Sybil Accrington and others, your hands
-will be pretty full this week.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The pressing problem of the moment,’ said the Pilot,
-gravely, as he spread himself in front of the fireplace,
-‘is, how many pounds of strawberries are required to
-feed five healthy English girls, three elderly ladies,
-two lapdogs, and last but not least, eight undergraduates.
-Freddy’s arranged a picnic for Sunday,
-and left me to cater for it with his usual cheek.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Which is his usual cheek, Pilot?’ asked Reggie in
-his most irritating manner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘O the right if it’s left, but if that isn’t right the left,’
-said the Pilot gravely, as he heaved a book at Reggie
-and a sigh to himself, and drifted off to bed.</p>
-
-<p>When Reggie and I came down at 10.30 next morning
-we found the Pilot interrogating Mrs. McNab as to
-how she thought trifle and Charlotte Russe would go
-with cold lamb and salmon mayonnaise.</p>
-
-<p>The worthy lady, whose brain already reeled at the
-thought of the entertainments to be given at our lodgings
-during the week, was standing in the doorway
-murmuring to herself ‘hadd a piece of nutmeg an bile
-the ’ole in a pudden’ clorth.’</p>
-
-<p>Soon after she had gone, a large brake stopped at our
-door and the occupants in no mild terms requested
-Reggie and the Pilot to come out at once, if they did
-not wish to go where the refrigerator is of no avail.</p>
-
-<p>They obeyed the call, but the Pilot in addition to his
-cricket bag carried several wine lists and Hooper’s
-catalogue of ‘cold dishes for picnic parties.’</p>
-
-<p>In order to avoid a meeting with the Bugg, of whom
-I foresaw we should see a great deal, I motored over to
-Banbury for lunch with de Beresford. Thus it befell
-that I missed the most exciting scene of the day when
-Jacob fell into the river and was rescued by a Humane
-Society’s man, while the Bugg who had fainted on the
-Barabbas’ barge was revived by a drop of the bargeman’s
-private store of brandy.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd at the station, when we got there next day
-to receive Blitherington and the girls, was something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-terrific. Nearly every member of the University appeared
-to be expecting female relations, and most of
-them must have been satisfied, for the crowd by the
-11.50 was simply colossal, though our cheery trio were
-conspicuous by their absence. After two or three
-minutes of unavailing search we secured a harassed
-official who was buzzing round the mouth of the guard’s
-van, and he assured us that a relief train would arrive
-in ten minutes, so we possessed ourselves in patience
-and admired our friends’ sisters.</p>
-
-<p>We were presented to Mrs. and Miss Accrington and
-had just caught sight of de Beresford escorting his
-mother and her niece, the Honourable Violet McNeill,
-who is generally admitted to be the most charming
-débutante of the season, when the relief train steamed
-in and a second scene of confusion ensued. Freddy,
-who is very quick in all things, sorted out from a first-class
-carriage a faultlessly dressed young man with a
-monocle and a pink-and-white complexion and two
-extremely pretty girls, whom he introduced as my
-cousins Miss Coffington, Miss Muriel Coffington, and
-Lord Blitherington.</p>
-
-<p>His lordship created the first sensation by enquiring,
-‘Is there a really good pawnshop down here?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ said Maisie, ‘we picked him up in the Burlington
-Arcade yesterday, kept him till this morning, gave
-him sixpence for a shave and brought him down here,
-and now we’re all three cleaned out; but he’s brought
-his gold-mounted dressing case to stay with a local<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-Hebrew, and so it’ll be pay day for everybody to-morrow.
-Now let’s get up to the village inn.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t be in such a hurry, young woman,’ said
-Blitherington slowly, ‘always reconnoitre your country
-before advancing your main body; is Ophelia with
-our Lady Aunt?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very much so,’ said Freddy.</p>
-
-<p>‘Good-bye then, I’m going back to town,’ said his
-lordship as he proceeded to climb back into the carriage:
-but on our pointing out that he had no money, he
-was persuaded to accompany us to the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>‘Only I warn you,’ he said with a weary smile, ‘if
-Ophelia commences telling me about Jacob I shall
-either take to drink or emigrate.’</p>
-
-<p>We could not return to the Granville to lunch, as
-Freddy and I had promised to lunch with Cobson, and
-Reggie, who had been persuaded to speak at the
-Union that evening, had his speech to prepare; however
-we arranged to meet the girls and Blitherington
-in the gateway of Thomas’ at four o’clock for the
-races. As we were walking down St. Aldate’s in the
-afternoon, Freddy, who professes a great indifference
-to the charms of his fair cousins, announced his intention
-of walking with Blitherington, so that Reggie
-and I were allotted to Maisie and Muriel.</p>
-
-<p>We had only been waiting about ten minutes when
-the trio hove in sight, Blitherington in a splendid flannel
-suit&mdash;he certainly does know how to dress&mdash;and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-girls in exceedingly light fluffy chiffons, which always
-win my heart.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy was inclined to be sarcastic at their little lapse
-in punctuality, but Maisie at once said to him, ‘Now run
-along you quaint old thing and try to make Blithers behave
-himself; can’t you see Mr. Cochrane and I want to
-be alone?’</p>
-
-<p>I had intended taking Muriel, who though very pretty
-is said to be quieter than her sister, and giving Reggie
-the pleasure of Maisie’s decidedly effervescent conversation,
-but after this how could I resist taking her under
-my wing.</p>
-
-<p>‘We had a lot of difficulty in shunting Ophelia,’ she
-said complacently as we started off for the river, ‘the
-dear old thing is so keen on seeing the boating-races, as
-she calls them.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ chimed in Muriel who wasn’t far behind, ‘we
-had to send a note round to Charlie Hanbury at Barabbas’,
-who had already got half a dozen maiden aunts
-encamped around him, and he promised to take her with
-them onto the Barabbas’ barge at tea-time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well now, Mr. Cochrane,’ began Maisie, ‘we’ve heard
-a lot about you from Freddy; he says you’d make a cat
-laugh.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope you don’t consider yourself a cat, Miss Coffington,’
-I put in quickly.</p>
-
-<p>‘O don’t call me Miss Coffington,’ said Maisie crossly,
-‘It’s such a mouthful.’</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Accrington and Cobson, who were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-rowing in our boat, ran past us, and Maisie, after a
-hasty glance at their attire, remarked simply, ‘How
-terribly draughty.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What do you mean, Miss&mdash;er&mdash;Maisie?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why look at their poor dear knees. Oh, but perhaps
-Oxford men haven’t got knees officially any more than
-we have legs.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You’ve got hold of a very good joke,’ I said to Reggie,
-as peals of laughter came from behind.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Miss Muriel says,’ began Reggie; when Muriel
-held up a little gloved hand in front of him and said,
-‘Oh you horrid man, I shall never tell you anything
-again if you tell them that.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right, then I won’t,’ said Reggie; and he didn’t
-till we were back at home that night.</p>
-
-<p>We went on to the Thomas’ barge, which as everybody
-knows is next door to the Cecil’s, and found it
-crowded with the usual assortment of Eights’ week relations,
-some of them surpassingly beautiful, but some
-very much the reverse.</p>
-
-<p>We could not find chairs for the girls, so Maisie sat
-upon a railing with her feet hanging over the edge, till
-Freddy’s tutor came up from below and informed him
-that it was hardly decent. So we sat down upon the
-steps just as the minute gun went off.</p>
-
-<p>‘What an unpleasant old man,’ said Maisie. ‘He’s
-obviously got no daughters of his own or he’d be in
-better training.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh yes he has,’ said Freddy, ‘but one’s the Professor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-of Archæology at Girton and the other edits “Clippings
-for Careful Housewives.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh yes, I know,’ said Maisie, ‘if I scrubbed my face
-till it shone and wore red flannel petticoats he’d have
-smiled upon me.’</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture the starting gun boomed out, and
-very soon after the mingled noises of cheering, rattles,
-horns, and all kinds of unmusical instruments floated up
-the stream.</p>
-
-<p>‘Are they coming yet?’ asked Muriel excitedly, as in
-her efforts to get a better view she trod upon the hat of
-a lady on a lower step who looked, as she subsequently
-said, ‘like a ferret with lockjaw’; ‘and what boat’s that?’
-as the top of the division began to appear by the ’Varsity
-boat-house.</p>
-
-<p>‘Gloucester, I think,’ Reggie said. ‘Yes it must be,
-and there’s our boat close behind.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think you’ll get them all right,’ said Freddy who
-with Blitherington was suspended from the awning just
-above our heads.</p>
-
-<p>‘I lay you a dollar they don’t,’ said the other, ‘why
-the beggars are as blown as glass.’</p>
-
-<p>Conversation then ceased as the two leading boats of
-the division came closer into view. Gloucester were
-about a quarter of a length ahead and rowing fairly
-evenly, while the Cecil’s crew appeared rather the worse
-for wear, but in spite of this the fact of being opposite
-their own barge and other people’s sisters nerved them
-up to such an extent that they shot up level with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-rudder of the Gloucester boat just as they passed us. I
-caught sight of the face of the Cecil’s stroke, a little man
-who splendidly exemplifies the old adage that ‘the best
-goods are done up in the smallest parcels,’ and noticed
-that he at any rate did not appear to be completely exhausted
-as yet. Their little cox was rising up in his
-seat like a soufflé and edging the Gloucester man, who
-had very foolishly taken the inner berth, closer and
-closer into the bank. At last the oar of number two in
-the Gloucester boat grazed the rushes and their cox was
-obliged to pull out into the stream, so Cecil’s gained
-their bump just opposite the Lichfield barge and hardly
-two lengths from the end of the course. The other
-boats all rowed over, that being the only bump in the
-division.</p>
-
-<p>When the Cecil’s boat returned to their barge next
-door to us we all set up a tremendous cheer, and Reggie
-departed in great haste to congratulate Miss Accrington,
-who was clapping her little hands with the most sisterly
-devotion. I scrambled down below with Freddy to get
-some tea, but this was a very hazardous business and it
-was nearer twenty minutes than ten before I secured
-two cups for the girls, and we waited patiently for the
-first division.</p>
-
-<p>About half-past five the Thomas’ men came out on the
-raft just beneath us and stepped gingerly into their boat
-which was the eighth in the first division. Maisie fell
-violently in love with the cox, who though exceptionally
-diminutive was possessed of a megaphonic voice which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-as Freddy coarsely remarked, ‘Fetches the girls every
-time.’</p>
-
-<p>The boat put off into mid stream, and when the cox
-repeated the usual formula of ‘Forward, are you ready,
-paddle!’ in stentorian tones, Maisie was so moved that
-I thought for a minute she was actually going to jump in
-after him.</p>
-
-<p>Blitherington, who had been down below consuming
-something which was not tea, now reappeared and said,
-‘Can’t we go down the river in a punt for this division,
-Freddy?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, yes, certainly if you like,’ he answered, ‘I haven’t
-got a punt, but we’ll soon get one.’</p>
-
-<p>We all trooped down the steps, and Freddy pirated
-the punt of some unknown scholar, while Reggie fetched
-the Pilot’s cushions from the adjoining barge.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now who’s going to pole?’ said Maisie.</p>
-
-<p>‘O, Martha’ll punt,’ said Freddy, ‘he rather likes it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right, I’ll take her down,’ I said, ‘if you’ll bring us
-back, Freddy.’</p>
-
-<p>This struck me as rather a cute dodge, for the stream
-will take anybody down, whereas punting back up the
-river through about a hundred other boats is a serious
-task.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy however assented immediately, and we got
-under weigh, leaving Reggie with Accrington’s sister.
-After we had secured a place in the long line down the
-tow-path side we spent the time very pleasantly in consuming
-sponge rusks borrowed from a Barabbas’ man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-next door who had a tea-party in full swing. This same
-party was amalgamated with that of Hanbury, and from
-the bottom of his punt the Bugg suddenly bobbed up and
-hailed us effusively. Blitherington wanted to move on
-at once, but we pointed out that we should not get such
-a good position anywhere else, and also that the Barabbas’
-rusks were very delectable.</p>
-
-<p>We had been there fully five minutes when Miss Bugg
-gave vent to a terrible screech, and we noticed that
-Jacob’s back was blazing furiously with blue fire from
-the spirit lamp which the Bugg had upset over him.
-She took off her cloak and endeavoured to smother the
-flames, but Hanbury very unfeelingly threw Jacob into
-the water to the great distress of Ophelia, who screamed
-louder than ever. We might have had every canoe and
-punt in the river paddling up to ascertain who was being
-murdered, but Blitherington quietly drew a cushion from
-beneath Muriel’s head and with a well directed shot
-caught Ophelia in the back of the neck. This treatment
-appeared to soothe Miss Bugg, though the aforementioned
-six maiden aunts made some remark about ‘an
-unmannerly young cub,’ and we had to persuade the
-Pilot, who passed at that moment in a Canader, to take
-his lordship with him.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after this all the first division except Thomas’
-and Lichfield rowed by us, the former having bumped
-the latter just above the Gut. Immediately the last boat
-had gone by we pulled up our pole and started up stream
-under the energetic if erratic guidance of Freddy. When<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-we came opposite the ’Varsity Boat-house we collided
-with a punt which contained three elderly ladies and a
-harassed-looking clergyman, punted by a meek individual
-who must have come from Park Temple.</p>
-
-<p>Freddy, having bumped the Parson’s elbow, sheered
-off in the opposite direction and ran into the stern of a
-canoe, the owner of which quietly ladled a few quarts of
-water over Maisie’s dress.</p>
-
-<p>‘Drat the man,’ she said, ‘Why can’t he&mdash;’ And
-then as he lifted his hat and apologised profusely, ‘O
-pray don’t mention it, water can’t possibly do any harm,’
-and we went on our way, though perhaps not rejoicing.
-The Thomas’ barge was too full of people thumping their
-eightsmen upon the back, so we landed on the Cecil’s
-raft and walked slowly back up the fine avenue, which
-was crowded with youth and beauty all going in one
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>There was no great excitement that night, and as
-Muriel complained of being tired, the ladies retired
-early, while Blitherington kindly organized a poker
-party in my rooms after the Union debate, and carried
-off thirty shillings from our united funds. With
-the exception of one and twopence this had all disappeared
-by the following morning, for while I was in
-Freddy’s digs at about sherry-and-bitter time, Blitherington
-came in to ask if he might put half-a-dozen
-collars and a silk handkerchief down to his account
-at Sampson’s.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon we took the girls out in canoes for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-Eights and Maisie fell to me, while Freddy sacrificed
-himself to the extent of taking Lady Blitherington and
-Ophelia out in a large and equably-balanced punt.
-Squiff disappeared with Muriel in another canoe;
-while Blitherington, to whom the sight of Ophelia is
-as a red rag to a bull, persuaded Reggie to take him
-out in a punt alone.</p>
-
-<p>‘What are you going to do with me this afternoon?’
-said Maisie as she settled herself in my Canader, ‘don’t
-you think we ought to have brought Miss Bugg as chaperon?’</p>
-
-<p>I suppose my face must have expressed my feelings,
-for she laughed and added, ‘Well, we’ll compromise by
-taking Jacob,’ which we did.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m a firm believer in laziness, aren’t you, Mr. Cochrane,’
-she said as we turned up the Cher; ‘let’s get into
-some quiet nook and watch the people passing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I like Oxford,’ she added after a short pause, ‘I can
-say what I like without everybody thinking I mean
-something else. That’s sometimes so unpleasant. I
-wonder,’ she remarked musingly, ‘who I’m going to
-marry; what sort of person do you think would suit me,
-Mr. Cochrane?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I should put you down for a Sir William Shipton or
-something like that, Miss Maisie,’ I answered.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! the money part of that is all right, but I want a
-respectable and presentable person, not an aitchless
-remnant with a squint and large feet.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! I suppose a decent sort of Englishman who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-bathes daily and plays most games would do you,’ I
-suggested.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes I think so, but he must be big and strong to
-satisfy me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There are some of them to be found even in these
-hard times,’ I assented.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank the Lord,’ said Maisie piously; and we changed
-the subject.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look,’ she cried suddenly, as a punt containing a
-portly and painted dowager shot past, propelled by
-a weedy-looking youth with pince-nez, ‘that’s old Lady
-Dombonpoint, the widow of Sir Herbert of the celebrated
-‘Aurol for Aching Ears.’ She’s as rich as they
-make them, and yet she only allowed her son, that
-sickly-looking youth, half-a-crown a week for pocket
-money at Eton, and bought his clothes from a slop-shop
-in Tottenham Court Road. But you know,’ she
-continued in a whisper, although no one was near,&mdash;and
-when Maisie whispers I know what to expect,&mdash;‘she
-was awfully gone on Blitherington last season,
-and followed him all round the Park, not to speak of
-country-houses and restaurants; he had a wretched
-time till she finally proposed to him at Ascot on a
-coach. Of course he rejected her, and then she fainted.
-He told me he might have stood her for a year, but he
-was sure she was what he calls a “stayer,” and would
-live to a hundred.’ Before I had time to make any comment
-on this extraordinary episode in the life of the
-youthful peer, the Bugg’s voice penetrated to our shelter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-and we caught the words, ‘I told him he was an idiot to
-oppose the Plural Dean, and no wonder they call it the
-Church Irritant if he is a curate.’ And the punt containing
-the inimitable Ophelia passed on. ‘There!’
-said Maisie explosively, ‘that’s a nice thing to have
-tacked on to me, isn’t it? She’s Blithers’ bête noir;
-why one day she told him that he oughtn’t to smoke, as
-it produced a weakness in the pneumatic nerve!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ I said, ‘I’m sorry for you, but still you must
-admit she answers the description that a certain paper
-bestowed on itself not long ago, “Funny without being
-vulgar.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know,’ said Maisie doubtfully, ‘why I could
-tell you some things she’s said that&mdash;well perhaps I’d
-better not.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! do,’ I said, ‘why not collect Buggisms.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why not, indeed,’ said Maisie, and thereafter a
-thoughtful silence ensued.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think it’s about time we went back,’ I said, having
-occupied the interval in gazing at Maisie’s very shapely
-ankles; ‘I should like to stay here for ever, but&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course you’re bound to say that,’ interrupted
-Maisie, as I began to rise ready to pole, ‘but the
-question is, do you really mean it?’</p>
-
-<p>I was in the act of pushing off when a fearful shock
-sent me flying into Maisie’s lap, and her parasol into the
-water. Maisie was just preparing to utter her favourite
-‘cuss-word,’ as she calls it, when a cheerful and inane
-voice from the offending boat remarked languidly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-‘Hullo! Maisie, what do you stick your old hearse in
-the light for?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s not a hearse,’ retorted Maisie, angrily, ‘and Mr.
-Cochrane has been very kind and attentive to me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! I’m sure of it,’ chuckled Blitherington, for it
-was he and Reggie in another punt, though neither of
-them seemed to be punting, and their boat was drifting
-broadside on down stream. ‘All the world,’ he continued,
-solemnly, ‘is attentive to its friends’ sisters and
-cousins.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If we want to see the Eights we must move on,’ I
-interrupted hastily, as I saw Reggie beginning to give
-utterance to some home-truth, and Reggie’s home-truths
-are the most unpleasant that I know. Fortunately
-Blitherington assented, and so we all punted down to
-the barge together. The races were most exciting to
-all but Cecil’s, who rowed over hopelessly, being behind
-the bump of James’ and Llewellyn’s. It was decided not
-to watch the first division, as Blithers had arranged to
-drive a large party out in a coach to sup at Woodstock
-and return by moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>The supper in The Lion was an enormous success,
-and it is not wonderful that on the return journey there
-was a great scramble for the inside of the coach, the
-four places being eventually secured by Freddy, Muriel,
-Reggie, and Sybil Accrington. As to what occurred I
-am unable to make any definite statement, though
-Reggie insists that Freddy kissed him by mistake
-in the dark, and this Freddy denies, like Peter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-‘with an oath’; however from the silence inside I
-gathered that they were all enjoying themselves. Outside
-Maisie and I, Blithers, Farmborough, the Pilot,
-Miss MacNeill and de Beresford sang comic songs
-with ever-increasing vigour, while the Bugg, who had
-come as general chaperon, rhapsodised into the unheeding
-ears of the Pilot, who had, as he afterwards
-admitted, fallen asleep through weariness.</p>
-
-<p>The next day was devoted to an inspection of the
-various colleges, monuments, and points of interest,
-with tea afterwards in different rooms, ‘a regular
-field-day for the Bugg,’ as Freddy aptly remarked.
-On being questioned later as to what she had seen, she
-mixed up the Martyrs’ Memorial with St. Peter’s-in-the-East,
-and stated at dinner that she considered the
-Sheldonian ‘such an ornament to the Parks.’ In the
-evening Freddy and I conveyed the Famille Blitherington
-to the O.U.D.S. performance in Gloucester
-Gardens, in which Fatty sustained a prominent part
-very creditably, and Cobson did wonderful quick
-changes as ‘2nd Lord, serving man, knight, soldier,
-citizen, and apprentice.’ Blitherington afterwards remarked
-to him, ‘My dear old native, if you went on at
-the Pav. in town as Ratsini, the quick-change man, you’d
-make your fortune, and probably marry some light of
-the variety stage into the bargain. Try it!’</p>
-
-<p>This <i>al fresco</i> entertainment was over earlier than
-such affairs usually are, and so soon after ten o’clock
-we left the Dowager and her suite at the Granville<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-and returned to our digs. As we ascended the stairs
-we heard peels of laughter coming from the room,
-and Reggie’s raucous voice enquiring, ‘Do you open’?</p>
-
-<p>‘Lord, yes,’ said a lady’s voice, ‘I’ll let you in for
-twopence.’</p>
-
-<p>A cheery poker party was gathered round the table,
-consisting of Reggie, the Pilot, de Beresford, Accrington,
-and a very smart little lady whose face was unknown
-to us.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hullo, you birds, I didn’t expect you quite so early,’
-Reggie cried, ‘let me introduce you to my friend Mrs.
-Jack Lomond, Lord Blitherington, Mr. Cochrane.’</p>
-
-<p>The lady removed a jewelled cigarette tube from her
-mouth, and enquired with a smile, ‘Won’t you join
-the dance, as they say in “Alice in Wonderland.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, don’t let us spoil your game,’ returned Blithers,
-‘five’s the best number for poker.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s all right,’ said the Pilot, ‘we were just finishing
-this when you came. Let’s turn it into Bank, if
-Mrs. Lomond has no objection.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, whatever you like,’ the lady put in with a smile;
-‘you must be rather surprised at my appearance here,’
-she continued, addressing me, ‘but Reggie asked me
-down for the picnic to-morrow, and I hadn’t time to
-reply, so I came in person, which is perhaps better.’</p>
-
-<p>As we settled down at the historical round table to
-play Bank, I observed that Blithers carefully commandeered
-the chair next to Mrs. Lomond, and she
-enquired of him at once, ‘Are you any relation to Billy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-Jenkins of the 110th? I used to know him when I was
-in India.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh yes,’ returned Blithers cheerfully, ‘he’s my
-uncle, and a very good sort too, but,’ he added with
-sudden apprehension, ‘please don’t mention him to my
-aunt to-morrow, he’s the black sheep of the family.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor old Jenks,’ Mrs. Lomond remarked reflectively,
-‘I used to tell him when we were at Jumbulpore that
-he’d never come to a good end. His affections were too
-shifting; he never stuck to one love for more than a
-month.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not even his wife,’ remarked Blithers solemnly, as play
-proceeded, accompanied by much frivolous conversation.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after 11.30 Mrs. Lomond rose to go, remarking,
-‘It’s very good of you all to have given me such a
-pleasant evening. See you in the morning, Reggie.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Half a mo, Mrs. Lomond,’ said Blithers, as he skipped
-down the staircase after her, ‘I’m going your way, may
-I see you home?’ And they left together.</p>
-
-<p>‘Jolly little woman, isn’t she?’ said Reggie. ‘And
-clever too; she’s got all the diplomatic posts attached
-to her petticoat, and Secretaries of State attend her like
-lap dogs. Her husband is, I believe, in Northern
-Nigeria,’ he added reflectively as we moved up to bed,
-‘and the date of his return is quite uncertain.’</p>
-
-<p>The next day, Sunday, was that fixed for the great
-picnic up at Marston, for which the unwilling Pilot had
-been appointed Caterer and General Manager. A
-regular fleet of punts had been chartered to convey the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-party, and cushions were piled in stacks, while Woodman’s
-express toiled down soon after breakfast under
-an immense load of eat- and drinkables. It required
-our utmost efforts to arouse de Beresford, who had
-finished the previous day and commenced this by an
-all-night poker sitting lasting till daylight. By the
-time Freddy had got his aunt and Ophelia under weigh,
-and we had shepherded the girls from the Cathedral to
-the barge, it was very nearly mid-day. The stowing
-process took some time, though as I had already secured
-Muriel, Maisie and Reggie for my punt, I did not much
-mind what happened. We headed the procession,
-carrying, I fancy, most of the liquid refreshment, and
-punted up stream at a fearful rate under Reggie’s
-guidance. We had scarcely passed the Thomas’ ferry
-when a fearful yell announced that the Bugg’s parasol
-had caught in the rope, and been carried down stream.
-It was rescued by a man in a Canader and brought
-back to Ophelia, who beamed on the canoeist and said,
-‘So kind of you to have reprieved my sunshade.’ This
-remark was passed down to the other punts, and
-reduced Blithers to such a hopeless state that he declared
-himself unable to punt any longer, and retired in
-favour of Accrington, who continued to propel the boat
-for the rest of the day.</p>
-
-<p>The party progressed without incident for some time,
-during which Reggie, who had contrived that I should
-punt, engaged the girls in conversation, which appeared
-to afford them immense amusement, but which I could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-not catch; and though I repeatedly begged to share the
-joke, their only reply was to shout in chorus, ‘Now do
-punt up, we’re hardly moving.’ Their unsympathetic
-treatment at length moved me to give up punting, and
-balance the pole carefully on Reggie, who after a while
-bestirred himself to work.</p>
-
-<p>‘I wonder,’ remarked Maisie contemplatively, as I
-seated myself beside her, ‘whether anything liquid and
-cool is obtainable in this department.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I will see,’ I said, as I foraged in the end and discovered
-a jar of Moselle Cup. ‘How’s that?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Great,’ said Muriel and Maisie in chorus, as they
-each held out a glass.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah!’ continued Maisie, as she gulped it down and
-paused to think, ‘I feel just like that mythological undraped
-person, who was always drinking and never
-satisfied.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There must have been lots of them, both the thirsty
-and the undraped,’ I said, ‘your description is rather vague.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, perhaps it is,’ she replied, ‘but anyhow I wish
-we adhered to those ancient customs now, except
-perhaps that one about not being satisfied.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think&mdash;&mdash;,’ I began, when it struck me that my
-thoughts had better be suppressed, and I relapsed into
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>By this time we had pretty nearly reached the Rollers,
-so we waited for the other punts to come up, that containing
-Accrington, de Beresford and Ophelia being
-easily last.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Hullo Ophelia!’ cried Freddy as they came up, ‘I
-didn’t think it of you, waiting there under the bushes
-for such a time with de B. I suppose you felt rather
-out of it as gooseberry,’ he continued addressing
-Accrington.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Frederick,’ called out Lady Blitherington
-from a punt propelled by the perspiring Pilot, ‘pray do
-not suggest such awful things. I am surprised at you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Aunt, if Ophelia will be such a giddy old thing,
-what can you expect?’ Freddy answered, as amid
-general confusion we disembarked at the Rollers.</p>
-
-<p>The Bugg had got as far as ‘You’re that pernicious
-to annoy one&mdash;’ when her boat hit the landing stage
-with a heavy thump, and her further remarks were lost.
-I noticed that in the general re-sorting which took place,
-the Pilot contrived that Accrington should have the
-honour of punting Lady Blitherington while he himself
-embarked with Miss MacNeill, who is sometimes described
-as ‘amusing’ and sometimes ‘forward,’ it all
-depends on the age and sex of the speaker. The Pilot,
-who is universally known as an old woman, says that a
-mean between the two would probably suit the case.</p>
-
-<p>‘O Reggie,’ said Mrs. Lomond, as she stepped carefully
-out of Freddy’s canoe, ‘do come here for a minute,
-the bottom of that canoe was all wet.’</p>
-
-<p>Reggie trotted gaily forward and marshalled her towards
-a disused bathing box following himself with a
-dish-cloth, but she gripped the door firmly and said ‘Oh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-no, you must send me a girl, this isn’t your innings, go
-and field outside.’</p>
-
-<p>Reg commandeered Muriel, and Mrs. Lomond soon
-reappeared smiling, and murmured to me as I helped
-her into a punt, ‘I’ll pay Reggie out for that dish-cloth
-afterwards.’</p>
-
-<p>We paddled round to pick up the ladies, and I found
-myself in de Beresford’s punt with Sybil Accrington and
-the Bugg, who positively declined to move into any
-other craft, though we all declared that the boat was
-dangerously full. Miss Accrington and I held pleasant
-converse amidships, while Ophelia, propped up by a
-four-gallon jar of claret cup and two hampers, chattered
-cheerfully to de Beresford, who was punting most skilfully.
-It is the one form of exercise that the dear old
-thing is addicted to, and so we are very careful never to
-deprive him of any opportunity to reduce his circumference.
-Among other things, I discovered, to my great
-gratification, that Sybil would be at the same place with
-us in the Vac.&mdash;pretty name Sybil.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was shining brightly, the birds were twittering,
-and everything was going beautifully, when the
-irresponsible Miss Bugg was nearly guilty of the manslaughter
-of all four of us.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. de Beresford,’ she murmured with an ingratiating
-smile, ‘do you know I never care to see a musical comedy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed, Miss Bugg, and how is that?’ the Pharisee
-enquired politely, as he carefully wiped one sleeve and
-thereby allowed the water to trickle on to the other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Well, you see, I disapprove most strongly of all
-those ballet girls looking like Lady Saliva in the streets
-of Coventry.’</p>
-
-<p>De Beresford surveyed her solemnly for half a minute
-and then dropped the pole and collapsed heavily on to a
-heap of cushions, while Miss Bugg, who takes herself
-very seriously, prattled on about the elevating influence
-of Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p>We glided quietly and peacefully into the bank, and
-there we stuck till the Pilot came along and pulled us
-off, but the Pharisee was too exhausted to renew his
-labours, and I was obliged to take his place till we
-reached Marston. We arrived there first with the
-Pilot, and the others turned up at intervals, each punt
-bringing a goodly assortment of hampers and stone
-jars.</p>
-
-<p>At last we had all assembled, the cloths were laid
-on a nice piece of level grass, and the Dowager was
-comfortably settled on an air pillow and a collection
-of punt cushions, when Ophelia emitted a melancholy
-gurgle and cried tearfully,</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve forgotten Lady Blitherington’s little flask.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pas beaucoup, Ophelia,’ chortled his lordship, as he
-produced a very diminutive silver bottle from the lining
-of his panama and gave it to the Bugg. ‘I knew
-you’d lose it, old girl, so I just took the liberty of removing
-it from your pocket when we landed at the
-rollers.’</p>
-
-<p>Ophelia heaved a sigh of satisfaction and settled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-down beside the Dowager, while we all bestowed
-ourselves conveniently around the cloth, each one as
-far as possible next to the lady of his choice.</p>
-
-<p>‘A little of the pink fish with the yellow blanket,
-thank you, Mr. Cochrane,’ said Maisie cheerfully as I
-offered her a variety of tasty dishes; the Pilot talked
-a lot about that picnic, but he certainly managed it
-very well all the same.</p>
-
-<p>Blitherington, who was seated only a few feet off, in
-fact just the other side of Muriel, was what Maisie
-described as ‘on the war-path,’ and we heard him
-asking Miss MacNeill some most exciting riddles. He
-absolutely refused to share them with us, until Reggie
-handed him a dish of cold chicken and ham, and then
-after looking at it solemnly for half a minute he
-turned his anxious gaze on me and enquired ‘Do you
-know, my ancient lord of creation, why hotel chickens
-are like ballet-girls?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ I answered feebly, I always seem to say ‘no,’
-when I’m asked anything catchy, I don’t think a fine
-frank open nature like mine is adapted to discovering
-puzzles.</p>
-
-<p>The incorrigible Blithers just chirruped ungrammatically
-‘It’s because they’re all legs;’ and by the time
-Lady Blitherington had turned her lorgnettes in his
-direction he was busily engaged carving a saddle of
-lamb for his fair neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t encourage him, Mr. Cochrane,’ Muriel whispered
-to me, ‘If Blithers once gets loose he’s apt to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-travel quite a distance, and he only begins where
-Auntie draws the line.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s that about drawing the line?’ asked Miss
-MacNeill, leaning across towards Muriel with a bewitching
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, I only said Blitherington goes a long way before
-he thinks it necessary to draw it,’ Muriel replied.</p>
-
-<p>‘It all depends what sort of a line you are talking
-about,’ Blitherington put in, ‘I know some ladies in
-evening dress who never seem to be going to draw a
-line at all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Tut, Blithers,’ said Muriel, ‘you’d pervert an ecclesiastical
-synod.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not much,’ returned the incorrigible peer, ‘I couldn’t
-spare the time. Suffering Sosthenes,’ he added after a
-pause, ‘just listen to Ophelia, she mixes her metaphors
-like those Reading birds do their biscuits.’</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Reggie, who had risen to search for
-the salt, created a sufficient diversion by sitting down
-in the remains of the salmon mayonnaise, and was accordingly
-compelled to take off his coat and wear Mr.
-Accrington’s aquascutum for the rest of the day. Lady
-Blitherington, who was much exercised by the unfortunate
-contretemps, very kindly offered him her purple
-velvet cloak, but he declined the proffered honour with
-thanks. The general attention was distracted from the
-unfortunate Reggie by Blithers, who had discovered
-Accrington and Muriel seated behind a tree discussing
-rabbit-pie and other things.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The most amusing thing about Accrington is the
-changefulness of his affections; he has, as Reggie remarked
-not long ago, the most expansive and expensive
-heart in Oxford. Only a week ago two of his ‘best
-girls’ arrived together quite unexpectedly and held
-prolonged and wordy warfare in his rooms until they
-caught sight of some photos of a third ‘best girl,’ when
-they buried the hatchet and tore up the other girl’s
-photos together. It may be added that when the third
-girl herself arrived a day or two later, her rage at finding
-none of her portraits on exhibition was only appeased
-by an even more costly gift than usual. These facts
-being well known among his friends, we were not a
-little amused to see that he had attached himself like
-a leech to Muriel for the last three days, weather and
-Reggie permitting.</p>
-
-<p>‘What about the Babes in the Wood?’ yelled Blitherington
-with his most aggravating smile, as Muriel peered
-round the corner.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! they haven’t arrived yet,’ she replied, ‘but what
-do you mean?’</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately this mystery was never cleared up, as
-Blithers returned to the family circle and was busily
-engaged in feeding Jacob on chocolate creams, which
-the faithful animal, to employ a euphemism, soon contrived
-to unswallow in a secluded portion of the meadow.</p>
-
-<p>As I turned to help Mrs. Accrington, who was most
-usefully employed in showing an awkward squad how
-to wash dishes, a voice behind me murmured,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, Mr. Cochrane, please take me somewhere and
-give me a cigarette, I simply daren’t smoke before the
-Dowager.’</p>
-
-<p>Personally I always affect a certain brand of leaf-covered
-invention known to the trade as cigarillos, but
-I obtained a supply of thin gold-tipped cigarettes from
-Reggie, who always keeps a selection of strange apparatus
-in his cigarette-case.</p>
-
-<p>As we climbed over a gate and sat down behind the
-nearest hedge Mrs. Lomond remarked, ‘Good boy, Reggie,
-I met him when I was out at Cannes for the Ladies
-golf matches; he did everything for me except sign my
-card.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s a born organizer,’ I said; ‘the anti-dons campaign
-that he arranged in Cecil’s prospered as no such
-enterprise has ever done before, and he doped the porter
-so successfully that the only name found on his black
-book next morning was that of an inoffensive Scholar
-who was visiting a sick aunt in Penzance.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish,’ she said, ‘that you and he would come up to
-town next week, and help me run our theatricals at the
-“Regality” in aid of the “Home for Helpless Hairdressers;”
-it’s bound to be a great success, the Duke is
-coming at half-time, and I’ll introduce you to some of
-the prettiest girls. If you like to wear an apron and
-carry a shaving brush in your hand you might even
-sell programmes,’ she added with the air of one who
-makes a great concession.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s all right for me,’ I put in, ‘but don’t you think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-that Reggie’s heart is full enough already, and yet stay,’
-I added, ‘there is still room for a few more in bin twenty-three.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How much do you expect to clear,’ I asked her after
-a short pause.</p>
-
-<p>‘O several thousand,’ she said cheerfully. ‘You see the
-Duchess of Dopingburgh is kissing all comers at half-a-crown
-a time, and Violet MacNeill is going to serve at
-the American bar. But I think we’d better be going
-back,’ she added, ‘if we don’t want to be left here for
-the night.’</p>
-
-<p>As we regained the scene of the orgy, Freddy gathered
-up all the remaining cloths and thrust them into a small
-trunk, while Mr. Accrington sat upon it and tried to turn
-the lock without much success.</p>
-
-<p>‘There they are,’ cried Blithers as we appeared, ‘now
-let’s be going.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What punt are you going in, Ophelia?’ Freddy enquired.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, I’ll go in the most aggressive one,’ Miss Bugg
-replied with a pleasant smile, ‘I’m all for going fast.’</p>
-
-<p>And so we embarked in a most amiable mood. The
-return journey was more or less uneventful, though my
-conversation with Violet MacNeill was quite the reverse.
-The unfortunate de Beresford who punted us down must
-have had a very poor time, for Blithers and Mrs. Lomond
-were much too busily engaged to pay any attention to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>As we proceeded up the Broad Walk Mrs. Accrington<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-sidled up to me and enquired with evident anxiety, ‘How
-do you think Steve is getting on with his work? he
-writes us such cheering letters, but we saw Mr. Yelland
-to-day and he seemed most despondent.’</p>
-
-<p>‘O the Yelper is always a Job’s Comforter, Mrs. Accrington,’
-I said, ‘besides poor old Stephen’s quite a
-model worker.’</p>
-
-<p>This seemed to satisfy the anxious parent, and I
-guided the conversation into less dangerous channels.
-Before the various families split up we made arrangements
-for a round of sight seeing on the following day,
-which was to finish with the James’ Ball. On the morrow
-all my time was taken up with an old friend of the
-family who had come down for the day, and I had to
-undergo all the sufferings of a hired guide round Oxford
-who doesn’t know his subject well. I contrived however
-to send her off soon after tea, and gained comparative
-rest by a couple of hours’ bridge in Farmborough’s
-rooms. We all dined with Mr. Accrington at the Hyde,
-and started about 9.0 for the ball, gathering the famille
-Blitherington as we passed their hotel. After introducing
-as many people as possible to all the girls, I completely
-lost track of the party till about supper-time,
-being mostly engaged with my No. 1. girl from Somerville
-who is a very cheery little body but suffers from
-worker’s conscience, a most distressing weakness which
-prevents me seeing very much of her except at occasional
-dances. A ball at Oxford is a wonderfully pretty
-sight, and well calculated to impress anybody seeing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-one for the first time. All the men and the girls are
-young and fresh, and there is a complete absence of the
-doddering old men and young women of fifty who give
-a sad tone to big dances in London and elsewhere. The
-handsome quads of James’ were most artistically lighted
-with myriads of fairy lights and Chinese lanterns, and
-the beautiful old-world gardens twinkled, though not
-too brightly, with wonderful devices in red and yellow.
-Supper was laid in the fine hall of the College and I
-secured two seats for Muriel and myself under a famous
-Archbishop who has been dead for over three hundred
-years, and beside Blithers and Mrs. Lomond, who were
-very much alive.</p>
-
-<p>‘Martha,’ said Blitherington, as I sat down, ‘try some
-of this fizz, it’s quite innocuous.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What is it,’ I said, ‘Robinson pere et fils?’</p>
-
-<p>‘O no,’ he replied, ‘it’s one of the non-poisonous
-varieties this time.’</p>
-
-<p>However, Blitherington was apparently at fault, for I
-heard a warning voice behind me saying, ‘I wouldn’t
-try none o’ that, if I was you, sir,’ and I turned to see
-our old scout Webster who had apparently been imported
-for the evening, ‘There’s somethin’ hin the Buttery
-as might suit you, sir,’ he added. ‘There’s honly
-heighteen bottles been hordered an them for the Committee,
-but I dessay as ’ow I can get yer two.’</p>
-
-<p>I clearly saw that this meant a Christmas-box to Webster,
-but readily assented as one always does on such occasions,
-and the two bottles were speedily forthcoming.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After supper I had a peaceful waltz with Miss Accrington;
-and subsequently conducted Miss MacNeill to a
-dark staircase in the second Quad.</p>
-
-<p>‘It seems to me,’ she remarked after we had mounted
-a flight and settled ourselves in someone’s rooms, ‘It
-seems to me that the world is about equally divided
-between the loved and the unloved, and the great thing
-is to avoid being in the second class.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, of course we know which lot you’re in,’ I
-replied quickly.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s very nice of you, Marth&mdash;, I mean Mr.
-Cochrane, but I was just thinking of the terrible number
-of girls who go through all this kind of thing and
-linger on to become sour old maids.’</p>
-
-<p>Although at that particular moment I happened to be
-holding Miss MacNeill’s hand in order to keep it warm,
-it is quite impossible that that could have been any
-reason for her squeezing it affectionately, and sighing
-softly; however, it was very stimulating, and I went on
-to say,</p>
-
-<p>‘I believe the proportion of men to women in the
-world is about two to three, even including black men,
-and I’m sure you wouldn’t marry a Fijian or a Sandwichman.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, why not,’ she put in, ‘I think a Pacific islander
-would make such a desirable husband. You’d know
-such a lot about him before your marriage.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Whatever do you mean, Violet?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘On, no,’ she said, ‘I only mean that on a little coral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-island everybody would be sure to know all about their
-neighbours, so that you wouldn’t be likely to get hold of
-a post-nuptial surprise packet, and anyhow, he’d be
-bound to be Pacific.’</p>
-
-<p>It was at this precise moment that Feltham, the owner
-of the rooms and a distant cousin of mine, arrived and
-remarked apologetically, ‘I’m awfully sorry that there’s
-only that one chair in the room, but the fact is they’ve
-commandeered all my best for the Ladies’ Cloaker at the
-bottom of the staircase&mdash;’, but here I noticed that Violet
-had departed with unusual shyness, and so I too withdrew
-hastily, leaving the owner surveying his apartment
-with a puzzled expression.</p>
-
-<p>As I reached the Quad a soft little hand was linked
-in to my arm, and Violet enquired anxiously, ‘Do you
-think he thought anything?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh no,’ I replied, ‘he couldn’t have, besides he
-wouldn’t say anything if he did.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, all right, take me to get an ice, will you, Frank,’
-she said shyly, ‘it was so awfully hot up there, wasn’t
-it?’</p>
-
-<p>I satisfied the fair lady with a marvellous icy rose
-with vanilla petals and strawberry leaves in a little
-white frilling of Japanese paper, and soon afterwards
-found myself dancing a most energetic set of lancers
-with Maisie.</p>
-
-<p>As we were leaving the floor after it was over, Maisie
-said to me with a bewitching smile, ‘Have you found my
-cosy corner?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t see how anybody could find one with so many
-people about,’ I very naturally responded.</p>
-
-<p>‘O yes you can,’ she said, ‘come along, I’ll soon show
-it you.’ And she guided me to a most beautiful arbour
-in the garden, where we watched the mysterious romantic
-world outside crawling in and out among the countless
-little red lights like a scene out of some worm and fire-fly
-carnival.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here it is,’ she said as she settled herself carefully
-and with an eye to effect. I should always have thought
-that Maisie would have been rather a careless girl, but
-you ought never to attempt to judge women till you have
-seen a good deal of them; and even then you are apt to
-be a bit previous.</p>
-
-<p>I enjoyed myself immensely, and Maisie’s behaviour
-was most improper, in fact I don’t know what her Aunt
-would have said, for she consumed three cigarettes.</p>
-
-<p>However, all good things must come to an end, and
-after wasting two waltzes and a barn-dance on me,
-Maisie said that we really must return to the Ball-tent.</p>
-
-<p>This was the first Quad, which had been entirely
-roofed over, and a beautifully swung floor put in, while
-all the passages and archways were carpeted and the
-grim old walls hung with flags and festooned draperies
-of the James’ colours.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Blitherington had enjoyed her evening, for the
-Bursar of James’ was a former tutor in her family and
-had behaved like a hero to her and Ophelia throughout<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-the dance; as the Bugg said to me on our way home:
-‘It was one of the most absorbent evenings I have ever
-spent.’</p>
-
-<p>After Freddy and I had seen the old ladies back to the
-Granville we returned to James’ for the photo, which was
-taken in the second Quad by three separate photographers,
-who spent about twenty minutes over preliminaries
-and only as many seconds over the actual
-operation.</p>
-
-<p>It had long been daylight when I regained our digs
-and crept quietly into my room without awaking the
-Pilot or Reggie, not that either of them deserved any
-consideration, for the Pilot who sleeps next to me snores
-like a foghorn, while Reggie very frequently returns
-from town by the Dons’ lubricator about two a.m. and
-makes enough noise to stampede a herd of wild bulls.</p>
-
-<p>Tired as everyone must have been, we were all up by
-12, and saw the Accringtons off for Manchester,
-being especially dismal on saying farewell to the
-charming Sybil.</p>
-
-<p>There was a general move again in the afternoon,
-when the Dowager and her party left for town by the
-4.20, only leaving behind Blitherington who, on hearing
-that Mrs. Lomond did not go till Wednesday, refused
-to budge. Miss Bugg’s last remark to the effect that
-‘her head was going round like one of those aerated
-fans,’ failed to raise even a smile from Reggie.</p>
-
-<p>The Dowager extended a cordial invitation to all of
-us to visit her in town, which was seconded warmly in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-my case by Maisie, on whom I flatter myself&mdash;but no
-I won’t say what I thought, lest I be accused of vanity,
-besides there is Sybil as well.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed, as the Pilot remarked, very dull after they
-had all gone; and the horrible flirtation carried on by
-Mrs. Lomond and her admirer failed to arouse us from
-the depths of despondency, only partially lightened by
-Cecil’s doing its fourth bump on Wednesday afternoon,
-and the prospect of what Reggie called a ‘roaring old
-bump-supper.’ Perhaps, as Squiff said, when I suddenly
-discovered my Finals to be only two weeks distant,
-‘If you have your fun you must expect to pay for
-it.’ So I consider a drop from a possible second in
-Law to a certain third was not expensive.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">OXFORD<br />
-BURROWS AND DOE, PRINTERS<br />
-THE HOLYWELL PRESS</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Red Paint at Oxford, by
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