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+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 #65744 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65744)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Jayhawker in Europe, by W. Y. (William
-Yoast) Morgan
-
-
-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: A Jayhawker in Europe
-
-
-Author: W. Y. (William Yoast) Morgan
-
-
-
-Release Date: July 2, 2021 [eBook #65744]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A JAYHAWKER IN EUROPE***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Fay Dunn, Fiona Holmes, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 65744-h.htm or 65744-h.zip:
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- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/65744/65744-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/jayhawkerineurop00morg
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Changes made are noted at the end of the book.
-
-
-
-
-
-A JAYHAWKER IN EUROPE
-
-by
-
-W. Y. MORGAN
-
-Author of “A Journey of a Jayhawker”
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Monotyped and Printed by
-Crane & Company
-Topeka
-1911
-
-Copyright 1911,
-by Crane & Company
-
-
-
-
-Preface
-
-
-These letters were printed in the Hutchinson _Daily News_ during the
-summer of 1911. There was no ulterior motive, no lofty purpose, just
-the reporter’s idea of telling what he saw.
-
-They are now put in book form without revision or editing, because the
-writer would probably make them worse if he tried to make them better.
-
- W. Y. MORGAN.
-
- HUTCHINSON, KANSAS, November 1, 1911.
-
-
-
-
- To the Jayhawkers
-
- who stay at home and take their European trips
- in their minds and in the books, this
- volume is respectfully dedicated
- by one of the
- gadders
-
-
-
-
-Table of Contents
-
-
- _Page_
-
- NEW YORK IN THE HOT TIME, 1
-
- BREAKING AWAY, 7
-
- ON THE POTSDAM, 12
-
- THE LIONS OF THE SHIP, 18
-
- OCEAN CURRENTS, 25
-
- THE DUTCH FOLKS, 30
-
- IN OLD DORDRECHT, 37
-
- THE DUTCHESSES, 44
-
- THE PILGRIMS’ START, 50
-
- AMSTERDAM, AND OTHERS, 56
-
- CHEESES AND BULBSES, 63
-
- HISTORIC LEYDEN, 72
-
- THE DUTCH CAPITAL, 80
-
- “THE DUTCH COMPANY,” 88
-
- THE GREAT RIVER, 96
-
- ALONG THE RHINE, 104
-
- IN GERMAN TOWNS, 112
-
- ARRIVING IN PARIS, 120
-
- THE FRENCH CHARACTER, 127
-
- THE LATIN QUARTER, 135
-
- THE BOULEVARDS OF PARIS, 144
-
- SOME FRENCH WAYS, 154
-
- IN DOVER TOWN, 162
-
- OLD CANTERBURY TODAY, 169
-
- THE ENGLISH STRIKE, 178
-
- ENGLISHMAN THE GREAT, 187
-
- THE NORTH OF IRELAND, 198
-
- SCOTLAND AND THE SCOTCH, 211
-
- THE LAND OF BURNS, 220
-
- THE JOURNEY’S END. 228
-
-
-
-
-Table of Illustrations
-
- The scrubbing-brush the national emblem of Holland _Facing page_ 41
-
- No place for a man from Kansas " 74
-
- The poet Byron building castles " 100
-
- The handsome knight she met in Elmdale Park " 111
-
- The plain Quadrille at the Moulin Rouge " 148
-
- Seeing London from the old English bus " 188
-
- Introducing a joke to our British cousins " 234
-
-
-
-
-A Jayhawker _in_ Europe
-
-
-
-
-New York in the Hot Time
-
-
- NEW YORK, July 10, 1911.
-
-The last day on American soil before starting on a trip to other lands
-should be marked with a proper spirit of seriousness, and I would
-certainly live up to the propriety of the occasion if it were not for
-two things,--the baggage and the weather. But how can a man heave a
-sigh of regret at departing from home, when he is chasing over Jersey
-City and Hoboken after a stray trunk, and the thermometer is breaking
-records for highness and the barometer for humidity? I have known some
-tolerably warm zephyrs from the south which were excitedly called “hot
-winds,” but they were balmy and pleasant to the touch in comparison
-with the New York hot wave which wilts collar, shirt and backbone
-into one mass. The prospect of tomorrow being out on the big water
-with a sea breeze and a northeast course does not seem bad, even if
-you are leaving the Stars and Stripes and home and friends. There is
-nothing like hot, humid weather to destroy patriotism, love, affection,
-and common civility. I speak in mild terms, but I have returned from
-Hoboken, the station just the other side of the place whose existence
-is denied by the Universalists. This is the place the ship starts from,
-and not from New York, as it is advertised to do.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Speaking of weather reminds me that the West is far ahead of New York
-in the emancipation of men. The custom here is for men to wear coats
-regardless of the temperature, whereas in the more intelligent West
-a man is considered dressed up in the evening if he takes off his
-gallusses along with his coat. Last night we went to a “roof garden”
-and expected that it would be a jolly Bohemian affair, but every man
-sat with his coat on and perspired until he couldn’t tell whether the
-young ladies of the stage were kicking high or not, and worse than
-that, he did not care.
-
-I have been again impressed with the fact that there are no flies in
-New York City. There are no screens on the windows, not even of the
-dining-rooms, and yet I have not seen a fly. I wish Dr. Crumbine would
-tell us why it is that flies swarm out in Kansas and leave without a
-friendly visit such a rich pasture-ground as they would find on the
-millions of humans on Manhattan island. If I were a fly I would leave
-the swatters and the hostile board of health of Kansas, and take the
-limited train for New York and one perpetual picnic for myself and
-family.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This afternoon I went to the ball game, of course. Some people would
-have gone to the art exhibit or the beautiful public library. But New
-York and Chicago were to play and Matthewson was to pitch, and the
-call of duty prevailed over the artistic yearnings which would have
-taken me elsewhere. Coming home from the game I had an idea--which is
-a dangerous thing to do in hot weather. There has been a good deal
-of talk in the newspapers about the Republicans not agreeing on a
-candidate, and the question as to whether Taft can be reëlected or
-not is being vigorously debated. Put ’em all out and nominate Christy
-Matthewson. This would insure the electoral vote of New York, for if
-the Republicans put “Matty” on the ticket the election returns would be
-so many millions for Matthewson and perhaps a few scattering.
-
-There were about as many errors and boneheads in the game between
-Chicago and New York as there would be in a Kansas State League game,
-and more than would come to pass in the match between the barbers
-and the laundrymen of Hutchinson. The players did not indulge in
-that brilliant repartee with the umpire which is a feature of the
-Kansas circuit, and the audience, while expressing its opinion of
-the judgments, had no such wealth of phrases as pours over the boxes
-from the grandstand at home. The language used could have come from
-the ministerial alliance, and sometimes the game seemed more like a
-moving-picture show than a real live game of baseball. Chicago won,
-3 to 2 in ten innings, and I feel that my European trip is a decided
-success so far.
-
-This morning I took a little walk down Wall street and saw the place in
-which the Great Red Dragon lives. These New York bankers and brokers
-are not so dangerous as I have been led to believe by reading some
-of the speeches in Congress. There was no blood around the Standard
-Oil building, and the office of J. Pierpont was filled with men who
-looked as uncomfortable and unhappy as I felt with the heat. Sometimes
-I think the men of Wall street, New York, are just like the men at
-home,--getting all they can under the rules of the game and only
-missing the bases when the umpire looks the other way. The few with
-whom I talked were really concerned about the crops and the welfare of
-the people of Kansas, perhaps because they have some of their money
-invested in our State, and I got the idea that Wall street and all it
-represents is interested in the prosperity of the country and knows
-that hard times anywhere mean corresponding trouble for some of them in
-New York.
-
- * * * * *
-
-New York is a growing city. In many respects it is like Hutchinson. The
-street paving is full of holes and new buildings are going up in every
-direction. Every few months “the highest skyscraper” is erected, and
-now one is being constructed that will have fifty or sixty stories--it
-doesn’t matter which. The buildings are faced with brick or stone, but
-really built of iron. I saw one today on which the bricklaying had been
-begun at the seventh story and was proceeding in both directions. That
-was the interesting feature of the building to me. That and the absence
-of flies and the baseball game are the general results of my efforts
-today to see something of the greatest city in America.
-
-We sail tomorrow morning. Then it will be ten days on the ship for us.
-One thing about an ocean voyage is reasonably sure: If you don’t like
-it you can’t get off and walk. A really attractive feature is that
-there is no dust and you don’t watch the clouds and wish it would rain
-so you will not have to water the lawn.
-
-
-
-
-Breaking Away
-
-
- STEAMSHIP POTSDAM, July 11.
-
-The sailing of an ocean steamer is always a scene of delightful
-confusion and excitement. Thousands of people throng the pier and
-the ship, saying goodbyes to the hundreds who are about to leave.
-The journey across the ocean, though no longer a matter of danger or
-hardship, is yet enough of an event to start the emotions and make the
-emoters forget everything but the watery way and the long absence.
-
-The crowd is anxious, expectant, sad, and unrestrained. Men who rarely
-show personal feeling look with glistening eyes on the friends to be
-left behind. Women, who are always seeing disaster to their loved ones,
-strive with pats, caresses and fond phrases to say the consoling words
-or to express the terror in their hearts. The timid girl, off for a
-year’s study, wishes she had not been so venturesome. The father rubs
-his eyes and talks loudly about the baggage. The mother clings to her
-son’s arm and whispers to him how she will pray for him every night,
-and hopes he will change his underclothes when the days are cool. Young
-folks hold hands and tell each other of the constant remembrance that
-they will have. Big bouquets of flowers are brought on by stewards,
-the trunks go sliding up the plank and into the ship, the officers
-strut up and down, conscious of the admiring glances of the curious,
-orders are shouted, sailors go about tying and untying ropes, the rich
-family parades on with servants and boxes, the whistle blows for the
-visitors to leave, and the final goodbyes and “write me” and “lock the
-back door” and “tell Aunt Mary” and such phrases fill the air while
-handkerchiefs alternately wipe and wave.
-
-Slowly the big boat backs into the stream amid a fog of cheers and
-sobs, then goes ahead down the harbor, past the pier still alive with
-fluttering handkerchiefs, the voices no longer to be heard, and the
-passengers feel that sinking of the heart that comes from the knowledge
-of the separation by time and distance coming to them for weeks and
-months, perhaps forever. Sorrowfully they strain for a last look at
-the crowd, now too far away to distinguish the wanted face, and then
-they turn around, look at their watches, and wonder how long it will be
-before lunch. Of course the Dutch band played the Star-Spangled Banner
-as the boat trembled and started; of course the last passenger arrived
-just a minute late and was prevented from making an effort to jump
-the twenty feet of water which then separated the ship from the pier.
-Of course the boys sold American flags and souvenir post cards. Of
-course the tourists wondered if they would be seasick and their friends
-rather hoped they would be, though they did not say so. The steamboats
-whistled salutes, and the band changed its tune to a Dutch version of
-“The Girl I Left Behind Me,” and with flags flying the Potsdam moved
-past the big skyscrapers, past the Battery, alongside the Statue of
-Liberty, and out toward the Atlantic like a swan in Riverside Park. The
-voyage has begun. The traveler has to look after his baggage, which is
-miraculously on board, find his deck chairs and his dining-room seats,
-and between times rush out occasionally to get one more glimpse of
-the New Jersey coast, which is never very pretty except when you are
-homeward bound, when even Oklahoma would look good.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This boat, the Potsdam, of the Holland-American line, is not one of the
-big and magnificent floating hotels which take travelers across the
-Atlantic so rapidly that they do not get acquainted with each other and
-in such style that they think they are at a summer resort. But it is a
-good-sized, easy-sailing, slow-going ship that will take about ten days
-across and has every comfort which the Dutch can think of, and they are
-long on having things comfortable. It has a reputation for steadiness
-and good meals which makes it popular with people who have traveled
-the Atlantic and who enjoy the ocean voyage as the best part of a trip
-abroad. It lands at Rotterdam, one of the best ports of Europe and
-right in the center of the most interesting part of the Old World.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The pilot left us at Sandy Hook, and now the Potsdam is sailing right
-out into the big water. A cool breeze has taken the place of the hot
-air of New York. The ocean is smooth; there is neither roll nor heave
-to the ship. Everybody is congratulating himself that this is to be
-a smooth voyage. A substantial luncheon is still staying where it
-belongs, and we are looking over the other passengers and being looked
-over by them. There is no chance to get off and go back if we wanted to
-do so. And we don’t want to--not yet.
-
-
-
-
-On the Potsdam
-
-
- STEAMSHIP POTSDAM, July 14.
-
-The daily life on shipboard might be considered monotonous if one were
-being paid for it, but under the present circumstances and surroundings
-the time goes rapidly. Everybody has noticed that the things he is
-obliged to do are dull and uninteresting. Any ordinary American would
-demand about $10 a day for fastening himself in a boat and remaining
-there for ten days. He would get tired of the society, sick of the
-meals and sore on his job. But call it “fun” and he pays $10 a day
-for the pleasure of the ride. The Potsdam is 560 feet long, sixty-two
-feet wide, and seven stories high,--four above the water-line and
-three below. On this trip its first-class accommodations are filled,
-about 260 people; but the second class is not crowded, and less than a
-hundred steerage passengers occupy that part of the ship which often
-carries 2,100 people. The steerage is crowded on the trip to America,
-filled with men and women who are leaving home and fatherland in order
-to do better for themselves and their children. They go back in later
-years, for a visit, but they do not travel in the steerage. They carry
-little American flags and scatter thoughts of freedom and free men in
-the older lands.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This is a Dutch ship and the language of the officers and crew is
-Dutch. While a few of them speak some English and most of them know a
-little, the general effect is that of getting into an entirely foreign
-environment. The Dutch language is a peculiar blend. It seems to be
-partly derived from the German, partly from the English, and partly
-from the Choctaw. The pronunciation is difficult because it is unlike
-the German, the English or the Latin tongues. An ordinary word spelled
-out looks like a freight train of box cars with several cabooses. As
-one of my Dutch fellow-passengers said when he was instructing me how
-to pronounce the name of the capital of Holland, “Don’t try to say it;
-sneeze it.” A great deal of interest is added to the smallest bits of
-conversation by the doubt as to whether the Dutch speaker is telling
-you that it is dinner-time or whether he has swallowed his store teeth.
-
-Which reminds me of a little story Ben Nusbaum told me of the Dutchman
-who came into the Oxford café, sat up to the counter and in proper
-Dutch etiquette greeted the waiter with the salutation, “Wie gehts?”
-Turning toward the kitchen the waiter sang out, “wheat cakes!” “Nein!
-nein!” shouted the Dutchman. “Nine,” said the waiter, scornfully;
-“you’ll be dam lucky if you get three!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The principal occupation on board a Dutch ship is eating, and the next
-most important is drinking. The eats begin with a hearty breakfast from
-8 to 10 o’clock. At 11 o’clock, beef soup, sandwiches and crackers.
-At 12:30, an elaborate luncheon. At 4 o’clock, afternoon tea, with
-sandwiches and fancy cakes. At 7 o’clock, a great dinner. At 9 o’clock,
-coffee, sandwiches, etc. Any time between these meals you can get
-something to eat, anything from beef to buns, and the table in the
-smoking-room is always loaded with cheese, sausage, ham, cakes and all
-the little knick-knacks that tempt you to take one as you go by. And
-yet there is surprise that some people are seasick.
-
-You can get anything you want to drink except water, which is scarce,
-and apparently only used for scrubbing and bathing. Of course the
-steward will find you a little water, if you are from Kansas, but he
-thinks you are sick, wants to add a hot-water bag, and suggests that
-the ship doctor might help you some.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have spoken before of the Dutch band. It is a good one, and loves to
-play. The first concert is at 10 in the morning. There is orchestra
-music during luncheon and dinner, and band concerts afternoon and
-evening. I like a German band, or a Dutch band, so long as it sticks
-to its proper répertoire. But there never was a German band that could
-play “My Old Kentucky Home” and “Swanee River,” and every German band
-persists in doing so in honor of the Americans. I suppose this desire
-to do something you can’t do is not confined to Dutch musicians. I
-know a man who can whistle like a bird, but he insists that he is a
-violinist, and plays second fiddle. I know a singer with a really great
-voice who persists in the theory that he can recite, which he can’t.
-Therefore he is a great bore, and nobody thinks he can even sing.
-Nearly all of us are afflicted some along this line, and the Dutch band
-on the Potsdam is merely accenting the characteristic in brass.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Today I saw a whale. Every time I am on the ocean I see a whale.
-At first nobody else could see it, but soon a large number could.
-There was a good deal of excitement, and the passengers divided
-into two factions, those who saw the whale and those who didn’t and
-who evidently thought we didn’t. The argument lasted nearly all the
-morning, and would be going on yet if a ship had not appeared in the
-distance, and our passengers divided promptly as to whether it was
-a Cunarder, a French liner, or a Norwegian tramp freighter. This
-discussion will take our valuable time all the afternoon. Friends will
-become enemies, and some of those who rallied around the whale story
-are almost glaring at each other over the nationality of that distant
-vessel. I am trying to keep out of this debate, as I am something of
-a Hero because I saw the whale. I have already told of my nautical
-experience on Cow creek, so while I feel I would be considered an
-authority, it is better to let some of the other ambitious travelers
-get a reputation.
-
-
-
-
-The Lions of the Ship
-
-
- STEAMSHIP POTSDAM, July 19.
-
-There are always "lions" on a ship, not the kind that roar and shake
-their manes, but those the other passengers point at and afterward
-recall with pride. I often speak carelessly of the time I crossed with
-Willie Vandergould, although he never left his room during the voyage
-and was probably sleeping off the effects of a long spree. Once I was
-a fellow-passenger with Julia Marlowe, a fact Julia never seemed to
-recognize. There are always a few counts and capitalists on an ocean
-steamer, and a ship without a lion is unfortunate. Our largest and
-finest specimen is Booth Tarkington, the head of the Indiana school of
-fiction, an author whose books have brought him fame and money, and a
-playwright whose dramatizations have won success. He is the tamest lion
-I ever crossed with. He is delightfully democratic, not a bit chesty,
-but rather modest, and as friendly to a traveling Jayhawker as he is to
-the distinguished members of the company. In fact, he understands and
-speaks the Kansas language like a native. His ideal of life is to have
-a home on an island in the track of the ocean steamers so he can sit on
-the porch and watch the ships come and go. Not for me. It is too much
-like living in a Kansas town where No. 3 and No. 4 do not stop, and
-every day the locomotives snort and go by without even hesitating.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Tarkington is an honest man, so he says, and he tells good sea stories.
-His favorite true story is of Toboga Bill, a big shark which followed
-ships up and down the South-American coast, foraging off the scraps
-the cooks threw overboard. Tarkington’s friend, Captain Harvey,
-got to noticing that on every trip his boat was escorted by Toboga
-Bill, whose bald spot on top and a wart on the nose made him easily
-recognizable. Harvey got to feeding him regularly with the spoiled meat
-and vegetables, and Toboga Bill would come to the surface, flop his
-fin at the captain and thank him as plainly as a shark could do. After
-several years of this mutual acquaintance the captain happened to be
-in a small-boat going out to his ship at a Central-American port. The
-boat upset, and the captain and sailors were immediately surrounded by
-a herd of man-eating sharks. The shore was a mile away and the captain
-swam that distance, the only one who escaped; and all the way he could
-see Toboga Bill with his fin standing up straight, keeping the other
-sharks from his old friend. Occasionally Toboga would give the captain
-a gentle shove, and finally pushed him onto the beach.
-
-This story Tarkington admitted sounded like a fish story, but he has a
-motor-boat named Toboga Bill, which verifies the tale.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That reminded me of a Kansas fish story which I introduced to the
-audience. Everybody in Kansas knows of the herd of hornless catfish
-which has been bred near the Bowersock dam at Lawrence. Some years ago
-Mr. Bowersock, who owns the dam that furnishes power for the mill and
-other factories, conceived the idea that big Kaw river catfish going
-through the mill-race and onto the water-wheel added much to the power
-generated. Then he read that fish are very sensitive to music. So he
-hired a man with an accordion to stand over the mill-race and play.
-The catfish came from up and down stream to hear the music, and almost
-inevitably drifted through the race, onto the wheel, and increased
-the power. The fishes’ horns used to get entangled in the wheel and
-injure the fish; so Mr. Bowersock, who is a kind-hearted man and very
-persistent, had a lot of the fish caught and dehorned, and in a year or
-two he had a large herd of hornless catfish. These fish not only turn
-out to hear the music, but they have learned to enjoy the trip through
-the mill-race and over the wheel, so that every Sunday or oftener whole
-families of catfish--and they have large families--come to Bowersock’s
-dam to shoot the chutes something as people go out to ride on the
-scenic railway. Whenever the water in the river gets low Mr. Bowersock
-has the band play: the catfish gather and go round and round over the
-wheel, furnishing power for the Bowersock mill when every other wheel
-on the river is idle from lack of water.
-
-There were some skeptical folks who heard my simple story and affected
-to disbelieve. But I assured them that it could be easily proven, and
-if they would go to Lawrence I would show them the Bowersock dam and
-the catfish. It is always a good idea to have the proofs for a fish
-story.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next “lion” on board is Gov. Fook, returning from the Dutch West
-Indies, where he has been governing the islands and Dutch Guiana.
-The governor is a well-informed gentleman, and a splendid player of
-pinochle. The Dutch have the thrifty habit of making their colonies
-pay. They are not a “world power” and do not have to be experimenting
-with efforts to lift the white man’s burden. Their idea is that the
-West-Indian and the East-Indian who live under the Dutch flag shall
-work. The American idea is to educate and convert the heathen and
-pension them from labor. Our theory sounds all right, but it results
-in unhappy Filipinos and increased expense for Americans. The Dutch
-colonials pay their way whether they get an education or not.
-
-One unfamiliar with modern steamship travel would think that the
-captain and his first and second officers were the important officials
-on board. They are not. The officers rank about as follows: 1st, the
-cook; 2nd, the engineer; 3rd, the barber, and after that the rest. The
-cook on an ocean steamer gets more pay than the captain, and is now
-ranked as an officer. The managing director of a big German company was
-accustomed on visiting any ship of their line, to first shake hands
-with the cook and then with the captain. When one of the officers
-suggested that he was not following etiquette he answered that there
-was no trouble getting captains and lieutenants but it was a darned
-hard job to find a cook. The cook has to buy, plan meals, supervise the
-kitchen and run it economically for the company and satisfactorily for
-the passengers, for over 2,000 people.
-
-The barber is the man on the ship who knows everything for sure. Ask
-the captain when we will get to Rotterdam and he will qualify and trim
-his answer by referring to possible winds and tides, and he won’t say
-exactly. Ask the barber and he will tell you we will get there at 10
-o’clock on Friday night. He knows everything going on in the boat, from
-the kind of freight carried in the hold to the meaning of the colors
-painted on the smokestack. During this voyage I have had more numerous
-and interesting facts than anybody, because I have not fooled with
-talking to the captain or the purser or the steward, but gotten my
-information straight from the fountain of knowledge, the barber shop.
-However, this is not peculiar to ships. The same principle applies at
-Hutchinson and every other town.
-
-
-
-
-Ocean Currents
-
-
- STEAMSHIP POTSDAM, July 21.
-
-This is the eleventh day of the voyage from New York, and if the
-Potsdam does not have a puncture or bust a singletree she will arrive
-at Rotterdam late tonight. The Potsdam is a most comfortable boat, but
-it is in no hurry. It keeps below the Hutchinson speed limit of fifteen
-miles an hour. But a steamship never stops for water or oil, or to
-sidetrack or to wait for connections. This steady pounding of fourteen
-miles an hour makes an easy speed for the passenger, and the verdict of
-this ship’s company is that the Potsdam is a bully ship and the captain
-and the cook are all right.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nearly all the way across the Atlantic we have been in the Gulf stream.
-I have read of this phenomenal current which originates in the Gulf of
-Mexico and comes up the eastern coast of the United States so warm that
-it affects the climate wherever it touches. Then nearly opposite New
-England it turns and crosses the Atlantic, a river of warm water many
-miles wide, flowing through the ocean, which is comparatively cold.
-This stream is a help to the boats going in its direction, although it
-has the bad feature of frequent fogs caused by the condensation which
-comes when the warm and cold air currents meet. The Gulf stream is
-believed to be responsible for the green of Ireland and for the winter
-resorts of southern England. It goes all the way across the Atlantic
-and into the English Channel, with a branch off to Ireland. What causes
-the Gulf stream? I forget the scientific terms, but this is the way it
-is, according to my friend Mr. Vischer, formerly of the German navy.
-The water in the Gulf of Mexico is naturally warm. The motion of the
-earth, from west to east, and other currents coming into the gulf,
-crowd the warm water out and send the big wide stream into the Atlantic
-with a whirl which starts it in a northerly and easterly direction.
-The same Providence that makes the grass grow makes the course of the
-current, and it flows for thousands of miles, gradually dissipating at
-the edges, but still a warm-water river until it breaks on the coast of
-the British Isles and into the North Sea. Perhaps Mr. Vischer would not
-recognize this explanation, but I have translated it into a vernacular
-which I can understand.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Gulf stream reminds me of the Mediterranean. Not having much else
-to worry about, I have gone to worrying over the Mediterranean Sea.
-The ocean always flows into the sea. The current through the strait
-of Gibraltar is always inward. Many great rivers contribute to the
-blue waters of the great sea. There is no known outlet. Why does
-not the Mediterranean run over and fill the Sahara desert, which is
-considerably below the sea-level? Scientists have tried to figure
-this out, and the only tangible theory is that the bottom of the
-Mediterranean leaks badly in some places, and that the water finds its
-way by subterranean channels back to the ocean. What would happen if an
-eruption of Vesuvius should stop up the drain-pipe? Now worry.
-
-Tonight we saw another phenomenon, the aurora borealis. It looked to
-me like a beautiful sunset in the north. We are sailing in the North
-Sea along the coast of Belgium, and the water reaches northward to the
-pole. The aurora borealis is another phenomenon not easily explained,
-but Mr. Vischer says it is probably the reflection of the sun from the
-ice mirror of the Arctic. And it does make you feel peculiar to see
-what is apparently the light of the sunset flare up toward the “Dipper”
-and the North Star.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some of our passengers disembarked today at Boulogne. This was the
-first time the Potsdam had paused since she left New York a week ago
-last Tuesday. This was the stop for the passengers who go direct to
-Paris. The Dutch who are homeward bound and those of us who think it
-best to fool around a little before encountering the dangers of Paris,
-continue to Rotterdam. We should be spending the evening with maps and
-guide books preparing ourselves for the art galleries, cathedrals,
-canals and windmills. As a matter of fact, we are wondering what is
-going on at home. There is a balance-wheel in the human heart that
-makes the ordinary citizen who is far afield or afloat turn to the
-thoughts of the home which he left, seeking a change.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A smoking-room story: An American in a European art gallery was heading
-an aggregation of family and friends for a study of art. His assurance
-was more pronounced than his knowledge. “See this beautiful Titian,” he
-said. “What glorious color, and mark the beauty of the small lines.
-Isn’t it a jim dandy? And next to it is a Rubens by the same artist!”
-
-
-
-
-The Dutch Folks
-
-
- ROTTERDAM, HOLLAND, July 23.
-
-It seemed to me unnecessary, but I had to explain to some friends why
-I was going especially to Holland. It is the biggest little country
-in the world. In art it rivals Italy, in business it competes with
-England, historically it has had more thrills to the mile than France,
-and in appearance it is the oddest, queerest, and most different from
-our own country, of all the nations of central Europe. Holland gives
-you more for your money and your time than any other, and that’s why I
-am back here to renew the hurried acquaintance with the Dutch made a
-few years ago.
-
-Landing in Rotterdam was an experiment. The guide books and the tourist
-authorities pass Rotterdam over with brief mention. Baedeker, the
-tripper’s friend, suggests that you can see Rotterdam in a half-day.
-That is because Rotterdam is short on picture galleries and cathedrals.
-It is a great, busy city of a half-million people, and one of the
-most active commercially in the world. It is the port where the boats
-from the Rhine meet the ships of the sea. It is the greatest freight
-shipping and receiving port of northern Europe. It is the coming city
-of the north, because of its natural advantages in cheap freight rates.
-After looking it over hurriedly it seems to me to be one of the most
-interesting of cities. I am not going to run away from cathedrals and
-galleries. I am not intending to dodge when I see a beautiful landscape
-coming. But I have done my duty in the past and have seen the great
-cathedrals and the exhibitions of art. No one can come to Europe and
-not see these things once, for if he did he would not be able to lift
-up his head in the presence of other travelers. But he does not have
-to do them a second time. If I want to see pictures of Dutch ladies
-labeled “Madonna,” I will see them. If I don’t want to, I do not have
-to. In other words, if I go to the “tourist delights” it will be my own
-fault.
-
-I would rather see the people themselves than the pictures of them.
-I want to observe how they work, what they work for, what their
-prospects are, and wherein they differ from the great Americans.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Man made most of Holland. Nearly all of the country is below the level
-of the sea, much of it many feet below. All that keeps the tide of the
-North Sea from flooding the country with from ten to a hundred feet of
-water every day are the dikes which man has built. Behind these huge
-embankments lies a country as flat as the flattest prairie in Kansas.
-A few sandhills and an occasional little rise of ground might stick
-out of the water if the dikes broke, but I doubt it. This “made” land
-has been fertilized and built up by the silt of the rivers, added to
-by the labor and science of man, until it is a vast market garden.
-The water of the rivers is diverted in every direction into canals.
-There is no current to the rivers; the surface is too flat, and the
-fresh water is backed up twice a day by the ocean tides at the mouths.
-There are practically no locks and the movement of the water is hardly
-perceptible, except near the coast, where it responds to the advance
-and retreat of the sea. These canals are an absolute necessity for
-drainage, otherwise the country would be a swamp. Then they are used
-as roads, and practically all the freight is carried to market cheaply
-in canal-boats. The canals also serve as fences. The drainage water is
-pumped by windmills, which are then used to furnish power for every
-imaginable manufacturing purpose, from sawing lumber to grinding wheat.
-The cheap wind-power enabled the people to clear the land of water. So
-you see why there are dikes, canals and windmills in Holland: because
-they were the only available instruments in the hand of man to beat
-back the sea and build a productive soil. They were not inserted in the
-Holland landscape for beauty or for art’s sake, but because they were
-necessities; and yet great artists come to Holland to paint pictures
-of these practical things, and when they want to add more beauty they
-insert Dutch cattle and wooden shoes. All of which shows that the plain
-everyday things around us are really picturesque; and they are, whether
-you look at the sandhills along the Arkansas or the dunes along the
-North Sea.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In this little country, containing 12,500 square miles of land and
-water, smaller than the seventh congressional district of Kansas, live
-almost 6,000,000 of the busiest people on earth. Their character may be
-drawn from their history. They first beat the ocean out of the arena
-and then made the soil. They met and overcame more obstacles than any
-other people in getting their land. And then for several centuries they
-had to fight all the rest of Europe to keep from being absorbed by one
-or the other of the great powers. They drove out the Spaniards at a
-time when Spain was considered invincible. They licked England on the
-sea, and the Dutch Admiral Tromp sailed up and down the Channel with a
-broom at the mast of his ship. They drove Napoleon’s soldiers and his
-king out of the country. They never willingly knuckled down to anybody,
-and they never stayed down long when they were hit.
-
-The Dutch have for centuries been considered the best traders in
-Europe. They have the ports for commerce and they have the money.
-They own 706,000 square miles of colonies, with a population six
-times as large as their own. From the beginning they have been ruled
-by merchants and business men, rather than by kings and princes, by
-men who knew how to buy and sell and fight. They have been saving and
-thrifty, and can dig up more cash than any other bunch of inhabitants
-on the globe. They have sunk some money in American railroads, but they
-have made it back, and they always take interest. Market-gardening and
-manufacturing and trade have been their resources, and nothing can beat
-that three of a kind for piling up profits and providing a way to keep
-the money working.
-
-Of course these characteristics and this environment have made the
-Dutch peculiar in some ways, and they are generally counted a little
-close or “near.” They habitually use their small coin, the value of
-two-fifths of an American cent, and they want and give all that is
-coming. They have good horses, fat stomachs, and lots of children. They
-are pleasant but not effusive, and they are as proud of their country
-as are the inhabitants of any place on earth. They believe in everybody
-working, including the women and the dogs. Their struggle with the sea
-never ends, and they follow the same persistent course in every line of
-development. They are so clean it is a wonder they are comfortable, and
-they believe in eating and drinking and having a good time, just so it
-doesn’t cost too much. They are a great people, and here’s looking at
-them.
-
-
-
-
-In Old Dordrecht
-
-
- DORDRECHT, July 23.
-
-This is the oldest town in Holland, and once upon a time was the
-great commercial city. It is about fifteen miles from Rotterdam, and
-remember that fifteen miles is a long distance in this country. It is
-built upon an island; two rivers and any number of canals run around
-it and through it whenever the tide ebbs or flows. Good-sized ocean
-steamers come to its wharves, and until other cities developed deeper
-harbors Dordrecht was the Hutchinson of southwest Holland. And now let
-me explain that the people of this country do not call it Holland, but
-The Netherland. Originally Holland was the western part of the present
-Netherland. Dordrecht is in old South Holland. About nine hundred years
-ago the Count of Holland, who then ruled in this precinct, decided to
-levy a tax or a tariff on all goods shipped on this route, the main
-traveled road from England to the Orient. The other counts and kings
-and bishops kicked, but after a fight the right of the Count of
-Holland was vindicated, and he built the city of Dordrecht as a sort of
-customs house. This was in 1008. For several hundred years Dordrecht
-prospered and was known as a great commercial city. Then Antwerp,
-Rotterdam and Amsterdam came forward with better harbors, and Dordrecht
-took a back seat. But it has always been one of the important places
-in The Netherland. When William of Orange took hold of the revolution
-against Spain, the first conference of the representatives of the Dutch
-states was held in Dordrecht, and it was always loyal to the cause of
-Dutch freedom. The best hotel and restaurant in the city today is The
-Orange, named for the royal house which has so long been at the head of
-the Dutch government. My idea of a really important statesman is one
-for whom hotels and cigars are named centuries after he has passed away.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This is Sunday, and I am forced to believe that the Dutch are not good
-churchgoers. We went to the evening service in the great cathedral. In
-fact, we went to the cathedral and suddenly the service began without
-our having time to retire gracefully. So we decided to stay, and in a
-prominent place was a list of the prices of seats. Some cost ten cents,
-some five cents, and some were marked free. I handed ten cents to the
-lady in charge, and we took two seats in the rear, which I afterward
-discovered were free. The women seem to run the church much as they
-do at home. The Dutch hymns were not so bad, but the Dutch sermon was
-not interesting to me. During the closing song, we thought we would
-slip out quietly, but when we reached the door we found it locked. The
-custom is to lock the door and allow no one to enter or leave during
-the service, but as a special favor to Americans, who evidently did not
-know what they were doing, the guardian of the door unlocked it, and
-out we went amid general interest of the congregation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We came from Rotterdam on a little steam-boat, which scooted along the
-rivers and canals like a street car. Very often the canal was built
-higher than the adjoining land, and it gave the peculiar feeling of
-boating in the air. There is no waste ground. Every foot of it not
-occupied by a house or a chicken-yard, is pasture or under cultivation.
-Every farmer has a herd of those black-and-white cattle. Some of the
-herds are as many as six or seven cows. But every cow acted as if
-she were doing her full duty toward making Holland the wealthiest of
-nations.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The streets of Dordrecht are generally narrow, like those of all old
-towns. Many of the buildings are very old, and a favorite style of
-architecture is to have the front project several feet forward over the
-street. The tops of opposite buildings often almost meet. I don’t see
-why they do not meet and come down kerwhack, but they don’t. Imagine
-these quaint streets with old Dutch houses, white and blue, with red
-tiled roofs, and green and yellow thrown in to give them color, with
-angles and dormers and curious corners, the tops projecting toward
-one another, and you can see how interesting a Dutch street can be if
-it tries, as it does in Dordrecht. Of course in the outer and newer
-parts of the town are larger streets and more modern houses, with
-beautiful gardens and flower beds that would baffle a painter for
-color, but old Dordrecht is the most interesting. Add to the street
-picture a canal down the middle, and you get a frequent variation. Put
-odd Dutch boats in the water, fill them with freight and children, and
-you have another. If this were not picturesque it would be grotesque to
-American eyes, but it is the actual development of Dutch civilization,
-and it is the thing you pay money for when some artist catches the
-inspiration which he can get here if anywhere.
-
-[Illustration: THE SCRUBBING-BRUSH THE NATIONAL EMBLEM OF HOLLAND]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of course the streets are paved, and they are as clean as the floor of
-an ordinary American dwelling. Everyone knows that the Dutch are clean
-and that their national emblem ought to be a scrubbing-brush. They
-are so clean that it almost hurts. Very often there are no sidewalks,
-and when there are they are not level, and are generally fenced in.
-They belong to the abutting property, and are not to be walked on
-by the public. The people walk in the street, and that custom is a
-little hard to get used to. Before the front window of nearly every
-house is a mirror, so fastened that those within the house can see
-up and down the street, observe who is coming and who is going, and
-where. This custom, if introduced at home, would save a good deal of
-neck-stretching. But at first one is overly conscious of the many eyes
-which are observing his walk and the many minds which are undoubtedly
-trying to guess just where and why and who. But this mirror custom does
-not bother the Dutch young folks, not much. It is also the custom for
-the young man and his sweetheart to parade along the street hand in
-hand, arm in arm, or catch-as-catch-can, if they want to,--and they
-want to a great deal. At first this looked like a rude demonstration of
-affection, but after you have observed it some, say for an hour or so,
-it doesn’t seem half bad,--if you were only Dutch.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dordrecht has about 40,000 people, and all of them are on the street
-or at the window on Sunday. The saloons are open, but nothing is sold
-stronger than gin. The Dutch in a quiet, gentlemanly and ladylike way,
-are evidently trying to consume all the beer that can be made in
-Holland or imported. Of course they can’t succeed, but, as the story
-goes, they can probably make the breweries work nights. There is really
-a need for a temperance organization in this country, and I should say
-it would have work enough to last it several thousand years.
-
-
-
-
-The Dutchesses
-
-
- ROTTERDAM, July 24.
-
-The secret of the success of the Dutch is no secret at all. Everybody
-works, not excepting father, grandfather and grandmother. I suppose
-this habit began with the unceasing fight against the sea, the building
-of the dikes, the pumping out of the water, and the construction of a
-soil. It has continued until there is no other people more persistently
-industrious. They rise early and get busy. The women cook and scrub
-and work on the canal-boats, in the shops and in the fields. The
-children go to school eleven months in the year. The men are stout,
-quick, and work from early to late. Even the dogs work in Holland.
-At first it seemed rather hard to see the dogs hitched to the little
-carts and pulling heavy loads, sometimes a man riding on the cart. This
-is a serious country for the canine, and must be the place where the
-phrase “worked like a dog” got its start. In most places the dog is
-the companion and pet of man, but in Holland he has to do his part in
-making a living, and he soon learns to draw the load, pulling hard and
-conscientiously on the traces. He has little time to fight and frolic,
-but he has the great pleasure of the rest that comes from hard labor.
-However, if I were a dog and were picking out a country for a location,
-I would stay far away from Holland. It is no uncommon sight to see a
-woman with a strap over her shoulders dragging a canal-boat or pulling
-a little wagon. In fact, the women of The Netherland have rights which
-they are not even asking in the United States, and no one disputes
-their prerogative of hard work. There are no “Suffragettes” in Holland,
-but a woman can do nearly anything she wants to unless it is vote,
-which she apparently does not care for. There are many rich Hollanders;
-in fact, there are few that are poor. But they do not constitute a
-leisure class. The wealthy Dutch gent merely works the harder and the
-wealthy Dutch “vrouw” scrubs and manages the household or runs the
-store just as she did in the earlier years of struggle.
-
-Speaking of the Dutch women, I think they are good-looking. They are
-almost invariably strong and well in appearance, with good complexions,
-clever eyes and capable expression. They may weigh a little strong for
-some, but that is a matter of taste. The old Dutch peasant costumes are
-still worn in places, but as a rule their clothes come from the same
-models as those for the American women. The Dutchess has been reared
-to work, to manage, and to advise with her man. She is intelligent in
-appearance and quick in action. She is educated and companionable.
-What if her waist line disappears? What if she has no ankles, only
-feet and legs? Perhaps it will be thought that I am going too far in
-my investigation, but the Dutch ladies ride bicycles so generally that
-even a man from America can see a few things, no matter how hard he
-tries to look the other way and comes near getting run over.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Queen of Holland is a woman. This is not a startling statement,
-for so far as I know a man has never been a queen in any country. But
-there is no king. Queen Wilhelmina’s husband, Prince Henry, is not a
-king. If there is any ruling to do in Holland it is done by Wilhelmina.
-Henry can’t even appoint a notary public. No one pays any attention
-to him, and I understand Wilhelmina has given it out that what Henry
-says does not go with her. I am trying to investigate the status of
-affairs in the royal family, because I had entertained the idea that
-Wilhelmina was an unfortunate young queen with a bad husband. That may
-have been so a few years ago, but now I understand she bats poor Henry
-around scandalously, pays no heed to his wishes, and pointedly calls
-his attention about three times a day to the fact that he is nothing
-but a one-horse prince while she is the boss of the family and the
-kingdom. This pleases the Dutch immensely, for Henry is a German and
-the Dutch don’t like the Germans. They think the Germans are conceited
-and arrogant, and that Emperor William is planning to eventually annex
-The Netherland to Germany. So every time Wilhelmina turns down the
-German prince all the Dutch people think it is fine, and her popularity
-is immense. Henry gets a good salary, but his job would be a hard one
-for a self-respecting American. I understand he is much dissatisfied,
-but he was not raised to a trade, and if Wilhelmina should stop his pay
-he would go hungry and thirsty, two conditions which would make life
-intolerable for a German prince.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Wilhelmina has a daughter, two years old, named Juliana. I suppose
-Henry is related to Juliana, but he gets no credit for it. Everywhere
-you go you see pictures of Wilhelmina and Juliana, but not of Henry. A
-princess is really what the Dutch want, for their monarch has actually
-no power, and the government is entirely managed by the representatives
-of the people. But a prince would likely be wild, and might want to mix
-into public affairs. A princess makes a better figurehead of the state.
-She will be satisfied with a new dress and a hand-decorated crown, and
-not be wanting an army and battleships as a prince might do. Wilhelmina
-represents to the Dutch people the ruling family of Orange, which
-brought them through many crises, and Juliana is another Orange. Henry
-is only a lemon which the Germans handed to them.
-
-The royal family are off on a visit to Brussels, and I have not met any
-of them. This information I have gleaned from the hotel porters, the
-boat captains, the chambermaids, and the clerks who speak English. I
-imagine I have come nearer getting the facts than if I had sent in my
-card at the royal palace.
-
-
-
-
-The Pilgrims’ Start
-
-DELFTSHAVEN, July 25.
-
-
-This is the town from which the Pilgrims sailed on the trip which was
-to make Plymouth Rock famous. Nearly a hundred of the congregation of
-Rev. John Robinson at Leyden came to this little suburb of Rotterdam,
-and embarked on the Speedwell. The night before the start was spent by
-the congregation in exhortation and prayer in a little church which
-still stands, and has the fact recorded on a big tablet. The Pilgrims
-went to Southampton, discovered the Speedwell was not seaworthy, and
-transferred to the Mayflower.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Those English Puritans who had emigrated from their own country to
-Holland were considered “religious cranks” even in those days when
-fighting and killing for religion was regarded the proper occupation of
-a Christian. The Puritans in England were strong in numbers, and while
-Queen Elizabeth had frowned upon them as dissenters from the church
-of which she was the head, she was politician enough to restrain the
-persecution of them, for they were useful citizens and loved to die
-fighting Spaniards. But a few extremists who persisted in preaching
-in public places were sentenced to jail, and some of these skipped to
-Holland. Queen Elizabeth died and James became the King of England,
-and he was a pinhead. He hated non-conformists as much as Catholics.
-So, more of the Puritans who could not pretend to conform went to
-Holland, and in Leyden and Amsterdam they founded little settlements.
-Holland was a land of liberty, and the Puritans wanted the right to
-disagree, non-conform, argue and debate over disputed questions. There
-were several congregations of them, and they did not agree on important
-doctrines, such as whether John the Baptist’s hair was parted on the
-side or in the middle. Public debates were held and great enjoyment
-therefrom resulted, although there is no record of anyone having his
-opinion changed by the arguments, and the side whose story you are
-reading always overcame the other.
-
-The Puritans did not mix much with the Dutch, and naturally grew
-lonesome in their exile. They conceived the plan of emigrating to the
-New World and there establishing the right to worship God in accord
-with their own conscience. Influential Puritans in England who had not
-been so cranky as to leave home, helped with the king, and finally
-they secured permission from James to settle in America and to own the
-land they should develop. James remarked at the time he would prefer
-that they go to Hell, where they belonged, but he was needing a loan
-from the English Puritans, so he gave the permit. The Puritans in old
-England also provided a good part of the money with which to fit out
-the expedition. At the time there was a general movement among the
-Puritans in England for a big migration to the New World. This was
-to be a sort of experiment station. At the time, James was king, and
-Charles, a dissolute prince, was to follow. The Puritans were sick
-at heart and ready to leave their native land. But soon after the
-Pilgrims had made their settlement in New England, the Puritans at
-home developed leaders who put them into the fight for Old England.
-Then along came Cromwell, and for many years English Puritans were
-running the government, and the necessity for a safe place across the
-sea and an asylum for religious liberty disappeared so far as they
-were concerned, though their interest in the Colonists was maintained.
-The sons of these Puritans who crossed the ocean rather than go to the
-established church, refused to pay a tax on tea, about 150 years later,
-and formed a new country with a new flag. That was part of the result
-of the sailing of the little company from Rev. Mr. Robinson’s flock
-after a night spent in prayer in this town of Delftshaven, just about
-this time of the year in 1620.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The stay of the Puritans in Holland had no effect on the Dutch. They
-let the Puritans shoot their mouths any way they pleased, and the
-Puritan only prospers and proselytes on opposition. But the Dutch of
-the present day are getting good returns for that investment of long
-ago. There are a dozen places in Holland, here and at Amsterdam and
-Leyden, visited by Americans every year because they are historic
-spots in connection with the Pilgrims. At each and every place the
-contribution-box is in sight, and the Dutch church or town which
-owns the property gets a handsome revenue. New England churches give
-liberally to the fixing up of the Dutch churches which can show a
-record of having been just once the place where some Puritan preached.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Wooden shoes have not gone out of style in Holland. They are still
-worn generally in the country, and by the poorer children and men
-in the cities. They are cheap, which is a big recommendation to the
-Dutch. They are warm, said to be much warmer than leather. It does not
-hurt them to be wet, a very desirable feature in this water-soaked
-country. These are all good reasons, and as soon as you get used to the
-clatter and the apparent awkwardness you appreciate the fact that the
-“klompen,” as the Dutch call them, are a reasonable style for Holland.
-They are not worn in the house but dropped in the entryway, and house
-shoes or stocking feet go within. The Dutch farmer is proud of his
-clogs, paints them, carves them, and scrubs them. A man with idle time,
-like a fisherman, will often spend months decorating a pair of wooden
-shoes. They are considered a proper present from a young husband to
-his bride, and she will use them when scrubbing, which is a good part
-of the time. The shoes are generally made of poplar, and to the size
-of the foot. When the foot grows you can hollow out a little more
-shoe. Wooden shoes are as common here as overalls in America, and they
-will not grow less popular unless Holland goes dry--of which I see no
-indication.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The farm-houses are usually built in connection with the barns, the
-family living in front and the stock and feed occupying the rear.
-This is rather customary in cold climates, and you must remember that
-Holland is farther north than Quebec. The winters get very cold and the
-canals and rivers freeze over. Skating is the great national sport.
-There does not seem to be much summer sport except scrubbing. All
-through the summer the people dig and weed and fertilize and prepare
-for market. The dikes and canals must be maintained and the best
-made of a short season. In the winter they can live with the pretty
-black-and-white cattle, the sheep and the horses, and have a good time.
-
-
-
-
-Amsterdam, and Others
-
-AMSTERDAM, July 27
-
-
-This is the largest and most important city of Holland. It has about
-as much commerce as Rotterdam, and is longer on history, manufactures,
-art, and society. It was the first large city built up on a canal
-system, and its 600,000 population is a proof that something can be
-built out of nothing. Along about 1300 and 1400 it was a small town
-in a swamp. When the war for independence from Spain began, in 1656,
-Amsterdam profited by its location on the Zuyder Zee. The Spaniards
-ruined most of the rival towns and put an end to the commerce of
-Antwerp for a while, and Amsterdam received the mechanics and merchants
-fleeing from the soldiers of Alva. The name means a “dam,” or dike, on
-the Amstel river. The swamp was reclaimed from the water by dikes and
-drainage canals, but even now every house in the city must have its
-foundation on piles. The word dam, or its inclusion in a name, means
-just about what it does in English, provided you refer to the proper
-dam, not the improper damn. As nearly all of the Dutch towns are built
-on dam sites a great many of them are some-kind-of-a-dam. Amsterdam
-is built below the level of the sea, which is just beside it, and the
-water in the canals is pumped out by big engines and forced over the
-dike into the sea. If this were not done the water would come over the
-town site and Amsterdam would go back to swamp and not be worth a dam
-site.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Amsterdam is the chief money market of Holland, and one of the
-financial capitals of the world. It is the place an American promoter
-makes for when he is out after the stuff with which to make the female
-horse travel. A large part of its business men are Jews, and their
-ability and wealth have maintained the credit of Dutch interests in
-all parts of the globe. At a time when the Jews were being persecuted
-nearly everywhere they were given liberty in Holland, and much of the
-country’s progress is due to that fact and to the religious toleration
-of all kinds of sects.
-
-The canals run along nearly all the streets, and are filled with
-freight-boats from the country and from other cities. Thousands of
-these canal boats lie in the canals of Amsterdam and are the homes
-of the boatmen, who are the commerce carriers of Holland. Under our
-window is tied up a canal-boat which could carry as much freight as a
-dozen American box cars. The power is a sail or a pole or a man or a
-woman, whichever is most convenient. The boatman and his wife and ten
-or fifteen children, with a dog and a cat, live comfortably in one end,
-and we can watch them at their work and play. A dozen more such boats
-are lying in this block, some with steam engines and some with gasoline
-engines. The Standard Oil Company does a great business in Holland, and
-as usual is a great help to the people. It is introducing cheap power
-for canal-boats by means of proper engines, and in a short time will
-probably free the boatman and his wife from the pull-and-push system
-received from the good old days.
-
-The canals are lined with big buildings, business and residence, mostly
-from four to six stories high, with the narrow, peaked and picturesque
-architecture made familiar to us by the pictures. All kinds of color
-are used and ornamented fronts are common. Imagine a street such as
-I describe and you have this one that is under our hotel window and
-which is the universal street scene of Amsterdam. Some one called this
-the Venice of the North, but to my mind it is prettier than Venice,
-although it lacks some of the oriental architecture and smell.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Last night we went to the Rembrandt theatre to see “The Mikado,” in
-Dutch. Of course we could follow the music of the old-time friend, and
-the language made the play funnier than ever. The Dutch are not near so
-strong on music as are their German or French neighbors. They utilize
-compositions of other nations, and American airs are very common. The
-window of a large fine music store is playing up “Has Anybody Here Seen
-Kelly?” A few Americans were at the big garden Krasnapolsky, listening
-to a really fine orchestra with an Austrian leader. We sent up a
-request for the American national air and it came promptly: “Whistling
-Rufus.” The Europeans think the cake-walk is something like a national
-dance in our country, and whenever they try to please us they turn
-loose one of our rag-time melodies. They do not mind chucking the
-“Georgia Campmeeting” or “Rings on My Fingers and Bells on My Toes,”
-into a program of Wagner and Tschudi and other composers whom we are
-taught at home to consider sacred.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The most entertaining feature of the Amsterdam landscape that I have
-seen is a Dutch lady in a hobble skirt. The fashion is here all right,
-and it would make an American hobble appear tame and common. In the
-first place, the Dutch lady is not of the proper architecture, and in
-the second place, she still wears a lot more underskirts, or whatever
-they are, than are considered necessary in Paris or Hutchinson. But she
-does not expand the hobble. The shopping street of Amsterdam is filled
-with fashionably dressed Dutch ladies who look like tops, and who are
-worth coming a long ways to see. Far be it from me to criticize the
-freaks of female fashion. I never know what they are until after they
-are past due. But if the Dutch hobble ever reaches the American side
-of the Atlantic it will be time for the mere men to organize.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The greatest art gallery in Europe is here, The Rijks Museum. I went to
-see it--once. I do not get the proper thrills from seeing a thousand
-pictures in thirty minutes. They make me tired. But Rembrandt’s Night
-Watch, or nearly anything a good Dutch artist has painted, is a real
-pleasure. The Dutch are recognizing their own modern art, and in that
-way they are going to distance the Italians. The Dutch artists are
-good at portraying people and common things, such as cats and dogs and
-ships. They are not strong in allegory or imaginative work, and you do
-not have to be educated up to enjoy them. And they run a little fun
-into their work occasionally, which would shock a Dago artist out of
-his temperament.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Wages are higher in Holland than elsewhere in Europe. A street car
-conductor gets a dollar a day. Ordinary labor is paid sixty to eighty
-cents a day. Farm laborer about $15 per month, but boards himself. A
-good all-around hired girl is a dollar a week. Mechanics receive from
-one dollar to two dollars a day. The necessaries of life are not so
-high as with us. Vegetables are cheaper. Tobacco is much less. Meats
-are about as high. Clothing is cheaper, but our people wouldn’t wear
-it. Beer is two cents a glass and lemonade is five cents. The ordinary
-workingman lives on soup, vegetables, and very little meat; gets a new
-suit of clothes about once in five years, and takes his family to a
-garden for amusement, where they get all they want for ten cents. The
-Dutch citizen on foot is plain, honest, a little rude, but of good
-heart and very accommodating. I have not met the citizens in carriages
-and on horseback, who make up a very small part of the procession in
-Holland.
-
-
-
-
-Cheeses and Bulbses
-
-
- ALKMAAR, July 28.
-
-Of course Holland is the greatest cheese country on earth, and Alkmaar
-is the biggest cheese market in Holland. Every Friday the cheesemakers
-of the district bring their product to the public market, and buyers,
-local and foreign, bargain for and purchase the cheeses. That is
-why we came to Alkmaar on Friday. The cheese market is certainly an
-interesting and novel sight. All over the big public square are piled
-little mounds of cheeses, shaped like large grape-fruit and colored in
-various shades of red and yellow. Each wholesaler has his carriers in
-uniform of white, and a straw hat and ribbons colored as a livery. When
-a sale is made, two carriers take a barrow which they carry suspended
-from their shoulders and with a sort of two-step and many cries to get
-out of the way they bring their load to the public weigh-house, where
-it is officially weighed. Then off the cheeses go to the store-rooms
-or to the canal-boats which line one side of the square, waiting to
-take their freight to the cities or to the sea. The farmers look over
-each other’s cheeses as they do hogs at the Kansas State Fair, with
-comments of praise or criticism. There is much chaffing and chaffering
-between them and the buyers. In about two hours the cheeses are gone,
-the square is empty and the beer-houses are full. The women-folks do
-not take an active part in the market, but they are present and looking
-things over, and I suspect they had been permitted to milk the cows and
-make the cheese.
-
-About $3,000,000 worth of cheese is sold annually in the Alkmaar
-market. The country round about, North Holland, is all small farms,
-with gardens and pastures and little herds of the black-and-white
-cattle. The cheese wholesales at about 60 cents a cheese, and in
-America we pay about twice that much for the same, or for the Edam,
-which is like it. The farmers look prosperous, drive good horses and
-very substantial gaily painted wagons.
-
-Alkmaar has 18,000 population, and is therefore about the size of
-Hutchinson. But it is a good deal older. Back in 1573 it successfully
-defended itself against the Spaniards. The name means “all sea,”
-because the country was originally covered with water. The land is
-kept above the water now by pumping and pouring into canals which
-are higher than the farms through which they flow. This is done very
-systematically and by windmills. A district thus maintained is called
-a “polder,” something like our irrigation district, and on one of them
-near Alkmaar, about the size of a Kansas township, six miles square,
-there are 51 windmills working all the time, pumping the water. These
-are not little windmills like those in a Kansas pasture, but great
-fellows with big arms fifty feet long, and they stand out over the
-polder like so many giants. The picture of these mills in a most
-fertile garden-spot, with canal streaks here and there and boats on the
-canals looming up above the land, is certainly a striking one. And it
-shows clearly what energy can do when properly applied.
-
-The soil is as sandy as in South Hutchinson. But dirt and fertilizer
-are brought from the back country and the soil is kept constantly
-renewed. It seems to me that with comparatively little work the sandy
-soil of the Arkansas valley can be made into a market garden, producing
-many times its present value, whenever our people take it into their
-heads to manufacture their own soil and apply water when needed and not
-just when it rains. That time will come, but probably not until a dense
-population forces a great increase in production.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have another idea. Along the coast of Holland are the “sand dunes,”
-which are exactly like our sand hills. What we should do is to change
-the name from sand hills to “dunes,” brag about them and charge
-people for visiting them. The city of Amsterdam gets its supply of
-drinking-water from the dunes. This was important news to me, for it
-confirmed my theory as to the similarity of the dunes and the sand
-hills, and also suggested that somebody in Amsterdam used water for
-drinking purposes, a fact I had not noticed while there.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We spent part of a day in Haarlem, where the tulips come from. The
-soil conditions are like those at Alkmaar, but the country is a mass
-of nurseries, flower gardens, and beautiful growing plants. We are
-out of season for tulips, but this is the time when the bulbs are
-being collected and dried to be shipped in all directions. Not only
-tulips but crocuses, hyacinths, lilies, anemones, etc., are raised
-for the market,--cut flowers to the cities, bulbs to all parts of the
-world. Just now the gardens are filled with phlox, dahlias, larkspurs,
-nasturtiums,--by the acre. The flowers are about the same as at
-home. Out of this thin, scraggly, sandy soil the gardeners of North
-Holland are taking money for flowers and bulbs faster than miners in
-gold-fields. With flowers and cheeses these Dutch catch about all kinds
-of people.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Haarlem is the capital of the province of North Holland, and is full
-of quaint houses of ancient architecture. It was one of the hot towns
-for independence when the war with Spain began. The Spaniards besieged
-it, and after a seven months gallant defense, in which even the women
-fought as soldiers, the town surrendered under promise of clemency.
-The Spaniards broke their promise and put to death the entire garrison
-and nearly all the townspeople. This outrage so incensed the Dutch in
-other places that the war was fought more bitterly than before, and
-the crime--for such it was--really aided in the final expulsion of the
-Spaniards.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Along in the seventeenth century was the big boom in Haarlem. The tulip
-mania developed and bulbs sold for thousands of dollars. Capitalists
-engaged in the speculation and the trade went into big figures.
-Millions of dollars were spent for the bulbs, and so long as the
-demand and the market continued every tulip-raiser was rich. Finally
-the reaction came, as it always does to a boom, and everybody went
-broke. A bulb which sold for $5,000 one year was not worth 50 cents
-the next. The government added to the confusion by decreeing that all
-contracts for future deliveries were illegal. The usual phenomenon of
-a panic followed, everybody losing and nobody gaining. A hundred years
-later there was about the same kind of a boom in hyacinths, and the
-same result. It will be observed that the Dutch are not so much unlike
-Americans when it comes to booms, only it takes longer for them to
-forget and calls for more experience.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Frans Hals, a great Dutch painter, almost next to Rembrandt, was born
-in Haarlem, and a number of his pictures are in the city building. It
-was customary in those days for the mayor and city council to have a
-group picture painted and hung in the town hall. This was the way most
-of the Dutch artists got their start, for the officials were always
-wealthy citizens who were willing to pay more for their own pictures
-than for studies of nature or allegory. I wonder if the officials paid
-their own money or did they voucher it through the city treasury and
-charge it to sprinkling or street work?
-
-Both Alkmaar and Haarlem are interesting because they are intensely
-Dutch. Their principal occupations, cheesemaking and flower-raising,
-have been their principal occupations for centuries. They had nothing
-to start with and had to fight for that. Now they are loaning money to
-the world. If the people of Kansas worked as hard as do the Dutch and
-were as economical and saving, in one generation they would have all
-the money in the world. But they wouldn’t have much fun.
-
-The American way of economizing may be illustrated by a story. Once
-upon a time in a certain town--which I want to say was not in Kansas,
-for I have no desire to be summoned before the attorney-general to tell
-all about it--a man and his wife were in the habit of sending out every
-night and getting a quart of beer for 10 cents. They drank this before
-retiring, and were reasonably comfortable. Prosperity came to them,
-and the man bought a keg of beer. That night he drew off a quart, and
-as he sat in his stocking-feet he philosophized to his wife and said:
-“See how we are saving money. By buying a keg of beer at a time this
-quart we are drinking costs only 6 cents. So we are saving 4 cents.”
-She looked at him with admiration, and replied: “How fine! Let’s have
-another quart and save 4 cents more.”
-
-
-
-
-Historic Leyden
-
-
- LEYDEN, July 31.
-
-We came to Leyden to spend the night, and have stayed three days. This
-was partly because it is necessary to sometimes rest your neck and
-feet, and partly because the Hotel Levedag is one of those delightful
-places where the beds are soft, the eats good and the help around the
-hotel does its best to make you comfortable. Leyden itself is worth
-while, but ordinarily it would be disposed of in two walks and a
-carriage-ride. It is a college town, and this is vacation; so everybody
-in the place has had the time to wait on wandering Americans and make
-the process of extracting their money as sweet and as long drawn out as
-possible.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Leyden is a good deal like Lawrence, Kansas. It is full of historic
-spots, and is very quiet in the summer-time. In Leyden they refer to
-the siege by the Spaniards in 1573 just as the Lawrence people speak
-of the Quantrill raid. The Dutch were in their war for independence,
-and the Duke of Alva’s army besieged Leyden. They began in October, and
-as the town was well fortified it resisted bravely. Early in the year
-the neighboring town of Haarlem had surrendered and the Spaniards had
-tied the citizens back to back and chucked them into the river. The
-Leydenites preferred to die fighting rather than surrender and die.
-They had just about come to starvation in March of the next year, when
-they decided to break down the dikes and let the sea take the country.
-The sea brought in a relief fleet sent by William the Silent, Prince
-of Orange, and the Spaniards retreated before the water. Then the wind
-changed, drove back the waves, and William fixed the dikes. This siege
-of Leyden was really one of the great events in history, and the story
-goes that out of gratitude to the people of the town William offered to
-exempt them from taxes for a term of years or to establish a University
-in their city. Leyden took the University, which is hard to believe of
-the Dutch, unless they were farseeing enough to know that the students
-would be a never-ending source of income and that the taxes would come
-back. The university thus established by William of Orange in 1575
-has been one of the best of the educational institutions in Europe,
-and has produced many great scholars. It now has 1700 students and a
-strong faculty. Some of the boys must be making up flunks by attending
-summer school, for last night at an hour when all good Dutchmen should
-be in bed, the sweet strains came through the odor of the canal, same
-old tune but Dutch words: “I don’t care what becomes of me, while I am
-singing this sweet melody, yip de yaddy aye yea, aye yea, yip-de yaddy,
-aye yea.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: NO PLACE FOR A MAN FROM KANSAS]
-
-The river Rhine filters through Leyden and to the sea. It never would
-get there, for Leyden is several feet below the sea-level, but by the
-use of big locks the Dutch raise the river to the proper height and
-pour it in. These are the dikes the Dutch opened to drive out the
-Spaniards. It is so easy I wonder they did not do it earlier. At any
-rate, the Spaniards never got much of a hold in this part of Holland
-again. The sandhills along the beach make an ideal bathing-place. I
-took a canal-boat and in three hours time covered the six miles from
-Leyden to Katryk. The Dutch ladies and gentlemen were playing in the
-water and on the sand, and it was no place for a man from Kansas. I
-have no criticism of these big bathing-beaches and we have some in our
-own fair land where the scenery is just as startling. But the Dutch
-ladies consider a skirt which does not touch the ground the same as
-immodest. And no Dutch gentleman will appear in public without his vest
-as well as his coat. On the beach the reaction is great, so great that
-I don’t blame the Spaniards for running away.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was in Leyden that the congregation of Puritans resided which sent
-the delegation of Pilgrim Fathers across the Atlantic in 1620. In St.
-Peter’s church John Robinson, the pastor, lies buried, and there he
-is said to have preached. A tablet tells of the house across the way
-which occupies the site of the little church in which Robinson held
-forth for years. The present house was not built until 1683, but
-that is close enough to make it interesting. The Puritans had several
-congregations in Leyden, but the Robinson church is the only one that
-made history. When the civil war broke out in England and Cromwell was
-leading the cause of liberty, all of the Puritans in Leyden who had
-not gone to America and who could raise the fare, returned to England
-and disappeared from the Dutch records. They were fine people in many
-ways, but the Dutch did not try to get them to stay. They dearly loved
-to argue, and when it was necessary to promote religious freedom by
-punching the heads of those who did not believe as they did, the
-Puritans were there with the punch.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Rembrandt, the great Dutch painter, was born in Leyden, in 1606. A
-stable now marks the spot where he first saw the light. It is a little
-difficult to get up a thrill in a livery stable, but we did our best.
-Rembrandt’s father was a miller, and operated one of these big Dutch
-windmills. When Rembrandt was about 25 years old he married and moved
-to Amsterdam, but he did not settle down. While he became popular
-and made a good deal of money, he was no manager and he spent like
-a true sport. When his wife died he went broke, and lived the last
-years of his life in a modest way. About 550 paintings are now known
-and attributed to him, together with about 250 etchings and more than
-a thousand drawings. His portrayals of expression and of lights and
-shadows are the great points of excellence in his work, but he was a
-master of every detail of the art. His pictures command more money than
-those of any other artist, and to my notion he is the greatest of all
-the great painters. Most of the other old fellows have left but few
-masterpieces, while Rembrandt never did anything but great work. The
-Dutch worship God, Rembrandt and William of Orange, and I never can
-tell which comes first with them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a hill in Leyden, eighty feet high and several hundred yards
-around the base. It is well covered with trees, and was topped with a
-fort in the good old days. Unfortunately, the buildings around it--for
-it is in the middle of town--keep it from being seen at a distance.
-People come from far and near to see the hill. It is as much of a
-novelty in this part of Holland as a Niagara would be in Kansas.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The public market is a feature in every Dutch town, as it is in most
-European countries. A large square is devoted to the purpose, and here
-the fish, the vegetables and everything from livestock to second-hand
-books is offered for sale. The square and the sidewalks are covered
-with the market displays, the farmers, the fishermen, the buyers, and
-the curious. There is only one small newspaper in this city of 60,000
-inhabitants, but I suppose everybody hears the news at the market.
-It is better than a show, or an art gallery, or a cathedral, to see
-the dickering, hear the talk and watch the people. The housewives
-or their representatives are there with baskets and comments, and
-the men of the town have some excuse to be around. Peasant costumes,
-peculiar headdresses, large fat ladies, wooden shoes, and all the odd
-and picturesque things that you can put into a landscape surrounded
-by quaint buildings and a canal, are mixed in confusion and yet in
-order. The colors which the painters put into their Holland pictures
-are present, and the sturdy, thrifty, trafficking Dutch people are
-there with the petticoats or the tobacco-smoke, which their sex calls
-for under such circumstances. Here in Leyden, where a house less
-than a hundred years old is a curiosity and where Dutch traditions
-are held as sacred, we have enjoyed the wonderful nature-picture of
-this moving market. And I might add that we have contributed greatly
-to the hilarity of the occasion by our own peculiar appearance and
-ways--peculiar from the view-point of the other fellow.
-
-
-
-
-The Dutch Capital
-
-
- THE HAGUE, Aug. 2.
-
-This is the capital of Holland and soon will be, in a way, of the
-civilized world. The first international peace conference was held
-here, followed by the establishment of an international tribunal to
-decide disputes between nations, and now, thanks to President Taft’s
-statesmanship, the nations are agreeing to arbitrate all differences,
-and this Hague tribunal will doubtless be the court of last resort
-for the world. The propriety of the selection of The Hague is not
-questioned. Holland is a small nation, with practically no forts or
-standing army or navy. It is not a factor in international politics,
-and its own independence and integrity are guaranteed by the various
-treaties between the nations. Its importance is commercial and not
-political, it has no alliances, and occupies a unique position among
-the countries of Europe. Paris or London or Berlin would not do for
-the location of an international tribunal, because each would be
-subject to local influence and force, but all nations can come to The
-Hague, the capital of the country whose territory they have promised to
-protect. As the arbitration treaties increase in number the practice of
-referring disputes to The Hague will become almost universal, and it
-seems to me that this will make the beautiful Dutch city the capital of
-the world. Other cities will strive for commercial supremacy, but The
-Hague will be the center for statesmanship and government.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Dutch have abbreviated the old name S’Gravenhage to Den Haag, and
-they pronounce the name of the capital just as we do the word hog. The
-old word meant “The Count’s Hedge” or wood, because there was a small
-forest here belonging to the Counts of Holland. The forest is still
-here, a beautiful piece of natural woods about a mile and a half long
-and half as wide. At the farther end of this forest is “The House in
-the Wood,” which is in fact a beautiful little palace built in 1645
-by Princess Amalia, the widow of Prince Frederick Henry of Orange.
-Amalia had a new idea in memorials, for the principal room of the
-palace, the orange room, is decorated by pictures from the brushes of
-pupils of Rubens, and while they portray scenes in the life of the
-Prince they are full of fat cherubs, scantily dressed ladies and very
-racy suggestion. I am told Amalia was that way, but I have no personal
-knowledge. All this happened nearly 300 years ago, and in any event
-she had a most charming palace. Several rooms are filled with gifts
-from the Emperors of China and Japan to Wilhelmina, and they add to the
-general hilarity of the memorial.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Although The Hague was the center of the Dutch government practically
-all the time from 1584, when the representatives of the Dutch provinces
-met here to form a League against Spain, it had no representation in
-the government until the last century. The original cities in the
-federation refused to admit The Hague, and it was a sort of District
-of Columbia until Napoleon took possession of Holland on the theory
-that it was formed from the deposits of dirt made by French rivers.
-Napoleon gave The Hague a local government, which it has since
-retained. It has grown much in late years, and is a beautiful city with
-good architecture, many wide streets, fine public buildings, handsome
-private homes, pretty canals, and shaded avenues. It is a custom in
-Holland and the Dutch colonies for men of wealth to come to The Hague,
-put up fine houses and spend some of their money, just as the “town
-farmers” do in Hutchinson.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We went to see the Gevangenpoort, an ancient tower in which prisoners
-were confined, tortured and executed. They still keep some of the
-interesting machines with which justice was dealt out in the good old
-days. A prisoner whom the authorities desired to convict would be
-allowed to prove his innocence by the ordeal of fire. He was permitted
-to walk with bare feet on a red hot gridiron. If he was innocent the
-heat would not affect his naked soles, if guilty it would. But that is
-nothing. Our own dear old Pilgrim fathers used to take a woman charged
-with witchcraft and toss her into a pond. If she were a witch, the evil
-spirit would keep her from drowning and the Puritans would put her to
-death. If she drowned, her innocence of the charge was proven--and
-they buried her in the churchyard.
-
-The Dutch got their early ideas of prison reform from the Spaniards.
-There is a machine in the Gevangenpoort which dropped water onto a
-man’s head for hours. If he lived he was crazy. Then they had a 1611
-model of a rack which would break the bones in the arms and legs and
-not kill the prisoner, and he could be tortured later. Pincers to pull
-out finger-nails, branding-irons, and stocks that kept a man or a
-woman standing on the toes for hours, were light punishments for petty
-thievery. A very popular form of punishment was to hang the prisoner by
-his feet, head down, and let the populace come in and enjoy the sight.
-Of course these old instruments are mere relics now, but just remember
-they were the real thing only 300 years ago, and 300 years is not long
-in the history of the world. We never think that it was just as long
-between 1311 and 1611 as it has been from 1611 to now. We confusedly
-jumble all the events of about 500 years into “Middle Ages,” and can’t
-remember which was in which century. The last 300 years seem long and
-full of events, while the three centuries before are remembered as all
-of one time. I wonder if the people on earth in 2211 will look over
-some Gevangenpoort of ours and shudder at the savagery of 1911?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Incidentally I want to report that the people of Europe are looking on
-President Taft as the great man of the age--I mean the great common
-people are. His successful advocacy of international arbitration is
-hailed as the coming of an era of peace. You don’t know what that means
-to Europe, where nearly every man has to give years of his life to army
-service, where heavy taxes for forts and ships bear down on the people,
-and where there is always a possibility of war with a neighboring
-nation, which would mean great loss of life. Nearly all of this war
-sacrifice falls upon the people, and while they patriotically sustain
-their governments they hail Taft’s policy of peace as the greatest
-help that has come to them in countless years, the advance step that
-will relieve the burden that bends the back of what Mr. Bryan calls
-“the plain common people.” No wonder these people are for Taft but of
-course they can’t vote for him in 1912.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The government of Holland is a sort of aristocratic republic with
-a monarch for ornament. There is a lower house of congress elected
-by popular vote, with some restrictions as to property on the right
-of suffrage. There is an upper house selected with still more
-restrictions. The upper house only can introduce bills. The lower
-house only can enact them into laws. The queen signs when the Dutch
-congress, or states-general, tells her to sign. She gets a salary of
-about $400,000 a year and is rich in her own right. The business men
-complain that she is stingy and the women say she is slouchy. Taxes are
-high, and in all the forms imaginable. They tax theatre tickets, bank
-checks, receipts, all documents, incomes and lands, and in some places
-the number of windows in a house. Taxes are “high” everywhere I go. I
-thought perhaps when I got where I could not understand the language I
-would no longer be bored by the man who complains about taxes. But I
-have not yet found that place. I suppose when I quit traveling on this
-earthly sphere the first thing I will hear will be a kick on the cost
-of paving the golden streets, or a complaint that the tax on sulphur is
-going to kill the prosperity of the country.
-
-
-
-
-“The Dutch Company.”
-
-
- ARNHEM, August 5th.
-
-This is the “last chance” station in Holland. About ten miles more and
-we cross the line into Germany. This is also the only hilly part of
-Holland, and it really is a surprise to find that somewhere in this
-little country there are neither canals nor dikes. The river Rhine
-flows here with some current, and the official documents say that at
-Arnhem it is 35 feet above the level of the sea. Right sharp little
-hills, as big as those about Strong City, rise from the river bank, and
-are covered with woods and handsome homes. Queen Wilhelmina has her
-summer residence near here, and Dutch colonials, who have made their
-fortunes and returned to the native land, are fond of this small and
-elevated piece of Netherland. The Dutch make a great deal of money out
-of their East India colonies, one of which is Java. They are not so
-much interested in preparing the Javanese or the Mochans for the work
-of self-government as our folks are the Filipinos. The Dutch theory
-is to treat the natives kindly but make them work as the dogs do in
-Holland. And the Javanese or the Javans, or whatever you call them,
-are too busy to get dissatisfied and plan revolutions. This question
-of what to do with the white man’s burden is a hard one to settle
-offhand. The brown people do not understand the American motives, and
-the Americans are probably the most detested people in the Orient.
-And yet the Americans are the only conquering nation which does not
-regard colonies as personal property and which tries to elevate the
-citizenship it finds. The English hold India by fear, but some day the
-English are going to be chased out of that part of Asia by the Indians
-they try to keep down. The other European nations make no bones of the
-fact that they own and operate their foreign possessions for what they
-can get out of them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Hollander makes a very strong American when he is caught young. On
-shipboard I made the acquaintance of a young man about 25 years old who
-had been in America nine years, and was now going to his birthplace,
-The Hague, on business for the Chicago firm with which he is connected.
-I met him in The Hague this week. He wore a western cowboy hat, had a
-small American flag in his button-hole, and wore no vest. The stories
-he was telling about the United States to his Dutch friends showed that
-he would have made a success as a real-estate man if he had settled
-in western Kansas. And the manner in which he did not take off his
-hat when he met a doctor or a lawyer or a duke or a notary public was
-shocking to his family, but was sweet American patriotism to him. He
-was still loyal to Holland, but he would not trade his new home with
-its opportunities for all the comforts of canals and clean streets.
-“You see,” he said, “in Holland every man has to take off his hat to
-those above him--and there are always those above him.” Of course we
-have classes, in a way, in our country, but a man never has to take
-off his hat or pay homage to another man, and the real American,
-home-grown or imported, can’t get that feeling of equality out of his
-system. I think the Europeans must grow very tired of us Americans, our
-blustering ways and bragging talk, but they are kind enough not to
-mention it so long as our money holds out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Passenger fares on trains are cheaper in Holland than with us. But of
-course their railroad business is really like an interurban street-car
-system. Freight rates are higher than with us. The wages paid railway
-employés run from 60 cents a day to section hands up to $2 a day for an
-engineer--just about one-third to one-half our schedule. The service
-is good, the stations and tracks are better, every little country
-road-crossing is protected by a flagman or a flagwoman. Of course the
-canals and rivers do so much of the carrying business, and distances
-are so small, that comparisons are hard to make. There is no such thing
-in Holland as a sandwich or a piece of pie, and yet there are very
-successful and excellent lunch-rooms in every station. The first-and
-second-class passengers usually have a lunch-room with upholstered
-furniture, while the third-class travelers are compelled to use wooden
-benches or stand up, a la Americaner. The first-class railroad cars are
-fitted out with plush, and there are sometimes toilet accommodations
-on the cars. The second-class cars are comfortably upholstered; the
-third-class have plain seats like our street cars. But remember you can
-go clear across Holland in a couple of hours, and do not need some of
-the comforts which are considered necessities in America.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Dutch are great on fixing things comfortably and neatly. If the
-beautiful Cow Creek which winds its way through Hutchinson were
-transferred to a Dutch town it would be diked, the banks graded and
-covered with grass and flowers and trees. The government would do this,
-and would put seats along the little park, and a band-stand from which
-music would be heard, and swings for the children, and almost every
-block there would be a “garden” with tables and all the beer you could
-drink--if you were Dutch--for two cents. And the Government would make
-a nice profit out of the restaurant business and go ahead and dike
-another stream.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Dutchman is a great business man. He works and saves and then
-he is not afraid to spend--if he has a sure thing. I have seen a
-business man smoking a cigarette, take out of his vest pocket a pair
-of scissors, snip off the burning end and put the unconsumed half of
-a cigarette back in his case. No Dutchman is afraid to demand cheap
-prices while traveling at home. The average American who goes through
-Europe with the theory of spending his money like a sport must fill
-the Dutchman with disgust. You don’t impress the Hollanders that way.
-On the other hand, these Dutchmen will investigate and spend barrels
-of money on dikes, drains, railroads, buildings and large investments
-in all parts of the world. I suppose the almost penurious saving comes
-from the fight with the sea, in which everything had to be watched and
-worked for, while the ability to handle big affairs results from the
-consciousness of having wrested a lot of land from the ocean and having
-made good with it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Dutch are proverbially honest. Of course I have been over-charged
-some, but I have never been anywhere on either side of the Atlantic
-where the rule was not observed, “he was a stranger and I took him
-in.” They hold a visitor up much more in Kansas City than in Amsterdam,
-and a man from Kansas who goes to New York is not even given the
-protection of the game laws. In fact, a stranger who does not know
-the language is treated much better in Europe than in America. I have
-often had a man walk half a block to show me the way when I could not
-understand his words. I say “walk a block,” but there is no such phrase
-in Dutch. There are no regular sized blocks, so a direction is given
-as “five minutes” or “two minutes, then to the right three minutes.”
-That is supposed to mean an average walk; but as legs differ in size
-and rapidity it is often confusing. I am told in the rural districts
-a distance is given as so many smokes, meaning the number of pipefuls
-of tobacco that a Dutchman would consume in going that far. But I have
-discovered that in Holland a pipe is a rarity. The men smoke cigars and
-smoke them incessantly. They are cheap. I get a good cigar, equivalent
-to a Tom Moore, for two cents American money. When I buy cigars I want
-to stay in Holland. But practically everything except cigars, beer and
-wooden shoes costs as much here as in the United States. Yes, there is
-one thing that costs less, and that is labor. Therefore hand-carved
-wood, hand-crocheted lace, hand-made shoes, tailored clothes, and
-houses are less expensive than with us. The more I see of a country
-where everything labor produces is cheap, the more I am in favor of
-high prices and good wages. Holland is probably the best country in
-Europe for a laboring man, but I don’t see how one can get ahead,
-unless he does without meat and wears the same suit for years, and his
-family economize the same way. Here in the land of cheese and butter,
-both articles are out of reach and the workingman uses “margarine.”
-
-But now it is goodby to the land of the dikes, the canals, the
-windmills and the wooden shoes. They are all here as advertised, and
-they color the lives of the people as they do the landscape of the
-country. To the eye they are artistic and beautiful, but in practice
-they are common, plain necessities, and in these signs the Dutch have
-conquered.
-
-
-
-
-The Great River
-
-
- KOENIGSWINTER, GERMANY, August 7.
-
-The river Rhine is in many respects the greatest river in the world.
-It is greatest in commercial importance, historical interest and
-artistic development. It has been the line of battle in Europe for
-centuries, since Cæsar first crossed the stream and met the original
-Germans. After that time it was the frontier of the Roman empire until
-Rome fell, and then it became the object for which Europe fought.
-The Germans and the French met on the Rhine, the other “civilized
-countries” got in the game, and the valley was filled with feudal
-counts and princes who sometimes took one side and sometimes the other,
-whichever seemed to offer them the best pickings. The broad and deep
-stream was a highway of commerce, and the old champions of chivalry,
-with whom robbery and murder were the principal business, built
-castles on the hills, and whenever they saw a merchant with a rich
-caravan of goods, down they would swoop on him, grab his valuables
-and kill the defenders. These adventures and wars were what the world
-called history, and during the Middle Ages the place where hell was
-continually breaking out was along this beautiful valley. The use of
-gunpowder finally put an end to knights in armor, and the Germans and
-the French struggled for the Rhine. Napoleon conquered the valley,
-organized it into a republic, and finally annexed it to France. The
-Allies conquered Napoleon and restored the Prussian king and the petty
-princes to their possessions. The war of 1870 between Germany and
-France pushed the boundary a considerable distance west, and made the
-Rhine valley all German, under the newly organized empire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Most rivers begin in a small way, from springs, creeks and little
-streams. The Rhine is the outlet of Lake Constance, and rushes out of
-that inland sea a great river ready-made, and begins with a magnificent
-waterfall second only to Niagara. It is a wide, deep river, and as
-soon as it emerges from the Swiss mountains becomes the great highway
-through Germany and Holland to the ocean. Along its banks are timber,
-coal and iron, great cities with factories, and fertile lands tilled
-to the utmost point. The freight rate is the lowest possible, and the
-productive value of the country is increased by the ease and cheapness
-with which the markets of the world are reached. Steamboats and barges
-go up and down in much greater numbers than do the freight trains of
-America’s greatest railroad. For much of its length the banks are
-walled, and the cities, towns and villages are almost continuous. In
-width the river is from 500 to 1500 feet, and it is about 550 miles
-long. The last 360 miles, from Manheim to the German ocean, has a
-channel of not less than thirty feet in depth, and in that 360 miles
-the fall is only 280 feet, the last hundred miles only 33 feet.
-
- * * * * *
-
-So much for the Rhine from a business viewpoint. This little town
-of Koenigswinter is on “the picturesque Rhine,” at the foot of the
-Drachenfels, the last of the big hills or mountains by which the Rhine
-flows in its course from Manheim to Cologne. We stopped at the little
-city of Bonn, seat of a good university, and an old town. Beethoven
-was born in Bonn, and we visited the little house he selected for that
-event in his life. It was most interesting to see the things used by
-the great composer, among them the original drafts of many of his great
-works. Beethoven’s folks were poor, and when only a boy he played the
-pipe organ at the church and was in the Bonn string band. When 22 years
-of age he went to Vienna, where he was taken care of financially by the
-Austrian emperor. He never married. He and a countess fell in love with
-each other, but her folks did not approve of her marrying a musician.
-Beethoven’s father sang tenor and his grandfather had led the Bonn
-brass band, and Beethoven himself was giving lessons. So they could not
-marry, though I don’t see why the countess did not arrange it later
-when Beethoven became famous. But he was very deaf and probably very
-cranky, for he was a great musician, and perhaps the Lady Amelia backed
-out herself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This is what is called the picturesque Rhine, for here the river runs
-through some German mountains, which rise almost abruptly from the
-banks. The mountain-sides are cultivated as we do first-bottom land.
-The principal product is the grape, which gets just the proper sunlight
-on these mountain-sides to make its juice command more money than the
-wine from the back country. There are also many truck farms, small
-pastures, patches of alfalfa and wheat, all tilted up from the river
-at an angle of 45 to 90 degrees. The roads are good and white, the
-fields just now are green, the sky is a blue like the sky in Italy and
-Kansas. The little towns with their white-washed houses and red-tiled
-roofs cluster every mile or so along the river, and the view from the
-mountains or from the river is one that makes the tickle come around
-the heart. In this beautiful spot where nature and man have both been
-busy for so many hundred years we are spending a few days for rest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: THE POET BYRON BUILDING CASTLES]
-
-Of course I climbed the Drachenfels, the mountain which looms up like a
-sentinel and has on its top a ruined castle with a view and a legend.
-Byron told of the great view, and every tourist who stops has to climb
-the mountain. So we climbed. Mr. Byron was right this time, for the
-view is grand. Ordinarily I take little stock in Byron’s fits over
-scenery. He traveled through Europe and had thrills over some very
-ordinary things. Byron could take a few drinks and then reel off some
-verses which gave an old ruin or a tumble-down castle a reputation
-which it will use forever as a bait for tourists. But this time Byron
-was right, for the panorama of the Rhine valley, made up of the river,
-the hills, the sky, the shades of growing green, the white-and-red
-towns, and the boats as noiseless as birds, is one worth more than the
-twenty-five American cents it takes to make the climb on a cog-wheel
-railroad.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ruined castle, which stands about 1,000 feet above the Rhine and
-yet so near it seems that one could throw a stone from the parapet
-into the river, was occupied by a line of the fiercest gentlemen that
-ever robbed an innocent traveler. For several hundred years no one was
-safe to go this way unless he paid the robber barons, who had a sort
-of confederacy or union, in which the Count of Drachenfels was one of
-the main guys. The name means the dragon’s rock, and comes from the
-fact that a Dragon once resided in a cave near the top. The legend says
-that it was customary among the old heathen to feed prisoners to the
-Dragon, so he would look pleasant and not roar at night. Returning from
-a trip into the west they brought a number of captives, among them a
-beautiful Christian maiden. The heathen young men all wanted the girl,
-so the wise chief decided that she should be given to the Dragon, thus
-preventing a scrap among the brethren and paying special tribute to the
-Drag. They formed a procession and marched to the big rock where they
-were accustomed to lay out provisions for his nibs. The beautiful girl
-was bound hand and foot, covered with flowers, and then the crowd got
-back to see the Dragon do the rest. The Dragon came out roaring like a
-stuck pig, but when the girl held out a crucifix toward him he bolted,
-ran and jumped from the rock into the river. The best-looking young man
-among the heathen then rushed forward and released the lady, married
-her, and they lived happily ever afterward,--so the legend says. And
-there is no reason to doubt the legend, for there is the rock, there is
-the river into which the Dragon leaped, and he never did come back.
-
-
-
-
-Along the Rhine
-
-
- KOENIGSWINTER, August 8.
-
-Next to riding on a Dutch canal comes a trip on the Rhine. The
-passenger steamers and motor-boats go up and down this part of the
-Rhine like street cars. Every boat is comfortably equipped with
-refreshment parlors and restaurants, and the waiters keep trying
-to please the thirsty traveler by offering him wine and beer. It
-is hard on a Kansan. What these Germans need is a governor and an
-attorney-general and a row over the joint question. Poor Germans! they
-do not know it, and they keep right on drinking beer and growing fat
-and looking happy. Aside from this unfortunate habit, which does not
-seem to hurt them as it ought to, the Germans are a fine lot of folks.
-They are immensely proud of their country, which is a trifle hard on us
-modest Americans. They really believe Germany can lick the world, and
-they have a notion that there is no nation so progressive as theirs.
-In some respects they are right, and in many phases of business and
-scientific advancement the Germans lead the world.
-
-I am inclined to attribute this to their public-school system, which
-is superior to ours in some respects. Without going into an extended
-argument on the subject, I will explain my reason for this opinion.
-The German system of education is very rigid for the boys and girls.
-The discipline in the common schools is military. The children go to
-school more months in the year and they are compelled to learn. There
-is no foolishness, no excuses from fond parents, no late parties, no
-indifference, no any-thing-to-get-through. The German teachers are not
-content with getting the children to pass, but they insist they shall
-_know_ their studies. This severe training is kept up until the boy
-or girl goes to the university, and then discipline is relaxed and
-he or she can do about as they please so far as personal conduct is
-concerned. In America the parents and the government let the little
-folks do as they please outside of short school hours, and then tighten
-up the in high school and university. Our scheme doesn’t work well.
-Our grade schools turn out indifferent scholars and boys and girls
-who have not been trained to study. Our course of study is fixed to
-make it easy, when every one knows that hard work is needed to develop
-character. If the Germans go ahead of the Americans in the next
-generation it will be because their school system is better than ours,
-because it trains the children better for the work to come. The Germans
-think just as much of their children as do the Americans of theirs,
-but they do not spoil them,--which is a great American fault and which
-counts against the children ever afterward.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We rode on the boat to Godesberg, and Rolandseck and Heisterbach,
-and Johannisberg, and Niersteiner, and all the other places which
-are recorded on the wine-card at a Kansas City hotel. The very names
-are enough to make a Kansas man file an information with the county
-attorney. Each town has its brand of wine, its old castles, its
-flourishing business, its comfortable hotels, and its legends of olden
-times. Most of the legends tell of the triumph of True Love, but here
-is an exception:
-
- * * * * *
-
-An old knight whose castle at Schoenberg was an important place in the
-feudal system of tax collection, had seven beautiful daughters. He
-died; these seven girls ruled in the castle, and all they cared for
-was a good time. They went hunting, gave late supper parties, and were
-much talked about; but their beauty and the castle of their inheritance
-kept them popular with the men. Many knights asked them to marry,
-but each and every suitor was given the merry ha-ha by the maiden he
-sought. Knights even fought and killed each other, disputing as to the
-merits of the sisters, and the ladies made such funerals the scenes of
-great enjoyment. Finally the knights had a mass meeting, and resolved
-that the seven sisters be required to select husbands. When this news
-was conveyed to the sisters they said this was just what they wanted.
-They proposed that they would give a picnic, to which all the would-be
-husbands should be invited, and after lunch they would announce the
-knights of their choice. The picnic day came, and it rained in the
-morning as it always does on picnic days. The knights came with their
-swords and their lunch-baskets and stood around throwing balls for the
-cigars and shaking for the lemonade, until the skies cleared and it
-was announced that the seven sisters would be in at once or as soon as
-they had finished dressing. Then came another hour’s wait. Suddenly a
-boat appeared around the bend, and in it were the Seven, all decked out
-with big hats and rhinestone buckles. The eldest sister stood up in the
-boat, screaming as it rocked, and said: “We don’t care to marry any of
-you country jakes. We are going to Cologne to visit a cousin, and there
-we propose to have a good time without being obliged to throw down some
-knight who wants a bride and a meal ticket every so often.” The other
-sisters joined in singing the old-time version of “Goodby, my lover,
-goodby,” and the boat sailed for Cologne. The knights cussed, and laid
-the blame onto each other; but suddenly a storm arose, and the boat
-began to bob around in the waves. The seven sisters screamed, but it
-did them no good. The boat upset, and all on board were drowned.
-
-This legend teaches flirtatious young ladies not to trifle with the
-home boys.
-
-On the spot where the boat went under, seven pointed rocks appear above
-the surface of the water even up to today. I saw them, and I guess that
-proves the legend.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have always believed that Kansas people make a mistake in neglecting
-the legend crop. For example, a good legend about Elmdale Park in
-Hutchinson would cause thousands of people to visit it and pay 10 cents
-apiece, besides buying post-cards and printed copies of the beautiful
-story, which might go something like this:
-
-Once upon a time there lived in the First Ward a man and his wife who
-had an only daughter. They were the only father and mother she had,
-so honors were about even on that point. They loved this Daughter so
-much that when she grew up she was not taught to sew or to cook, but
-to play the piano and to sing “Love Me and the World is Mine.” She was
-very beautiful as she sat on the front porch reading the latest novel,
-“The Soul of My Soul,” while her mother fried the beefsteak for supper.
-Suitors came from far and near, one of them a brakeman on the Missouri
-Pacific, and another an assistant chief clerk in a hash foundry. But
-her choice fell upon a handsome young knight she met at Elmdale Park,
-who wore an open-faced vest and a Brazilian diamond on his shirt front,
-but who had quit school in order to go to work and then forgot about
-it. He saw the clean home and he smelled the fried steak and thought
-the young lady did it all, when in fact the young lady could not boil
-an egg. They were married, and he at once came to live with his wife’s
-folks. The old Father developed an unexpected trait, and insisted
-that the Bridegroom should pay board, which he proudly refused to do,
-took his bride and went to Wichita. There he was offered a position
-as chamber-maid in a livery stable and the Girl found it necessary at
-odd times to do the laundry work for a small boarding-house. Thus they
-lived for nearly two years, when she borrowed a postage stamp and wrote
-home: “I have a Divorce and two children.” The father and mother
-promptly sent her enough money to pay her fare, and she returned to
-the castle of her childhood. But she had learned a lesson. The next
-time she got married she did not pick up a friend in Elmdale Park, but
-made him show her his bank book and his receipt for dues in the Modern
-Woodmen. At the place in Elmdale Park where she met her first soul-mate
-she planted a cottonwood tree, which is there yet, and under its shade
-lovers now meet, remember this legend and buy post-cards which tell the
-story.
-
-[Illustration: THE HANDSOME KNIGHT SHE MET IN ELMDALE PARK]
-
-
-
-
-In German Towns
-
-
- COLOGNE, GERMANY, August 9.
-
-This is the big town of the lower Rhine country in Germany, though it
-has rivals which may sometime take the title away. It is also the old
-town, and there have been many hot times in its history. It was started
-in the first century of the Christian era as a colony by Aggripina,
-the mother of Nero, and a lot of Roman soldiers were given extra
-rights for settling in the new town. A couple of hundred years later
-a bridge was built across the Rhine, and Cologne became of commercial
-importance. When Christianity was extended to this section it was made
-the seat of a bishop and then of an archbishop. It grew rapidly and
-was independent in its tendencies, so when the break-up came of the
-old Roman empire it became a free city, and with some bossing by the
-archbishop the people ruled, that is, the wealthier and more important,
-a sort of aristocracy. Napoleon annexed Cologne to France, but when he
-was overthrown the city was handed over to the king of Prussia, and
-it has been Prussian ever since. In the last hundred years Cologne has
-developed as the great jobbing and commercial city of this section. It
-is full of quaint old houses, narrow streets, medieval architecture,
-and has the best cathedral in Europe. Dutch and German cathedrals are
-generally Protestant, but the Cologne cathedral is Catholic. When
-the Reformation came the Lutherans especially enjoyed capturing a
-cathedral, tearing down the images and statues, destroying all the
-artistic beauty they could, and making the house of God as plain and
-uncomfortable as possible. On the other hand, the Catholics believed in
-beautifying and adorning their churches. The present-day Protestants
-doubtless wish their predecessors had been less zealous and that the
-beautiful decorations and paintings had not been defaced by whitewash.
-The Cologne cathedral is the finest specimen of Gothic architecture in
-the world. Of course it is in the shape of a cross, and is 157 yards
-long, 94 yards wide, 201 feet to the roof, 357 feet to the tower over
-the center, and the towers are 515 feet high. These figures give no
-idea of the impressive and imposing interior; and the exterior, which
-is a profusion of turrets, gargoyles, cornices, galleries and other
-decorations, makes the visitor catch his breath as he looks at this
-great structure. The foundation of this cathedral was laid in 1248 and
-the work was completed thirty years ago; so there was no rush about the
-job.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Twenty-five miles below Cologne is Düsseldorf, also on the Rhine,
-and the place where the iron and coal development of Germany seeks
-its market. You know what iron and coal did for Pittsburg, and it is
-the same with Düsseldorf. It is the growing city of the section, and
-threatens to pass Cologne. As Düsseldorf is largely modern, having
-developed since the days of railroads and steel bridges, it has wide
-streets, beautiful buildings, and its architecture is of the present
-generation. Düsseldorf is noted for its municipal ownership, and is
-often called a model city. The town owns the street cars, the light
-system, the docks on the river, the water plant, a pawn-shop and a lot
-of other things, including a couple of breweries. Municipal ownership
-comes easier in the Old World than in the New. It was formerly the
-custom of the government to own everything, and to lay out parks
-and provide utilities for the people, who were then too poor to do
-much themselves. So the modern European government, which is largely
-popular, succeeds to the power of the ancient monarchical rule, and
-provides the big things for the people. A strong-handed ruler who
-can condemn private property, and wisely put the good of the entire
-community above the property and welfare of individuals, does these
-public works much better than our own municipal governments, which have
-restricted powers and which have to do what the people want rather than
-tell the people what they ought to do. Generally speaking the public
-ownership of utilities is a good thing, provided the government has
-the power and the integrity to do the business right. Düsseldorf has a
-mayor and twelve salaried aldermen, a common council of 56 members, and
-over 5,000 city employés.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One great difference between Germans and Americans is the regard in
-which they hold the law. Unfortunately, our new civilization has
-brought about a general feeling that the law is meant for the other
-fellows and we obey it if we have to. For that reason it is easier
-for a German municipality to manage business than it is for an
-American--and especially for a Kansan. Imagine what would happen in
-Hutchinson if the city owned a couple of breweries like the city of
-Düsseldorf. The next spring election the candidates would be running on
-the beer issue, and there would be all kinds of opinions. In Düsseldorf
-they hire expert brewers, sell the product, and the city takes a good
-profit. In Hutchinson the First Ward would be kicking because they
-didn’t like the head brewer, the Sixth Ward would demand a reduction
-in the price of beer, and the Third Ward would make the candidates
-pledge themselves to another beer garden in the south part of town,
-where it would be poor business. The final result would be that Mayor
-Vincent and Dr. Winans and the rest of the commission would be charged
-with favoritism and defeated for reëlection, and their successors
-would make beer at a loss and nobody would be satisfied. The curse of
-American municipal affairs is this playing of politics with every petty
-question. The Germans take the wiser method of cutting out politics,
-selecting their best men for public office, giving great respect to
-them personally, and accepting the laws they enact. When the mayor of
-Düsseldorf comes out for a walk everybody he meets takes off his hat
-and salutes. In our country everybody the mayor meets has a kick about
-something, and as for taking off his hat to the mayor--the American
-citizen would see him in Halifax first.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Kansas man, Clarence Price, of Pittsburg, stirred up all kinds of
-trouble in the German empire recently. Price has a moving-picture show,
-travel scenes and such, and is in Europe to get some of the best and
-see the local color. He thought it would be a fine thing to compliment
-the German army with a picture; so he had his machine at one of the
-forts of Berlin taking views of the drill of an artillery squad. The
-police saw him, and he nearly spent the night in the Hotel de Jail. It
-was all the American Consul and the Associated Press could do to save
-him, for the police believed he was a French spy, and as they could
-not understand the Pittsburg language and Price could not talk their
-German, it was only with difficulty that he got word to his friends and
-was finally released. A German jail is not fitted up for pleasure and
-comfort, but to make people sorry they get there, and as the picture
-machine had been confiscated there was not even the consolation for
-the Kansas showman of being able to present to the American public the
-sight of German justice administered on the spot.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Everywhere in Germany the load the people are carrying is militarism.
-The young men of the country lose several of the best years of their
-life in their army service, and heavy taxes burden business and
-industry. The people are patriotic, and this army is necessary, for
-there is always the prospect of a war, and of course they want to lick
-the other fellow. But the newspapers are praising Taft and urging that
-arbitration and disarmament are practicable if the course marked out by
-the United States is followed. It makes an American really proud of his
-country and his President when he hears the praise that is everywhere
-bestowed on both for taking the lead in the most important movement
-of the times. There has been a marked change in sentiment toward
-Americans among the educated and upper classes the last few years.
-The poor people always were strong for us. But the business men and
-the newspapers, as well as the brass collars, sneered at Americans as
-mere money-makers. McKinley brought the change when the United States
-jumped into a war with Spain to help Cuba. Dewey at Manila pounded
-it into their heads with language the Europeans could understand.
-Roosevelt’s dashing policies and his stand for peace between Japan and
-Russia impressed them wonderfully. And now Taft’s policy of arbitration
-instead of war is receiving the commendation of uppers and lowers,
-and they recognize the statesmanship in the treaties. To use one of
-Roosevelt’s favorite words, it is bully to be an American and travel
-in Europe, just to see how much better it is at home and to feel the
-respect paid to our great nation and its leaders.
-
-
-
-
-Arriving in Paris
-
-
- PARIS, August 11.
-
-Paris is a good deal like a circus, a three-ringed one which strains
-the rubber in your neck trying to see all you can before the acts
-change. Even the arrival is theatrical. As the train pulled into the
-Gare du Nord, after making the last forty-five miles in fifty-five
-minutes, I passed our hand baggage out through the open car window to
-a porter, and, going out the door myself, told him in a confident tone
-“voiture,” which is the foolish French word for cab. He understood,
-piloted us through the big station and called a little victoria with
-a seat for two. The driver wears a white celluloid plug hat and a red
-face. He drives a horse which probably fought with Napoleon. He nods
-assent to the name of the hotel as I mispronounce it, takes our three
-grips on his seat, and away we go down the street, the Lord and the
-cabby only knowing where. On the sidewalks are busy people talking
-French, walking French, and gesturing French. The stores and shops
-are attractive, for the French shopkeeper puts his best stuff in the
-front window, whether he is selling hats or sausages. Big busses, with
-people on top as well as inside, motor cars and motor busses with horns
-and honks, loaded wagons drawn by heavy Norman horses, street sweepers
-with brooms, policemen in red-and-blue uniforms, maids in cap and gown,
-porters with their work shirts outside their trousers, restaurants and
-little cafés with tables and chairs on the sidewalk and French men
-sipping absinthe or cold coffee, buildings almost uniformly six stories
-high, built with courts in the center which are often seen through
-open doors, and everybody talking, gesticulating and screaming in a
-language you cannot understand,--that is the confusion through which we
-drive for two miles and for which journey the cabman takes off his hat
-when I pay him 35 cents, which includes a 4-cent tip for himself. The
-hotel porter, or chief clerk, the head waiter, the pages, the manager
-and several assistants meet us at the hotel door, and in response to
-inquiries assure us that there is a bath-room in the hotel and that
-they have a “very nice” room. As an additional and decisive argument
-why we should stop there the chief clerk asserts that they have
-ice-water, and the entire company falls back in an ecstatic gesture
-which evidently means “What do you think of that?” We examine the room,
-agree upon a price, and then and not till then do we dismiss the cabman
-and proceed to get settled. We are in Paris, the dirtiest and prettiest
-city in the world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of course the first thing to do is to get out and see the sights, but
-of course it is not. The first thing is to get the mail and the next
-is to clean up. After traveling eight hours on a fast train through a
-country which has had no rain for two months, one really does not care
-for the wonderful things which the world talks about. Then comes the
-French dinner, which is something of an affair. A dinner in France goes
-like this: Soup, fish or eggs, veal, beef or mutton, and a vegetable
-and salad, cakes or tarts, fruit or ice. No coffee is served with the
-meal, but it is usually taken later and is an additional charge. Any
-attempt to vary this bill of fare is regarded as insane. I tried my
-best to get string beans served with my veal course, but I couldn’t.
-The waiter said “Oui,” then went and called the other waiters, and I
-could see them looking at the crazy American. That made me persistent,
-and I sent for the head waiter and told him I wanted beans--and I knew
-they had them ready. The head waiter said “Oui” and disappeared, and
-soon the clerks from the office strolled by and looked in. By this
-time the veal was cold, and I realized that any further attempt might
-result in calling the police, so I gave it up. No one refused to get
-my beans, but each time I was told “oui,” which means “yes” and is
-pronounced “we,” and each time nothing further happened except the
-sympathizing and curious mob. Once I traveled in Europe with a friend
-named McGregor, who wanted his coffee served with his meal, as it is in
-Illinois. He was willing to pay any price and he would put in his order
-hours ahead of mealtime. Did he get it? Certainly not. Coffee is not
-served with the dinner in France, and that is all there is to it.
-
-American travelers have won on one point--ice. Every hotel and
-restaurant which caters to American trade advertises ice-water. No
-Frenchman will drink it, but in some way the managers found that
-ice could be procured in the summer-time, and as a special favor to
-Americans, at a small increase in rates, the hotels give us ice-water.
-
-No real French hotel has a bath-room, to say nothing of a room with
-bath. I suppose the French, who look clean, either go to the creek or
-swim in the washbowl. Again the American influence is felt. First-class
-hotels now have bath-rooms, or a bath-room, and when it is used the
-charge appears on the bill, so much for a “grand bath.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-After dinner we went for a walk on the boulevards, just as every
-Frenchman who can, does every evening. The boulevards are the wide
-streets which run through the city in different directions, and were
-constructed at first for military purposes. In the little narrow
-streets of old Paris it was easy to start a revolution by merely
-throwing a barricade across a “rue,” prying up cobblestones for
-weapons and stationing a few old women on the housetops with pots of
-scalding water, which are harder on soldiers than leaden bullets.
-The revolution habit got so strong in Paris that the boulevards were
-constructed so the soldiers could march through the city without being
-stopped by barricades and mobs. They are likely to be used for that
-purpose again sometime, but just now the boulevards are largely for
-parades in which French millinery and hosiery are placed on exhibition
-every afternoon and evening. The sidewalks are occupied by cafés, miles
-of them it seems to me, and for the price of a drink, from one cent up,
-and in substance from coffee down, a Frenchman can occupy a comfortable
-seat and observe the wonders of art and glimpses of nature which pass
-by. An American can do the same, only a real American can never put in
-a whole evening consuming one small cup of coffee or whatever other
-beverage he can call for in the French language.
-
-So when I say we “went for a stroll,” we did so in the Parisian sense.
-We went for a sit, and let the promenaders do the strolling. Here
-and there an orchestra was playing some frivolous air, the street
-lights flashed from the lamp-posts, old ladies sold newspapers and
-post-cards, and the chattering but musical French language filled the
-air with a suggestive touch of the bohemian accent. The later the hour
-the larger the crowd, until midnight came, and then the Parisians went
-to the dances and parties and the American visitors to the hotels.
-
-
-
-
-The French Character
-
-
- PARIS, August 13.
-
-It is a little hard to take Paris seriously, because Paris refuses to
-take herself that way. There is a cheerfulness and a playfulness about
-the French folks that is hard to appreciate from the calm viewpoint of
-an Englishman or American. Our standards are different along so many
-lines that comparisons are unfair without explanations; and who cares
-for long-winded explanations? According to all the rules that are laid
-down in the books of American etiquette, the people of this city should
-be behind the rest of the world in all the serious and necessary works
-of life. And yet French generals have fought and defeated larger armies
-with their French soldiers, French engineers have performed marvelous
-feats, French scientists are authority, French musicians command the
-highest prices, French business men do great things, the French people
-are wealthy, and when it comes to literature and art we in America are
-really small potatoes. The fact seems to be that the Frenchman who
-promenades the boulevard and the French lady who startles the Puritan
-in us, are accomplishing just as much with somewhat limited resources,
-as we do, and we are the greatest people on earth as we admit ourselves.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The show place in Paris is the parallelogram along the Seine,
-consisting of the Champs-Élysées, the Place de la Concorde, the
-Tuileries gardens, and the Louvre art gallery. This district is about
-three miles long and averages a quarter of a mile wide. It contains the
-Champs with beautiful gardens and woods intersected by wide avenues,
-then the Place de la Concorde, one of the most beautiful squares in
-the world, the Tuileries’ commodious public playgrounds, with ponds
-and fountains; palaces with pictures, statues and monuments historical
-and allegorical; and the end is in the Louvre, which is said to be the
-greatest collection of art in existence. There is not a chord in the
-human mind and heart which is not touched beautifully and effectively
-by some part of this magnificent public place, which belongs to the
-people and is used by them. The more one thinks over this feature, the
-more he must realize that although the French do not conform to our
-methods they are certainly able to reach many of our best ideals, and
-whether they go around or cross-lots to get there depends upon the
-viewpoint of the critic.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The old Bourbon kings of France understood their people. While they
-made it hard for the common people to get a living they made it easy
-for them to have a good time. Whenever the public kicked on taxes,
-the king laid out a new park and gave a fête with free drinks and
-fireworks. The Bourbons would probably be reigning yet if Louis
-the Sixteenth and his wife, Marie Antoinette, had had any sense.
-Antoinette was German and did not understand the French ways, Louis
-was a poor politician, and when a storm came they lost their heads
-figuratively and then lost them actually. The republic lasted a few
-years and then Napoleon, who was as great a player to the grandstand
-as he was a general, became emperor, and only his foolish desire to
-conquer everybody lost him his job. The Bourbons came back as kings,
-but they had no sense. The French people want to be fooled, and these
-kings couldn’t fool anybody. So there was another republic, and then
-Napoleon the Third came to the front on the reputation of his uncle,
-the great Napoleon. He worked the French people to a finish, built
-palaces, boulevards and playgrounds until he had everybody for him,
-and then got captured by the Germans, lost his reputation and throne,
-and France became a republic for the third time. This was in 1871, and
-the republic has lasted forty years, much longer than expected, but
-in fact the government has been wisely conducted and has understood
-the French character well. There is another Napoleon, by the name of
-Victor, who is likely to come back, and sometime when the government
-does an imprudent thing the people will remember the good old times of
-Napoleon and return to a monarchy. Victor married the daughter of the
-old Emperor of Belgium, and has a big campaign fund.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of course everybody knows these facts, and I have recited them to
-illustrate the French national character. The French are not false,
-but they are fickle. They like a change, a novelty, an excitement. A
-revolution, or a new government, appeals to their sense of enjoyment
-just as does a new picture, a new hat, or a new coiffure. In spite
-of this trait they have done great things in all the great lines of
-advancement and progress. Theoretically they should be failures, but in
-fact they are successful. They consider Paris the greatest city of the
-world, and the way the people of other countries come here and add to
-the circulating medium seems to prove they are right. They practically
-refuse to learn any other language, but all other countries study
-French. Thousands of English and American Puritans come to Paris every
-year, but the Frenchman who travels for pleasure is unknown. Why is it?
-I give it up, unless we have some French tastes along with our English
-standards.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The French people are the most temperate, most economical and most
-saving of any of the peoples of Europe--or America. With all their
-fun they love money, and never forget the necessity of having some
-in their old age. Get off the Parisian boulevards, which are spoiled
-by visitors, and you see the French, pure and simple, though not so
-very pure and not at all simple. They will bargain and figure down to
-the “sou,” the popular coin, worth two American cents. Every French
-family figures on spending less than it makes, and does it. There are
-practically no savings banks and no one much has a bank account, but as
-soon as a little money is saved it is invested in government bonds or
-municipal or railroad bonds, which bear four per cent interest. Every
-family has government bonds, and this habit of investing in securities
-is the reason which makes France so great and strong financially. The
-people pile their savings into the government treasury, the only bank
-they know. The family, which is always small in France, must save for
-the daughter’s dot, or she will never be married, and for the last
-years of the parents’ lives. There are practically no abjectly poor
-people in France. It is not fashionable to be poor, and French men and
-French women must be fashionable.
-
-The Place de la Concorde is a wonderful square, larger than a couple of
-our city blocks. In the center is an obelisk, presented by Mohammed Ali
-when he was viceroy of Egypt and before the bargain sale of obelisks
-took place. It is a block of red granite, 75 feet high and covered
-with hieroglyphics which tell the deeds of an Egyptian gentleman named
-Rameses. The obelisk is surrounded by large fountains with mermaids
-and Tritons and dolphins spouting water into lower basins. Around the
-square are statues representing the eight principal cities of France.
-Since the monuments were erected one of these cities, Strassburg, has
-been taken by the Germans. This was forty years ago, but the monument
-still stands, and it is draped in mourning. In any other country the
-statue would have been quietly removed, but the French are not built
-that way. They hang their wreaths around Strassburg, swear vengeance on
-the Germans, and have a good time.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This mourning habit is very popular in Paris. The ladies who are called
-upon to mourn do so with proper regard for appearances. As near as
-I can figure it out the death of a second cousin puts all the female
-members of a family into deep black. A mourning-gown with a very hobble
-skirt, with the hoisery and millinery to match and with plumes and
-décolleté neck to strengthen the effect,--well, it does not detract
-from the human interest one naturally takes at such a time.
-
-
-
-
-The Latin Quarter
-
-
- PARIS, August 15.
-
-As everyone knows, the city of Paris is cut into two parts by the river
-Seine, which runs through it from east to west and with its curves is
-about seven miles in length within the town. The river is crossed by
-many bridges, all stone and substantial, many ornamented by statues.
-Little steamboats run up and down like street cars, and the banks are
-covered with massive stone walls. About half-way through the city are
-two islands, one called the Cité and the other the Isle of St. Louis.
-The Cité is the most ancient part of Paris, and was a town in the time
-of Cæsar. The coming of Christianity was marked by the erection of a
-church, and about the 12th century by the present cathedral Notre-Dame,
-one of the famous buildings in Europe, but not one of the finest
-cathedrals. By this time the city had spread out on the banks, and
-the organization of France into a kingdom with Paris as the capital
-was followed by a removal of the royal residence and of most of the
-activities to the sides of the stream. On the south side developed
-the university, the artists’ studios, and eventually the military
-establishments. Big business, the large residences and industrial
-enterprises went to the north bank. The Latin Quarter, as the
-educational and artistic section is known, on the south, while equipped
-with large stores, palaces and public buildings, is a most interesting
-and quaint place, and though still Bohemian is very respectable, from a
-Parisian viewpoint.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The University of Paris, the original part of which was the Sorbonne,
-now an immense structure, has about 15,000 students. It differs from
-American universities in many respects. There are no recitations.
-The instruction is given by lectures, and a famous authority on law,
-or philosophy or science, can lecture to hundreds as easily as to a
-small class. There are no dormitories, no fraternities, no football
-clubs, no spring parties, no classes, no sports, no colors, no badges,
-none of the essential parts of American higher education. Students
-of any age or previous training may enroll and become members of the
-University, go to the lectures they desire, or not go at all if they
-prefer. The public can attend the lectures and the University is open
-to women, though the proportion of women students is not large. The
-most efficient instruction and the greatest sources of information are
-open to the students--if they desire. The Sorbonne was erected in 1629
-by Cardinal Richelieu, and named for Robert de Sorbonne, who started a
-school for the education of poor boys in theology about 1250. It has
-been rebuilt and enlarged until it is a vast pile 800 feet long and 300
-feet wide. This building houses the schools in literature and science,
-the schools of law and medicine occupying buildings near by.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Although the students at the University of Paris do not have the fun
-in athletics and society that the students do in the University of
-Kansas, they have a good time in the French way. The quarter is filled
-with cafés, large and small, where students and artists congregate and
-eat, drink and make merry. The back room of the café is something of
-a club, and discussions on art and science mingle with the perfume of
-tobacco and fermented grape-juice. While there is a lack of co-eds
-there is no scarcity of ladies, who constitute a part of the course
-taken by many of the students, not leading to a degree, not even
-to matrimony. All of this, which would be regarded with horror in
-Lawrence, is quite the thing in Paris and seems to work out most
-satisfactorily to the University authorities, for even the professors
-do not hesitate to mingle with their students at the evening sessions
-in the joints of the Latin Quarter. The men take examinations and
-degrees and go their way to promote the advancement of learning, while
-the ladies stay and aid in the instruction of the next generation of
-students. The original of the old college story took place in the
-Sorbonne. A father who had graduated many years before came for a
-visit with his son, who had matriculated as a student. The son had
-gone to the same lodging-place which his father had occupied in the
-years gone by. The old man was recalling his student days, looking over
-the familiar place, noticing the changes and the old scenes. “The
-same old beamed ceiling, where I carved my name, and here it is,” he
-exclaimed with delight. “The same old view from the window. The same
-old furniture--” and just then the back door opened and a dashing lady
-appeared. “Same old girl,” he cried with rapture. The boy tried to
-explain that she was a friend of a friend. “Same old story,” was the
-happy comment, “Same old game.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Near the Sorbonne is the Pantheon, originally built for a church, in
-the shape of a Greek cross, located on a hill which is the highest
-place on the south side of the river, and with a noble dome that can be
-seen for many miles. This is a new building, having been constructed
-in the eighteenth century. It was dedicated to Saint Genevieve, the
-patron saint of Paris. The revolution converted it into a memorial
-temple and named it the Pantheon. It has been a church a couple of
-times since then, but is now not used for religious purposes. It is
-the burying-place of great Frenchmen. Here are buried Victor Hugo,
-Mirabeau, Rousseau, Carnot, and others distinguished in literature
-and statecraft. You can see the last resting-place of these great men
-by securing an order from the Government or by tipping the custodian:
-the latter way I always find the easiest and best. The Pantheon is
-beautifully decorated, and the interior with Corinthian columns and
-mural paintings is most effective. If it makes any difference to these
-men where they are buried they should be glad, for it is the finest
-memorial building in Europe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That leads me to a rather grave subject. As a matter of fact, funerals
-are very important events in France. Three or four directors in black
-clothes and three-cornered hats march ahead, and the hearse is heavily
-draped. If the departed was a man of prominence there are a number of
-orations delivered, the crowd goes away excited over the condition
-of the republic, and is likely to break windows and show its feeling
-toward the political opponents of the deceased. When Zola was buried a
-hundred thousand people marched in the procession, and there were a
-number of street fights and duels as a climax.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But the biggest thing in the Latin Quarter so far as American tourists
-are concerned is the Bon Marché, I suppose the largest retail general
-store in the world. In most ways it is like our department stores, and
-announces that it has made its success by reason of faithful dealings
-with the public and by advertising. It has been running about fifty
-years; the original proprietor is dead, but the business moves on
-smoothly. The corporation has a method of division of profits among
-employés who have been with the store more than ten years. It also
-pensions its old employés, provides lectures and amusements for its
-workers, and has a paternal and cöoperative side that is interesting,
-although the corporation is in fact controlled by a few heavy
-stockholders.
-
-Somehow I had the idea that our own country was the leader in the big
-department store business. But the Bon Marché and others in Paris took
-the idea out of me. It has many clerks who speak foreign languages, and
-it is said that a native of Timbuctoo or Arkansas could slip into the
-store and find some one who could speak his language.
-
-The clerks in the Bon Marché get from $3 to $6 a week, with the
-exception of a few who have special qualifications. So I guess the
-old-age pension business is necessary. That is the ordinary wage paid
-store clerks in Paris.
-
-It was at the Bon Marché that the ancient joke happened to me. I was
-looking at a price-mark, and, not understanding the figure, inquired in
-my pigeon French, “Est sees [6] auter set? [7].” The clerk answered “It
-is six.”
-
-My French is a joke. From necessity I have learned enough French words
-to order a meal, buy a ticket and ask how much. I have found that a
-good bluff, plenty of signs and the throwing in of French and German
-words on the subject generally get about what I want. But often I fall
-down. The word for potatoes in French is “pommes.” I told a waiter I
-wanted “fried pommes,” and as the word for cold is “froid,” I got cold
-potatoes.
-
-I went for a ride in the underground tube. Bought my tickets and got
-onto a train I knew was in the right direction. It stopped, everybody
-got out, and the porter insisted that I go too. I knew something was
-wrong, and I tackled the platform boss with good English. He couldn’t
-understand a word, so he waved his hands and clawed the air and talked
-French for a couple of minutes. Then he tried to walk off, but I hung
-on. I was away down below the surface of the ground and didn’t even
-know straight up. “Correspond” he kept saying, and I assured him I
-would be glad to do so if he would give me his address, but first I
-wanted to know where I was “at.” I knew he was swearing, but it was
-French swear and I didn’t mind. Finally he took me by the arm and
-walked me through a couple of passages and pointed to another platform.
-A light broke in on me, and I took the train which soon came. I learned
-afterward that “correspond” is French for “transfer.”
-
-
-
-
-The Boulevards of Paris
-
-
- PARIS, August 18.
-
-The boulevards of Paris are one of the wonders of the world. Strictly
-speaking there are a number of broad avenues which are called
-boulevards, but usually “the boulevards” is a phrase which means
-the one long wide boulevard extending for several miles, from near
-the Place de la Concorde to the Place de la Bastille, built in a
-semi-circle on the north of the old city and on the fortifications
-which defended the city in the Middle Ages. Of course later walls and
-fortifications were built farther out, and the “grand boulevards” are
-through the heart of the present Paris. The boulevard--for it is one
-continuous highway--changes its name every few blocks, a fact that is
-characteristically French and somewhat confusing to the stranger. The
-beginning is a short distance from the Place de la Concorde at the
-church of the Madeleine, the fashionable church of Paris. The building
-is in the style of a Roman temple, and has an imposing colonnade of
-Corinthian columns. The interior decorations are very good, and include
-a large fresco above the altar in which Christ, Napoleon and Pope Pius
-the Seventh are classified more or less together. The boulevard is
-called The Madeleine for about 200 yards, when the name changes to the
-Capucines and sticks for a couple of blocks until the grand opera house
-is reached. Along this short stretch are some of the wildest music
-halls and the greatest cafés of the world. The greatest is the Café de
-la Paix, where everybody who visits Paris goes for at least one drink
-of ginger ale or cold coffee.
-
-The Opera is the largest theatre in the world, covering about three
-acres. The site alone cost $2,000,000 and the building over $7,000,000.
-The materials are marble and costly stone, and there are statues
-of Poetry, Music, Drama, Dance, with other figures, medallions and
-allegorical statuary until your head swims. The front of the roof is
-sculptured with gilded masks and with collossal groups representing
-Music and Poetry attended by the Muses and Goddesses of Fame. Apollo
-with a golden lyre and two Pegasuses occupy the dome. The interior
-has a grand staircase of marble with a rail of onyx, and the rest of
-the interior is be-columned and be-frescoed to match. It is the most
-beautiful building in Paris, and could hardly be surpassed if the
-attempt were made regardless of expense. I would not try a detailed
-description, for it would not convey the real effect, best described by
-the word gorgeous.
-
-From the Opera a street runs southerly called the Avenue de l’Opera,
-the great shopping street of Paris, and at another angle goes the
-Street de la Paix, where the most expensive jewelry stores and
-millinery establishments are located. The name of this street is
-properly pronounced de la Pay.
-
-But the Boulevard continues, no longer the Capucines, but the Italiens.
-Some years ago this was the great shopping-place, and it is not bad
-now. As the ladies promenade past the Opera and into the Italiens,
-the skirts unconsciously go a little higher. The boulevard proceeds,
-the next section being called the Montmartre. This part interested me
-a great deal. On the rue Montmartre, a side street to the right, is
-the Y. M. C. A., and on Mt. Montmartre, a little to the left, is the
-Moulin Rouge.
-
-The Y. M. C. A. in Paris is one of the best things in the city, but
-it does not get much newspaper notoriety. It is an English-speaking
-organization, with convenient quarters, parlor, reception, billiard,
-smoking-and dining-rooms. It is one place in Paris where there is no
-café or bar, and it is a great help to young men from America who are
-in this city by reason of their business or to study or to visit the
-historic places. A great many use the Y. M. C. A. facilities, and a
-membership card from Hutchinson or any other association in the world
-is good for these privileges in the heart of Paris. I would recommend
-to every American that when he goes to Paris he make his headquarters
-at the Y. M. C. A., but I am not going to count on many of them doing
-it. The Paris atmosphere has the same effect on a Y. M. C. A. that a
-nice, warm August sun has on a cake of ice left on the sidewalk in
-Hutchinson. I am not telling what I would like to, but I setting down
-the facts as they appear to me. The man who goes to Paris and sticks to
-the Y. M. C. A. as his loafing-place should have his halo ordered at
-once. He has a cinch.
-
-In the other direction, on Mt. Montmartre, is the Moulin Rouge. I do
-not recommend it to nervous men, but it is one of the sights of this
-city. When I was a boy I read somewhere about a “gilded palace of
-sin,” and now I know what that means. The cowboys out west used to
-have what they called “free-and-easies,” but the Moulin Rouge is not
-free. I shut my eyes as the dancers loped by until a friend said the
-next dance would be a quadrille. I once danced quadrilles myself, and
-I thought there would be a breathing-place. The young people arranged
-themselves as if they were going to dance a Virginia Reel, and I could
-feel consciousness returning. The music struck up and the quadrille
-began. At first it went as smooth as if it were at the Country Club.
-Then each young lady passed the toe of her right foot over the head
-of her partner. Then she turned and pointed the toe of her left foot
-at the chandelier which hung from the ceiling. And then came the most
-wonderful display of things that are put in the store windows at
-home and marked “white goods sale,” or “lingerie.”
-
-[Illustration: THE PLAIN QUADRILLE AT THE MOULIN ROUGE]
-
-It was dreadfully embarrassing to me, as it must have been to any other
-Kansas man present, but I braced myself, for I knew the worst was yet
-to come. I felt like getting right up on my chair and saying, “Ladies,
-there are gentlemen present.” But I didn’t, and I have been glad ever
-since, for they might not have understood English and thought I wanted
-a partner for the next quadrille.
-
-Afterwards the proceedings became almost immodest.
-
-So I do not recommend the Moulin Rouge, though I fear that this failure
-on my part will not detract from the rush of strangers who are visiting
-in Paris and who might go to the Y. M. C. A. But I will say in passing
-that it is no place for a man unless his wife is with him, and it is
-somewhat distracting even then.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Returning to the boulevard. It changes its name to the Poissoniere, and
-on this part is the office of the _Matin_, the great newspaper, which
-has 750,000 circulation, prints only six pages, and pretends not to
-care for advertising. The _Matin_ differs from most Parisian newspapers
-in really printing news. The general run of papers here are purely
-political, and put their editorials on the front page. They are very
-abusive, and the editor has to fight frequent duels. The fighting is
-done with pistols at a safe distance, and after an exchange of shots
-with nobody hurt, the principals rush together and clinch, but it is
-to kiss each other on both cheeks and rejoice that Honor has been
-Satisfied. I wouldn’t mind the dueling, but I positively would not kiss
-these Frenchmen, and so far as I can learn the society editresses do
-not duel.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Matin_ is the paper that cleared Dreyfus after his trial and
-conviction a few years ago. The story is interesting. Dreyfus was made
-the victim of a conspiracy, and a document showing details of the
-French army was attributed to him as a German spy. Everybody remembers
-the trial and the fuss at the time. It became a contest between the
-Honor of the French Army and Dreyfus. The _Matin_ took little part,
-but, like most of the French, sided with the army. One evening at a
-dinner an officer of the court exhibited the original of the document
-which Dreyfus had been convicted of writing. Mr. Bueno-Varilla, editor
-of the _Matin_, was present, and as the paper was passed around he
-looked at it carelessly. That night when he reached home he remembered
-that a few years before this same Dreyfus had written him a letter
-about some engineering, and he dug up the letter. The handwriting was
-not at all what he had seen that evening. He rushed to the telephone
-and got the official who had shown the document, who promised to bring
-it to him in the morning. They compared the spy information and the
-Dreyfus letter which Bueno-Varilla had, and they were utterly unlike.
-Next day the _Matin_ printed a photograph copy of the document, and
-appealed to anyone who knew the handwriting to advise the _Matin_.
-In a day or two a gentleman wrote and said it was the writing of a
-drunken bankrupt army officer, named Esterhazey, inclosing letters from
-the latter which proved it. Dreyfus was brought back from prison and
-pardoned, Esterhazey skipped the country, and the honor of the French
-army was flyspecked. All of this because Bueno-Varilla happened to keep
-an old letter, and because he owned the _Matin_.
-
-The boulevard next becomes the Bonne-Nouvelle, and then St. Denis and
-then St. Martin, and has several other names before it reaches its end
-in the Place de la Bastille.
-
-This place is even more important in French history than Independence
-Hall in ours. The 14th of July is celebrated every year, just as we
-do the 4th of July as Independence Day, because on that date in 1789
-the Bastille prison was destroyed by an uprising of the people which
-became the French Revolution. The Bastille was especially odious
-because political prisoners were confined there, and it only took an
-order from the police to send a man or woman to its dungeons. Its use
-for this purpose was so flagrant and so despotic that the first fury
-of the revolution was directed against its walls, and it was entirely
-destroyed, and the jailers and soldiers defending it were killed.
-The place is now a large square surrounded by business houses and
-ornamented by a statue of Liberty on a column 150 feet high. From the
-beginning to the end of this great boulevard with the many names,
-are places made historic by great men and hard fights. Now it is a
-peaceful, broad avenue, with shops and cafés and handsome buildings,
-the promenade-ground for the Parisian and of tourists from all
-countries.
-
-
-
-
-Some French Ways
-
-
- PARIS, August 20.
-
-There are practically no athletic sports in France, none at all in and
-around Paris. In America the men put in a lot of time talking baseball,
-football, boating and such-like. In France the men talk only politics
-or gossip. There are no lodges and no clubs in France. This ought to
-be applauded by the women, but as a matter of fact they probably wish
-the men would do a little something in that line. There is a secret
-order or two, but they are not strong and not recognized by the orders
-in other countries. Frenchmen do not seem to care for athletics of any
-kind. The nearest approach to it is fencing, and the young Frenchman
-learns to use the sword so he can fight duels. The popular Hero is not
-a ball-player nor a prize-fighter, but a man who has invented something
-new or who has run off with the wife of a friend. They are venturesome
-and personally brave, but they can’t stand for team work. The attempt
-has been made to introduce a mild form of football, but every man on
-the team wanted to be the star. I suppose if the French should organize
-a baseball club every one of them would insist on being pitcher. They
-will go up in balloons or airships with dashing recklessness and are
-brave enough, if that trait is not merely the absence of caution and
-calculation. French aviators are numerous and successful, though the
-fatalities are still many. They have shown themselves good fighters
-but not good losers. They will quarrel over a trifle and then forgive
-and kiss each other in a manner that makes an American seasick. They
-are polite in a veneer, for they will lift their hats and make goo-goo
-eyes at every pretty woman, and they will let an old woman stand up in
-a street car. They are industrious, thrifty, temperate, and cheerful.
-Just because they look at some things from a different viewpoint is no
-reason why we should criticize them, and yet they are so different from
-the neighbors that I can’t help mentioning a few things that are very
-noticeable.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The French Government has a president, whose name few people know, and
-a senate which has little power, and therefore the main factor is
-the lower house. This kind of government is a mistake, for the large
-legislative body rushes from one extreme to another; whenever its
-majority changes, the cabinet resigns, and the result is inconstancy
-and instability. Public sentiment is the controlling factor, and
-it takes an acrobat to be a statesman in France. Sometimes the
-flippety-flop is popular in America, but on the long run he loses. In
-France he is succeeded by another just as good.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The French are great lovers of art, and in the Louvre they claim the
-largest collection of pictures in the world. They looted Italy to get
-them, but they have them. No living artist has a picture in the Louvre.
-The fellows now on earth have to hang their pictures in the Salon or
-the Luxembourg or some other gallery, a sort of artistic tryout, with
-the judging done after they are no longer able to exert any personal
-influence. I think modern art is as good as ancient art, or better,
-except that every modern picture is not art. And I may add that in the
-Paris Salon the pictures painted by the artists of today have just as
-good color, better drawing and just as few clothes as the works of the
-old masters in the Louvre. I get along right well with the old masters
-until they paint Mary de Medici and Mary the mother of Christ sitting
-and talking together, and then I want to go outside and say a few
-things.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But while Paris is important in the world, politically, historically,
-and artistically, its great distinction nowadays is in millinery and
-dressmaking. The women go to Paris to shop, and the men go on account
-of the women. The men of Paris are about the worst dressers in the
-world. The women are the best. The Parisienne has the natural ability
-to take a hat and stick a feather in it so the effect is brilliant. She
-can wear a dress that costs much less than the gown of an English woman
-or an American woman, and she can look stylish when the other women
-have hard work to look decent. The American woman is second, and in a
-few respects, like shoes and gloves, she can beat the French; but take
-it all around, and the world removes its hat to the French milliner.
-Of course the milliner is often a man, but he has to have his Parisian
-model or he would fail. Let M. Worth or any of the other Monsieurs
-who dictate styles in feminine attire go to London and he would be a
-second-rater at once. This is true, whether you want to believe it or
-not, and the doubter need only spend a few days on the Paris boulevards
-to be convinced.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There may be some who think that the latest development in costumes,
-the hobble skirt, has reached America. They are mistaken. No real
-French hobble skirt could go down the street of an American city
-without starting a riot. When one does get to the territory of the
-Stars and Stripes the railroads will run excursion trains. The first
-day or two in Paris I was nervous about this style of gown. When I saw
-a saucy French lady in a dress which looked as if it was put on by a
-glove-fitter, I felt that I ought to blush and look at the statuary. I
-was told by the best feminine authority with me that in order to wear
-one of those skirts it was necessary to discard any wearing apparel
-which is usually beneath the female skirt. The poor, pretty things
-would go along the street like boys in a sack-race trying to walk, and
-by a slit up one side which was not buttoned for several feet from the
-bottom, a little motion was secured. But when the lady crossed the
-street, or when she climbed to the top of a bus or even stepped into
-a cab, it was necessary in order that she maintain appearances that
-there be not even a hole in her stocking above the knee. Of course I do
-not speak from personal observation. Far be it from me to watch a lady
-cross the street or climb into a vehicle. But I knew how it must be
-from a careless study of the environment, and my theory was confirmed
-by the evidence of all those who did not hide their eyes or observe
-the scenery. And I will add that it is extremely difficult to keep the
-blinders on while seeing the sights.
-
-I only speak of these matters because they are much more in evidence in
-Paris than are the Statue of Liberty, or the Column of Vendôme, or any
-of the great places that the guide-books tell about.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The French are delightfully “natural” about many things. It is quite
-the proper thing for a man and woman to hug and kiss each other in
-public. At first this startled me and I felt that perhaps they were
-excited. But no, it is just the proper way to manifest their feelings
-at the time. Just imagine how it would be if the Frenchman across the
-table from you put his arm around the lady next to him and she snuggled
-up to him and patted his cheek with her unengaged hand. I felt like
-getting right up and saying, “Excuse me. Am I intruding?” But I soon
-learned that they didn’t mind us at all. Their idea of love is to let
-go all holds and l-o-v-e. Their theory of matrimony is that it is
-an arrangement based on family position, business and prospects. No
-young woman can get a husband unless she has a dot, so much capital.
-The parents arrange the matches, and usually do so carefully and
-thoughtfully. The girl, who has not even been allowed to go to school
-with the boys, has no idea of any other arrangement; and the man, who
-has never thought of matrimony in another way, considers it a part of
-his “career.”
-
-A man in France cannot marry without the consent of his parents until
-he is 25 and a woman not till she is 21. This law is strictly obeyed,
-and there is no running off to some other state where the rule is
-different. I suppose French marriages arranged in this apparently
-cold-blooded manner by the parents turn out on the average as well as
-they would if they let the young people rush in and “marry for love.”
-But it doesn’t seem right to us, any more than our ways seem good to
-them. Of course a Frenchman does not insist that his “sweetheart” shall
-have a “dot,” so that kind of an arrangement is made by the parties
-themselves. All of which seems very wrong to English and Americans; and
-yet the French prove it is the best way by using the divorce figures,
-for divorce is practically unknown in France. The French woman is the
-business partner of her husband, and necessity makes them pull together
-just as they were taught to do from their youth up. She doesn’t belong
-to clubs any more than her husband does. She has a great deal of
-liberty, and in fact is often the head of the firm.
-
-
-
-
-In Dover Town
-
-
- DOVER, ENGLAND, August 22.
-
-One of the strange things in this old world is a boundary line. You
-are on a railway in Germany, hearing no language but German. The train
-crosses the imaginary line and you hear an entirely different language,
-and if you try to use the words which were understood ten minutes
-before, the people do not understand you. They are French, and they
-not only speak a different language but they differ in custom, tastes
-and looks. It would be just like a traveler from Hutchinson to Kansas
-City being able to speak and understand what people said at Argentine,
-but on arrival at the union depot in Kansas City finding a different
-looking and different talking lot, who could not understand a word he
-said. And arriving in the Kansas City depot neither understanding nor
-being understood, would be something of an ordeal, especially if you
-were trying to change trains and make a sharp connection. It is no
-wonder that an ordinary Kansan traveling in this European land puts in
-much of his time figuring out his route and a lot more doing it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of course it is a joy to arrive in England and be able to talk and
-to understand everything that is said. Two hours after we left the
-fish-smelly Boulogne I was quarreling in right fair English with a
-railroad official because a train was late. In France we would have
-had to stand around and look pleasant, for the official would not have
-known whether we were cross about the train or the reciprocity treaty.
-It often relieves your mind to tell a Frenchman or a German what you
-think of him or his country in English, but it doesn’t cause him any
-discomfort.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dover is a most interesting town, with a castle, a harbor, a garrison,
-and a history. It is the closest English port to France, and on a
-clear day with good eyes and a vivid imagination you can see Calais
-in France, 21 miles away. Ever since William the Conqueror came over
-and did his conquering, the English have kept Dover fortified in such
-a way that it would be difficult for another conqueror to follow his
-example. The town lies along the shore and back into a small river
-valley. The hills, about 300 feet high, begin at the water’s edge
-and go up very rapidly. The biggest hill is on the east, and rises
-straight up from the sea 375 feet. The face of the cliff is white, for
-the rock formation is chalk, and, topped with green trees and a big
-stone castle, makes a fine appearance from the water or from the beach.
-There is not only this old castle, which is a fort with a regiment
-of soldiers, but the cliff is mined and tunneled, and big cannon are
-at the opening in the earth, ready to shoot the stuffing out of any
-hostile fleet or army which comes this way. The only time the castle
-was ever captured was when Cromwell worked some strategem and got it
-away from the Royalists. After looking it all over I don’t see how
-any army could possibly capture Dover castle so long as the defenders
-stayed awake.
-
-The Romans first built a fort here, and the remains of the old Roman
-walls are still a small part of the present fortifications. The Saxons
-built some, then the Normans, and after that various generations of
-English,--so that the castle contains specimens of a lot of different
-styles of architecture. On the whole it is one of the most imposing
-castles in Europe, both by location and by construction.
-
-This castle business is peculiar. Sometimes a little runt of a building
-with a tower and a high fence is famous in history and story because of
-a great fight, or a brilliant robber who lived there. To the tourist it
-is a disappointment. I suppose every one gets his idea of what a castle
-looks like from the reading done in his youth. When I was a boy I
-thought a castle must be a good deal like the court-house at Cottonwood
-Falls, which is 80 feet high, with a mansard roof and a jail with
-barred windows in the rear. Then I got a larger idea, something like
-the Reformatory at Hutchinson. And when I came to personally see these
-ancient castles I have frequently had to back up to my early theories.
-Now I am an expert in castles, and can talk of them without admitting
-to myself it is all guess-work. When we started up the Rhine from Bonn
-I occupied an unquestioned place as an authority, for I had been in
-the great castle country before. But this time my trip was reversed.
-To an admiring company of boat acquaintances I pointed out in the
-distance a magnificent castle we were approaching. I started to tell
-the legend of the castle, when it became apparent that the structure
-was a cement plant. Then I was more careful, but soon located another,
-a really splendid castle standing off a little from the river. I would
-have gotten through all right if some smart aleck had not butted in
-with the uncalled for information that the building was a brewery. But
-that is what a real castle looks like, the Hutchinson Reformatory, a
-cement plant, or a brewery, whichever comparison comes easiest for you
-to understand.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dover was one of the “Cinque Ports.” Five little towns along the coast
-of the channel had a sort of organization which was given recognition
-by the government under the early Norman kings. The towns were granted
-privileges and relieved from burdens of taxation in consideration of
-furnishing ships in time of war. The principal work of a navy at that
-time was to capture merchant vessels, slug the crews and keep the
-cargoes; so the towns prospered under the arrangement. It has been
-only a couple of hundred years since there was a standing army or a
-royal navy. When the king declared war he issued a call and the lords
-and knights responded with their men, and the army was formed for the
-campaign. If any of the nobles got sore on the king, they took their
-troops and went home. A navy was raised in the same way, only by the
-towns along the coast instead of by individuals. Such an army and navy
-was not satisfactory, but the English parliament refused to furnish
-money for a standing army until after the days of good Queen Anne,
-about 200 years ago. Now the English army is not near as large as the
-armies on the continent, but the English navy is kept twice the size
-of any other navy in the world. Germany is the country that England
-suspects as a possible enemy. Germany and France are crossways right
-now over which shall get the most of Morocco, and England is bound
-to stand by France in case of trouble. Morocco isn’t worth anything
-to anybody, but it may cause a terrible war between the most highly
-civilized nations of Europe. And yet some people are opposed to
-arbitration because of “national honor.” The opponents of arbitration
-ought to come over to these poor countries laboring under the weight of
-big armies and navies, and see how people are suffering because of the
-foolish feudal notion that the way to decide which is right is to fight
-it out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We ate our lunch today in a restaurant which proudly boasts that its
-steps were the place where David Copperfield rested during his search
-for his aunt, Betsey Trotwood. Little Dorrit lived at Dover, and the
-men and women of Dickens land often visited or made their homes in
-this quaint old seaport or in its vicinity. Shut your eyes to the big
-cliff and its imposing fortress, forget the harbor with its ships and
-men of war, quit observing the narrow streets and crooked lanes which
-run up and down the side of the hill, and live with the people that
-Dickens made so real that to most of us they surely existed. That is
-Dover, a different Dover from the red-coated, fish-smelling, quaintly
-architectured place in which people are buying and selling, and a Dover
-which will live as long as the English language is read.
-
-
-
-
-Old Canterbury Today
-
-
- CANTERBURY, ENGLAND, August 24.
-
-This little city of 25,000 inhabitants is the ecclesiastical capital
-of England, and has been for over a thousand years. Some time before
-the year 600 Queen Bertha, wife of the Saxon king, became a Christian
-and built a small church in Canterbury. Then when St. Augustine came
-in 597 and took the king and all his army into the church at one big
-baptizing, the king gave him the palace and the heathen church, and
-they were converted into a cathedral and monastery. St. Augustine
-and succeeding archbishops were the heads of the church in England,
-and when the Normans came in 1066 they continued the rule. The first
-Norman archbishop began the construction of the present cathedral, and
-as money was plenty and labor cheap, it was built magnificently. The
-Archbishop of Canterbury received the title of Primate of All England,
-and he wears it to this day. The English Church is a government
-institution, the archbishop is a member of the House of Lords, and the
-position is easily the greatest in the Protestant world.
-
-The murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket, in 1170, was the greatest
-thing that ever happened for Canterbury. He was in a controversy with
-King Henry, and made life so uncomfortable for the king that Henry
-remarked to some of his followers that if he had a few real friends
-there would be no Thomas Becket to worry him. Henry was probably drunk
-when he made this talk, although it doubtless was an expression of
-his real feelings. Four of his knights took him at his word, hiked
-to Canterbury, and killed the archbishop right in the cathedral. The
-murder was a shock to Christendom. The dead archbishop was canonized as
-a saint, and the people generally refused to believe Henry’s statement
-that he didn’t mean what he said. Everything went wrong with Henry, and
-the sacrilegious act was held responsible. Two years later the king
-went to Canterbury and took a whipping on his bare back as a penance
-for his remarks, and for years pilgrims came to Canterbury, miracles
-were reported wrought by the relics, and the cathedral and Canterbury
-got rich from the pilgrim business and the valuable gifts showered upon
-the shrine of St. Thomas.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is customary to consider Thomas Becket a martyr to the cause of
-liberty and to indulge in great eulogy of him as a saint. But he was
-really a plain man like the rest of us. His trouble with the king came
-because Henry wanted to recognize some other bishops, and Thomas, who
-was proud and stubborn, claimed that he alone had the power. It was
-really a conflict of authority between the church and the state, and a
-good deal to be said on both sides. Thomas abused the king viciously
-and had several bishops excommunicated because they agreed with Henry.
-He also threatened the king, and the disagreement was all over jobs
-and money. Those were tough times, and the usual way to get rid of
-an enemy was to kill him if you could. Unfortunately for Henry, his
-self-appointed friends did a bungling job, Thomas became a saint, and
-the king had to concede to the church all the privileges that had
-been claimed. Three hundred years later King Henry the Eighth, in
-order to secure a divorce and a new queen, overthrew the authority
-of the church, made himself the head of it, and incidentally sent to
-Canterbury, took all the valuables that had been placed on the shrine
-of St. Thomas, and put them in the national treasury, that is, his own
-pocket.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But during that 300 years the supremacy of Canterbury as the religious
-head of the nation became fixed. The archbishops generally had to go
-into politics, many of them achieved greatness, and some were executed
-publicly. The cathedral was added to, “restored,” improved, and is
-now one of the very finest cathedrals in Europe. To an Englishman or
-an American it is more interesting than any other church in England,
-except perhaps Westminster Abbey. It has specimens of all kinds of
-architecture in its different parts, but they have been so harmoniously
-put together that the edifice is imposing on the outside and most
-impressive on the inside.
-
-Canterbury itself is a sleepy old town, very full of quaint houses and
-with plenty of tradition to make things interesting. Chaucer, Dickens,
-Thackeray and other English writers have woven Canterbury into their
-stories, and on every side you are shown the places where heroes and
-heroines of fiction made their homes. But this week Canterbury is busy.
-The last game of the cricket season is being played, and Canterbury
-is as crazy over cricket as Hutchinson was over baseball when in the
-Western Association. The cricket association of England is made up of
-the counties, and I had the opportunity of seeing the game between Kent
-and Yorkshire. Fully ten thousand people attended, and I suppose they
-enjoyed the game, though English cricket is as tame to an American
-as the moo of a cow would seem to a roaring lion, or as spring-water
-lemonade would taste to a colonel from Kentucky. The game began at
-10 o’clock in the morning, with Yorkshire, the visiting team, at the
-bat. At one o’clock the Yorks were put out after making 75 runs. Then
-there was lunch, and the crowd stayed on the field and under the trees
-for what looked to me like a harvest home picnic in Kansas. At 2
-o’clock play was resumed, and continued till 4 o’clock, when the game
-stopped for the players and spectators to have tea. Yes, tea! Imagine
-an American ball game suspended for a half-hour while the ball-players
-enjoyed tea and sandwiches! It was too much for me. I saw the last
-half of the first inning would not be ended in one day, so I quit the
-cricketers and their tea and went off to look at an old church, which
-was more exciting.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are some peculiarities about cricket when viewed from an
-American standpoint. The association or league corresponds very well
-to our National or American League. A club of eleven men may be all
-professionals, or, as is usually the case, some may be amateurs.
-A professional is a player who is paid, and on the score his name
-appears without prefix, just “Brown.” But if he is an amateur and plays
-without pay, his name is on the score card “J. M. Brown, Esq.” He is
-then called a “gentleman player.” The game usually lasts two days. The
-side that is in stays in until ten men are put out. The pitcher or
-bowler tries to hit the wicket, three little posts that stand like our
-baseball home plate, and if he does, the batter is out. The batter, or
-in English the batsman, defends the “wicket,” and when he hits the ball
-far enough runs to the other wicket, which is located at the pitcher’s
-box. If he knocks a fly and it is caught he is out, or if a fielder
-gets the ball and hits the wicket while he is running, he is out. Two
-batsmen are up at a time, and a man may make a lot of runs. I saw
-Woolley, the pride of Kent, score 56 runs, and players often exceed the
-hundred mark. If the game is not finished in three days it is declared
-off.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The crowd was quiet and ladylike. Occasionally they would applaud and
-say “Well bowled, sir,” but they did not tell the umpire he was rotten
-and they never urged the visiting club to warm up another pitcher. Not
-a word was said by the players, not a pop-bottle was thrown, nobody
-was benched and there was never a thought of such a thing. The English
-are better sportsmen than we are, and they applaud a good play by a
-visitor. A man who tried to rattle the bowler by screaming that his arm
-was glass, would be arrested and probably hung.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Besides the cathedral, the quaint buildings and the cricket, Canterbury
-also offered an opportunity to see the moving pictures of the
-Jeffries-Johnson prize fight in a theater next to the church. Of course
-I did not go. I told several Englishmen that in America we considered
-these pictures degrading, and as between the fight pictures and the
-cathedral I preferred the cathedral. Besides, I had seen the fight
-pictures before.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another very interesting church in Canterbury is St. Martin’s, a little
-one, but considered the mother church of England. It is said to be
-the one erected for Queen Bertha before her Saxon husband, Ethelbert,
-was converted. This was prior to 600. It is on a foundation which was
-used for a Roman temple. Within the church is a big stone font said to
-have been used for the baptizing of Ethelbert. There is little doubt
-but that the history of St. Martin’s is clear and it is the oldest
-Christian church in all England.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Associating with old cathedrals and Saxon churches makes one feel a few
-thrills. Even the inn where Chaucer put up his pilgrims seems modern.
-But cricket and the prize-fight pictures make up a sort of balance, and
-second-hand shops with wonderful salesmen bring one back to the 20th
-century. Canterbury has a famous brewery which is better patronized
-locally than is the cathedral, and farmers are in town trying to get
-hop-pickers just like Kansas farmers after hands in harvest-time. If
-St. Thomas could come back and see the automobiles running around his
-old monastery, notice the electric lights in the cathedral crypt,
-observe the American tourists with their guide-books and their gall, he
-would probably have some thrills himself.
-
-
-
-
-The English Strike
-
-
- LONDON, August 28.
-
-There was a great strike of railway men in England last week, the
-news of which was sent over the world. As a subject of conversation
-and discussion it has taken the place of ordinary sights and tourist
-stunts. A very large per cent of the railway employés went out, there
-was rioting in several places, the soldiers were called upon, there
-was almost war in spots, and several people, innocent by-standers
-usually, were killed. The government secured a cessation of the strike
-by getting men and managers to agree to submit the differences to a
-national commission and be bound by it--an agreement both sides will
-break if it does not suit them. A railroad strike is a most serious
-thing in England, for in London and the manufacturing centers the
-people depend on the railroads to bring in their provisions, and as
-ice is almost unknown very few shops have more than a day’s supply of
-meats, fish and fresh eatables on hand. So the strike was pinching
-millions of people who had no personal interest in its result.
-
-If I were a railroad employé in England I would strike, or at least
-I’d strike out for America or some other land where a man has a show.
-Railroad men are not well paid in England, rather worse than other
-working-men. Engineers, or drivers as they are called, rarely get to
-exceed 30 to 35 shillings a week (seven to nine dollars). Firemen,
-switch-men, baggagemen, station-men, operators, conductors and brakemen
-get from 20 shillings to 35 shillings a week (five to nine dollars).
-And yet both passenger fares and freight charges are higher in England
-than in Kansas. In discussing the subject with an educated Englishman
-I complained that a man with a family could not live on these wages.
-“Yes, but they do,” he said; “but the family doesn’t get meat every
-day--and the family doesn’t need meat every day.” I argued on, that a
-man can’t buy a home, or save anything for trouble or old age. “That’s
-true,” he said, “and it is unfortunate. But his children won’t let
-him starve, and there is some light job he can do to help out. The
-government is now preparing a plan for the pensioning of old people.
-When that law is working, a man won’t have to worry about the future.”
-
-Which is a rotten theory. It merely means that with the prospect of a
-pension of less than two dollars a week an English laborer can be kept
-working at the present low standard. I am for the old-age pension, but
-I am for the proper payment of a workingman while he is at the age to
-enjoy life. This beautiful England with its castles and palaces and
-picture galleries and great history is far behind every other nation
-in its treatment of the workingman, and consequently England is now
-sitting on a keg of dynamite which is likely to explode. Once get it
-out of the heads of the English workmen that they have to submit to
-these things and these wages because their fathers did, and that it is
-a great blessing to have a king and lords, and the English working-men
-will raise Hades with the present political and social conditions in
-merry England. It seems to me that the time is not far distant when the
-explosion will take place. Only very skillful management on the part
-of the English statesmen and the very conservative habits of thought of
-the English people prevented most serious trouble last week.
-
-An English workman usually has a large family, and the only way they
-can keep from going hungry or to the poorhouse is for the whole family
-to work and mother and children earn money to put into the common
-treasury. Meat, vegetables, fruit, everything to eat, costs more in
-England than it does in Kansas. Rent is less, but our workmen wouldn’t
-live as these have to. Clothing is cheaper in some respects and dearer
-in others. But the item is small with an English workman. You can see
-that after he pays rent and buys food he has very little left for
-wearing apparel, so father wears his suit until it is worn out, mother
-gets along on second-hand clothing, which is generally used, and the
-children have a cheaper grade and little of it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I am not knocking on the English. This condition which seems so
-distressing to me is a product of their conditions and is not
-the deliberate purpose of the people. I think it comes from the
-conservatism of the English character, and also from the fact that the
-English workman competes against the world. English manufactures and
-commerce have been built up because in England labor is intelligent,
-high-class, and cheap. I can have a tailor-made suit of clothes for
-twelve dollars in London. That’s fine for me, but how is it for the
-tailor? And it doesn’t help the other English workingman, for he does
-not have the twelve. On the other hand, the ability of the American
-workman to buy has brought it to pass that he can get just as good a
-suit, better fitted and better looking, at a Hutchinson clothing store
-for twelve to fifteen dollars,--and he has the money and buys! There
-is going to be some discussion of clothing and the woolen schedule
-in the United States, and I want to put in this testimony. Before
-I left home I bought a suit in Hutchinson for fifteen dollars. No
-English tailor-made suit for that price looks near so well, and the
-way it fits and hangs is complimented by the English. The only kind
-of stuff that is cheaper in England than with us is that in which
-hand labor is employed. Women buy laces because they are made by
-intelligent working-women who are paid 25 to 50 cents a day. Silk hats
-are cheaper, but the same quality hat I buy at home cost me just as
-much in London, and shirts, underwear, sox, etc., are as expensive here
-as in Hutchinson. I am told the same rule applies to women’s clothes.
-Americans who come to England and continue to live on the same standard
-they do in America say that living is more expensive here. Of course
-they can have three or four servants for the same price they paid the
-one hired girl at home, and can pose as being “upper class.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-I went to a barber shop, a first-class one. I was shaved for a
-“tuppence” (four American cents) and had my hair cut for a “trippence”
-(six American cents). I gave the barber a tip of a penny, for which
-he was very thankful, and then I went out of the shop growling at a
-country where I could get shaved so cheaply and where a tailor-made
-suit cost only $12. In this world of ours we are so dependent on one
-another that you can’t cheapen one man without cheapening all the
-rest. I asked the street-car conductor and he told me he was paid
-five dollars a week--and he has a family of six. The chamber-maid at
-the hotel works for a dollar a week and board. A good coachman or
-a house-man gets one to two dollars a week and board. A clerk in a
-store does well to beat five dollars a week. How do they live? I don’t
-know, but they do; but they have all heard of America and Canada and
-Australia, and would go there if they could raise the fare, or if it
-were not for leaving family and home.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I am getting away from the strike subject. I make myself unpopular
-with some of the English, the wealthier people and their foot-men,
-by insisting that the railroad men ought to strike and ought to have
-their wages doubled, when I have to pay more than two cents a mile for
-a second-class fare, and about twice as much for shipping freight as I
-would in Kansas. And I always compare with Kansas, a place most of them
-never heard of, and I suppose they think I am describing a fictitious
-land where the millennium has already arrived.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We spent an afternoon at Richmond, where high hills rise from the
-valley of the Thames and the view of English farm and village, river
-and forest, is one of the finest in the world. Far away in the distance
-is Windsor Castle, the favorite royal dwelling-place, the Thames like
-a silver streak dotted with boats and wooded islands, quaint towns
-with old churches, and winding roads white with the macadam of chalky
-stone, occasional tram-ways, busses with the passengers on top, gardens
-and orchards, little strips of pasture with sheep and cows, fences of
-hedges and ivy-covered walls,--all of these things are a panorama which
-make the breath come fast, the heart beat more rapidly. The ground is
-historic, for it has been the living-place and fighting-place of great
-men from the time of the Saxons, and every town and hill is like a page
-of English history. Beautiful homes adorn the hillside and comfortable
-inns offer entertainment to the traveler and the visitor. It is a great
-picture, and artists have copied it onto their canvases. Turner and
-Gainsborough lived here, and their pictures of English scenery are
-more beautiful than their conceptions of saints and their portraits
-of sinners. Here is where good King Edward, the most popular monarch
-England has had in many years, came for a view and a night out. In the
-road-house on the height is the place where Lilly Langtry achieved fame
-by slipping a chunk of ice down the back of Edward’s princely neck.
-
-We had lunch at The Boar’s Head and took tea at The Red Dog, two of the
-many taverns which show the English taste in names is just the same now
-as it was when Pickwick traveled and motor cars were unknown.
-
-
-
-
-Englishman the Great
-
-
- LONDON, August 31.
-
-London is easily the capital of the world. As much as every other large
-nation might argue the question, there is general acceptance of the
-fact that Great Britain is the greatest force politically. The English
-navy, superior in size and quality to any other two navies, the English
-commerce which goes under the English flag to the furthermost parts,
-the great English colonies (almost independent states) Canada and
-Australia, the rich English possessions like India and South Africa,
-the English “spheres of influence” like Egypt and Persia, and the
-supremacy of English capital and banking methods,--all of these and the
-capable, self-possessed, educated English manhood and womanhood have
-made the power of Great Britain foremost among the nations. And London
-is not only the political capital of England and its dependencies, but
-it is the capital in business, books, art, fashion, science, and money.
-The wealth and the literature and the commerce of the world depend on
-the judgment of London. The very thought of the power thus included
-is impressive. I walked down Threadneedle street and Lombard street,
-each about as large as an alley in Hutchinson, and thought of the
-millions and millions of money and capital which those plain buildings
-contained, and of the power which the men within them possessed. Then I
-thought of the eight million people of London, moving around like ants
-in a hill, and the size, the activity, and the never-ending motion,
-brought most forcibly to mind how insignificant is one man, especially
-if he is from Kansas and doesn’t know a soul in all that aggregation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: SEEING LONDON FROM THE OLD ENGLISH BUS]
-
-But there is one part of London in which all English-speaking people
-have a part--the London of history, of Dickens, Thackeray, Johnson,
-Shakespeare and those men whose names are living long after the
-money-lender and the broker are forgotten. A little way from the
-Bank and the bankers is the old Curiosity Shop, the Cheshire Cheese,
-the Cock, the Temple Courts, and hundreds of names familiar to
-every reader of English literature, and instead of being lonesome
-and oppressed by the weight of the millions of people and money, I
-felt that I had met old friends, and that Little Dorrit, or David
-Copperfield, or Samuel Johnson, or Pendennis, or Oliver Twist or some
-other acquaintance whom I knew very well was expected every minute.
-That is the great beauty of being an American in London, for all of the
-history and literature that have centered here is ours as well as our
-English cousins’.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hansom cab and the old omnibus are disappearing before the taxi
-and the motor-bus. It is a shame, but the world will move on. Every
-Englishman or traveler remembers the London cab, with its two wheels
-and hood-shaped carriage, and the driver up behind. There are still a
-few, but the taxis are faster, and the London cab horse will soon be
-freed. So it is with the old bus, drawn by two good horses and driven
-by an expert driver who knew all of the history and romance of the
-buildings along the route, and who would impart said information with
-decorations and embellishments to the traveler with a sixpence. All
-of this so-called progress, the motor cars and the wider streets, are
-doubtless more efficient and more sanitary, but they are not near so
-picturesque or interesting. The taxicabs go through the London crowds,
-the jam of vehicles and the congestion of traffic at a speed that would
-not be tolerated in a small town in Kansas. The policeman stands on the
-corner and regulates the moving mass, but apparently there is no speed
-limit, only punishment for bad driving. The motor-driver who runs over
-a man is severely punished, and that makes him careful. The rule works
-well, but not quite so well as the one in Paris, which punishes the
-pedestrian who gets in the way of the motor car.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next to the wages problem is the land problem in England. Three or four
-men own half the real estate in London. Their ancestors got it in a
-fairly legitimate way when it was outlying country, and now it is the
-heart of a great city. The English law of heredity keeps the estate
-together. The English land conditions are the worst I know of in any
-nation in the world. The rich old dukes who own so much of London
-cannot be pried loose from their holdings, and the actual residents
-cannot buy their homes or their business houses. The proprietor usually
-leases for 99 years, but every improvement goes to him eventually; he
-will do nothing himself, and the renter pays the taxes. On Piccadilly
-street, in the center of the fashionable residence and shop district,
-the Marquis of Landsup, or some such title, has a park of twenty acres
-which is surrounded by a high stone wall. It is a pretty park, but
-the owner’s family is there only a couple of months in the year when
-the weather is cold and the park is not usable. The rest of the time
-no one but servants and caretakers occupy that beautiful tract, with
-the city all around it. And thousands and tens of thousands of people
-are walking the streets or living in miserable tenements. I suspect
-I’d be a Socialist if I stayed long in London and thought much about
-such things as this. With all their brain and intellect the English
-statesmen have not solved the land problem in England, and they never
-will solve it until they upset the table.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is a great thing to be able to speak the language and not have to
-rely so much on holding up your fingers and making faces. We have been
-for so many weeks among the Dutch and the French that it is a positive
-pleasure to just listen to the conversation around us and know that we
-can understand. A little knowledge of a foreign tongue leads to many
-mistakes. I heard a Frenchman in a London hotel giving an account of
-his day’s experience to an English lady. Among other things he said he
-went to a linen store and left an order for table linen, and added,
-“and I will have my entrails on it.” Of course he meant his initials,
-but he had been careless with his dictionary. And yet it is very hard
-for us to understand the ordinary London cab-driver or workman. His
-accent is so different that it is almost like another language. And
-even an educated Englishman will give you a direction like this: “Go
-to the next turning on the left, bear a bit to the right until you
-get to the top of the street.” Which means in American go to the next
-corner, turn to the left, then a little to the right to the end of the
-street. I never can understand why the English people generally murder
-their language as they do. But perhaps I am like the little American
-girl I met in Germany. She had learned German at home, and I asked her
-how she got along in Berlin. “Not very well,” she said, “they talk such
-bad German.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The transportation in the center of London is confined entirely to
-busses and cabs. There is too much traffic and the streets are too
-narrow for street railways. In the outer parts of the city a number
-of street cars, or “trams” as they are called, are operated. Every
-bus and every tram has seats on the roof, and they are the choice
-seats on the vehicle. From one of these top seats is the place to see
-London, and the traveler has the advantage of not only being able
-to note the sights on the pavement and the walks, but he can look
-in the second-story windows and see how people live. There are no
-great skyscrapers in London, the business houses usually being six
-stories or less in height. The residences are nearly always three
-or four stories, and either built flush to the street, with a garden
-or court in the rear, or back from the street and the yard inclosed
-by a high stone wall. The Englishman goes on the old principle that
-an Englishman’s house is his castle, and puts up high walls between
-himself and his neighbors. A front porch, or an open lawn in front
-of a private house, would be regarded as freakish or an evidence of
-insanity. On the other hand, there are many public parks and pretty
-green squares in London which are breathing-spots for the congestion of
-humanity within this great city.
-
-The “City of London” which has a Lord Mayor is the little old city
-which is the hub of the whole business. It is the section of the
-banks and the great institutions of finance, and is about the size of
-Hutchinson, but a solid mass of stone structures and narrow streets.
-Only about 30,000 people reside there. The London of the present is
-London County, covers about 900 square miles and is therefore about the
-size of Reno county. That is the area in which 8,000,000 people live.
-It is governed by a County Council, elected by the taxpayers, which is
-a very active body and is doing much to improve the conditions. London
-has fine water and visitors are even urged to drink it--something new
-in Europe. Taxes, or “rates” as they are called, are high, and include
-everything from real estate and personal to income tax and a stamp tax
-on receipts and drafts. The great problem of improving a city is to get
-the money without distressing the people. It requires large sums to
-make and care for parks, streets, schools, paving, water-works, light,
-and the other things that the city must have in order to be modern,
-healthful, and comfortable. The citizens everywhere groan under the
-weight of taxation, and yet they should not if the money is properly
-spent. These streets, police, schools, fire departments and such are as
-necessary as the walls of our homes, which also require money to build
-and maintain. The certainty of death and taxes is proverbial. There is
-no way to avoid the former and the only way to dodge taxes is to go
-to an uninhabited island and live by yourself. And then if some other
-individual comes along, the first thing the original tax-dodger will
-do is to tax the other fellow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ordinary English home has the front room of the house for the
-dining-room. The “drawing-room” is at the rear and the kitchen quite a
-distance from the dining-room. The drawing-room is used only on special
-occasions and the dining-room is the family living-room. The English
-are great home-makers, and their houses are always well furnished and
-look as if folks lived there. On the continent the fashion is to go out
-for the evening meal to restaurant or café, but the Englishman comes
-home and stays there. The table is spread with the family and intimate
-friends around, and supper is served at 8 o’clock or later. You see the
-Englishman has already had three meals--breakfast, luncheon, and tea;
-so the evening meal is late. To me the most attractive part of English
-life is that in the home. The Englishman gathers his family about him,
-pulls down the blinds, reads his newspaper and is in his castle, which
-no lord or duke can enter without his consent. This simple virtue of
-home-living is rare in Europe, and in the family circle which gathers
-at the table and at the altar the young Englishman gets the habit of
-thought and manner which marks him wherever he goes, and which has made
-his country the greatest of all the nations.
-
-
-
-
-The North of Ireland
-
-
- LONDONDERRY, IRELAND, September 8.
-
-Crossing the Irish Sea from Fishguard in southern Wales to Rosslare in
-southern Ireland, I met a jolly Irishman from Cork. When I told him I
-was going to the North of Ireland he remonstrated. “Don’t do it, mon.
-Every Irishman up there is a Scotchman!” But I had seen the beautiful
-South of Ireland and we had to come to Londonderry to take the ship
-for home, so the warning of the Corker was in vain. I found that he
-was right. Soon after we left Dublin we came upon linen factories and
-distilleries and Presbyterian churches, people too busy to jolly a
-stranger, and cannily seeking the surest way to a sixpence. In the
-South of Ireland no one is too busy to talk with the stranger and to
-tell him all the legendary lore of the country, while in the North one
-shrinks from stopping the busy worker, even to ask him which way is
-straight up. The people of both ends of Ireland are pleasant and the
-American dollar is greatly admired, but the process of extracting it
-is painless, even pleasant, in Cork, while it hurts enough to notice in
-Belfast. The South is almost entirely agricultural and is social, while
-the North is filled with factories and notices not to allow your heads
-to stick out of the windows. The people of the South are poorer but
-happier; the people of the North are busier and more worried in their
-looks. The Irishman in the South smiles pleasantly without an apparent
-thought of the money he is going to make, the Irishman in the North
-smiles after he gets the money.
-
- * * * * *
-
-All of this Emerald isle is green, and picturesque scenery with lakes
-and falls, glens and fields, rugged coasts and beautiful beaches is to
-be found from Queenstown to Portrush.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We stopped a day in Dublin, which is an Irish city with a large tinge
-of English. It was the capital of Ireland prior to the consolidation
-of the Irish Parliament with that of Great Britain, and may still be
-called so because the Lord-Lieutenant Governor lives here and has a
-sort of a court. There are about 400,000 people, packed in too tightly
-and with not enough work to keep many of them in decent living and
-style. That is the trouble in Ireland--one of their troubles, the lack
-of opportunity for work. There is not much for the energetic young
-Irishman to do but to emigrate, and he goes to America or Canada or
-Australia, or even to England, to get a job and a chance. The land is
-nearly all owned by men who do not live in Ireland, and is rented to
-farmers who find that when they improve their places it means a raise
-in rent. The new land law which gives a man a sort of title to his
-leased land, and makes a court of arbitration as to rent and purchase,
-is improving conditions in Ireland and they are better off now in
-respect to land than they are in England, except for the blight of
-absentee landlordism, the system which takes the rent-money and spends
-it in London or in Paris.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dublin is perking up some on the prospect of home rule, which would
-bring an Irish legislature to Dublin and make the city a real capital.
-But the prospect for home rule is dubious. The Irish party holds the
-balance of power in the English Parliament and has been allied with
-the Liberals in their reforms and the dehorning of the House of Lords.
-The Liberals have promised the Irish home rule, and the leaders will
-try to fulfill the promise, but they may find it hard work to line up
-their followers, and let it go until another general election. There
-are so many other questions involved in English politics that home rule
-may be lost in the shuffle, but as the Irish are the best politicians
-in the world they are looking forward to success after a lovely fight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The city of Belfast, a hundred miles north of Dublin, is the center of
-the linen trade. The English Parliament a couple of hundred years ago
-prohibited the manufacture of wool in Ireland because it competed with
-English trade, but promoted the spinning of linen. The climate is just
-right, labor is cheap, and Irish linen is the best in the world. We
-visited a linen mill, and also a cottage where the hand looms were at
-work. The wages paid to good hands are 50 to 75 cents a day. This would
-be fair wages in Europe, but the work is not always steady and many
-days are lost in setting the patterns and fixing the looms. The manager
-of the factory said that most of his best men went to America--he
-himself had two sons in New York. The wages here will keep soul and
-body together if the body is willing to get along on fish and potatoes.
-But there is no outcome, no prospect of a future which shall include
-a beefsteak once a week. The manager had been in America and he knew
-the difference. “Our workmen are all right because they don’t know the
-luxuries the American workman has, except by hearsay. Of course if they
-once get the appetite for meat and a new suit of clothes every year
-they have to leave us. But a two-eyed beefsteak makes a good meal.” A
-two-eyed beefsteak is an Irish name for a herring.
-
-Belfast has great ship-building yards, next to Glasgow the greatest
-in the world. It also has large distilleries which supply England and
-America. I am told that the consumption of liquor is on the decrease in
-Ireland. I hope so. But the distilleries keep building additions and
-enlarging their plants.
-
-Which recalls the old story of the Illinois statesman who was a great
-drinker and was ruining the prospect of a useful life. His family
-and friends tried to stop him, but the habit or disease could not be
-overcome. One night a friend had him out for a walk, trying to sober
-him up for important business the next day. They passed a distillery
-and the friend said: “John, what a fool you are to try to drink all the
-whisky that is made. You can’t do it. See that busy distillery with its
-bright lights and throbbing engines. You can’t beat it.” John looked,
-and then with drunken dignity replied: “Perhaps you’re right. But don
-you shee I’m making ’em work nights?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The drink problem is the hardest to solve in Great Britain, England,
-Ireland and Scotland. It is worse than the wage problem or the land
-problem. In no other countries that I have visited are the evils of
-booze so plainly in evidence as in the British Isles. In Germany the
-sight of the family in the beer garden with their mugs of creamy
-liquid, their good-nature and their temperance, does not make an
-unpleasant impression. In France and the southern countries, where
-wine is the common beverage, one does not worry about this custom.
-But in England, Ireland and Scotland, where you see men and women
-drunk in the streets and in the gutters, where you see children ragged
-and barefooted, homes cheerless and pauperism prevalent, all plainly
-because of the drink, the sensibility of even the most seasoned is
-shocked. Public-houses with women behind the bars, open seven days in
-the week and handing out the whisky which temporarily exhilarates and
-then stupefies and degrades, are one of the companion pictures to the
-great buildings, wonderful achievements and artistic developments which
-one sees in every British town. The temperance societies work hard, the
-government would help if it dared, but the drinking, the suffering and
-the pauperizing process goes on. The distilleries are enlarging, and
-working nights.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I talked this matter over with an intelligent Irishman, and he agreed
-with me that if the drinking of liquor could be abolished it would do
-away with nine-tenths of the poverty. “But see these poor fellows and
-how they work,” he said. “Saturday night comes, and who can blame them
-for having a few pleasant hours even if it is all imagination, and even
-if they do go to work on blue Monday with aching heads and a little
-tremble.”
-
-Which is very poor argument, for it does not take in the dependent
-wives and children. And the Saturday night drunk makes a poor workman
-on Monday.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the northern coast of Ireland, near Portrush and a number of
-beautiful summer resorts, is the Giant’s Causeway. The origin of
-this really wonderful freak of nature is said by archæologists to be
-volcanic, and that the Causeway, the adjoining cliffs and several
-islands are products that came from a volcano in the shape of burning
-lava, and were then thrown into shape by later explosions as the molten
-mass was cooling. The Causeway is a formation like a pier extending
-into the ocean and made up of 40,000 pillars (by Irish count), each a
-separate column and usually five-or six-sided. They are about twenty
-feet long, twenty inches in diameter and jointed like mason-work,
-or more like a bamboo rod. The theory is that as the lava cooled it
-cracked and shrunk. Perhaps so. Nobody saw it.
-
-I prefer the Irish version, which is simpler and easy to understand.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fin MacCoul, the giant, was the champion of Ireland. He had knocked
-out all rivals and no one could stand in front of him for a second
-round. He was as great a man in Ireland as John L. Sullivan used to be
-in Boston. Over in Scotland a certain Caledonia giant boasted that he
-could lick any man on earth, Irish preferred. He gave out an interview
-to the newspapers, saying that if it were not for the wetting he would
-cross over and take the Irish championship from Fin. After much of the
-usual mouth-work between the champions, Fin got permission from the
-king, constructed the Causeway from Ireland to Scotland, and dared the
-Caledonian to come across. The Scot was game, and the match was pulled
-off without police interference, resulting in a victory for Fin, who
-kindly allowed his beaten rival to settle in Ireland and open a saloon.
-Ireland was then, as it is now, the finest country in the world, so the
-Scotchman lived happily ever afterward. The Causeway gradually sank
-into the sea, and all that is now in sight is the Irish end and a few
-islands between it and the Scottish coast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The formation of the coast for several miles each side of the Causeway
-is the same volcanic rock, and it rises abruptly hundreds of feet high
-from the sea. Caves and caverns with arches and vaults and echoes, and
-natural amphitheatres with the pipe organ Fin used to play and the
-bathtub which he used, are visited by the visitors who go out upon
-the Atlantic in a row-boat. I have seen Niagara and the Falls of the
-Rhine, and the Garden of the Gods in Colorado, and a few hundred more
-wonderful works of Nature or of giants, and the Causeway is not second
-to any of them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Our last stop in Ireland is this town of Londonderry, known in Ireland
-as “Derry.” The London end of the name was put on by King James the
-First, who was so devoted to his religion that he killed or exiled the
-Catholic Irish in Ulster and Derry and gave their lands to Protestant
-emigrants from England. A few years later Cromwell finished the job
-and got the name of “Thorough,” because of his theory that the only
-good Irishman was a dead Irishman. There were terrible religious wars
-in Ireland for years, each side getting even for outrages committed by
-the other. One great event in the series was the siege of Londonderry
-by an Irish army under James the Second, who had been run out of
-England by William of Orange. James was about to enter the city with
-the consent of the governor, when thirteen apprentice boys banged down
-the portcullis, closing the entrance. That started the fight, and the
-people of Londonderry decided to stand the siege. They repulsed the
-soldiers and James tried to starve ’em out. The siege, which began
-with no preparation for defense, lasted seven months, and half the
-population died of starvation. The people ate dogs and cats and rats,
-a rat selling for three shillings. At last an English fleet broke
-through the obstruction in the river, and the remnant of the people of
-Londonderry was saved.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Those were “good old times.” The Protestants of Londonderry knew if
-they surrendered they would meet the same fate that they had accorded
-to the Catholics on the capture of Irish towns, and there is hardly
-a town in Ireland which cannot duplicate the story of the siege of
-Londonderry. Those days are gone, Irish and English have laid aside
-their weapons, and except for St. Patrick’s Day or the 12th of July,
-which is the anniversary of the battle of the Boyne in which William
-defeated James, there is hardly a broken head in the country from
-religious causes.
-
-The walls still stand in Londonderry, and some of the cannon of 1689
-are mounted at the old stand. But the walls are now a promenade and
-the cannon are only relics. A Protestant cathedral and a Catholic
-cathedral, a Presbyterian college and a Catholic college, are doing
-business side by side, and all are doing good. Two steamship lines have
-made Derry a regular stop on their way from Glasgow to America. The
-principal business of the town is the manufacture of linen and whisky,
-most of which is exported to the United States. And Irishmen from
-the North of the isle, who want an opportunity and a chance, come to
-Derry on their way to the best land of all, discovered by the Spanish,
-developed by the English, and ruled generally by the Irish, known and
-loved as home now by more Irish than are in Ireland, the U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
-Scotland and the Scotch
-
-
- GLASGOW, SCOTLAND, September 7.
-
-Scotland is one of the oldest countries of the civilized world.
-Although it is now united with England and is a part of Great
-Britain, up to two hundred years ago it had nothing to do with the
-English except to fight them. The original inhabitants were Celts,
-and came into history as Picts and Scots, who held possession of
-the northern part of the country when the Romans conquered England.
-After the Romans went away the Saxons arrived and practically wiped
-out all the old Britons in England, but made no headway against the
-Caledonians or “people of the hills,” as they called the residents
-of the north. About the ninth century the various tribes were gotten
-together under one chief or king, and from that time until the union
-of England and Scotland in 1706 the chief occupation of the Scotch
-was to fight the English, who were always trying to conquer Scotland,
-but never succeeding. The Scotch and the English were of different
-race, language, customs and habits. Much of Scotland, the Highlands,
-has little room for agriculture, and the people lived a roving life,
-raising a few sheep and oats, and, whenever they felt like it, making
-a raid into the Lowlands and into England and bringing back cattle
-and supplies to last them until the next raid. They were converted to
-Christianity, but their idea of morality never included an injunction
-against killing the Lowlander and running off his herd. War was the
-name under which nations concealed their crimes of robbery, and the
-Highlanders of Scotland had war all the time; so they were officially
-justified. When you analyze their romantic history and the great
-deeds of their heroes you will always find that no matter how strict
-their character and honor among themselves, they never considered it
-anything but a praiseworthy action to kill and rob an Englishman. The
-reformation by John Knox and his contemporaries filled the Scottish
-heads with religious enthusiasm and devotion, but it did not interfere
-with the Scottish theory that the English were the natural enemy who
-must always be fought. And the English, on their side, reciprocated
-the regard in which they were held by the Scotch, and every king
-of England who had a chance put in his time trying to conquer the
-clansmen. Often the English would defeat the Scotch armies and capture
-their chiefs, but they couldn’t any more hold the Scotch territory than
-they could hold the red-hot end of a poker.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Elizabeth, Queen of England, died, the next heir to the English
-throne was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, then reigning as James
-the Sixth, King of Scotland. He was not only the heir, but he was a
-Protestant, and was, therefore, acceptable, and he was duly crowned as
-James the First of England. Of course, he went to London to reside, and
-from that time to the present England and Scotland have had the same
-king, although it was 100 years later before there was any union of
-the two governments. In 1706 the Scottish Parliament adopted the act
-of union, the majority being secured by shameful and open bribery and
-against the protests of the Scottish people, who did not want to be the
-tail of the English kite. But the union resulted very beneficially
-to Scotland, as it changed the occupation from war to commerce and
-from raising hell to raising sheep. The natural shrewdness of the Celt
-was stimulated by the industry required in a country where hard work
-is necessary, and all over the world Scotchmen are known for their
-ability, their keenness in argument, their thrift and their success.
-Scotland is as far north as Labrador and Hudson Bay. It has a short
-growing season and very little fertile soil. I am wearing an overcoat
-and shivering with cold. That kind of a country raises sturdy and
-energetic people.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It has rained every day and nearly all the time since we arrived.
-The Scotch do not seem to mind the wet, but go about their business,
-clad in rough, warm clothing. I had quite a talk with a bright old
-Scotchman, and, after I had admitted--just as well give in to a
-Scotchman without argument--that Scotland was the most beautiful
-country on earth, I started a diversion by asking him if it rained all
-the time in Scotland. In very broad dialect he said he would tell
-us a story that would answer the question. A ship arrived off the
-Scotch coast, and, as it was raining, the captain decided to delay
-landing until the storm was over. He waited three weeks before the rain
-stopped, but finally the sun came out and he put for the shore. Just as
-he climbed onto the land the sky darkened and the rain began to fall
-again. Of a Scotch lad standing by, the captain asked: “Does it rain
-all the time in Scotland?”
-
-“Naw,” said the lad; “sometimes it snaws.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The agricultural products of Scotland are oats, grass, barley, and a
-little wheat. The farms are generally small and the soil poor, and the
-great industry is the raising of sheep. In the manufacturing towns the
-wool is made into cloth. The chief industry, aside from this, is the
-distillery, and a great deal of the product is consumed at home. The
-people are poor, and there is little chance for them to improve their
-condition and stay in Scotland. The land is owned by big landlords,
-and hundreds of square miles are kept for hunting by the proprietors
-of the estates. Work as hard as he may, the Scotch tenant farmer has
-very little ahead of him except poverty and heaven. The tourists
-bring a good deal of money to the country, and are separated from it
-in every way the canny Scot can devise. But in spite of poverty and
-notwithstanding the evil of intemperance, there is no doubt of the
-natural brightness of the Scotch.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I had heard all my life of the Scotch heather, and it is one thing
-in which I was not disappointed. The Scotch moor, which is something
-between a barren field and a swamp, will raise nothing else, and most
-of Scotland is moor. Heather is like a weed cedar, if there could be
-such a thing, and at this season, when it is in bloom, covers the
-ground with a mat of blue. There is also a white heather, which is rare
-and to find which is good luck. I was very fortunate, for I picked a
-bunch of white heather the first attempt. I picked it from a lad for
-a penny, and I recommend that way of hunting for the white kind. But
-the blue heather is everywhere, as buffalo-grass used to be on western
-prairies. Heather is good for nothing, except as a flower, and it will
-not grow anywhere but in Scotland. It is like the hills and woods and
-lakes of this country-fair to look upon but not convertible into cash.
-It is worn by the people, and a man is hardly dressed up unless he
-has a bunch in his cap or his button-hole. The shamrock will not grow
-except in Ireland and the heather only in Scotland, and each is held in
-loving affection by the people of the country because of its constancy
-and patriotism.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Scotch have a way of making oatmeal porridge that justifies its
-reputation. But I tried the “haggis,” and once was enough. I do not
-know what the component elements of Scotch “haggis” may be, but I
-suspect that they are the remnants of the last meal minced together,
-with oatmeal and sheep-blood added to make them palatable. The Scotch
-people are not high livers. Whatever cannot be made out of oats and
-mutton is too high-priced for the ordinary citizen. The farm-house is
-generally divided by a solid wall, the family on one side and the cows
-and sheep on the other. The people of Scotland always have been poor,
-and they are not ashamed of it; but they consider it disgraceful to be
-ignorant or irreligious, so they have as good schools and churches as
-can be found anywhere outside of America. The men no longer go around
-with guns and plaids, calling themselves by the names of their clans,
-but there is much family pride, and the traditions of the good old
-times of murder and robbery are kept in mind. The English language has
-taken the place of the old Gaelic for general use, but the English as
-spoken in Scotland is only about second cousin to the English language
-as known in Kansas.
-
-Walter Scott wrote the history of Scotland for the world, and it is
-very fortunate for the clansmen that he did. Scott had a picturesque
-way of dressing up the costume and character of a dirty highwayman
-so that he would appear to be the soul of honor and the pride of
-chivalry. He has given some of the kings and dukes, who committed
-every crime from arson to murder, the reputation and standing of good
-and respectable citizens. His historical novels, in so far as their
-description of royal character is concerned, have the merit of beauty
-and interest, but not of truth. The Scots were fierce fighters, and
-in the days when war meant conquest and conquest meant pillage the
-Scots were unexcelled in all lines. Now that the world is putting
-up a different standard for success we find the Scotchmen adapting
-themselves to modern ideas; and in science, invention, law and commerce
-they can show down with any lot of people twice their size on earth.
-They are proud of their country, and can recite its legends and
-its poems of Burns even if they are so poor that they don’t have a
-square meal a day. They love to argue, state their views positively,
-contradict flatly, and do not object to taking as good as they send.
-They are not polite like the Germans, insinuating like the French, or
-reserved like the English. They are abrupt and inconsiderate, though
-kind-hearted and helpful, proud and poor, quick-witted and industrious.
-If they had any other country’s natural advantages they would own the
-earth.
-
-
-
-
-The Land of Burns
-
-
- AYR, SCOTLAND, September 9.
-
-Today we have spent in Ayr, the village which bases a claim on fame
-because in a humble little cottage, just outside its limits, Robert
-Burns, the great Scottish poet, was born. I call Burns “the great
-Scottish poet” because it is right that his beloved country should be
-linked with his name, but, as a matter of fact, Burns is the poet of
-humanity in every land and every clime. His writings jingle like a
-familiar song, his thoughts are the thoughts we all think but cannot
-express, and his music touches the heartstrings like recollections of
-childhood, a letter from home, or the memory of those who are dear
-and away. Burns wrote in rhyme the thoughts that came themselves and
-not thoughts he had worked up for the occasion. A child of poverty
-himself, he was neither blinded to its troubles nor overcome by its
-restrictions, and he tells us of the joys and pleasures, the griefs and
-sorrows of the people. He puts epigrams into verse and he tells of
-things as they are, looking through the shams and deceits and making
-good-natured fun of weakness and folly. He never gets away from the
-human interest and he never fails in knowledge of human nature.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Burns’s father was a farmer, and not a very successful one. He spelled
-his name Burness, but for some unknown reason the poet shortened it.
-The father was an honest and religious man who was highly respected,
-but never made good in a business way. His mother was brighter, and
-used to sing Scotch songs and ballads, and if there is anything in
-heredity Robert got his poetic instincts from that side of the house.
-They were trying to make a nursery pay when Robert was born, and I
-visited the cottage where that event took place. One end of the shanty
-with three rooms was for the family and the other with two rooms was
-for the cattle. The Burnses failed in the nursery business, and rented
-a small farm near by, on which Robert spent his boyhood days, not far
-from the taverns in Ayr and Irvine, where he learned how to be a
-“good fellow” and thus shortened his life. He was 15 years old when
-he wrote his first verses, and was helping on the farm and going to
-school. After the father died Robert and his brother tried to run the
-farm, but the poet got discouraged, and decided to emigrate to Jamaica.
-A publisher printed his poems, and he intended to take the money he
-received for them to pay his passage. But the book made a hit from the
-start, a second edition was called for, and Burns at once attained
-great popularity. He gave up the idea of leaving Scotland, and put in
-most of the remainder of his days writing, besides holding a small job
-which his friends got for him, in the revenue service. He bought a farm
-near Dumfries, and lived there and in the town the rest of his short
-life, for he died in 1796, when he was only 37 years of age.
-
-Burns not only enjoyed popularity in his own generation, but in the
-more than a century since he wrote his fame has grown steadily and his
-genius and talent are appreciated in every part of the world. There
-are statues and monuments to Burns all over Scotland, but the greatest
-memorial is in the hearts of the people of his own country and of
-all others into which his songs have gone. Wherever there is a son or
-daughter of Scotland there is a lover of “Bobby Burns.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was a little thrilling to be shown the inn where “Tam O’Shanter”
-loitered that stormy night in Ayr--
-
- “Auld Ayr, wham ne’er a town surpasses,
- For honest men and bonnie lasses.”
-
-It will be remembered that Tam and his crony, Souter Johnny, (both
-honored by statues now,) had spent the evening most merrily, and it
-came time for Tam to go home to his wife, who had frequently told
-Tam what would happen to him after one of those sprees. And the poet
-philosophizes:
-
- “Ah, gentle dames! it gars me greet
- To think how mony counsels sweet,
- How mony lengthen’d sage advices,
- The husband frae the wife despises!”
-
-Tam started for home on his good gray mare, Meg, but when he reached
-old Alloway Church he saw lights, and, made brave by the Scotch whisky,
-he boldly looked in. He saw the witches dancing, the devil playing the
-fifes, and a young woman he knew was in the carousal. Tam foolishly
-called, the lights went out, and it was up to Meg to get away from the
-swarm of witches who came in hot pursuit. The leading lady of the gang
-was right upon poor Tam when he came to the bridge, his hope of escape,
-for witches cannot cross running water. With one great jump Meg saved
-her master.
-
- “Ane spring brought off her master, hale,
- But left behind her ain grey tail;
- The carlin claught her by the rump,
- And left poor Maggie scarce a stump.”
-
-I have seen the tavern, the church, the bridge, the statue of Tam, but
-a grateful public has forgotten to properly commemorate the services of
-Meg and the sacrifice of the tail.
-
-Across the river Ayr are “the auld brig” and “the new brig” which
-held a joint debate as reported by Burns’s muse. The city council was
-recently about to take down the auld brig because it was unsafe, but
-a general howl went up, and the bridge is to be preserved. All of the
-relics of Burns are being taken care of, and so far as possible the
-old cottage and other places connected with his life are restored to
-the condition they were in when Burns was plowing and quit work to
-write poetry to a mouse he had stirred out of its nest. I can readily
-understand why Burns did not make a success as a farmer, for like other
-poets he did not like to work. However, the dislike for work is not
-confined to poets, who have more of an excuse for this fault than the
-rest of us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have not yet found a Scotchman who cannot quote Burns’s poetry by the
-yard. It is all I can do to read most of Burns’s lines, and the words I
-skip often look rough and jagged. But when a Scotchman recites Burns,
-the dialect and the broad accent make the rhymes sound like music. The
-strange syllables fit together in harmony so that one can understand
-that Burns knew what he was about when he used the local phrases and
-words in so much of his writing. Burns was a good scholar, and could
-and did write the purest of English, but he took the homely phrases of
-the Scottish life to make the common things he writes about ring clear
-and right.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ayr is about forty miles from Glasgow. As soon as you leave the Burns
-neighborhood you get into a country of coal mines, factories, and golf
-links. There are miles of golf grounds on the moors along the road.
-Most of the land is only fit to raise heather and lose golf balls. No
-wonder Burns’s father failed and Robert was going to emigrate. The
-more I see of Scottish soil the more I take off my hat to the Scotch
-farmers, who must be the bravest men in the world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-About fifty years ago Andrew Carnegie, then a lad of a half-dozen
-years, took his father by the hand and led him onto the ship at Glasgow
-which brought them to America. In all the Scotch towns there are
-Carnegie libraries and other benefactions from the Scotch boy. His
-shrewdness and industry are the result of Scotch character when given
-full play in an open field. On the other hand, Burns with his talent
-and his weakness exhibits another result of the sentimental yet canny
-Scot who sees through humanity and analyzes it.
-
-To read the poetry of Robert Burns is to be wiser, better and happier.
-The day spent in this little nook in which he began his life has
-brought much of Burns’s surroundings vividly to my mind. The little
-hovel in which he was born contrasts with the great monument reared by
-a grateful country, and proves his words if they needed proof:
-
- “A king can make a belted knight,
- A marquis, duke, and a’ that,
- But an honest man’s aboon his might,
- Guid faith, he mauna fa’ that.
- For a’ that and a’ that,
- Their dignities and a’ that,
- The pith of sense and pride o’ worth,
- Are higher rank, than a’ that.”
-
-
-
-
-The Journey’s End
-
-
- STEAMSHIP CAMERONIA, September 21.
-
-For some unexplainable reason the ship homeward-bound is always slow.
-When one leaves his own country on a journey to other lands he is in
-no hurry. The new pictures that constantly present themselves, the new
-objects and the talk that suggests new ideas, hopes and plans, make
-the days go swiftly by and the voyage is never too long or tiresome.
-But when months of travel have exhausted the appetite for sights, and
-the occurrence of the strange no longer starts a thrill, the thoughts
-of the traveler far exceed the speed of the ship and the fastest boat
-that crosses the Atlantic is too slow. This is the only excuse I can
-find for the Cameronia, which sailed four days later than scheduled,
-and has developed no traits which will be affectionately remembered by
-the present passengers. She is a new ship, and not finished. I suppose
-the Anchor line needed the money or it would not have started a vessel
-across the ocean with so many things not completed and untried. And
-then the Cameronia has shown great ability as a pitcher, also as a
-roller, and if a contest is begun as to what ship can pitch and roll,
-kick and buck and snort the best, I will back the Cameronia against the
-field.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ocean along the northern coast of Ireland has a habit of being
-busy. The currents from the south and the Arctic meet the turbulent
-waves from the Irish Sea, and a watery Donnybrook fair is the result.
-The Cameronia enjoyed the opportunity, and although the passengers
-generally took their evening meal a majority of them went dinnerless
-to bed, and they went early and with much haste. There is no known
-remedy for seasickness. The Rockefeller foundation which is discovering
-wonderful germs, on which every other ill can be laid, has not found
-the bacillus which started the trouble on the Cameronia. The ship’s
-doctor calmly advises you to put your finger down your throat and aid
-nature in her work. He assures you that the disease is not fatal,
-although you may wish it were, and he encourages you in the faith that
-every minute will be your next. The seasick ones lose temporarily any
-other trouble or ailments, and often forget their own names, imagining
-probably that these have gone with the rest. The story is told of a
-time like the one in question, that a sympathizing officer came to a
-man and woman who were leaning against each other with a common misery.
-“Is your husband very sick?” he inquired of the evidently cultured and
-modest lady. “He’s not my husband,” she faintly answered, as she leaned
-on her companion once again. “Your brother?” continued the butter-in.
-“I never saw him before,” she murmured, clasping again at the wobbly
-supporter under discussion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This is a Scotch boat, and she has some Scotch traits. The Scotch
-people are wonderful. In a land which is nearly all poor pasture and
-good golf links, they have developed a citizenship which intellectually
-leads the world. But they are not given to covering up unpleasant spots
-and they do not go too strong for things of mere beauty or comfort.
-There is no blarney-stone in the Highlands. The Scotch are probably
-the poorest hotel managers in the world. The graces and the pleasantry
-of the continent are despised, and everything coming to a Scotchman is
-expected on the day it is due. This habit of thrift is necessary in a
-land where it has always been a fight for man to get a result in the
-way of bread or meat or porridge. There is little humor in the Scotch
-nature, and every action is based on serious thought. The Cameronia is
-getting us across just as was promised, but with no frills or furbelows
-in the way of personal attention or entertainment.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of course there is a great deal in their viewpoint, and what seems
-right and proper in one country is often looked upon with horror in
-another. Sunday on the Cameronia was Sunday as it is in Glasgow. The
-Anchor line would no more sail a ship without divine service than it
-would without a rudder. It would no more permit the pianist to play
-secular music like “America” or “Swanee River” on Sunday than it would
-allow a passenger to take the captain’s place. But all the Sabbath
-Day the Anchor line sells booze openly and without a compunction of
-conscience. A compulsorily closed piano and an open bar look strange
-from the viewpoint of a traveler from Kansas.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I do not want to seem to be faultfinding, so I will only say that
-the grand concert on the Cameronia was not much worse than is usual
-on shipboard. Everybody knows that during a voyage some night is
-designated as concert night, a program is given by the passengers,
-and a collection taken for the benefit of the Sailors’ Home or some
-such charitable object. But only those who have actually made the trip
-and attended a concert realize the painful nature of the operation.
-A notice is posted on the bulletin board asking for volunteers for
-the program, and aspiring genius directly or through friends offers
-itself for the entertainment. A dignified gentleman who can’t tell a
-funny story but thinks he can is selected for chairman. Sometimes a
-really good musician or entertainer is inadvertently included in the
-program, but this is not often. No mistake is made in the choice of
-pretty girls who take up the collection. Our concert was opened by a
-bass solo, the guilty party being a man with his name parted in the
-middle and old enough to know better. He rendered (that’s the proper
-word) the old Roman favorite, “Only a Pansy Blossom.” When he came to
-the chorus about a faded flower he waved a yellow chrysanthemum in
-the air to a tremulo accompaniment. This was not a comic song, but
-a serious, sentimental selection, and the singer was an Englishman.
-The Scotch and English in the room heaved sighs and said to each
-other, “How beautiful!” The Americans poked each other in the ribs and
-almost wept in the effort to restrain their laughter. Of course he
-was encored, and he rendered again. This time it was a ballad about
-the golden tress of my darling, and in the touchiest of the touching
-lines he drew forth from his vest a piece of female switch, peroxide
-in color and horsetailish in effect. It was a great effort, and the
-serious fellow-country-men heaved more sighs of appreciation, while
-an American girl at my right whispered out of her handerchief, “I
-know I’m going to scream!” Then a Scotchman sang an Irish song. Now a
-Scotchman can’t get the Irish brogue any more than he can understand
-an American joke. He was enthusiastically encored, and responded with
-a French dialect story, in broad Scotch. It was funnier than he knew.
-An amateur violinist contributed an execution of a sonata or a nocturne
-or a cordial of some kind. A famous story-teller recited a few choice
-bits from the column of some London magazine, on which the American
-copyright expired many years ago. The chairman in a few touching words
-then explained the object of the charity for which the fund was to be
-collected, and the touching was completed by the young ladies with
-pleasant smiles.
-
-Such is a ship’s concert, and with slight variations it is one of the
-features of every ocean voyage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: INTRODUCING A JOKE TO OUR BRITISH COUSINS]
-
-I have alluded to the lack of humor in Great Britain, from the American
-viewpoint. I heard a good joke on the Scotch, and told it to a small
-crowd in the smoking-room. The story was of the boy who asked his
-father why there was such a coin as a farthing, the fourth part
-of a penny. The father replied that it was to enable the Scotch to
-be charitable. Nobody laughed, and I resumed a discussion of the
-weather. About five minutes afterward an Englishman roared with mirth,
-and shouted to me, “I follow you! I follow you!” I didn’t understand
-why he was following me until he began my story, which he repeated
-with explanations and reminders of the proverbial Scotch thrift. Then
-he told it again and laughed loudly. The others smiled courteously
-and then face after face broadened, they all “followed,” and nobody
-appreciated the joke more than the Scotchmen. They told the story to
-each other and laughed, then hunted up friends and told it until the
-friends “followed,” and I was pointed out as a humorist. But it was a
-long and painful operation, and I did not have the courage to try it
-again. These British cousins are not devoid of humor but their speed
-limit is far below ours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The harbor of New York is in sight and the pilot just came aboard. I
-witnessed an affecting scene. A fellow-passenger shouted vigorously
-to get the attention of a man who was sitting in the pilot boat. The
-man looked up, and I could tell the passenger was nervously preparing
-to ask for important news, perhaps of the strike, or the English
-elections. He called, “Who’s ahead in the National League?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-No coast looks as beautiful as the shore of home. Even New Jersey looms
-magnificently at such a time. The passengers are all on deck except
-those who are hiding articles from the customs officer. The returning
-Americans are full of enthusiasm. They have seen enough of other
-lands to know that there is none to compare with the United States,
-none which comes nearer to giving a man a chance. The foreigners in
-the first cabin watch the approaching scene with quiet interest. Over
-in the steerage hundreds of would-be Americans gaze eagerly at the
-land of hope and promise. Soon they will be welcomed by the Statue of
-Liberty which holds out the torch of citizenship to every alien with
-ten dollars in cash and a certificate of health. The American flag
-appears on passing boats, and it is the most beautiful as it is the
-most meaning of all the ensigns of all the nations. A man with a German
-accent tells me how forty years ago, when a mere boy, he came from
-the fatherland to try his fortune in the New World. This year he went
-back for a visit, but he had a stateroom and was not in the steerage.
-He saw the struggle and the lack of opportunity in the country of his
-birth. Now he is homeward-bound, satisfied that in spite of trusts
-and politics and coon songs, this is really the land of the free, the
-nation of opportunity; and as the pilot took charge and the American
-flag went to the top of the Cameronia’s mast, a tear trickled down his
-cheek, telling of the joy in his heart.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-Hyphenation has been standardised.
-
-A Table of Illustrations has been created by the Transcriber and is
-placed in the Public Domain.
-
-Page 61 — protraying changed to portraying.
-
-Page 113 — commerical changed to commercial.
-
-Page 121 — slipping changed to sipping.
-
-Page 141 — langauges changed to languages.
-
-Page 163 — Boulougne changed to Boulogne.
-
-Page 169 — 1060 changed to 1066.
-
-
-
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Jayhawker in Europe, by W. Y. (William
-Yoast) Morgan</h1>
-<p>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 <a
-href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.</p>
-<p>Title: A Jayhawker in Europe</p>
-<p>Author: W. Y. (William Yoast) Morgan</p>
-<p>Release Date: July 2, 2021 [eBook #65744]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A JAYHAWKER IN EUROPE***</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Fay Dunn, Fiona Holmes,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/jayhawkerineurop00morg
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nopagebreak" title="">Transcriber’s Note.</h2>
-
-<p>Changes made are noted at the <a href="#end_note" title="Go to the End Note">end of the book.</a></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_cover.jpg" alt="" width="711" height="1100" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>A Jayhawker <i>in</i> Europe</h1>
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center p130"> A<br />
- Jayhawker <i>in</i> Europe</p>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-
-<p class="center p80"> BY</p>
-<p class="center p110"> W. Y. MORGAN</p>
-<p class="center p80"> <em>Author of “A Journey of a Jayhawker”</em></p>
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_003.jpg" alt="" width="43" height="40" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<p class="center p70"> MONOTYPED AND PRINTED BY</p>
-<p class="center p70"> CRANE &amp; COMPANY</p>
-<p class="center p70"> TOPEKA</p>
-<p class="center p70"> 1911</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center p70"> Copyright 1911,</p>
-<p class="center p70"> <span class="smcap">By Crane &amp; Company</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap1 x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Preface">Preface</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">These</span> letters were printed in the Hutchinson
-<cite>Daily News</cite> during the summer of 1911.
-There was no ulterior motive, no lofty purpose,
-just the reporter’s idea of telling what
-he saw.</p>
-
-<p>They are now put in book form without
-revision or editing, because the writer would
-probably make them worse if he tried to make
-them better.</p>
-
-<p class="right">W. Y. MORGAN.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Hutchinson, Kansas</span>, November 1, 1911.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="gothic">To the Jayhawkers<br />
- who stay at home and take their European trips<br />
- in their minds and in the books, this<br />
- volume is respectfully dedicated<br />
- by one of the<br />
- gadders</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Table_of_Contents">Table of Contents</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents" class="toc">
-<tr>
- <th>&nbsp;</th>
- <td class="tdr"><small><i>Page</i></small></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">New York in the Hot Time</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_1" title="Page 1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Breaking Away</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_7" title="Page 7">7</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">On the Potsdam</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_12" title="Page 12">12</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Lions of the Ship</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_18" title="Page 18">18</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Ocean Currents</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_25" title="Page 25">25</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Dutch Folks</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_30" title="Page 30">30</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">In Old Dordrecht</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_37" title="Page 37">37</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Dutchesses</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_44" title="Page 44">44</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Pilgrims’ Start</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_50" title="Page 50">50</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Amsterdam, and Others</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_56" title="Page 56">56</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Cheeses and Bulbses</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_63" title="Page 63">63</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Historic Leyden</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_72" title="Page 72">72</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Dutch Capital</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_80" title="Page 80">80</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"> “<span class="smcap">The Dutch Company</span>,”</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_88" title="Page 88">88</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Great River</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_96" title="Page 96">96</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Along the Rhine</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_104" title="Page 104">104</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"> <span class="smcap">In German Towns</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_112" title="Page 112">112</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Arriving in Paris</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_120" title="Page 120">120</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The French Character</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_127" title="Page 127">127</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"> <span class="smcap">The Latin Quarter</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_135" title="Page 135">135</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Boulevards of Paris</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_144" title="Page 144">144</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Some French Ways</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_154" title="Page 154">154</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"> <span class="smcap">In Dover Town</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_162" title="Page 162">162</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Old Canterbury Today</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_169" title="Page 169">169</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The English Strike</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_178" title="Page 178">178</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"> <span class="smcap">Englishman the Great</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_187" title="Page 187">187</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The North of Ireland</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_198" title="Page 198">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">Scotland and the Scotch</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_211" title="Page 211">211</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"> <span class="smcap">The Land of Burns</span>,</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_220" title="Page 220">220</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="contents"><span class="smcap">The Journey’s End</span>.</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_228" title="Page 228">228</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>TABLE OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
- <table class="toi" summary="Illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="smcap right"><small><small>FACING PAGE</small></small></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">The scrubbing-brush the national emblem of Holland</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">No place for a man from Kansas</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">The poet Byron building castles</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">The handsome knight she met in Elmdale Park</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">The plain Quadrille at the Moulin Rouge</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_148">148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">Seeing London from the old English bus</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">Introducing a joke to our British cousins</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap1 x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-<p class="center p210"> A Jayhawker <i>in</i> Europe</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="New_York_in_the_Hot_Time">New York in the Hot Time</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">New York</span>, July 10, 1911.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>The last day on American soil before starting
-on a trip to other lands should be marked
-with a proper spirit of seriousness, and I would
-certainly live up to the propriety of the occasion
-if it were not for two things,&mdash;the
-baggage and the weather. But how can a
-man heave a sigh of regret at departing from
-home, when he is chasing over Jersey City and
-Hoboken after a stray trunk, and the thermometer
-is breaking records for highness and
-the barometer for humidity? I have known
-some tolerably warm zephyrs from the south
-which were excitedly called “hot winds,” but
-they were balmy and pleasant to the touch
-in comparison with the New York hot wave
-which wilts collar, shirt and backbone into
-one mass. The prospect of tomorrow being
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>out on the big water with a sea breeze and a
-northeast course does not seem bad, even if
-you are leaving the Stars and Stripes and
-home and friends. There is nothing like hot,
-humid weather to destroy patriotism, love,
-affection, and common civility. I speak in
-mild terms, but I have returned from Hoboken,
-the station just the other side of the
-place whose existence is denied by the Universalists.
-This is the place the ship starts
-from, and not from New York, as it is advertised
-to do.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Speaking of weather reminds me that the
-West is far ahead of New York in the emancipation
-of men. The custom here is for men
-to wear coats regardless of the temperature,
-whereas in the more intelligent West a man is
-considered dressed up in the evening if he
-takes off his gallusses along with his coat.
-Last night we went to a “roof garden” and
-expected that it would be a jolly Bohemian
-affair, but every man sat with his coat on and
-perspired until he couldn’t tell whether the
-young ladies of the stage were kicking high
-or not, and worse than that, he did not care.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-<p>I have been again impressed with the fact
-that there are no flies in New York City.
-There are no screens on the windows, not
-even of the dining-rooms, and yet I have not
-seen a fly. I wish Dr. Crumbine would tell
-us why it is that flies swarm out in Kansas
-and leave without a friendly visit such a rich
-pasture-ground as they would find on the
-millions of humans on Manhattan island. If
-I were a fly I would leave the swatters and the
-hostile board of health of Kansas, and take
-the limited train for New York and one perpetual
-picnic for myself and family.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This afternoon I went to the ball game, of
-course. Some people would have gone to the
-art exhibit or the beautiful public library.
-But New York and Chicago were to play and
-Matthewson was to pitch, and the call of duty
-prevailed over the artistic yearnings which
-would have taken me elsewhere. Coming
-home from the game I had an idea&mdash;which is
-a dangerous thing to do in hot weather. There
-has been a good deal of talk in the newspapers
-about the Republicans not agreeing on a candidate,
-and the question as to whether Taft
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>can be reëlected or not is being vigorously
-debated. Put ’em all out and nominate
-Christy Matthewson. This would insure the
-electoral vote of New York, for if the Republicans
-put “Matty” on the ticket the election
-returns would be so many millions for
-Matthewson and perhaps a few scattering.</p>
-
-<p>There were about as many errors and boneheads
-in the game between Chicago and New
-York as there would be in a Kansas State
-League game, and more than would come to
-pass in the match between the barbers and
-the laundrymen of Hutchinson. The players
-did not indulge in that brilliant repartee with
-the umpire which is a feature of the Kansas
-circuit, and the audience, while expressing its
-opinion of the judgments, had no such wealth
-of phrases as pours over the boxes from the
-grandstand at home. The language used
-could have come from the ministerial alliance,
-and sometimes the game seemed more like a
-moving-picture show than a real live game of
-baseball. Chicago won, 3 to 2 in ten innings,
-and I feel that my European trip is a decided
-success so far.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span></p>
-<p>This morning I took a little walk down Wall
-street and saw the place in which the Great
-Red Dragon lives. These New York bankers
-and brokers are not so dangerous as I have
-been led to believe by reading some of the
-speeches in Congress. There was no blood
-around the Standard Oil building, and the
-office of J. Pierpont was filled with men who
-looked as uncomfortable and unhappy as I
-felt with the heat. Sometimes I think the
-men of Wall street, New York, are just like
-the men at home,&mdash;getting all they can under
-the rules of the game and only missing the
-bases when the umpire looks the other way.
-The few with whom I talked were really concerned
-about the crops and the welfare of the
-people of Kansas, perhaps because they have
-some of their money invested in our State, and
-I got the idea that Wall street and all it
-represents is interested in the prosperity of
-the country and knows that hard times anywhere
-mean corresponding trouble for some
-of them in New York.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>New York is a growing city. In many respects
-it is like Hutchinson. The street pav<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>ing
-is full of holes and new buildings are going
-up in every direction. Every few months
-“the highest skyscraper” is erected, and now
-one is being constructed that will have fifty or
-sixty stories&mdash;it doesn’t matter which. The
-buildings are faced with brick or stone, but
-really built of iron. I saw one today on which
-the bricklaying had been begun at the seventh
-story and was proceeding in both directions.
-That was the interesting feature of the building
-to me. That and the absence of flies and
-the baseball game are the general results of
-my efforts today to see something of the greatest
-city in America.</p>
-
-<p>We sail tomorrow morning. Then it will
-be ten days on the ship for us. One thing
-about an ocean voyage is reasonably sure:
-If you don’t like it you can’t get off and walk.
-A really attractive feature is that there is no
-dust and you don’t watch the clouds and wish
-it would rain so you will not have to water the
-lawn.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Breaking_Away">Breaking Away</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Steamship Potsdam</span>, July 11.</p>
-
-<p>The sailing of an ocean steamer is always a
-scene of delightful confusion and excitement.
-Thousands of people throng the pier and the
-ship, saying goodbyes to the hundreds who are
-about to leave. The journey across the ocean,
-though no longer a matter of danger or hardship,
-is yet enough of an event to start the
-emotions and make the emoters forget everything
-but the watery way and the long absence.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd is anxious, expectant, sad, and
-unrestrained. Men who rarely show personal
-feeling look with glistening eyes on the friends
-to be left behind. Women, who are always
-seeing disaster to their loved ones, strive with
-pats, caresses and fond phrases to say the
-consoling words or to express the terror in
-their hearts. The timid girl, off for a year’s
-study, wishes she had not been so venturesome.
-The father rubs his eyes and talks
-loudly about the baggage. The mother clings
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>to her son’s arm and whispers to him how she
-will pray for him every night, and hopes he
-will change his underclothes when the days are
-cool. Young folks hold hands and tell each
-other of the constant remembrance that they
-will have. Big bouquets of flowers are brought
-on by stewards, the trunks go sliding up the
-plank and into the ship, the officers strut up
-and down, conscious of the admiring glances
-of the curious, orders are shouted, sailors go
-about tying and untying ropes, the rich family
-parades on with servants and boxes, the
-whistle blows for the visitors to leave, and the
-final goodbyes and “write me” and “lock the
-back door” and “tell Aunt Mary” and such
-phrases fill the air while handkerchiefs alternately
-wipe and wave.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the big boat backs into the stream
-amid a fog of cheers and sobs, then goes
-ahead down the harbor, past the pier still
-alive with fluttering handkerchiefs, the voices
-no longer to be heard, and the passengers feel
-that sinking of the heart that comes from the
-knowledge of the separation by time and distance
-coming to them for weeks and months,
-perhaps forever. Sorrowfully they strain for
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>a last look at the crowd, now too far away to
-distinguish the wanted face, and then they
-turn around, look at their watches, and
-wonder how long it will be before lunch.
-Of course the Dutch band played the Star-Spangled
-Banner as the boat trembled and
-started; of course the last passenger arrived
-just a minute late and was prevented from
-making an effort to jump the twenty feet of
-water which then separated the ship from the
-pier. Of course the boys sold American flags
-and souvenir post cards. Of course the tourists
-wondered if they would be seasick and
-their friends rather hoped they would be,
-though they did not say so. The steamboats
-whistled salutes, and the band changed its
-tune to a Dutch version of “The Girl I Left
-Behind Me,” and with flags flying the Potsdam
-moved past the big skyscrapers, past the
-Battery, alongside the Statue of Liberty, and
-out toward the Atlantic like a swan in Riverside
-Park. The voyage has begun. The
-traveler has to look after his baggage, which
-is miraculously on board, find his deck chairs
-and his dining-room seats, and between times
-rush out occasionally to get one more glimpse
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>of the New Jersey coast, which is never very
-pretty except when you are homeward bound,
-when even Oklahoma would look good.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This boat, the Potsdam, of the Holland-American
-line, is not one of the big and magnificent
-floating hotels which take travelers
-across the Atlantic so rapidly that they do not
-get acquainted with each other and in such
-style that they think they are at a summer
-resort. But it is a good-sized, easy-sailing,
-slow-going ship that will take about ten days
-across and has every comfort which the Dutch
-can think of, and they are long on having
-things comfortable. It has a reputation for
-steadiness and good meals which makes it
-popular with people who have traveled the
-Atlantic and who enjoy the ocean voyage as
-the best part of a trip abroad. It lands at
-Rotterdam, one of the best ports of Europe
-and right in the center of the most interesting
-part of the Old World.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The pilot left us at Sandy Hook, and now
-the Potsdam is sailing right out into the big
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>water. A cool breeze has taken the place of
-the hot air of New York. The ocean is
-smooth; there is neither roll nor heave to the
-ship. Everybody is congratulating himself
-that this is to be a smooth voyage. A substantial
-luncheon is still staying where it belongs,
-and we are looking over the other passengers
-and being looked over by them. There
-is no chance to get off and go back if we
-wanted to do so. And we don’t want to&mdash;not
-yet.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="On_the_Potsdam">On the Potsdam</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Steamship Potsdam</span>, July 14.</p>
-
-<p>The daily life on shipboard might be considered
-monotonous if one were being paid for
-it, but under the present circumstances and
-surroundings the time goes rapidly. Everybody
-has noticed that the things he is obliged
-to do are dull and uninteresting. Any ordinary
-American would demand about $10 a day
-for fastening himself in a boat and remaining
-there for ten days. He would get tired of
-the society, sick of the meals and sore on his
-job. But call it “fun” and he pays $10 a day
-for the pleasure of the ride. The Potsdam is
-560 feet long, sixty-two feet wide, and seven
-stories high,&mdash;four above the water-line and
-three below. On this trip its first-class accommodations
-are filled, about 260 people;
-but the second class is not crowded, and less
-than a hundred steerage passengers occupy
-that part of the ship which often carries 2,100
-people. The steerage is crowded on the trip
-to America, filled with men and women who
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>are leaving home and fatherland in order to
-do better for themselves and their children.
-They go back in later years, for a visit, but
-they do not travel in the steerage. They
-carry little American flags and scatter thoughts
-of freedom and free men in the older lands.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This is a Dutch ship and the language of
-the officers and crew is Dutch. While a few of
-them speak some English and most of them
-know a little, the general effect is that of
-getting into an entirely foreign environment.
-The Dutch language is a peculiar blend. It
-seems to be partly derived from the German,
-partly from the English, and partly from the
-Choctaw. The pronunciation is difficult because
-it is unlike the German, the English
-or the Latin tongues. An ordinary word
-spelled out looks like a freight train of box
-cars with several cabooses. As one of my
-Dutch fellow-passengers said when he was instructing
-me how to pronounce the name of
-the capital of Holland, “Don’t try to say it;
-sneeze it.” A great deal of interest is added to
-the smallest bits of conversation by the doubt
-as to whether the Dutch speaker is telling you
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>that it is dinner-time or whether he has
-swallowed his store teeth.</p>
-
-<p>Which reminds me of a little story Ben
-Nusbaum told me of the Dutchman who came
-into the Oxford café, sat up to the counter
-and in proper Dutch etiquette greeted the
-waiter with the salutation, “Wie gehts?”
-Turning toward the kitchen the waiter sang
-out, “wheat cakes!” “Nein! nein!” shouted
-the Dutchman. “Nine,” said the waiter,
-scornfully; “you’ll be dam lucky if you get
-three!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The principal occupation on board a Dutch
-ship is eating, and the next most important
-is drinking. The eats begin with a hearty
-breakfast from 8 to 10 o’clock. At 11 o’clock,
-beef soup, sandwiches and crackers. At 12:30,
-an elaborate luncheon. At 4 o’clock, afternoon
-tea, with sandwiches and fancy cakes. At 7
-o’clock, a great dinner. At 9 o’clock, coffee,
-sandwiches, etc. Any time between these
-meals you can get something to eat, anything
-from beef to buns, and the table in the smoking-room
-is always loaded with cheese, sausage,
-ham, cakes and all the little knick-knacks
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>that tempt you to take one as you go by.
-And yet there is surprise that some people
-are seasick.</p>
-
-<p>You can get anything you want to drink
-except water, which is scarce, and apparently
-only used for scrubbing and bathing. Of
-course the steward will find you a little water,
-if you are from Kansas, but he thinks you are
-sick, wants to add a hot-water bag, and suggests
-that the ship doctor might help you
-some.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have spoken before of the Dutch band.
-It is a good one, and loves to play. The first
-concert is at 10 in the morning. There is
-orchestra music during luncheon and dinner,
-and band concerts afternoon and evening. I
-like a German band, or a Dutch band, so long
-as it sticks to its proper répertoire. But there
-never was a German band that could play
-“My Old Kentucky Home” and “Swanee
-River,” and every German band persists in
-doing so in honor of the Americans. I suppose
-this desire to do something you can’t do
-is not confined to Dutch musicians. I know
-a man who can whistle like a bird, but he in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>sists
-that he is a violinist, and plays second
-fiddle. I know a singer with a really great
-voice who persists in the theory that he can
-recite, which he can’t. Therefore he is a
-great bore, and nobody thinks he can even
-sing. Nearly all of us are afflicted some along
-this line, and the Dutch band on the Potsdam
-is merely accenting the characteristic in brass.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Today I saw a whale. Every time I am on
-the ocean I see a whale. At first nobody else
-could see it, but soon a large number could.
-There was a good deal of excitement, and the
-passengers divided into two factions, those
-who saw the whale and those who didn’t and
-who evidently thought we didn’t. The argument
-lasted nearly all the morning, and would
-be going on yet if a ship had not appeared in
-the distance, and our passengers divided
-promptly as to whether it was a Cunarder, a
-French liner, or a Norwegian tramp freighter.
-This discussion will take our valuable time all
-the afternoon. Friends will become enemies,
-and some of those who rallied around the whale
-story are almost glaring at each other over
-the nationality of that distant vessel. I am
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>trying to keep out of this debate, as I am
-something of a Hero because I saw the whale.
-I have already told of my nautical experience
-on Cow creek, so while I feel I would be considered
-an authority, it is better to let some
-of the other ambitious travelers get a reputation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Lions_of_the_Ship">The Lions of the Ship</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Steamship Potsdam</span>, July 19.</p>
-
-<p>There are always "lions" on a ship, not the
-kind that roar and shake their manes, but
-those the other passengers point at and afterward
-recall with pride. I often speak carelessly
-of the time I crossed with Willie Vandergould,
-although he never left his room during
-the voyage and was probably sleeping off the
-effects of a long spree. Once I was a fellow-passenger
-with Julia Marlowe, a fact Julia
-never seemed to recognize. There are always
-a few counts and capitalists on an ocean
-steamer, and a ship without a lion is unfortunate.
-Our largest and finest specimen is
-Booth Tarkington, the head of the Indiana
-school of fiction, an author whose books have
-brought him fame and money, and a playwright
-whose dramatizations have won success.
-He is the tamest lion I ever crossed with.
-He is delightfully democratic, not a bit chesty,
-but rather modest, and as friendly to a traveling
-Jayhawker as he is to the distinguished
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>members of the company. In fact, he understands
-and speaks the Kansas language like
-a native. His ideal of life is to have a home
-on an island in the track of the ocean steamers
-so he can sit on the porch and watch the ships
-come and go. Not for me. It is too much
-like living in a Kansas town where No. 3 and
-No. 4 do not stop, and every day the locomotives
-snort and go by without even hesitating.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Tarkington is an honest man, so he says,
-and he tells good sea stories. His favorite
-true story is of Toboga Bill, a big shark which
-followed ships up and down the South-American
-coast, foraging off the scraps the cooks
-threw overboard. Tarkington’s friend, Captain
-Harvey, got to noticing that on every trip
-his boat was escorted by Toboga Bill, whose
-bald spot on top and a wart on the nose made
-him easily recognizable. Harvey got to feeding
-him regularly with the spoiled meat and
-vegetables, and Toboga Bill would come to the
-surface, flop his fin at the captain and thank
-him as plainly as a shark could do. After
-several years of this mutual acquaintance the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>captain happened to be in a small-boat going
-out to his ship at a Central-American port.
-The boat upset, and the captain and sailors
-were immediately surrounded by a herd of
-man-eating sharks. The shore was a mile
-away and the captain swam that distance, the
-only one who escaped; and all the way he
-could see Toboga Bill with his fin standing up
-straight, keeping the other sharks from his
-old friend. Occasionally Toboga would give
-the captain a gentle shove, and finally pushed
-him onto the beach.</p>
-
-<p>This story Tarkington admitted sounded
-like a fish story, but he has a motor-boat
-named Toboga Bill, which verifies the tale.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That reminded me of a Kansas fish story
-which I introduced to the audience. Everybody
-in Kansas knows of the herd of hornless
-catfish which has been bred near the Bowersock
-dam at Lawrence. Some years ago Mr.
-Bowersock, who owns the dam that furnishes
-power for the mill and other factories, conceived
-the idea that big Kaw river catfish
-going through the mill-race and onto the water-wheel
-added much to the power generated.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>Then he read that fish are very sensitive to
-music. So he hired a man with an accordion
-to stand over the mill-race and play. The
-catfish came from up and down stream to
-hear the music, and almost inevitably drifted
-through the race, onto the wheel, and increased
-the power. The fishes’ horns used to
-get entangled in the wheel and injure the fish;
-so Mr. Bowersock, who is a kind-hearted man
-and very persistent, had a lot of the fish caught
-and dehorned, and in a year or two he had a
-large herd of hornless catfish. These fish not
-only turn out to hear the music, but they have
-learned to enjoy the trip through the mill-race
-and over the wheel, so that every Sunday
-or oftener whole families of catfish&mdash;and they
-have large families&mdash;come to Bowersock’s dam
-to shoot the chutes something as people go
-out to ride on the scenic railway. Whenever
-the water in the river gets low Mr. Bowersock
-has the band play: the catfish gather and go
-round and round over the wheel, furnishing
-power for the Bowersock mill when every
-other wheel on the river is idle from lack of
-water.</p>
-
-<p>There were some skeptical folks who heard
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>my simple story and affected to disbelieve.
-But I assured them that it could be easily
-proven, and if they would go to Lawrence I
-would show them the Bowersock dam and the
-catfish. It is always a good idea to have the
-proofs for a fish story.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The next “lion” on board is Gov. Fook,
-returning from the Dutch West Indies, where
-he has been governing the islands and Dutch
-Guiana. The governor is a well-informed
-gentleman, and a splendid player of pinochle.
-The Dutch have the thrifty habit of making
-their colonies pay. They are not a “world
-power” and do not have to be experimenting
-with efforts to lift the white man’s burden.
-Their idea is that the West-Indian and the
-East-Indian who live under the Dutch flag
-shall work. The American idea is to educate
-and convert the heathen and pension them
-from labor. Our theory sounds all right, but
-it results in unhappy Filipinos and increased
-expense for Americans. The Dutch colonials
-pay their way whether they get an education
-or not.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span></p>
-<p>One unfamiliar with modern steamship
-travel would think that the captain and his
-first and second officers were the important
-officials on board. They are not. The officers
-rank about as follows: 1st, the cook; 2nd,
-the engineer; 3rd, the barber, and after that
-the rest. The cook on an ocean steamer gets
-more pay than the captain, and is now ranked
-as an officer. The managing director of a big
-German company was accustomed on visiting
-any ship of their line, to first shake hands with
-the cook and then with the captain. When
-one of the officers suggested that he was not
-following etiquette he answered that there
-was no trouble getting captains and lieutenants
-but it was a darned hard job to find a
-cook. The cook has to buy, plan meals,
-supervise the kitchen and run it economically
-for the company and satisfactorily for the
-passengers, for over 2,000 people.</p>
-
-<p>The barber is the man on the ship who
-knows everything for sure. Ask the captain
-when we will get to Rotterdam and he will
-qualify and trim his answer by referring to
-possible winds and tides, and he won’t say
-exactly. Ask the barber and he will tell you
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>we will get there at 10 o’clock on Friday
-night. He knows everything going on in the
-boat, from the kind of freight carried in the
-hold to the meaning of the colors painted on
-the smokestack. During this voyage I have
-had more numerous and interesting facts than
-anybody, because I have not fooled with talking
-to the captain or the purser or the steward,
-but gotten my information straight from the
-fountain of knowledge, the barber shop. However,
-this is not peculiar to ships. The same
-principle applies at Hutchinson and every
-other town.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Ocean_Currents">Ocean Currents</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Steamship Potsdam</span>, July 21.</p>
-
-<p>This is the eleventh day of the voyage from
-New York, and if the Potsdam does not have
-a puncture or bust a singletree she will arrive
-at Rotterdam late tonight. The Potsdam
-is a most comfortable boat, but it is
-in no hurry. It keeps below the Hutchinson
-speed limit of fifteen miles an hour.
-But a steamship never stops for water or oil,
-or to sidetrack or to wait for connections.
-This steady pounding of fourteen miles an
-hour makes an easy speed for the passenger,
-and the verdict of this ship’s company is that
-the Potsdam is a bully ship and the captain
-and the cook are all right.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Nearly all the way across the Atlantic we
-have been in the Gulf stream. I have read
-of this phenomenal current which originates
-in the Gulf of Mexico and comes up the eastern
-coast of the United States so warm that
-it affects the climate wherever it touches.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>Then nearly opposite New England it turns
-and crosses the Atlantic, a river of warm
-water many miles wide, flowing through the
-ocean, which is comparatively cold. This
-stream is a help to the boats going in its direction,
-although it has the bad feature of frequent
-fogs caused by the condensation which
-comes when the warm and cold air currents
-meet. The Gulf stream is believed to be responsible
-for the green of Ireland and for
-the winter resorts of southern England. It
-goes all the way across the Atlantic and into
-the English Channel, with a branch off to
-Ireland. What causes the Gulf stream? I
-forget the scientific terms, but this is the way
-it is, according to my friend Mr. Vischer,
-formerly of the German navy. The water
-in the Gulf of Mexico is naturally warm.
-The motion of the earth, from west to east,
-and other currents coming into the gulf,
-crowd the warm water out and send the big
-wide stream into the Atlantic with a whirl
-which starts it in a northerly and easterly
-direction. The same Providence that makes
-the grass grow makes the course of the current,
-and it flows for thousands of miles,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>gradually dissipating at the edges, but still
-a warm-water river until it breaks on the
-coast of the British Isles and into the North
-Sea. Perhaps Mr. Vischer would not recognize
-this explanation, but I have translated
-it into a vernacular which I can understand.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Gulf stream reminds me of the Mediterranean.
-Not having much else to worry
-about, I have gone to worrying over the Mediterranean
-Sea. The ocean always flows into
-the sea. The current through the strait of
-Gibraltar is always inward. Many great
-rivers contribute to the blue waters of the
-great sea. There is no known outlet. Why
-does not the Mediterranean run over and fill
-the Sahara desert, which is considerably below
-the sea-level? Scientists have tried to
-figure this out, and the only tangible theory
-is that the bottom of the Mediterranean leaks
-badly in some places, and that the water finds
-its way by subterranean channels back to
-the ocean. What would happen if an eruption
-of Vesuvius should stop up the drain-pipe?
-Now worry.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span></p>
-
-<p>Tonight we saw another phenomenon, the
-aurora borealis. It looked to me like a beautiful
-sunset in the north. We are sailing in
-the North Sea along the coast of Belgium,
-and the water reaches northward to the pole.
-The aurora borealis is another phenomenon
-not easily explained, but Mr. Vischer says it
-is probably the reflection of the sun from the
-ice mirror of the Arctic. And it does make you
-feel peculiar to see what is apparently the
-light of the sunset flare up toward the “Dipper”
-and the North Star.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some of our passengers disembarked today
-at Boulogne. This was the first time the
-Potsdam had paused since she left New York
-a week ago last Tuesday. This was the stop
-for the passengers who go direct to Paris.
-The Dutch who are homeward bound and
-those of us who think it best to fool around
-a little before encountering the dangers of
-Paris, continue to Rotterdam. We should be
-spending the evening with maps and guide
-books preparing ourselves for the art galleries,
-cathedrals, canals and windmills. As a matter
-of fact, we are wondering what is going<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-on at home. There is a balance-wheel in
-the human heart that makes the ordinary
-citizen who is far afield or afloat turn to the
-thoughts of the home which he left, seeking a
-change.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A smoking-room story: An American in
-a European art gallery was heading an aggregation
-of family and friends for a study of
-art. His assurance was more pronounced
-than his knowledge. “See this beautiful
-Titian,” he said. <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>“What glorious color, and
-mark the beauty of the small lines. Isn’t
-it a jim dandy? And next to it is a Rubens
-by the same artist!”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Dutch_Folks">The Dutch Folks</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Rotterdam, Holland</span>, July 23.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to me unnecessary, but I had to
-explain to some friends why I was going
-especially to Holland. It is the biggest little
-country in the world. In art it rivals Italy,
-in business it competes with England, historically
-it has had more thrills to the mile
-than France, and in appearance it is the
-oddest, queerest, and most different from our
-own country, of all the nations of central
-Europe. Holland gives you more for your
-money and your time than any other, and
-that’s why I am back here to renew the hurried
-acquaintance with the Dutch made a
-few years ago.</p>
-
-<p>Landing in Rotterdam was an experiment.
-The guide books and the tourist authorities
-pass Rotterdam over with brief mention.
-Baedeker, the tripper’s friend, suggests that
-you can see Rotterdam in a half-day. That
-is because Rotterdam is short on picture galleries
-and cathedrals. It is a great, busy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-city of a half-million people, and one of the
-most active commercially in the world. It
-is the port where the boats from the Rhine
-meet the ships of the sea. It is the greatest
-freight shipping and receiving port of northern
-Europe. It is the coming city of the
-north, because of its natural advantages in
-cheap freight rates. After looking it over
-hurriedly it seems to me to be one of the most
-interesting of cities. I am not going to run
-away from cathedrals and galleries. I am
-not intending to dodge when I see a beautiful
-landscape coming. But I have done my
-duty in the past and have seen the great
-cathedrals and the exhibitions of art. No
-one can come to Europe and not see these
-things once, for if he did he would not be
-able to lift up his head in the presence of
-other travelers. But he does not have to do
-them a second time. If I want to see pictures
-of Dutch ladies labeled “Madonna,”
-I will see them. If I don’t want to, I do not
-have to. In other words, if I go to the “tourist
-delights” it will be my own fault.</p>
-
-<p>I would rather see the people themselves
-than the pictures of them. I want to observe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-how they work, what they work for, what
-their prospects are, and wherein they differ
-from the great Americans.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Man made most of Holland. Nearly all
-of the country is below the level of the sea,
-much of it many feet below. All that keeps
-the tide of the North Sea from flooding the
-country with from ten to a hundred feet of
-water every day are the dikes which man has
-built. Behind these huge embankments lies
-a country as flat as the flattest prairie in Kansas.
-A few sandhills and an occasional little
-rise of ground might stick out of the water
-if the dikes broke, but I doubt it. This
-“made” land has been fertilized and built
-up by the silt of the rivers, added to by the
-labor and science of man, until it is a vast
-market garden. The water of the rivers is
-diverted in every direction into canals. There
-is no current to the rivers; the surface is too
-flat, and the fresh water is backed up twice
-a day by the ocean tides at the mouths.
-There are practically no locks and the movement
-of the water is hardly perceptible, except
-near the coast, where it responds to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-advance and retreat of the sea. These canals
-are an absolute necessity for drainage, otherwise
-the country would be a swamp. Then
-they are used as roads, and practically all the
-freight is carried to market cheaply in canal-boats.
-The canals also serve as fences. The
-drainage water is pumped by windmills, which
-are then used to furnish power for every
-imaginable manufacturing purpose, from sawing
-lumber to grinding wheat. The cheap
-wind-power enabled the people to clear the
-land of water. So you see why there are
-dikes, canals and windmills in Holland: because
-they were the only available instruments
-in the hand of man to beat back the
-sea and build a productive soil. They were
-not inserted in the Holland landscape for
-beauty or for art’s sake, but because they
-were necessities; and yet great artists come
-to Holland to paint pictures of these practical
-things, and when they want to add more
-beauty they insert Dutch cattle and wooden
-shoes. All of which shows that the plain
-everyday things around us are really picturesque;
-and they are, whether you look at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-the sandhills along the Arkansas or the dunes
-along the North Sea.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In this little country, containing 12,500
-square miles of land and water, smaller than
-the seventh congressional district of Kansas,
-live almost 6,000,000 of the busiest people
-on earth. Their character may be drawn
-from their history. They first beat the ocean
-out of the arena and then made the soil.
-They met and overcame more obstacles than
-any other people in getting their land. And
-then for several centuries they had to fight
-all the rest of Europe to keep from being absorbed
-by one or the other of the great powers.
-They drove out the Spaniards at a time when
-Spain was considered invincible. They licked
-England on the sea, and the Dutch Admiral
-Tromp sailed up and down the Channel with
-a broom at the mast of his ship. They drove
-Napoleon’s soldiers and his king out of the
-country. They never willingly knuckled down
-to anybody, and they never stayed down long
-when they were hit.</p>
-
-<p>The Dutch have for centuries been considered
-the best traders in Europe. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-have the ports for commerce and they have
-the money. They own 706,000 square miles
-of colonies, with a population six times as
-large as their own. From the beginning they
-have been ruled by merchants and business
-men, rather than by kings and princes, by
-men who knew how to buy and sell and fight.
-They have been saving and thrifty, and can
-dig up more cash than any other bunch of inhabitants
-on the globe. They have sunk
-some money in American railroads, but they
-have made it back, and they always take interest.
-Market-gardening and manufacturing
-and trade have been their resources, and
-nothing can beat that three of a kind for
-piling up profits and providing a way to keep
-the money working.</p>
-
-<p>Of course these characteristics and this environment
-have made the Dutch peculiar in
-some ways, and they are generally counted
-a little close or “near.” They habitually use
-their small coin, the value of two-fifths of an
-American cent, and they want and give all
-that is coming. They have good horses, fat
-stomachs, and lots of children. They are
-pleasant but not effusive, and they are as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-proud of their country as are the inhabitants
-of any place on earth. They believe in everybody
-working, including the women and the
-dogs. Their struggle with the sea never ends,
-and they follow the same persistent course in
-every line of development. They are so clean
-it is a wonder they are comfortable, and they
-believe in eating and drinking and having a
-good time, just so it doesn’t cost too much.
-They are a great people, and here’s looking
-at them.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="In_Old_Dordrecht">In Old Dordrecht</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Dordrecht</span>, July 23.</p>
-
-<p>This is the oldest town in Holland, and once
-upon a time was the great commercial city.
-It is about fifteen miles from Rotterdam, and
-remember that fifteen miles is a long distance
-in this country. It is built upon an island;
-two rivers and any number of canals run
-around it and through it whenever the tide
-ebbs or flows. Good-sized ocean steamers
-come to its wharves, and until other cities
-developed deeper harbors Dordrecht was the
-Hutchinson of southwest Holland. And now
-let me explain that the people of this country
-do not call it Holland, but The Netherland.
-Originally Holland was the western part of
-the present Netherland. Dordrecht is in old
-South Holland. About nine hundred years
-ago the Count of Holland, who then ruled in
-this precinct, decided to levy a tax or a tariff
-on all goods shipped on this route, the main
-traveled road from England to the Orient.
-The other counts and kings and bishops<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-kicked, but after a fight the right of the Count
-of Holland was vindicated, and he built the
-city of Dordrecht as a sort of customs house.
-This was in 1008. For several hundred years
-Dordrecht prospered and was known as a
-great commercial city. Then Antwerp, Rotterdam
-and Amsterdam came forward with
-better harbors, and Dordrecht took a back
-seat. But it has always been one of the important
-places in The Netherland. When
-William of Orange took hold of the revolution
-against Spain, the first conference of the representatives
-of the Dutch states was held in
-Dordrecht, and it was always loyal to the
-cause of Dutch freedom. The best hotel and
-restaurant in the city today is The Orange,
-named for the royal house which has so long
-been at the head of the Dutch government.
-My idea of a really important statesman is
-one for whom hotels and cigars are named
-centuries after he has passed away.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This is Sunday, and I am forced to believe
-that the Dutch are not good churchgoers. We
-went to the evening service in the great cathedral.
-In fact, we went to the cathedral and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-suddenly the service began without our having
-time to retire gracefully. So we decided
-to stay, and in a prominent place was a list
-of the prices of seats. Some cost ten cents,
-some five cents, and some were marked free.
-I handed ten cents to the lady in charge, and
-we took two seats in the rear, which I afterward
-discovered were free. The women seem
-to run the church much as they do at home.
-The Dutch hymns were not so bad, but the
-Dutch sermon was not interesting to me.
-During the closing song, we thought we would
-slip out quietly, but when we reached the door
-we found it locked. The custom is to lock
-the door and allow no one to enter or leave
-during the service, but as a special favor to
-Americans, who evidently did not know what
-they were doing, the guardian of the door unlocked
-it, and out we went amid general
-interest of the congregation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We came from Rotterdam on a little steam-boat,
-which scooted along the rivers and canals
-like a street car. Very often the canal was
-built higher than the adjoining land, and it
-gave the peculiar feeling of boating in the air.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-There is no waste ground. Every foot of it
-not occupied by a house or a chicken-yard, is
-pasture or under cultivation. Every farmer
-has a herd of those black-and-white cattle.
-Some of the herds are as many as six or seven
-cows. But every cow acted as if she were
-doing her full duty toward making Holland
-the wealthiest of nations.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The streets of Dordrecht are generally narrow,
-like those of all old towns. Many of the
-buildings are very old, and a favorite style of
-architecture is to have the front project several
-feet forward over the street. The tops of
-opposite buildings often almost meet. I don’t
-see why they do not meet and come down
-kerwhack, but they don’t. Imagine these
-quaint streets with old Dutch houses, white
-and blue, with red tiled roofs, and green and
-yellow thrown in to give them color, with
-angles and dormers and curious corners, the
-tops projecting toward one another, and you
-can see how interesting a Dutch street can
-be if it tries, as it does in Dordrecht. Of course
-in the outer and newer parts of the town are
-larger streets and more modern houses, with
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>beautiful gardens and flower beds that would
-baffle a painter for color, but old Dordrecht
-is the most interesting. Add to the street
-picture a canal down the middle, and you get
-a frequent variation. Put odd Dutch boats in
-the water, fill them with freight and children,
-and you have another. If this were not
-picturesque it would be grotesque to American
-eyes, but it is the actual development of Dutch
-civilization, and it is the thing you pay money
-for when some artist catches the inspiration
-which he can get here if anywhere.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_fp040.jpg" alt="" width="405" height="550" />
-<p class="caption center"><span class="smcap">THE SCRUBBING-BRUSH THE NATIONAL EMBLEM OF HOLLAND</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of course the streets are paved, and they
-are as clean as the floor of an ordinary American
-dwelling. Everyone knows that the
-Dutch are clean and that their national emblem
-ought to be a scrubbing-brush. They
-are so clean that it almost hurts. Very often
-there are no sidewalks, and when there are
-they are not level, and are generally fenced in.
-They belong to the abutting property, and
-are not to be walked on by the public. The
-people walk in the street, and that custom is
-a little hard to get used to. Before the front
-window of nearly every house is a mirror, so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-fastened that those within the house can see
-up and down the street, observe who is coming
-and who is going, and where. This custom,
-if introduced at home, would save a good
-deal of neck-stretching. But at first one is
-overly conscious of the many eyes which are
-observing his walk and the many minds which
-are undoubtedly trying to guess just where
-and why and who. But this mirror custom
-does not bother the Dutch young folks, not
-much. It is also the custom for the young
-man and his sweetheart to parade along the
-street hand in hand, arm in arm, or catch-as-catch-can,
-if they want to,&mdash;and they want to
-a great deal. At first this looked like a rude
-demonstration of affection, but after you have
-observed it some, say for an hour or so, it
-doesn’t seem half bad,&mdash;if you were only
-Dutch.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Dordrecht has about 40,000 people, and all
-of them are on the street or at the window on
-Sunday. The saloons are open, but nothing
-is sold stronger than gin. The Dutch in a
-quiet, gentlemanly and ladylike way, are evidently
-trying to consume all the beer that can<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-be made in Holland or imported. Of course
-they can’t succeed, but, as the story goes, they
-can probably make the breweries work nights.
-There is really a need for a temperance organization
-in this country, and I should say it
-would have work enough to last it several
-thousand years.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Dutchesses">The Dutchesses</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Rotterdam</span>, July 24.</p>
-
-<p>The secret of the success of the Dutch is no
-secret at all. Everybody works, not excepting
-father, grandfather and grandmother. I
-suppose this habit began with the unceasing
-fight against the sea, the building of the dikes,
-the pumping out of the water, and the construction
-of a soil. It has continued until
-there is no other people more persistently industrious.
-They rise early and get busy.
-The women cook and scrub and work on the
-canal-boats, in the shops and in the fields.
-The children go to school eleven months in
-the year. The men are stout, quick, and work
-from early to late. Even the dogs work in
-Holland. At first it seemed rather hard to
-see the dogs hitched to the little carts and
-pulling heavy loads, sometimes a man riding
-on the cart. This is a serious country for
-the canine, and must be the place where the
-phrase “worked like a dog” got its start. In
-most places the dog is the companion and pet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-of man, but in Holland he has to do his part
-in making a living, and he soon learns to draw
-the load, pulling hard and conscientiously on
-the traces. He has little time to fight and
-frolic, but he has the great pleasure of the rest
-that comes from hard labor. However, if I
-were a dog and were picking out a country for
-a location, I would stay far away from Holland.
-It is no uncommon sight to see a
-woman with a strap over her shoulders dragging
-a canal-boat or pulling a little wagon.
-In fact, the women of The Netherland have
-rights which they are not even asking in the
-United States, and no one disputes their
-prerogative of hard work. There are no “Suffragettes”
-in Holland, but a woman can do
-nearly anything she wants to unless it is
-vote, which she apparently does not care for.
-There are many rich Hollanders; in fact, there
-are few that are poor. But they do not constitute
-a leisure class. The wealthy Dutch
-gent merely works the harder and the wealthy
-Dutch “vrouw” scrubs and manages the
-household or runs the store just as she did in
-the earlier years of struggle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span></p>
-
-<p>Speaking of the Dutch women, I think they
-are good-looking. They are almost invariably
-strong and well in appearance, with good
-complexions, clever eyes and capable expression.
-They may weigh a little strong for some,
-but that is a matter of taste. The old Dutch
-peasant costumes are still worn in places, but
-as a rule their clothes come from the same
-models as those for the American women.
-The Dutchess has been reared to work, to
-manage, and to advise with her man. She is
-intelligent in appearance and quick in action.
-She is educated and companionable. What
-if her waist line disappears? What if she has
-no ankles, only feet and legs? Perhaps it
-will be thought that I am going too far in my
-investigation, but the Dutch ladies ride bicycles
-so generally that even a man from
-America can see a few things, no matter how
-hard he tries to look the other way and comes
-near getting run over.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Queen of Holland is a woman. This is
-not a startling statement, for so far as I know
-a man has never been a queen in any country.
-But there is no king. Queen Wilhelmina’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-husband, Prince Henry, is not a king. If
-there is any ruling to do in Holland it is done
-by Wilhelmina. Henry can’t even appoint a
-notary public. No one pays any attention to
-him, and I understand Wilhelmina has given
-it out that what Henry says does not go with
-her. I am trying to investigate the status of
-affairs in the royal family, because I had
-entertained the idea that Wilhelmina was an
-unfortunate young queen with a bad husband.
-That may have been so a few years ago, but
-now I understand she bats poor Henry around
-scandalously, pays no heed to his wishes, and
-pointedly calls his attention about three times
-a day to the fact that he is nothing but a one-horse
-prince while she is the boss of the family
-and the kingdom. This pleases the Dutch
-immensely, for Henry is a German and the
-Dutch don’t like the Germans. They think
-the Germans are conceited and arrogant, and
-that Emperor William is planning to eventually
-annex The Netherland to Germany. So
-every time Wilhelmina turns down the German
-prince all the Dutch people think it is
-fine, and her popularity is immense. Henry
-gets a good salary, but his job would be a hard<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-one for a self-respecting American. I understand
-he is much dissatisfied, but he was not
-raised to a trade, and if Wilhelmina should
-stop his pay he would go hungry and thirsty,
-two conditions which would make life intolerable
-for a German prince.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Wilhelmina has a daughter, two years old,
-named Juliana. I suppose Henry is related to
-Juliana, but he gets no credit for it. Everywhere
-you go you see pictures of Wilhelmina
-and Juliana, but not of Henry. A princess
-is really what the Dutch want, for their monarch
-has actually no power, and the government
-is entirely managed by the representatives
-of the people. But a prince would likely
-be wild, and might want to mix into public
-affairs. A princess makes a better figurehead
-of the state. She will be satisfied with a new
-dress and a hand-decorated crown, and not be
-wanting an army and battleships as a prince
-might do. Wilhelmina represents to the Dutch
-people the ruling family of Orange, which
-brought them through many crises, and
-Juliana is another Orange. Henry is only a
-lemon which the Germans handed to them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span></p>
-
-<p>The royal family are off on a visit to Brussels,
-and I have not met any of them. This information
-I have gleaned from the hotel
-porters, the boat captains, the chambermaids,
-and the clerks who speak English. I imagine
-I have come nearer getting the facts than if I
-had sent in my card at the royal palace.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Pilgrims_Start">The Pilgrims’ Start</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Delftshaven</span>, July 25.</p>
-
-
-<p>This is the town from which the Pilgrims
-sailed on the trip which was to make Plymouth
-Rock famous. Nearly a hundred of
-the congregation of Rev. John Robinson at
-Leyden came to this little suburb of Rotterdam,
-and embarked on the Speedwell. The
-night before the start was spent by the congregation
-in exhortation and prayer in a little
-church which still stands, and has the fact
-recorded on a big tablet. The Pilgrims went
-to Southampton, discovered the Speedwell
-was not seaworthy, and transferred to the
-Mayflower.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Those English Puritans who had emigrated
-from their own country to Holland were considered
-“religious cranks” even in those days
-when fighting and killing for religion was regarded
-the proper occupation of a Christian.
-The Puritans in England were strong in numbers,
-and while Queen Elizabeth had frowned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-upon them as dissenters from the church of
-which she was the head, she was politician
-enough to restrain the persecution of them, for
-they were useful citizens and loved to die fighting
-Spaniards. But a few extremists who persisted
-in preaching in public places were
-sentenced to jail, and some of these skipped
-to Holland. Queen Elizabeth died and James
-became the King of England, and he was a pinhead.
-He hated non-conformists as much as
-Catholics. So, more of the Puritans who
-could not pretend to conform went to Holland,
-and in Leyden and Amsterdam they founded
-little settlements. Holland was a land of
-liberty, and the Puritans wanted the right to
-disagree, non-conform, argue and debate over
-disputed questions. There were several congregations
-of them, and they did not agree
-on important doctrines, such as whether John
-the Baptist’s hair was parted on the side or
-in the middle. Public debates were held and
-great enjoyment therefrom resulted, although
-there is no record of anyone having his opinion
-changed by the arguments, and the side whose
-story you are reading always overcame the
-other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Puritans did not mix much with the
-Dutch, and naturally grew lonesome in their
-exile. They conceived the plan of emigrating
-to the New World and there establishing
-the right to worship God in accord with their
-own conscience. Influential Puritans in England
-who had not been so cranky as to leave
-home, helped with the king, and finally they
-secured permission from James to settle in
-America and to own the land they should
-develop. James remarked at the time he
-would prefer that they go to Hell, where they
-belonged, but he was needing a loan from the
-English Puritans, so he gave the permit. The
-Puritans in old England also provided a good
-part of the money with which to fit out the
-expedition. At the time there was a general
-movement among the Puritans in England
-for a big migration to the New World. This
-was to be a sort of experiment station. At the
-time, James was king, and Charles, a dissolute
-prince, was to follow. The Puritans were sick
-at heart and ready to leave their native land.
-But soon after the Pilgrims had made their
-settlement in New England, the Puritans at
-home developed leaders who put them into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-the fight for Old England. Then along came
-Cromwell, and for many years English Puritans
-were running the government, and the
-necessity for a safe place across the sea and an
-asylum for religious liberty disappeared so far
-as they were concerned, though their interest
-in the Colonists was maintained. The sons
-of these Puritans who crossed the ocean rather
-than go to the established church, refused to
-pay a tax on tea, about 150 years later, and
-formed a new country with a new flag. That
-was part of the result of the sailing of the little
-company from Rev. Mr. Robinson’s flock after
-a night spent in prayer in this town of Delftshaven,
-just about this time of the year in 1620.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The stay of the Puritans in Holland had no
-effect on the Dutch. They let the Puritans
-shoot their mouths any way they pleased, and
-the Puritan only prospers and proselytes on
-opposition. But the Dutch of the present
-day are getting good returns for that investment
-of long ago. There are a dozen places
-in Holland, here and at Amsterdam and Leyden,
-visited by Americans every year because
-they are historic spots in connection with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-Pilgrims. At each and every place the contribution-box
-is in sight, and the Dutch church
-or town which owns the property gets a handsome
-revenue. New England churches give
-liberally to the fixing up of the Dutch churches
-which can show a record of having been just
-once the place where some Puritan preached.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Wooden shoes have not gone out of style in
-Holland. They are still worn generally in the
-country, and by the poorer children and men
-in the cities. They are cheap, which is a big
-recommendation to the Dutch. They are
-warm, said to be much warmer than leather.
-It does not hurt them to be wet, a very desirable
-feature in this water-soaked country.
-These are all good reasons, and as soon as you
-get used to the clatter and the apparent awkwardness
-you appreciate the fact that the
-“klompen,” as the Dutch call them, are a
-reasonable style for Holland. They are not
-worn in the house but dropped in the entryway,
-and house shoes or stocking feet go within.
-The Dutch farmer is proud of his clogs,
-paints them, carves them, and scrubs them.
-A man with idle time, like a fisherman, will
-often spend months decorating a pair of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-wooden shoes. They are considered a proper
-present from a young husband to his bride,
-and she will use them when scrubbing, which
-is a good part of the time. The shoes are
-generally made of poplar, and to the size of
-the foot. When the foot grows you can hollow
-out a little more shoe. Wooden shoes are as
-common here as overalls in America, and they
-will not grow less popular unless Holland goes
-dry&mdash;of which I see no indication.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The farm-houses are usually built in connection
-with the barns, the family living in
-front and the stock and feed occupying the
-rear. This is rather customary in cold climates,
-and you must remember that Holland
-is farther north than Quebec. The winters
-get very cold and the canals and rivers freeze
-over. Skating is the great national sport.
-There does not seem to be much summer sport
-except scrubbing. All through the summer
-the people dig and weed and fertilize and prepare
-for market. The dikes and canals must
-be maintained and the best made of a short
-season. In the winter they can live with the
-pretty black-and-white cattle, the sheep and
-the horses, and have a good time.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Amsterdam_and_Others">Amsterdam, and Others</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Amsterdam</span>, July 27</p>
-
-
-<p>This is the largest and most important city
-of Holland. It has about as much commerce
-as Rotterdam, and is longer on history, manufactures,
-art, and society. It was the first
-large city built up on a canal system, and its
-600,000 population is a proof that something
-can be built out of nothing. Along about
-1300 and 1400 it was a small town in a swamp.
-When the war for independence from Spain
-began, in 1656, Amsterdam profited by its
-location on the Zuyder Zee. The Spaniards
-ruined most of the rival towns and put an end
-to the commerce of Antwerp for a while, and
-Amsterdam received the mechanics and merchants
-fleeing from the soldiers of Alva. The
-name means a “dam,” or dike, on the Amstel
-river. The swamp was reclaimed from the
-water by dikes and drainage canals, but even
-now every house in the city must have its
-foundation on piles. The word dam, or its
-inclusion in a name, means just about what<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-it does in English, provided you refer to the
-proper dam, not the improper damn. As
-nearly all of the Dutch towns are built on dam sites
-a great many of them are some-kind-of-a-dam.
-Amsterdam is built below the level of the sea,
-which is just beside it, and the water in the
-canals is pumped out by big engines and forced
-over the dike into the sea. If this were not
-done the water would come over the town site
-and Amsterdam would go back to swamp and
-not be worth a dam site.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Amsterdam is the chief money market of
-Holland, and one of the financial capitals of
-the world. It is the place an American promoter
-makes for when he is out after the stuff
-with which to make the female horse travel.
-A large part of its business men are Jews, and
-their ability and wealth have maintained the
-credit of Dutch interests in all parts of the
-globe. At a time when the Jews were being
-persecuted nearly everywhere they were given
-liberty in Holland, and much of the country’s
-progress is due to that fact and to the religious
-toleration of all kinds of sects.</p>
-
-<p>The canals run along nearly all the streets,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-and are filled with freight-boats from the country
-and from other cities. Thousands of these
-canal boats lie in the canals of Amsterdam and
-are the homes of the boatmen, who are the
-commerce carriers of Holland. Under our
-window is tied up a canal-boat which could
-carry as much freight as a dozen American
-box cars. The power is a sail or a pole or a
-man or a woman, whichever is most convenient.
-The boatman and his wife and ten or
-fifteen children, with a dog and a cat, live
-comfortably in one end, and we can watch
-them at their work and play. A dozen more
-such boats are lying in this block, some with
-steam engines and some with gasoline engines.
-The Standard Oil Company does a great business
-in Holland, and as usual is a great help to
-the people. It is introducing cheap power for
-canal-boats by means of proper engines, and
-in a short time will probably free the boatman
-and his wife from the pull-and-push system
-received from the good old days.</p>
-
-<p>The canals are lined with big buildings,
-business and residence, mostly from four to
-six stories high, with the narrow, peaked and
-picturesque architecture made familiar to us<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-by the pictures. All kinds of color are used
-and ornamented fronts are common. Imagine
-a street such as I describe and you have this
-one that is under our hotel window and which
-is the universal street scene of Amsterdam.
-Some one called this the Venice of the North,
-but to my mind it is prettier than Venice,
-although it lacks some of the oriental architecture
-and smell.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Last night we went to the Rembrandt
-theatre to see “The Mikado,” in Dutch. Of
-course we could follow the music of the old-time
-friend, and the language made the play
-funnier than ever. The Dutch are not near so
-strong on music as are their German or French
-neighbors. They utilize compositions of other
-nations, and American airs are very common.
-The window of a large fine music store is
-playing up “Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?”
-A few Americans were at the big garden
-Krasnapolsky, listening to a really fine orchestra
-with an Austrian leader. We sent up a request
-for the American national air and it
-came promptly: “Whistling Rufus.” The
-Europeans think the cake-walk is something<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-like a national dance in our country, and whenever
-they try to please us they turn loose
-one of our rag-time melodies. They do not
-mind chucking the “Georgia Campmeeting”
-or “Rings on My Fingers and Bells on My
-Toes,” into a program of Wagner and Tschudi
-and other composers whom we are taught at
-home to consider sacred.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The most entertaining feature of the Amsterdam
-landscape that I have seen is a Dutch
-lady in a hobble skirt. The fashion is here
-all right, and it would make an American
-hobble appear tame and common. In the
-first place, the Dutch lady is not of the proper
-architecture, and in the second place, she still
-wears a lot more underskirts, or whatever
-they are, than are considered necessary in
-Paris or Hutchinson. But she does not expand
-the hobble. The shopping street of
-Amsterdam is filled with fashionably dressed
-Dutch ladies who look like tops, and who are
-worth coming a long ways to see. Far be it
-from me to criticize the freaks of female
-fashion. I never know what they are until
-after they are past due. But if the Dutch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-hobble ever reaches the American side of the
-Atlantic it will be time for the mere men to
-organize.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The greatest art gallery in Europe is here,
-The Rijks Museum. I went to see it&mdash;once.
-I do not get the proper thrills from seeing a
-thousand pictures in thirty minutes. They
-make me tired. But Rembrandt’s Night
-Watch, or nearly anything a good Dutch
-artist has painted, is a real pleasure. The
-Dutch are recognizing their own modern art,
-and in that way they are going to distance the
-Italians. The Dutch artists are good at portraying
-people and common things, such as
-cats and dogs and ships. They are not strong
-in allegory or imaginative work, and you do
-not have to be educated up to enjoy them.
-And they run a little fun into their work occasionally,
-which would shock a Dago artist
-out of his temperament.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Wages are higher in Holland than elsewhere
-in Europe. A street car conductor gets a
-dollar a day. Ordinary labor is paid sixty to
-eighty cents a day. Farm laborer about $15<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-per month, but boards himself. A good all-around
-hired girl is a dollar a week. Mechanics
-receive from one dollar to two dollars
-a day. The necessaries of life are not so high
-as with us. Vegetables are cheaper. Tobacco
-is much less. Meats are about as high.
-Clothing is cheaper, but our people wouldn’t
-wear it. Beer is two cents a glass and lemonade
-is five cents. The ordinary workingman
-lives on soup, vegetables, and very little
-meat; gets a new suit of clothes about once
-in five years, and takes his family to a garden
-for amusement, where they get all they want
-for ten cents. The Dutch citizen on foot is
-plain, honest, a little rude, but of good heart
-and very accommodating. I have not met the
-citizens in carriages and on horseback, who
-make up a very small part of the procession
-in Holland.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Cheeses_and_Bulbses">Cheeses and Bulbses</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Alkmaar</span>, July 28.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Holland is the greatest cheese
-country on earth, and Alkmaar is the biggest
-cheese market in Holland. Every Friday the
-cheesemakers of the district bring their product
-to the public market, and buyers, local
-and foreign, bargain for and purchase the
-cheeses. That is why we came to Alkmaar
-on Friday. The cheese market is certainly
-an interesting and novel sight. All over the
-big public square are piled little mounds of
-cheeses, shaped like large grape-fruit and colored
-in various shades of red and yellow.
-Each wholesaler has his carriers in uniform
-of white, and a straw hat and ribbons colored
-as a livery. When a sale is made, two
-carriers take a barrow which they carry suspended
-from their shoulders and with a sort
-of two-step and many cries to get out of the
-way they bring their load to the public weigh-house,
-where it is officially weighed. Then
-off the cheeses go to the store-rooms or to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-the canal-boats which line one side of the
-square, waiting to take their freight to the
-cities or to the sea. The farmers look over
-each other’s cheeses as they do hogs at the
-Kansas State Fair, with comments of praise
-or criticism. There is much chaffing and chaffering
-between them and the buyers. In
-about two hours the cheeses are gone, the
-square is empty and the beer-houses are full.
-The women-folks do not take an active part
-in the market, but they are present and looking
-things over, and I suspect they had been
-permitted to milk the cows and make the
-cheese.</p>
-
-<p>About $3,000,000 worth of cheese is sold
-annually in the Alkmaar market. The country
-round about, North Holland, is all small
-farms, with gardens and pastures and little
-herds of the black-and-white cattle. The
-cheese wholesales at about 60 cents a cheese,
-and in America we pay about twice that much
-for the same, or for the Edam, which is like
-it. The farmers look prosperous, drive good
-horses and very substantial gaily painted
-wagons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span></p>
-
-<p>Alkmaar has 18,000 population, and is therefore
-about the size of Hutchinson. But it is
-a good deal older. Back in 1573 it successfully
-defended itself against the Spaniards.
-The name means “all sea,” because the country
-was originally covered with water. The
-land is kept above the water now by pumping
-and pouring into canals which are higher
-than the farms through which they flow.
-This is done very systematically and by windmills.
-A district thus maintained is called a
-“polder,” something like our irrigation district,
-and on one of them near Alkmaar, about
-the size of a Kansas township, six miles
-square, there are 51 windmills working all
-the time, pumping the water. These are not
-little windmills like those in a Kansas pasture,
-but great fellows with big arms fifty feet long,
-and they stand out over the polder like so
-many giants. The picture of these mills in a
-most fertile garden-spot, with canal streaks
-here and there and boats on the canals looming
-up above the land, is certainly a striking one.
-And it shows clearly what energy can do
-when properly applied.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span></p>
-
-<p>The soil is as sandy as in South Hutchinson.
-But dirt and fertilizer are brought from
-the back country and the soil is kept constantly
-renewed. It seems to me that with
-comparatively little work the sandy soil of
-the Arkansas valley can be made into a market
-garden, producing many times its present
-value, whenever our people take it into
-their heads to manufacture their own soil
-and apply water when needed and not just
-when it rains. That time will come, but
-probably not until a dense population forces
-a great increase in production.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have another idea. Along the coast of
-Holland are the “sand dunes,” which are
-exactly like our sand hills. What we should
-do is to change the name from sand hills
-to “dunes,” brag about them and charge
-people for visiting them. The city of Amsterdam
-gets its supply of drinking-water from
-the dunes. This was important news to me,
-for it confirmed my theory as to the similarity
-of the dunes and the sand hills, and
-also suggested that somebody in Amsterdam<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-used water for drinking purposes, a fact I
-had not noticed while there.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We spent part of a day in Haarlem, where
-the tulips come from. The soil conditions
-are like those at Alkmaar, but the country
-is a mass of nurseries, flower gardens, and
-beautiful growing plants. We are out of
-season for tulips, but this is the time when
-the bulbs are being collected and dried to be
-shipped in all directions. Not only tulips
-but crocuses, hyacinths, lilies, anemones, etc.,
-are raised for the market,&mdash;cut flowers to the
-cities, bulbs to all parts of the world. Just
-now the gardens are filled with phlox, dahlias,
-larkspurs, nasturtiums,&mdash;by the acre. The
-flowers are about the same as at home. Out
-of this thin, scraggly, sandy soil the gardeners
-of North Holland are taking money for
-flowers and bulbs faster than miners in gold-fields.
-With flowers and cheeses these Dutch
-catch about all kinds of people.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Haarlem is the capital of the province of
-North Holland, and is full of quaint houses<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-of ancient architecture. It was one of the
-hot towns for independence when the war
-with Spain began. The Spaniards besieged
-it, and after a seven months gallant defense,
-in which even the women fought as
-soldiers, the town surrendered under promise
-of clemency. The Spaniards broke their
-promise and put to death the entire garrison
-and nearly all the townspeople. This outrage
-so incensed the Dutch in other places
-that the war was fought more bitterly than
-before, and the crime&mdash;for such it was&mdash;really
-aided in the final expulsion of the Spaniards.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Along in the seventeenth century was the
-big boom in Haarlem. The tulip mania developed
-and bulbs sold for thousands of dollars.
-Capitalists engaged in the speculation
-and the trade went into big figures. Millions
-of dollars were spent for the bulbs, and so
-long as the demand and the market continued
-every tulip-raiser was rich. Finally the reaction
-came, as it always does to a boom, and
-everybody went broke. A bulb which sold
-for $5,000 one year was not worth 50 cents
-the next. The government added to the con<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>fusion
-by decreeing that all contracts for future
-deliveries were illegal. The usual phenomenon
-of a panic followed, everybody losing
-and nobody gaining. A hundred years
-later there was about the same kind of a
-boom in hyacinths, and the same result. It
-will be observed that the Dutch are not so
-much unlike Americans when it comes to
-booms, only it takes longer for them to forget
-and calls for more experience.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Frans Hals, a great Dutch painter, almost
-next to Rembrandt, was born in Haarlem,
-and a number of his pictures are in the city
-building. It was customary in those days
-for the mayor and city council to have a group
-picture painted and hung in the town hall.
-This was the way most of the Dutch artists
-got their start, for the officials were always
-wealthy citizens who were willing to pay more
-for their own pictures than for studies of nature
-or allegory. I wonder if the officials paid
-their own money or did they voucher it
-through the city treasury and charge it to
-sprinkling or street work?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<p>Both Alkmaar and Haarlem are interesting
-because they are intensely Dutch. Their
-principal occupations, cheesemaking and flower-raising,
-have been their principal occupations
-for centuries. They had nothing to
-start with and had to fight for that. Now
-they are loaning money to the world. If the
-people of Kansas worked as hard as do the
-Dutch and were as economical and saving,
-in one generation they would have all the
-money in the world. But they wouldn’t have
-much fun.</p>
-
-<p>The American way of economizing may be
-illustrated by a story. Once upon a time in
-a certain town&mdash;which I want to say was not
-in Kansas, for I have no desire to be summoned
-before the attorney-general to tell all
-about it&mdash;a man and his wife were in the
-habit of sending out every night and getting
-a quart of beer for 10 cents. They drank this
-before retiring, and were reasonably comfortable.
-Prosperity came to them, and the man
-bought a keg of beer. That night he drew off
-a quart, and as he sat in his stocking-feet he
-philosophized to his wife and said: “See how
-we are saving money. By buying a keg of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-beer at a time this quart we are drinking costs
-only 6 cents. So we are saving 4 cents.”
-She looked at him with admiration, and replied:
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>“How fine! Let’s have another quart
-and save 4 cents more.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Historic_Leyden">Historic Leyden</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Leyden</span>, July 31.</p>
-
-<p>We came to Leyden to spend the night,
-and have stayed three days. This was partly
-because it is necessary to sometimes rest your
-neck and feet, and partly because the Hotel
-Levedag is one of those delightful places where
-the beds are soft, the eats good and the help
-around the hotel does its best to make you
-comfortable. Leyden itself is worth while,
-but ordinarily it would be disposed of in two
-walks and a carriage-ride. It is a college
-town, and this is vacation; so everybody in
-the place has had the time to wait on wandering
-Americans and make the process of extracting
-their money as sweet and as long
-drawn out as possible.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Leyden is a good deal like Lawrence, Kansas.
-It is full of historic spots, and is very
-quiet in the summer-time. In Leyden they
-refer to the siege by the Spaniards in 1573
-just as the Lawrence people speak of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-Quantrill raid. The Dutch were in their war
-for independence, and the Duke of Alva’s
-army besieged Leyden. They began in October,
-and as the town was well fortified it
-resisted bravely. Early in the year the neighboring
-town of Haarlem had surrendered and
-the Spaniards had tied the citizens back to
-back and chucked them into the river. The
-Leydenites preferred to die fighting rather
-than surrender and die. They had just about
-come to starvation in March of the next year,
-when they decided to break down the dikes
-and let the sea take the country. The sea
-brought in a relief fleet sent by William the
-Silent, Prince of Orange, and the Spaniards
-retreated before the water. Then the wind
-changed, drove back the waves, and William
-fixed the dikes. This siege of Leyden was
-really one of the great events in history, and
-the story goes that out of gratitude to the
-people of the town William offered to exempt
-them from taxes for a term of years or to establish
-a University in their city. Leyden
-took the University, which is hard to believe
-of the Dutch, unless they were farseeing
-enough to know that the students would be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-a never-ending source of income and that the
-taxes would come back. The university thus
-established by William of Orange in 1575 has
-been one of the best of the educational institutions
-in Europe, and has produced many
-great scholars. It now has 1700 students and
-a strong faculty. Some of the boys must be
-making up flunks by attending summer school,
-for last night at an hour when all good Dutchmen
-should be in bed, the sweet strains came
-through the odor of the canal, same old tune
-but Dutch words: “I don’t care what becomes
-of me, while I am singing this sweet
-melody, yip de yaddy aye yea, aye yea, yip-de
-yaddy, aye yea.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_fp074.jpg" alt="" width="391" height="550" />
-<p class="caption center"><span class="smcap">NO PLACE FOR A MAN FROM KANSAS</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<p>The river Rhine filters through Leyden and
-to the sea. It never would get there, for
-Leyden is several feet below the sea-level, but
-by the use of big locks the Dutch raise the
-river to the proper height and pour it in.
-These are the dikes the Dutch opened to
-drive out the Spaniards. It is so easy I
-wonder they did not do it earlier. At any
-rate, the Spaniards never got much of a hold
-in this part of Holland again. The sand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>hills
-along the beach make an ideal bathing-place.
-I took a canal-boat and in three hours
-time covered the six miles from Leyden to
-Katryk. The Dutch ladies and gentlemen
-were playing in the water and on the sand,
-and it was no place for a man from Kansas.
-I have no criticism of these big bathing-beaches
-and we have some in our own fair
-land where the scenery is just as startling.
-But the Dutch ladies consider a skirt which
-does not touch the ground the same as immodest.
-And no Dutch gentleman will appear
-in public without his vest as well as his
-coat. On the beach the reaction is great, so
-great that I don’t blame the Spaniards for
-running away.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was in Leyden that the congregation of
-Puritans resided which sent the delegation
-of Pilgrim Fathers across the Atlantic in
-1620. In St. Peter’s church John Robinson,
-the pastor, lies buried, and there he is said
-to have preached. A tablet tells of the house
-across the way which occupies the site of the
-little church in which Robinson held forth for
-years. The present house was not built un<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>til
-1683, but that is close enough to make it
-interesting. The Puritans had several congregations
-in Leyden, but the Robinson
-church is the only one that made history.
-When the civil war broke out in England and
-Cromwell was leading the cause of liberty,
-all of the Puritans in Leyden who had not
-gone to America and who could raise the fare,
-returned to England and disappeared from
-the Dutch records. They were fine people
-in many ways, but the Dutch did not try to
-get them to stay. They dearly loved to
-argue, and when it was necessary to promote
-religious freedom by punching the heads of
-those who did not believe as they did, the
-Puritans were there with the punch.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Rembrandt, the great Dutch painter, was
-born in Leyden, in 1606. A stable now marks
-the spot where he first saw the light. It is
-a little difficult to get up a thrill in a livery
-stable, but we did our best. Rembrandt’s
-father was a miller, and operated one of these
-big Dutch windmills. When Rembrandt was
-about 25 years old he married and moved to
-Amsterdam, but he did not settle down.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-While he became popular and made a good
-deal of money, he was no manager and he
-spent like a true sport. When his wife died
-he went broke, and lived the last years of his
-life in a modest way. About 550 paintings
-are now known and attributed to him, together
-with about 250 etchings and more
-than a thousand drawings. His portrayals
-of expression and of lights and shadows are
-the great points of excellence in his work, but
-he was a master of every detail of the art.
-His pictures command more money than those
-of any other artist, and to my notion he is
-the greatest of all the great painters. Most
-of the other old fellows have left but few
-masterpieces, while Rembrandt never did anything
-but great work. The Dutch worship
-God, Rembrandt and William of Orange, and
-I never can tell which comes first with them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a hill in Leyden, eighty feet high
-and several hundred yards around the base.
-It is well covered with trees, and was topped
-with a fort in the good old days. Unfortunately,
-the buildings around it&mdash;for it is in
-the middle of town&mdash;keep it from being seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-at a distance. People come from far and
-near to see the hill. It is as much of a novelty
-in this part of Holland as a Niagara
-would be in Kansas.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The public market is a feature in every
-Dutch town, as it is in most European countries.
-A large square is devoted to the purpose,
-and here the fish, the vegetables and
-everything from livestock to second-hand
-books is offered for sale. The square and
-the sidewalks are covered with the market
-displays, the farmers, the fishermen, the buyers,
-and the curious. There is only one small
-newspaper in this city of 60,000 inhabitants,
-but I suppose everybody hears the news at
-the market. It is better than a show, or an
-art gallery, or a cathedral, to see the dickering,
-hear the talk and watch the people.
-The housewives or their representatives are
-there with baskets and comments, and the
-men of the town have some excuse to be
-around. Peasant costumes, peculiar headdresses,
-large fat ladies, wooden shoes, and
-all the odd and picturesque things that you
-can put into a landscape surrounded by quaint<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-buildings and a canal, are mixed in confusion
-and yet in order. The colors which the
-painters put into their Holland pictures are
-present, and the sturdy, thrifty, trafficking
-Dutch people are there with the petticoats
-or the tobacco-smoke, which their sex calls
-for under such circumstances. Here in Leyden,
-where a house less than a hundred years
-old is a curiosity and where Dutch traditions
-are held as sacred, we have enjoyed the wonderful
-nature-picture of this moving market.
-And I might add that we have contributed
-greatly to the hilarity of the occasion by our
-own peculiar appearance and ways&mdash;peculiar
-from the view-point of the other fellow.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Dutch_Capital">The Dutch Capital</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">The Hague</span>, Aug. 2.</p>
-
-<p>This is the capital of Holland and soon will
-be, in a way, of the civilized world. The first
-international peace conference was held here,
-followed by the establishment of an international
-tribunal to decide disputes between
-nations, and now, thanks to President Taft’s
-statesmanship, the nations are agreeing to
-arbitrate all differences, and this Hague tribunal
-will doubtless be the court of last resort
-for the world. The propriety of the selection
-of The Hague is not questioned. Holland is
-a small nation, with practically no forts or
-standing army or navy. It is not a factor in
-international politics, and its own independence
-and integrity are guaranteed by the
-various treaties between the nations. Its importance
-is commercial and not political, it
-has no alliances, and occupies a unique position
-among the countries of Europe. Paris
-or London or Berlin would not do for the
-location of an international tribunal, because<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-each would be subject to local influence and
-force, but all nations can come to The Hague,
-the capital of the country whose territory
-they have promised to protect. As the arbitration
-treaties increase in number the practice
-of referring disputes to The Hague will become
-almost universal, and it seems to me
-that this will make the beautiful Dutch city
-the capital of the world. Other cities will
-strive for commercial supremacy, but The
-Hague will be the center for statesmanship
-and government.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Dutch have abbreviated the old name
-S’Gravenhage to Den Haag, and they pronounce
-the name of the capital just as we do
-the word hog. The old word meant “The
-Count’s Hedge” or wood, because there was
-a small forest here belonging to the Counts
-of Holland. The forest is still here, a beautiful
-piece of natural woods about a mile and a half
-long and half as wide. At the farther end of
-this forest is “The House in the Wood,”
-which is in fact a beautiful little palace built
-in 1645 by Princess Amalia, the widow of
-Prince Frederick Henry of Orange. Amalia<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-had a new idea in memorials, for the principal
-room of the palace, the orange room, is decorated
-by pictures from the brushes of pupils of
-Rubens, and while they portray scenes in the
-life of the Prince they are full of fat cherubs,
-scantily dressed ladies and very racy suggestion.
-I am told Amalia was that way, but
-I have no personal knowledge. All this happened
-nearly 300 years ago, and in any event
-she had a most charming palace. Several
-rooms are filled with gifts from the Emperors
-of China and Japan to Wilhelmina, and they
-add to the general hilarity of the memorial.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Although The Hague was the center of the
-Dutch government practically all the time
-from 1584, when the representatives of the
-Dutch provinces met here to form a League
-against Spain, it had no representation in the
-government until the last century. The original
-cities in the federation refused to admit
-The Hague, and it was a sort of District of
-Columbia until Napoleon took possession of
-Holland on the theory that it was formed from
-the deposits of dirt made by French rivers.
-Napoleon gave The Hague a local government,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-which it has since retained. It has grown
-much in late years, and is a beautiful city with
-good architecture, many wide streets, fine
-public buildings, handsome private homes,
-pretty canals, and shaded avenues. It is a
-custom in Holland and the Dutch colonies
-for men of wealth to come to The Hague, put
-up fine houses and spend some of their money,
-just as the “town farmers” do in Hutchinson.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We went to see the Gevangenpoort, an
-ancient tower in which prisoners were confined,
-tortured and executed. They still keep
-some of the interesting machines with which
-justice was dealt out in the good old days. A
-prisoner whom the authorities desired to convict
-would be allowed to prove his innocence
-by the ordeal of fire. He was permitted to
-walk with bare feet on a red hot gridiron. If
-he was innocent the heat would not affect his
-naked soles, if guilty it would. But that is
-nothing. Our own dear old Pilgrim fathers
-used to take a woman charged with witchcraft
-and toss her into a pond. If she were a witch,
-the evil spirit would keep her from drowning
-and the Puritans would put her to death. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-she drowned, her innocence of the charge was
-proven&mdash;and they buried her in the churchyard.</p>
-
-<p>The Dutch got their early ideas of prison
-reform from the Spaniards. There is a machine
-in the Gevangenpoort which dropped
-water onto a man’s head for hours. If he lived
-he was crazy. Then they had a 1611 model
-of a rack which would break the bones in the
-arms and legs and not kill the prisoner, and
-he could be tortured later. Pincers to pull
-out finger-nails, branding-irons, and stocks
-that kept a man or a woman standing on the
-toes for hours, were light punishments for
-petty thievery. A very popular form of punishment
-was to hang the prisoner by his feet,
-head down, and let the populace come in and
-enjoy the sight. Of course these old instruments
-are mere relics now, but just remember
-they were the real thing only 300 years ago,
-and 300 years is not long in the history of the
-world. We never think that it was just as
-long between 1311 and 1611 as it has been
-from 1611 to now. We confusedly jumble all
-the events of about 500 years into “Middle
-Ages,” and can’t remember which was in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-which century. The last 300 years seem long
-and full of events, while the three centuries
-before are remembered as all of one time. I
-wonder if the people on earth in 2211 will look
-over some Gevangenpoort of ours and shudder
-at the savagery of 1911?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Incidentally I want to report that the people
-of Europe are looking on President Taft as
-the great man of the age&mdash;I mean the great
-common people are. His successful advocacy
-of international arbitration is hailed as the
-coming of an era of peace. You don’t know
-what that means to Europe, where nearly
-every man has to give years of his life to army
-service, where heavy taxes for forts and ships
-bear down on the people, and where there is
-always a possibility of war with a neighboring
-nation, which would mean great loss of life.
-Nearly all of this war sacrifice falls upon the
-people, and while they patriotically sustain
-their governments they hail Taft’s policy of
-peace as the greatest help that has come to
-them in countless years, the advance step that
-will relieve the burden that bends the back
-of what Mr. Bryan calls “the plain common<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-people.” No wonder these people are for
-Taft but of course they can’t vote for him
-in 1912.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The government of Holland is a sort of
-aristocratic republic with a monarch for ornament.
-There is a lower house of congress
-elected by popular vote, with some restrictions
-as to property on the right of suffrage. There
-is an upper house selected with still more restrictions.
-The upper house only can introduce
-bills. The lower house only can enact
-them into laws. The queen signs when the
-Dutch congress, or states-general, tells her to
-sign. She gets a salary of about $400,000 a
-year and is rich in her own right. The business
-men complain that she is stingy and the
-women say she is slouchy. Taxes are high,
-and in all the forms imaginable. They tax
-theatre tickets, bank checks, receipts, all documents,
-incomes and lands, and in some places
-the number of windows in a house. Taxes
-are “high” everywhere I go. I thought perhaps
-when I got where I could not understand
-the language I would no longer be bored by
-the man who complains about taxes. But I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-have not yet found that place. I suppose
-when I quit traveling on this earthly sphere
-the first thing I will hear will be a kick on the
-cost of paving the golden streets, or a complaint
-that the tax on sulphur is going to kill
-the prosperity of the country.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Dutch_Company">“The Dutch Company.”</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Arnhem</span>, August 5th.</p>
-
-<p>This is the “last chance” station in Holland.
-About ten miles more and we cross the line
-into Germany. This is also the only hilly
-part of Holland, and it really is a surprise to
-find that somewhere in this little country there
-are neither canals nor dikes. The river Rhine
-flows here with some current, and the official
-documents say that at Arnhem it is 35 feet
-above the level of the sea. Right sharp little
-hills, as big as those about Strong City, rise
-from the river bank, and are covered with
-woods and handsome homes. Queen Wilhelmina
-has her summer residence near here,
-and Dutch colonials, who have made their
-fortunes and returned to the native land, are
-fond of this small and elevated piece of Netherland.
-The Dutch make a great deal of money
-out of their East India colonies, one of which
-is Java. They are not so much interested in
-preparing the Javanese or the Mochans for
-the work of self-government as our folks are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-the Filipinos. The Dutch theory is to treat
-the natives kindly but make them work as
-the dogs do in Holland. And the Javanese or
-the Javans, or whatever you call them, are
-too busy to get dissatisfied and plan revolutions.
-This question of what to do with the
-white man’s burden is a hard one to settle
-offhand. The brown people do not understand
-the American motives, and the Americans are
-probably the most detested people in the
-Orient. And yet the Americans are the only
-conquering nation which does not regard colonies
-as personal property and which tries to
-elevate the citizenship it finds. The English
-hold India by fear, but some day the English
-are going to be chased out of that part of Asia
-by the Indians they try to keep down. The
-other European nations make no bones of the
-fact that they own and operate their foreign
-possessions for what they can get out of them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A Hollander makes a very strong American
-when he is caught young. On shipboard I
-made the acquaintance of a young man about
-25 years old who had been in America nine
-years, and was now going to his birthplace,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-The Hague, on business for the Chicago firm
-with which he is connected. I met him in The
-Hague this week. He wore a western cowboy
-hat, had a small American flag in his button-hole,
-and wore no vest. The stories he was
-telling about the United States to his Dutch
-friends showed that he would have made a
-success as a real-estate man if he had settled
-in western Kansas. And the manner in which
-he did not take off his hat when he met a
-doctor or a lawyer or a duke or a notary public
-was shocking to his family, but was sweet
-American patriotism to him. He was still
-loyal to Holland, but he would not trade his
-new home with its opportunities for all the
-comforts of canals and clean streets. “You
-see,” he said, “in Holland every man has to
-take off his hat to those above him&mdash;and there
-are always those above him.” Of course we
-have classes, in a way, in our country, but a
-man never has to take off his hat or pay
-homage to another man, and the real American,
-home-grown or imported, can’t get that
-feeling of equality out of his system. I think
-the Europeans must grow very tired of us
-Americans, our blustering ways and bragging<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-talk, but they are kind enough not to mention
-it so long as our money holds out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Passenger fares on trains are cheaper in
-Holland than with us. But of course their
-railroad business is really like an interurban
-street-car system. Freight rates are higher
-than with us. The wages paid railway employés
-run from 60 cents a day to section
-hands up to $2 a day for an engineer&mdash;just
-about one-third to one-half our schedule. The
-service is good, the stations and tracks are
-better, every little country road-crossing is
-protected by a flagman or a flagwoman. Of
-course the canals and rivers do so much of the
-carrying business, and distances are so small,
-that comparisons are hard to make. There is
-no such thing in Holland as a sandwich or a
-piece of pie, and yet there are very successful
-and excellent lunch-rooms in every station.
-The first-and second-class passengers usually
-have a lunch-room with upholstered furniture,
-while the third-class travelers are compelled
-to use wooden benches or stand up, a la Americaner.
-The first-class railroad cars are fitted
-out with plush, and there are sometimes toilet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-accommodations on the cars. The second-class
-cars are comfortably upholstered; the
-third-class have plain seats like our street
-cars. But remember you can go clear across
-Holland in a couple of hours, and do not need
-some of the comforts which are considered
-necessities in America.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Dutch are great on fixing things comfortably
-and neatly. If the beautiful Cow
-Creek which winds its way through Hutchinson
-were transferred to a Dutch town it would
-be diked, the banks graded and covered with
-grass and flowers and trees. The government
-would do this, and would put seats along
-the little park, and a band-stand from which
-music would be heard, and swings for the
-children, and almost every block there would
-be a “garden” with tables and all the beer you
-could drink&mdash;if you were Dutch&mdash;for two
-cents. And the Government would make a
-nice profit out of the restaurant business and
-go ahead and dike another stream.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Dutchman is a great business man.
-He works and saves and then he is not afraid<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-to spend&mdash;if he has a sure thing. I have seen
-a business man smoking a cigarette, take out
-of his vest pocket a pair of scissors, snip off
-the burning end and put the unconsumed half
-of a cigarette back in his case. No Dutchman
-is afraid to demand cheap prices while traveling
-at home. The average American who
-goes through Europe with the theory of spending
-his money like a sport must fill the Dutchman
-with disgust. You don’t impress the
-Hollanders that way. On the other hand,
-these Dutchmen will investigate and spend
-barrels of money on dikes, drains, railroads,
-buildings and large investments in all parts of
-the world. I suppose the almost penurious
-saving comes from the fight with the sea, in
-which everything had to be watched and
-worked for, while the ability to handle big
-affairs results from the consciousness of having
-wrested a lot of land from the ocean and having
-made good with it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Dutch are proverbially honest. Of
-course I have been over-charged some, but I
-have never been anywhere on either side of
-the Atlantic where the rule was not observed,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-“he was a stranger and I took him in.” They
-hold a visitor up much more in Kansas City
-than in Amsterdam, and a man from Kansas
-who goes to New York is not even given the
-protection of the game laws. In fact, a
-stranger who does not know the language is
-treated much better in Europe than in America.
-I have often had a man walk half a block
-to show me the way when I could not understand
-his words. I say “walk a block,” but
-there is no such phrase in Dutch. There are
-no regular sized blocks, so a direction is given
-as “five minutes” or “two minutes, then to
-the right three minutes.” That is supposed
-to mean an average walk; but as legs differ
-in size and rapidity it is often confusing. I
-am told in the rural districts a distance is given
-as so many smokes, meaning the number of
-pipefuls of tobacco that a Dutchman would
-consume in going that far. But I have discovered
-that in Holland a pipe is a rarity. The
-men smoke cigars and smoke them incessantly.
-They are cheap. I get a good cigar, equivalent
-to a Tom Moore, for two cents American
-money. When I buy cigars I want to stay
-in Holland. But practically everything ex<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>cept
-cigars, beer and wooden shoes costs as
-much here as in the United States. Yes, there
-is one thing that costs less, and that is labor.
-Therefore hand-carved wood, hand-crocheted
-lace, hand-made shoes, tailored clothes, and
-houses are less expensive than with us. The
-more I see of a country where everything
-labor produces is cheap, the more I am in
-favor of high prices and good wages. Holland
-is probably the best country in Europe for a
-laboring man, but I don’t see how one can get
-ahead, unless he does without meat and wears
-the same suit for years, and his family economize
-the same way. Here in the land of cheese
-and butter, both articles are out of reach and
-the workingman uses “margarine.”</p>
-
-<p>But now it is goodby to the land of the dikes,
-the canals, the windmills and the wooden
-shoes. They are all here as advertised, and
-they color the lives of the people as they do the
-landscape of the country. To the eye they
-are artistic and beautiful, but in practice they
-are common, plain necessities, and in these
-signs the Dutch have conquered.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Great_River">The Great River</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Koenigswinter, Germany</span>, August 7.</p>
-
-<p>The river Rhine is in many respects the
-greatest river in the world. It is greatest in
-commercial importance, historical interest and
-artistic development. It has been the line of
-battle in Europe for centuries, since Cæsar
-first crossed the stream and met the original
-Germans. After that time it was the frontier
-of the Roman empire until Rome fell, and
-then it became the object for which Europe
-fought. The Germans and the French met
-on the Rhine, the other “civilized countries”
-got in the game, and the valley was filled with
-feudal counts and princes who sometimes took
-one side and sometimes the other, whichever
-seemed to offer them the best pickings. The
-broad and deep stream was a highway of
-commerce, and the old champions of chivalry,
-with whom robbery and murder were the
-principal business, built castles on the hills,
-and whenever they saw a merchant with a rich
-caravan of goods, down they would swoop on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-him, grab his valuables and kill the defenders.
-These adventures and wars were what the
-world called history, and during the Middle
-Ages the place where hell was continually
-breaking out was along this beautiful valley.
-The use of gunpowder finally put an end to
-knights in armor, and the Germans and the
-French struggled for the Rhine. Napoleon
-conquered the valley, organized it into a republic,
-and finally annexed it to France. The
-Allies conquered Napoleon and restored the
-Prussian king and the petty princes to their
-possessions. The war of 1870 between Germany
-and France pushed the boundary a considerable
-distance west, and made the Rhine
-valley all German, under the newly organized
-empire.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Most rivers begin in a small way, from
-springs, creeks and little streams. The Rhine
-is the outlet of Lake Constance, and rushes out
-of that inland sea a great river ready-made,
-and begins with a magnificent waterfall
-second only to Niagara. It is a wide, deep
-river, and as soon as it emerges from the Swiss
-mountains becomes the great highway through<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-Germany and Holland to the ocean. Along its
-banks are timber, coal and iron, great cities
-with factories, and fertile lands tilled to the
-utmost point. The freight rate is the lowest
-possible, and the productive value of the
-country is increased by the ease and cheapness
-with which the markets of the world are
-reached. Steamboats and barges go up and
-down in much greater numbers than do the
-freight trains of America’s greatest railroad.
-For much of its length the banks are walled,
-and the cities, towns and villages are almost
-continuous. In width the river is from 500
-to 1500 feet, and it is about 550 miles long.
-The last 360 miles, from Manheim to the
-German ocean, has a channel of not less than
-thirty feet in depth, and in that 360 miles
-the fall is only 280 feet, the last hundred miles
-only 33 feet.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>So much for the Rhine from a business
-viewpoint. This little town of Koenigswinter
-is on “the picturesque Rhine,” at the foot of
-the Drachenfels, the last of the big hills or
-mountains by which the Rhine flows in its
-course from Manheim to Cologne. We stopped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-at the little city of Bonn, seat of a good university,
-and an old town. Beethoven was born
-in Bonn, and we visited the little house he
-selected for that event in his life. It was most
-interesting to see the things used by the great
-composer, among them the original drafts of
-many of his great works. Beethoven’s folks
-were poor, and when only a boy he played the
-pipe organ at the church and was in the Bonn
-string band. When 22 years of age he went to
-Vienna, where he was taken care of financially
-by the Austrian emperor. He never married.
-He and a countess fell in love with each other,
-but her folks did not approve of her marrying
-a musician. Beethoven’s father sang tenor
-and his grandfather had led the Bonn brass
-band, and Beethoven himself was giving
-lessons. So they could not marry, though I
-don’t see why the countess did not arrange
-it later when Beethoven became famous. But
-he was very deaf and probably very cranky,
-for he was a great musician, and perhaps the
-Lady Amelia backed out herself.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This is what is called the picturesque Rhine,
-for here the river runs through some German<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-mountains, which rise almost abruptly from
-the banks. The mountain-sides are cultivated
-as we do first-bottom land. The principal product
-is the grape, which gets just the proper
-sunlight on these mountain-sides to make its
-juice command more money than the wine
-from the back country. There are also many
-truck farms, small pastures, patches of alfalfa
-and wheat, all tilted up from the river
-at an angle of 45 to 90 degrees. The roads are
-good and white, the fields just now are green,
-the sky is a blue like the sky in Italy and
-Kansas. The little towns with their white-washed
-houses and red-tiled roofs cluster
-every mile or so along the river, and the view
-from the mountains or from the river is one
-that makes the tickle come around the heart.
-In this beautiful spot where nature and man
-have both been busy for so many hundred
-years we are spending a few days for rest.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_fp100.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="550" />
-<p class="caption center"><span class="smcap">THE POET BYRON BUILDING CASTLES</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<p>Of course I climbed the Drachenfels, the
-mountain which looms up like a sentinel and
-has on its top a ruined castle with a view and
-a legend. Byron told of the great view, and
-every tourist who stops has to climb the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>mountain. So we climbed. Mr. Byron was
-right this time, for the view is grand. Ordinarily
-I take little stock in Byron’s fits over
-scenery. He traveled through Europe and had
-thrills over some very ordinary things. Byron
-could take a few drinks and then reel off some
-verses which gave an old ruin or a tumble-down
-castle a reputation which it will use
-forever as a bait for tourists. But this time
-Byron was right, for the panorama of the
-Rhine valley, made up of the river, the hills,
-the sky, the shades of growing green, the white-and-red
-towns, and the boats as noiseless as
-birds, is one worth more than the twenty-five
-American cents it takes to make the climb on a
-cog-wheel railroad.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ruined castle, which stands about 1,000
-feet above the Rhine and yet so near it seems
-that one could throw a stone from the parapet
-into the river, was occupied by a line of the
-fiercest gentlemen that ever robbed an innocent
-traveler. For several hundred years no
-one was safe to go this way unless he paid
-the robber barons, who had a sort of confederacy
-or union, in which the Count of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-Drachenfels was one of the main guys. The
-name means the dragon’s rock, and comes
-from the fact that a Dragon once resided in a
-cave near the top. The legend says that it
-was customary among the old heathen to feed
-prisoners to the Dragon, so he would look
-pleasant and not roar at night. Returning
-from a trip into the west they brought a
-number of captives, among them a beautiful
-Christian maiden. The heathen young men
-all wanted the girl, so the wise chief decided
-that she should be given to the Dragon, thus
-preventing a scrap among the brethren and
-paying special tribute to the Drag. They
-formed a procession and marched to the big
-rock where they were accustomed to lay out
-provisions for his nibs. The beautiful girl was
-bound hand and foot, covered with flowers, and
-then the crowd got back to see the Dragon do
-the rest. The Dragon came out roaring like a
-stuck pig, but when the girl held out a crucifix
-toward him he bolted, ran and jumped from
-the rock into the river. The best-looking
-young man among the heathen then rushed
-forward and released the lady, married her,
-and they lived happily ever afterward,&mdash;so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-the legend says. And there is no reason to
-doubt the legend, for there is the rock, there
-is the river into which the Dragon leaped, and
-he never did come back.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Along_the_Rhine">Along the Rhine</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Koenigswinter</span>, August 8.</p>
-
-<p>Next to riding on a Dutch canal comes a
-trip on the Rhine. The passenger steamers and
-motor-boats go up and down this part of the
-Rhine like street cars. Every boat is comfortably
-equipped with refreshment parlors and
-restaurants, and the waiters keep trying to
-please the thirsty traveler by offering him wine
-and beer. It is hard on a Kansan. What
-these Germans need is a governor and an attorney-general
-and a row over the joint
-question. Poor Germans! they do not know
-it, and they keep right on drinking beer and
-growing fat and looking happy. Aside from
-this unfortunate habit, which does not seem
-to hurt them as it ought to, the Germans are
-a fine lot of folks. They are immensely proud
-of their country, which is a trifle hard on us
-modest Americans. They really believe Germany
-can lick the world, and they have a
-notion that there is no nation so progressive
-as theirs. In some respects they are right,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-and in many phases of business and scientific
-advancement the Germans lead the world.</p>
-
-<p>I am inclined to attribute this to their
-public-school system, which is superior to ours
-in some respects. Without going into an extended
-argument on the subject, I will explain
-my reason for this opinion. The German
-system of education is very rigid for the boys
-and girls. The discipline in the common
-schools is military. The children go to school
-more months in the year and they are compelled
-to learn. There is no foolishness, no
-excuses from fond parents, no late parties, no
-indifference, no any-thing-to-get-through.
-The German teachers are not content with
-getting the children to pass, but they insist
-they shall <i>know</i> their studies. This severe
-training is kept up until the boy or girl goes
-to the university, and then discipline is relaxed
-and he or she can do about as they
-please so far as personal conduct is concerned.
-In America the parents and the government
-let the little folks do as they please outside of
-short school hours, and then tighten up the
-in high school and university. Our
-scheme doesn’t work well. Our grade schools<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-turn out indifferent scholars and boys and
-girls who have not been trained to study.
-Our course of study is fixed to make it easy,
-when every one knows that hard work is
-needed to develop character. If the Germans
-go ahead of the Americans in the next generation
-it will be because their school system is
-better than ours, because it trains the children
-better for the work to come. The Germans
-think just as much of their children as do the
-Americans of theirs, but they do not spoil
-them,&mdash;which is a great American fault and
-which counts against the children ever afterward.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We rode on the boat to Godesberg, and
-Rolandseck and Heisterbach, and Johannisberg,
-and Niersteiner, and all the other places
-which are recorded on the wine-card at a
-Kansas City hotel. The very names are
-enough to make a Kansas man file an information
-with the county attorney. Each town has
-its brand of wine, its old castles, its flourishing
-business, its comfortable hotels, and its legends
-of olden times. Most of the legends tell of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-triumph of True Love, but here is an exception:</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>An old knight whose castle at Schoenberg
-was an important place in the feudal system
-of tax collection, had seven beautiful daughters.
-He died; these seven girls ruled in the
-castle, and all they cared for was a good time.
-They went hunting, gave late supper parties,
-and were much talked about; but their beauty
-and the castle of their inheritance kept them
-popular with the men. Many knights asked
-them to marry, but each and every suitor was
-given the merry ha-ha by the maiden he
-sought. Knights even fought and killed each
-other, disputing as to the merits of the sisters,
-and the ladies made such funerals the scenes
-of great enjoyment. Finally the knights had
-a mass meeting, and resolved that the seven
-sisters be required to select husbands. When
-this news was conveyed to the sisters they
-said this was just what they wanted. They
-proposed that they would give a picnic, to
-which all the would-be husbands should be invited,
-and after lunch they would announce<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-the knights of their choice. The picnic day
-came, and it rained in the morning as it always
-does on picnic days. The knights came with
-their swords and their lunch-baskets and stood
-around throwing balls for the cigars and shaking
-for the lemonade, until the skies cleared
-and it was announced that the seven sisters
-would be in at once or as soon as they had
-finished dressing. Then came another hour’s
-wait. Suddenly a boat appeared around the
-bend, and in it were the Seven, all decked out
-with big hats and rhinestone buckles. The
-eldest sister stood up in the boat, screaming
-as it rocked, and said: “We don’t care to
-marry any of you country jakes. We are going
-to Cologne to visit a cousin, and there we
-propose to have a good time without being
-obliged to throw down some knight who wants
-a bride and a meal ticket every so often.”
-The other sisters joined in singing the old-time
-version of “Goodby, my lover, goodby,” and
-the boat sailed for Cologne. The knights
-cussed, and laid the blame onto each other;
-but suddenly a storm arose, and the boat
-began to bob around in the waves. The seven
-sisters screamed, but it did them no good.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-The boat upset, and all on board were
-drowned.</p>
-
-<p>This legend teaches flirtatious young ladies
-not to trifle with the home boys.</p>
-
-<p>On the spot where the boat went under,
-seven pointed rocks appear above the surface
-of the water even up to today. I saw them,
-and I guess that proves the legend.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have always believed that Kansas people
-make a mistake in neglecting the legend crop.
-For example, a good legend about Elmdale
-Park in Hutchinson would cause thousands of
-people to visit it and pay 10 cents apiece, besides
-buying post-cards and printed copies
-of the beautiful story, which might go something
-like this:</p>
-
-<p>Once upon a time there lived in the First
-Ward a man and his wife who had an only
-daughter. They were the only father and
-mother she had, so honors were about even
-on that point. They loved this Daughter so
-much that when she grew up she was not
-taught to sew or to cook, but to play the piano
-and to sing “Love Me and the World is Mine.”
-She was very beautiful as she sat on the front<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-porch reading the latest novel, “The Soul of
-My Soul,” while her mother fried the beefsteak
-for supper. Suitors came from far and
-near, one of them a brakeman on the Missouri
-Pacific, and another an assistant chief clerk
-in a hash foundry. But her choice fell upon a
-handsome young knight she met at Elmdale
-Park, who wore an open-faced vest and a
-Brazilian diamond on his shirt front, but who
-had quit school in order to go to work and then
-forgot about it. He saw the clean home and
-he smelled the fried steak and thought the
-young lady did it all, when in fact the young
-lady could not boil an egg. They were married,
-and he at once came to live with his wife’s
-folks. The old Father developed an unexpected
-trait, and insisted that the Bridegroom
-should pay board, which he proudly refused
-to do, took his bride and went to Wichita.
-There he was offered a position as chamber-maid
-in a livery stable and the Girl found it
-necessary at odd times to do the laundry work
-for a small boarding-house. Thus they lived
-for nearly two years, when she borrowed a
-postage stamp and wrote home: “I have a
-Divorce and two children.” The father and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>mother promptly sent her enough money to
-pay her fare, and she returned to the castle
-of her childhood. But she had learned a
-lesson. The next time she got married she did
-not pick up a friend in Elmdale Park, but
-made him show her his bank book and his receipt
-for dues in the Modern Woodmen. At
-the place in Elmdale Park where she met her
-first soul-mate she planted a cottonwood tree,
-which is there yet, and under its shade lovers
-now meet, remember this legend and buy post-cards
-which tell the story.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_fp110.jpg" alt="" width="406" height="550" />
-<p class="caption center"><span class="smcap">THE HANDSOME KNIGHT SHE MET IN ELMDALE PARK</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="In_German_Towns">In German Towns</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Cologne, Germany</span>, August 9.</p>
-
-<p>This is the big town of the lower Rhine
-country in Germany, though it has rivals
-which may sometime take the title away. It
-is also the old town, and there have been
-many hot times in its history. It was started
-in the first century of the Christian era as a
-colony by Aggripina, the mother of Nero, and
-a lot of Roman soldiers were given extra rights
-for settling in the new town. A couple of
-hundred years later a bridge was built across
-the Rhine, and Cologne became of commercial
-importance. When Christianity was extended
-to this section it was made the seat of a bishop
-and then of an archbishop. It grew rapidly
-and was independent in its tendencies, so
-when the break-up came of the old Roman
-empire it became a free city, and with some
-bossing by the archbishop the people ruled,
-that is, the wealthier and more important, a
-sort of aristocracy. Napoleon annexed Cologne
-to France, but when he was overthrown<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-the city was handed over to the king of Prussia,
-and it has been Prussian ever since. In the
-last hundred years Cologne has developed as
-the great jobbing and commercial city of this
-section. It is full of quaint old houses, narrow
-streets, medieval architecture, and has the
-best cathedral in Europe. Dutch and German
-cathedrals are generally Protestant, but the
-Cologne cathedral is Catholic. When the
-Reformation came the Lutherans especially
-enjoyed capturing a cathedral, tearing down
-the images and statues, destroying all the
-artistic beauty they could, and making the
-house of God as plain and uncomfortable as
-possible. On the other hand, the Catholics
-believed in beautifying and adorning their
-churches. The present-day Protestants doubtless
-wish their predecessors had been less
-zealous and that the beautiful decorations and
-paintings had not been defaced by whitewash.
-The Cologne cathedral is the finest specimen
-of Gothic architecture in the world. Of course
-it is in the shape of a cross, and is 157 yards
-long, 94 yards wide, 201 feet to the roof, 357
-feet to the tower over the center, and the
-towers are 515 feet high. These figures give<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-no idea of the impressive and imposing interior;
-and the exterior, which is a profusion
-of turrets, gargoyles, cornices, galleries and
-other decorations, makes the visitor catch his
-breath as he looks at this great structure. The
-foundation of this cathedral was laid in 1248
-and the work was completed thirty years ago;
-so there was no rush about the job.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Twenty-five miles below Cologne is Düsseldorf,
-also on the Rhine, and the place where
-the iron and coal development of Germany
-seeks its market. You know what iron and
-coal did for Pittsburg, and it is the same with
-Düsseldorf. It is the growing city of the section,
-and threatens to pass Cologne. As
-Düsseldorf is largely modern, having developed
-since the days of railroads and steel
-bridges, it has wide streets, beautiful buildings,
-and its architecture is of the present
-generation. Düsseldorf is noted for its municipal
-ownership, and is often called a model
-city. The town owns the street cars, the light
-system, the docks on the river, the water
-plant, a pawn-shop and a lot of other things,
-including a couple of breweries. Municipal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-ownership comes easier in the Old World than
-in the New. It was formerly the custom of the
-government to own everything, and to lay
-out parks and provide utilities for the people,
-who were then too poor to do much themselves.
-So the modern European government,
-which is largely popular, succeeds to the power
-of the ancient monarchical rule, and provides
-the big things for the people. A strong-handed
-ruler who can condemn private property, and
-wisely put the good of the entire community
-above the property and welfare of individuals,
-does these public works much better than our
-own municipal governments, which have restricted
-powers and which have to do what the
-people want rather than tell the people what
-they ought to do. Generally speaking the
-public ownership of utilities is a good thing,
-provided the government has the power and
-the integrity to do the business right. Düsseldorf
-has a mayor and twelve salaried aldermen,
-a common council of 56 members, and
-over 5,000 city employés.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One great difference between Germans and
-Americans is the regard in which they hold the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-law. Unfortunately, our new civilization has
-brought about a general feeling that the law
-is meant for the other fellows and we obey
-it if we have to. For that reason it is easier
-for a German municipality to manage business
-than it is for an American&mdash;and especially
-for a Kansan. Imagine what would happen
-in Hutchinson if the city owned a couple of
-breweries like the city of Düsseldorf. The next
-spring election the candidates would be running
-on the beer issue, and there would be all
-kinds of opinions. In Düsseldorf they hire
-expert brewers, sell the product, and the city
-takes a good profit. In Hutchinson the First
-Ward would be kicking because they didn’t
-like the head brewer, the Sixth Ward would
-demand a reduction in the price of beer, and
-the Third Ward would make the candidates
-pledge themselves to another beer garden in
-the south part of town, where it would be poor
-business. The final result would be that
-Mayor Vincent and Dr. Winans and the rest
-of the commission would be charged with
-favoritism and defeated for reëlection, and
-their successors would make beer at a loss and
-nobody would be satisfied. The curse of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-American municipal affairs is this playing of
-politics with every petty question. The Germans
-take the wiser method of cutting out
-politics, selecting their best men for public
-office, giving great respect to them personally,
-and accepting the laws they enact. When the
-mayor of Düsseldorf comes out for a walk
-everybody he meets takes off his hat and
-salutes. In our country everybody the mayor
-meets has a kick about something, and as for
-taking off his hat to the mayor&mdash;the American
-citizen would see him in Halifax first.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A Kansas man, Clarence Price, of Pittsburg,
-stirred up all kinds of trouble in the
-German empire recently. Price has a moving-picture
-show, travel scenes and such, and is in
-Europe to get some of the best and see the
-local color. He thought it would be a fine
-thing to compliment the German army with a
-picture; so he had his machine at one of the
-forts of Berlin taking views of the drill of an
-artillery squad. The police saw him, and he
-nearly spent the night in the Hotel de Jail.
-It was all the American Consul and the Associated
-Press could do to save him, for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-police believed he was a French spy, and as
-they could not understand the Pittsburg
-language and Price could not talk their German,
-it was only with difficulty that he got
-word to his friends and was finally released.
-A German jail is not fitted up for pleasure
-and comfort, but to make people sorry they
-get there, and as the picture machine had been
-confiscated there was not even the consolation
-for the Kansas showman of being able
-to present to the American public the sight
-of German justice administered on the spot.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Everywhere in Germany the load the people
-are carrying is militarism. The young men of
-the country lose several of the best years of
-their life in their army service, and heavy
-taxes burden business and industry. The
-people are patriotic, and this army is necessary,
-for there is always the prospect of a
-war, and of course they want to lick the other
-fellow. But the newspapers are praising Taft
-and urging that arbitration and disarmament
-are practicable if the course marked out by
-the United States is followed. It makes an
-American really proud of his country and his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-President when he hears the praise that is
-everywhere bestowed on both for taking the
-lead in the most important movement of the
-times. There has been a marked change in
-sentiment toward Americans among the educated
-and upper classes the last few years.
-The poor people always were strong for us.
-But the business men and the newspapers, as
-well as the brass collars, sneered at Americans
-as mere money-makers. McKinley
-brought the change when the United States
-jumped into a war with Spain to help Cuba.
-Dewey at Manila pounded it into their heads
-with language the Europeans could understand.
-Roosevelt’s dashing policies and his
-stand for peace between Japan and Russia
-impressed them wonderfully. And now Taft’s
-policy of arbitration instead of war is receiving
-the commendation of uppers and lowers,
-and they recognize the statesmanship in the
-treaties. To use one of Roosevelt’s favorite
-words, it is bully to be an American and travel
-in Europe, just to see how much better it is
-at home and to feel the respect paid to our
-great nation and its leaders.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Arriving_in_Paris">Arriving in Paris</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Paris</span>, August 11.</p>
-
-<p>Paris is a good deal like a circus, a three-ringed
-one which strains the rubber in your
-neck trying to see all you can before the acts
-change. Even the arrival is theatrical. As
-the train pulled into the Gare du Nord, after
-making the last forty-five miles in fifty-five
-minutes, I passed our hand baggage out
-through the open car window to a porter, and,
-going out the door myself, told him in a confident
-tone “voiture,” which is the foolish
-French word for cab. He understood, piloted
-us through the big station and called a little
-victoria with a seat for two. The driver wears
-a white celluloid plug hat and a red face. He
-drives a horse which probably fought with
-Napoleon. He nods assent to the name of the
-hotel as I mispronounce it, takes our three
-grips on his seat, and away we go down the
-street, the Lord and the cabby only knowing
-where. On the sidewalks are busy people
-talking French, walking French, and gesturing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-French. The stores and shops are attractive,
-for the French shopkeeper puts his best stuff
-in the front window, whether he is selling hats
-or sausages. Big busses, with people on top as
-well as inside, motor cars and motor busses
-with horns and honks, loaded wagons drawn
-by heavy Norman horses, street sweepers
-with brooms, policemen in red-and-blue uniforms,
-maids in cap and gown, porters with
-their work shirts outside their trousers, restaurants
-and little cafés with tables and chairs on
-the sidewalk and French men sipping absinthe
-or cold coffee, buildings almost uniformly
-six stories high, built with courts in
-the center which are often seen through open
-doors, and everybody talking, gesticulating
-and screaming in a language you cannot understand,&mdash;that
-is the confusion through which
-we drive for two miles and for which journey
-the cabman takes off his hat when I pay him
-35 cents, which includes a 4-cent tip for himself.
-The hotel porter, or chief clerk, the head
-waiter, the pages, the manager and several
-assistants meet us at the hotel door, and in
-response to inquiries assure us that there is a
-bath-room in the hotel and that they have a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-“very nice” room. As an additional and decisive
-argument why we should stop there the
-chief clerk asserts that they have ice-water,
-and the entire company falls back in an
-ecstatic gesture which evidently means “What
-do you think of that?” We examine the room,
-agree upon a price, and then and not till then
-do we dismiss the cabman and proceed to get
-settled. We are in Paris, the dirtiest and
-prettiest city in the world.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of course the first thing to do is to get out
-and see the sights, but of course it is not. The
-first thing is to get the mail and the next is to
-clean up. After traveling eight hours on a fast
-train through a country which has had no
-rain for two months, one really does not care
-for the wonderful things which the world talks
-about. Then comes the French dinner, which
-is something of an affair. A dinner in France
-goes like this: Soup, fish or eggs, veal, beef or
-mutton, and a vegetable and salad, cakes or
-tarts, fruit or ice. No coffee is served with
-the meal, but it is usually taken later and is an
-additional charge. Any attempt to vary this
-bill of fare is regarded as insane. I tried my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-best to get string beans served with my veal
-course, but I couldn’t. The waiter said “Oui,”
-then went and called the other waiters, and I
-could see them looking at the crazy American.
-That made me persistent, and I sent for the
-head waiter and told him I wanted beans&mdash;and
-I knew they had them ready. The head
-waiter said “Oui” and disappeared, and soon
-the clerks from the office strolled by and
-looked in. By this time the veal was cold,
-and I realized that any further attempt might
-result in calling the police, so I gave it up. No
-one refused to get my beans, but each time I
-was told “oui,” which means “yes” and is
-pronounced “we,” and each time nothing
-further happened except the sympathizing
-and curious mob. Once I traveled in Europe
-with a friend named McGregor, who wanted
-his coffee served with his meal, as it is in
-Illinois. He was willing to pay any price and
-he would put in his order hours ahead of mealtime.
-Did he get it? Certainly not. Coffee
-is not served with the dinner in France, and
-that is all there is to it.</p>
-
-<p>American travelers have won on one point&mdash;ice.
-Every hotel and restaurant which caters<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-to American trade advertises ice-water. No
-Frenchman will drink it, but in some way the
-managers found that ice could be procured in
-the summer-time, and as a special favor to
-Americans, at a small increase in rates, the
-hotels give us ice-water.</p>
-
-<p>No real French hotel has a bath-room, to
-say nothing of a room with bath. I suppose
-the French, who look clean, either go to the
-creek or swim in the washbowl. Again the
-American influence is felt. First-class hotels
-now have bath-rooms, or a bath-room, and
-when it is used the charge appears on the bill,
-so much for a “grand bath.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>After dinner we went for a walk on the
-boulevards, just as every Frenchman who can,
-does every evening. The boulevards are the
-wide streets which run through the city in
-different directions, and were constructed at
-first for military purposes. In the little narrow
-streets of old Paris it was easy to start a
-revolution by merely throwing a barricade
-across a “rue,” prying up cobblestones for
-weapons and stationing a few old women on
-the housetops with pots of scalding water,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-which are harder on soldiers than leaden
-bullets. The revolution habit got so strong in
-Paris that the boulevards were constructed
-so the soldiers could march through the city
-without being stopped by barricades and
-mobs. They are likely to be used for that
-purpose again sometime, but just now the
-boulevards are largely for parades in which
-French millinery and hosiery are placed on
-exhibition every afternoon and evening. The
-sidewalks are occupied by cafés, miles of them
-it seems to me, and for the price of a drink,
-from one cent up, and in substance from coffee
-down, a Frenchman can occupy a comfortable
-seat and observe the wonders of art and
-glimpses of nature which pass by. An American
-can do the same, only a real American can
-never put in a whole evening consuming one
-small cup of coffee or whatever other beverage
-he can call for in the French language.</p>
-
-<p>So when I say we “went for a stroll,” we
-did so in the Parisian sense. We went for a
-sit, and let the promenaders do the strolling.
-Here and there an orchestra was playing some
-frivolous air, the street lights flashed from the
-lamp-posts, old ladies sold newspapers and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-post-cards, and the chattering but musical
-French language filled the air with a suggestive
-touch of the bohemian accent. The later the
-hour the larger the crowd, until midnight
-came, and then the Parisians went to the
-dances and parties and the American visitors
-to the hotels.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_French_Character">The French Character</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Paris</span>, August 13.</p>
-
-<p>It is a little hard to take Paris seriously,
-because Paris refuses to take herself that
-way. There is a cheerfulness and a playfulness
-about the French folks that is hard to
-appreciate from the calm viewpoint of an
-Englishman or American. Our standards are
-different along so many lines that comparisons
-are unfair without explanations; and
-who cares for long-winded explanations? According
-to all the rules that are laid down in
-the books of American etiquette, the people
-of this city should be behind the rest of the
-world in all the serious and necessary works
-of life. And yet French generals have fought
-and defeated larger armies with their French
-soldiers, French engineers have performed
-marvelous feats, French scientists are authority,
-French musicians command the highest
-prices, French business men do great things,
-the French people are wealthy, and when it
-comes to literature and art we in America are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-really small potatoes. The fact seems to be
-that the Frenchman who promenades the
-boulevard and the French lady who startles
-the Puritan in us, are accomplishing just as
-much with somewhat limited resources, as
-we do, and we are the greatest people on
-earth as we admit ourselves.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The show place in Paris is the parallelogram
-along the Seine, consisting of the
-Champs-Élysées, the Place de la Concorde,
-the Tuileries gardens, and the Louvre art
-gallery. This district is about three miles
-long and averages a quarter of a mile wide.
-It contains the Champs with beautiful gardens
-and woods intersected by wide avenues,
-then the Place de la Concorde, one of the
-most beautiful squares in the world, the
-Tuileries’ commodious public playgrounds,
-with ponds and fountains; palaces with pictures,
-statues and monuments historical and
-allegorical; and the end is in the Louvre,
-which is said to be the greatest collection of
-art in existence. There is not a chord in the
-human mind and heart which is not touched
-beautifully and effectively by some part of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-this magnificent public place, which belongs
-to the people and is used by them. The more
-one thinks over this feature, the more he must
-realize that although the French do not conform
-to our methods they are certainly able
-to reach many of our best ideals, and whether
-they go around or cross-lots to get there depends
-upon the viewpoint of the critic.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The old Bourbon kings of France understood
-their people. While they made it hard
-for the common people to get a living they
-made it easy for them to have a good time.
-Whenever the public kicked on taxes, the
-king laid out a new park and gave a fête with
-free drinks and fireworks. The Bourbons
-would probably be reigning yet if Louis the
-Sixteenth and his wife, Marie Antoinette, had
-had any sense. Antoinette was German and
-did not understand the French ways, Louis
-was a poor politician, and when a storm came
-they lost their heads figuratively and then lost
-them actually. The republic lasted a few
-years and then Napoleon, who was as great
-a player to the grandstand as he was a general,
-became emperor, and only his foolish desire<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-to conquer everybody lost him his job. The
-Bourbons came back as kings, but they had
-no sense. The French people want to be
-fooled, and these kings couldn’t fool anybody.
-So there was another republic, and then Napoleon
-the Third came to the front on the
-reputation of his uncle, the great Napoleon.
-He worked the French people to a finish,
-built palaces, boulevards and playgrounds
-until he had everybody for him, and then got
-captured by the Germans, lost his reputation
-and throne, and France became a republic
-for the third time. This was in 1871, and
-the republic has lasted forty years, much
-longer than expected, but in fact the government
-has been wisely conducted and has understood
-the French character well. There
-is another Napoleon, by the name of Victor,
-who is likely to come back, and sometime
-when the government does an imprudent thing
-the people will remember the good old times
-of Napoleon and return to a monarchy. Victor
-married the daughter of the old Emperor
-of Belgium, and has a big campaign fund.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of course everybody knows these facts,
-and I have recited them to illustrate the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-French national character. The French are
-not false, but they are fickle. They like a
-change, a novelty, an excitement. A revolution,
-or a new government, appeals to their
-sense of enjoyment just as does a new picture,
-a new hat, or a new coiffure. In spite
-of this trait they have done great things in
-all the great lines of advancement and progress.
-Theoretically they should be failures,
-but in fact they are successful. They consider
-Paris the greatest city of the world, and
-the way the people of other countries come
-here and add to the circulating medium seems
-to prove they are right. They practically
-refuse to learn any other language, but all
-other countries study French. Thousands of
-English and American Puritans come to Paris
-every year, but the Frenchman who travels
-for pleasure is unknown. Why is it? I give
-it up, unless we have some French tastes along
-with our English standards.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The French people are the most temperate,
-most economical and most saving of any of
-the peoples of Europe&mdash;or America. With
-all their fun they love money, and never for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>get
-the necessity of having some in their old
-age. Get off the Parisian boulevards, which
-are spoiled by visitors, and you see the French,
-pure and simple, though not so very pure and
-not at all simple. They will bargain and
-figure down to the “sou,” the popular coin,
-worth two American cents. Every French
-family figures on spending less than it makes,
-and does it. There are practically no savings
-banks and no one much has a bank account,
-but as soon as a little money is saved
-it is invested in government bonds or municipal
-or railroad bonds, which bear four per
-cent interest. Every family has government
-bonds, and this habit of investing in securities
-is the reason which makes France so great
-and strong financially. The people pile their
-savings into the government treasury, the
-only bank they know. The family, which is
-always small in France, must save for the
-daughter’s dot, or she will never be married,
-and for the last years of the parents’ lives.
-There are practically no abjectly poor people
-in France. It is not fashionable to be poor,
-and French men and French women must be
-fashionable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Place de la Concorde is a wonderful
-square, larger than a couple of our city blocks.
-In the center is an obelisk, presented by
-Mohammed Ali when he was viceroy of
-Egypt and before the bargain sale of obelisks
-took place. It is a block of red granite, 75
-feet high and covered with hieroglyphics
-which tell the deeds of an Egyptian gentleman
-named Rameses. The obelisk is surrounded
-by large fountains with mermaids
-and Tritons and dolphins spouting water into
-lower basins. Around the square are statues
-representing the eight principal cities of
-France. Since the monuments were erected
-one of these cities, Strassburg, has been taken
-by the Germans. This was forty years ago,
-but the monument still stands, and it is
-draped in mourning. In any other country
-the statue would have been quietly removed,
-but the French are not built that way.
-They hang their wreaths around Strassburg,
-swear vengeance on the Germans, and have
-a good time.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This mourning habit is very popular in
-Paris. The ladies who are called upon to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-mourn do so with proper regard for appearances.
-As near as I can figure it out the
-death of a second cousin puts all the female
-members of a family into deep black. A
-mourning-gown with a very hobble skirt,
-with the hoisery and millinery to match and
-with plumes and décolleté neck to strengthen
-the effect,&mdash;well, it does not detract from the
-human interest one naturally takes at such
-a time.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Latin_Quarter">The Latin Quarter</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Paris</span>, August 15.</p>
-
-<p>As everyone knows, the city of Paris is
-cut into two parts by the river Seine, which
-runs through it from east to west and with its
-curves is about seven miles in length within
-the town. The river is crossed by many
-bridges, all stone and substantial, many ornamented
-by statues. Little steamboats run
-up and down like street cars, and the banks
-are covered with massive stone walls. About
-half-way through the city are two islands, one
-called the Cité and the other the Isle of St.
-Louis. The Cité is the most ancient part
-of Paris, and was a town in the time of Cæsar.
-The coming of Christianity was marked by
-the erection of a church, and about the 12th
-century by the present cathedral Notre-Dame,
-one of the famous buildings in Europe,
-but not one of the finest cathedrals. By this
-time the city had spread out on the banks,
-and the organization of France into a kingdom
-with Paris as the capital was followed by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-a removal of the royal residence and of most
-of the activities to the sides of the stream.
-On the south side developed the university,
-the artists’ studios, and eventually the military
-establishments. Big business, the large
-residences and industrial enterprises went to
-the north bank. The Latin Quarter, as the
-educational and artistic section is known, on
-the south, while equipped with large stores,
-palaces and public buildings, is a most interesting
-and quaint place, and though still
-Bohemian is very respectable, from a Parisian
-viewpoint.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The University of Paris, the original part
-of which was the Sorbonne, now an immense
-structure, has about 15,000 students. It differs
-from American universities in many respects.
-There are no recitations. The instruction
-is given by lectures, and a famous
-authority on law, or philosophy or science,
-can lecture to hundreds as easily as to a small
-class. There are no dormitories, no fraternities,
-no football clubs, no spring parties,
-no classes, no sports, no colors, no badges,
-none of the essential parts of American higher<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-education. Students of any age or previous
-training may enroll and become members of
-the University, go to the lectures they desire,
-or not go at all if they prefer. The public
-can attend the lectures and the University
-is open to women, though the proportion of
-women students is not large. The most efficient
-instruction and the greatest sources of
-information are open to the students&mdash;if they
-desire. The Sorbonne was erected in 1629
-by Cardinal Richelieu, and named for Robert
-de Sorbonne, who started a school for the
-education of poor boys in theology about
-1250. It has been rebuilt and enlarged until
-it is a vast pile 800 feet long and 300 feet
-wide. This building houses the schools in
-literature and science, the schools of law and
-medicine occupying buildings near by.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Although the students at the University
-of Paris do not have the fun in athletics and
-society that the students do in the University
-of Kansas, they have a good time in the
-French way. The quarter is filled with cafés,
-large and small, where students and artists
-congregate and eat, drink and make merry.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-The back room of the café is something of a
-club, and discussions on art and science
-mingle with the perfume of tobacco and fermented
-grape-juice. While there is a lack
-of co-eds there is no scarcity of ladies, who
-constitute a part of the course taken by many
-of the students, not leading to a degree, not
-even to matrimony. All of this, which would
-be regarded with horror in Lawrence, is quite
-the thing in Paris and seems to work out most
-satisfactorily to the University authorities,
-for even the professors do not hesitate to
-mingle with their students at the evening
-sessions in the joints of the Latin Quarter.
-The men take examinations and degrees and
-go their way to promote the advancement of
-learning, while the ladies stay and aid in the
-instruction of the next generation of students.
-The original of the old college story took
-place in the Sorbonne. A father who had
-graduated many years before came for a visit
-with his son, who had matriculated as a student.
-The son had gone to the same lodging-place
-which his father had occupied in the
-years gone by. The old man was recalling
-his student days, looking over the familiar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-place, noticing the changes and the old scenes.
-“The same old beamed ceiling, where I
-carved my name, and here it is,” he exclaimed
-with delight. “The same old view
-from the window. The same old furniture&mdash;”
-and just then the back door opened and a
-dashing lady appeared. “Same old girl,” he
-cried with rapture. The boy tried to explain
-that she was a friend of a friend. “Same
-old story,” was the happy comment, “Same
-old game.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Near the Sorbonne is the Pantheon, originally
-built for a church, in the shape of a
-Greek cross, located on a hill which is the
-highest place on the south side of the river,
-and with a noble dome that can be seen for
-many miles. This is a new building, having
-been constructed in the eighteenth century.
-It was dedicated to Saint Genevieve, the
-patron saint of Paris. The revolution converted
-it into a memorial temple and named
-it the Pantheon. It has been a church a
-couple of times since then, but is now not
-used for religious purposes. It is the burying-place
-of great Frenchmen. Here are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-buried Victor Hugo, Mirabeau, Rousseau,
-Carnot, and others distinguished in literature
-and statecraft. You can see the last resting-place
-of these great men by securing an
-order from the Government or by tipping
-the custodian: the latter way I always find
-the easiest and best. The Pantheon is beautifully
-decorated, and the interior with Corinthian
-columns and mural paintings is most
-effective. If it makes any difference to these
-men where they are buried they should be
-glad, for it is the finest memorial building in
-Europe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That leads me to a rather grave subject.
-As a matter of fact, funerals are very important
-events in France. Three or four directors
-in black clothes and three-cornered
-hats march ahead, and the hearse is heavily
-draped. If the departed was a man of prominence
-there are a number of orations delivered,
-the crowd goes away excited over the
-condition of the republic, and is likely to
-break windows and show its feeling toward
-the political opponents of the deceased. When
-Zola was buried a hundred thousand people<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-marched in the procession, and there were a
-number of street fights and duels as a climax.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But the biggest thing in the Latin Quarter
-so far as American tourists are concerned is
-the Bon Marché, I suppose the largest retail
-general store in the world. In most ways it
-is like our department stores, and announces
-that it has made its success by reason of faithful
-dealings with the public and by advertising.
-It has been running about fifty years;
-the original proprietor is dead, but the business
-moves on smoothly. The corporation
-has a method of division of profits among
-employés who have been with the store more
-than ten years. It also pensions its old employés,
-provides lectures and amusements for
-its workers, and has a paternal and cöoperative
-side that is interesting, although the
-corporation is in fact controlled by a few
-heavy stockholders.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow I had the idea that our own country
-was the leader in the big department store
-business. But the Bon Marché and others
-in Paris took the idea out of me. It has many
-clerks who speak foreign languages, and it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-is said that a native of Timbuctoo or Arkansas
-could slip into the store and find some one
-who could speak his language.</p>
-
-<p>The clerks in the Bon Marché get from $3
-to $6 a week, with the exception of a few who
-have special qualifications. So I guess the
-old-age pension business is necessary. That
-is the ordinary wage paid store clerks in
-Paris.</p>
-
-<p>It was at the Bon Marché that the ancient
-joke happened to me. I was looking at a
-price-mark, and, not understanding the figure,
-inquired in my pigeon French, “Est sees [6]
-auter set? [7].” The clerk answered “It is
-six.”</p>
-
-<p>My French is a joke. From necessity I
-have learned enough French words to order
-a meal, buy a ticket and ask how much. I
-have found that a good bluff, plenty of signs
-and the throwing in of French and German
-words on the subject generally get about
-what I want. But often I fall down. The
-word for potatoes in French is “pommes.”
-I told a waiter I wanted “fried pommes,”
-and as the word for cold is “froid,” I got cold
-potatoes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span></p>
-
-<p>I went for a ride in the underground tube.
-Bought my tickets and got onto a train I
-knew was in the right direction. It stopped,
-everybody got out, and the porter insisted
-that I go too. I knew something was wrong,
-and I tackled the platform boss with good
-English. He couldn’t understand a word, so
-he waved his hands and clawed the air and
-talked French for a couple of minutes. Then
-he tried to walk off, but I hung on. I was
-away down below the surface of the ground
-and didn’t even know straight up. “Correspond”
-he kept saying, and I assured him
-I would be glad to do so if he would give me
-his address, but first I wanted to know where
-I was “at.” I knew he was swearing, but
-it was French swear and I didn’t mind. Finally
-he took me by the arm and walked me
-through a couple of passages and pointed to
-another platform. A light broke in on me,
-and I took the train which soon came. I
-learned afterward that “correspond” is French
-for <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>“transfer.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Boulevards_of_Paris">The Boulevards of Paris</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Paris</span>, August 18.</p>
-
-<p>The boulevards of Paris are one of the
-wonders of the world. Strictly speaking there
-are a number of broad avenues which are
-called boulevards, but usually “the boulevards”
-is a phrase which means the one long
-wide boulevard extending for several miles,
-from near the Place de la Concorde to the
-Place de la Bastille, built in a semi-circle on
-the north of the old city and on the fortifications
-which defended the city in the Middle
-Ages. Of course later walls and fortifications
-were built farther out, and the “grand boulevards”
-are through the heart of the present
-Paris. The boulevard&mdash;for it is one continuous
-highway&mdash;changes its name every few blocks,
-a fact that is characteristically French and
-somewhat confusing to the stranger. The beginning
-is a short distance from the Place de
-la Concorde at the church of the Madeleine,
-the fashionable church of Paris. The building
-is in the style of a Roman temple, and has an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-imposing colonnade of Corinthian columns.
-The interior decorations are very good, and
-include a large fresco above the altar in which
-Christ, Napoleon and Pope Pius the Seventh
-are classified more or less together. The boulevard
-is called The Madeleine for about 200
-yards, when the name changes to the Capucines
-and sticks for a couple of blocks until
-the grand opera house is reached. Along this
-short stretch are some of the wildest music
-halls and the greatest cafés of the world. The
-greatest is the Café de la Paix, where everybody
-who visits Paris goes for at least one
-drink of ginger ale or cold coffee.</p>
-
-<p>The Opera is the largest theatre in the
-world, covering about three acres. The site
-alone cost $2,000,000 and the building over
-$7,000,000. The materials are marble and
-costly stone, and there are statues of Poetry,
-Music, Drama, Dance, with other figures, medallions
-and allegorical statuary until your
-head swims. The front of the roof is sculptured
-with gilded masks and with collossal
-groups representing Music and Poetry attended
-by the Muses and Goddesses of Fame.
-Apollo with a golden lyre and two Pegasuses<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-occupy the dome. The interior has a grand
-staircase of marble with a rail of onyx, and
-the rest of the interior is be-columned and be-frescoed
-to match. It is the most beautiful
-building in Paris, and could hardly be surpassed
-if the attempt were made regardless
-of expense. I would not try a detailed description,
-for it would not convey the real
-effect, best described by the word gorgeous.</p>
-
-<p>From the Opera a street runs southerly
-called the Avenue de l’Opera, the great shopping
-street of Paris, and at another angle goes
-the Street de la Paix, where the most expensive
-jewelry stores and millinery establishments are
-located. The name of this street is properly
-pronounced de la Pay.</p>
-
-<p>But the Boulevard continues, no longer the
-Capucines, but the Italiens. Some years ago
-this was the great shopping-place, and it is
-not bad now. As the ladies promenade past
-the Opera and into the Italiens, the skirts
-unconsciously go a little higher. The boulevard
-proceeds, the next section being called
-the Montmartre. This part interested me a
-great deal. On the rue Montmartre, a side
-street to the right, is the Y. M. C. A., and on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-Mt. Montmartre, a little to the left, is the
-Moulin Rouge.</p>
-
-<p>The Y. M. C. A. in Paris is one of the best
-things in the city, but it does not get much
-newspaper notoriety. It is an English-speaking
-organization, with convenient quarters,
-parlor, reception, billiard, smoking-and dining-rooms.
-It is one place in Paris where
-there is no café or bar, and it is a great help
-to young men from America who are in this
-city by reason of their business or to study or
-to visit the historic places. A great many use
-the Y. M. C. A. facilities, and a membership
-card from Hutchinson or any other association
-in the world is good for these privileges
-in the heart of Paris. I would recommend to
-every American that when he goes to Paris
-he make his headquarters at the Y. M. C. A.,
-but I am not going to count on many of them
-doing it. The Paris atmosphere has the same
-effect on a Y. M. C. A. that a nice, warm
-August sun has on a cake of ice left on the
-sidewalk in Hutchinson. I am not telling what
-I would like to, but I setting down the facts
-as they appear to me. The man who goes to
-Paris and sticks to the Y. M. C. A. as his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-loafing-place should have his halo ordered at
-once. He has a cinch.</p>
-
-<p>In the other direction, on Mt. Montmartre,
-is the Moulin Rouge. I do not recommend it
-to nervous men, but it is one of the sights of
-this city. When I was a boy I read somewhere
-about a “gilded palace of sin,” and now I know
-what that means. The cowboys out west used
-to have what they called “free-and-easies,”
-but the Moulin Rouge is not free. I shut my
-eyes as the dancers loped by until a friend
-said the next dance would be a quadrille. I
-once danced quadrilles myself, and I thought
-there would be a breathing-place. The young
-people arranged themselves as if they were
-going to dance a Virginia Reel, and I could
-feel consciousness returning. The music
-struck up and the quadrille began. At first
-it went as smooth as if it were at the Country
-Club. Then each young lady passed the toe
-of her right foot over the head of her partner.
-Then she turned and pointed the toe of her
-left foot at the chandelier which hung from
-the ceiling. And then came the most wonderful
-display of things that are put in the store
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>windows at home and marked “white goods
-sale,” or “lingerie.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_fp148.jpg" alt="" width="416" height="550" />
-<p class="caption center"><span class="smcap">THE PLAIN QUADRILLE AT THE MOULIN ROUGE</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<p>It was dreadfully embarrassing to me, as it
-must have been to any other Kansas man
-present, but I braced myself, for I knew the
-worst was yet to come. I felt like getting right
-up on my chair and saying, “Ladies, there are
-gentlemen present.” But I didn’t, and I have
-been glad ever since, for they might not have
-understood English and thought I wanted a
-partner for the next quadrille.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards the proceedings became almost
-immodest.</p>
-
-<p>So I do not recommend the Moulin Rouge,
-though I fear that this failure on my part will
-not detract from the rush of strangers who are
-visiting in Paris and who might go to the
-Y. M. C. A. But I will say in passing that it
-is no place for a man unless his wife is with
-him, and it is somewhat distracting even then.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Returning to the boulevard. It changes its
-name to the Poissoniere, and on this part is
-the office of the <em>Matin</em>, the great newspaper,
-which has 750,000 circulation, prints only six<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-pages, and pretends not to care for advertising.
-The <em>Matin</em> differs from most Parisian
-newspapers in really printing news. The
-general run of papers here are purely political,
-and put their editorials on the front page.
-They are very abusive, and the editor has to
-fight frequent duels. The fighting is done with
-pistols at a safe distance, and after an exchange
-of shots with nobody hurt, the principals
-rush together and clinch, but it is to kiss
-each other on both cheeks and rejoice that
-Honor has been Satisfied. I wouldn’t mind the
-dueling, but I positively would not kiss these
-Frenchmen, and so far as I can learn the
-society editresses do not duel.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The <em>Matin</em> is the paper that cleared Dreyfus
-after his trial and conviction a few years ago.
-The story is interesting. Dreyfus was made
-the victim of a conspiracy, and a document
-showing details of the French army was attributed
-to him as a German spy. Everybody
-remembers the trial and the fuss at the time.
-It became a contest between the Honor of the
-French Army and Dreyfus. The <em>Matin</em> took
-little part, but, like most of the French, sided<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-with the army. One evening at a dinner an
-officer of the court exhibited the original of
-the document which Dreyfus had been convicted
-of writing. Mr. Bueno-Varilla, editor
-of the <em>Matin</em>, was present, and as the paper
-was passed around he looked at it carelessly.
-That night when he reached home he remembered
-that a few years before this same
-Dreyfus had written him a letter about some
-engineering, and he dug up the letter. The
-handwriting was not at all what he had seen
-that evening. He rushed to the telephone and
-got the official who had shown the document,
-who promised to bring it to him in the morning.
-They compared the spy information and
-the Dreyfus letter which Bueno-Varilla had,
-and they were utterly unlike. Next day the
-<em>Matin</em> printed a photograph copy of the document,
-and appealed to anyone who knew the
-handwriting to advise the <em>Matin</em>. In a day or
-two a gentleman wrote and said it was the
-writing of a drunken bankrupt army officer,
-named Esterhazey, inclosing letters from the
-latter which proved it. Dreyfus was brought
-back from prison and pardoned, Esterhazey
-skipped the country, and the honor of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-French army was flyspecked. All of this because
-Bueno-Varilla happened to keep an old
-letter, and because he owned the <em>Matin</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The boulevard next becomes the Bonne-Nouvelle,
-and then St. Denis and then St.
-Martin, and has several other names before
-it reaches its end in the Place de la Bastille.</p>
-
-<p>This place is even more important in French
-history than Independence Hall in ours. The
-14th of July is celebrated every year, just as
-we do the 4th of July as Independence Day,
-because on that date in 1789 the Bastille
-prison was destroyed by an uprising of the
-people which became the French Revolution.
-The Bastille was especially odious because
-political prisoners were confined there, and
-it only took an order from the police to send
-a man or woman to its dungeons. Its use for
-this purpose was so flagrant and so despotic
-that the first fury of the revolution was directed
-against its walls, and it was entirely
-destroyed, and the jailers and soldiers defending
-it were killed. The place is now a large
-square surrounded by business houses and
-ornamented by a statue of Liberty on a
-column 150 feet high. From the beginning to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-the end of this great boulevard with the many
-names, are places made historic by great men
-and hard fights. Now it is a peaceful, broad
-avenue, with shops and cafés and handsome
-buildings, the promenade-ground for the Parisian
-and of tourists from all countries.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Some_French_Ways">Some French Ways</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Paris</span>, August 20.</p>
-
-<p>There are practically no athletic sports in
-France, none at all in and around Paris. In
-America the men put in a lot of time talking
-baseball, football, boating and such-like. In
-France the men talk only politics or gossip.
-There are no lodges and no clubs in France.
-This ought to be applauded by the women, but
-as a matter of fact they probably wish the men
-would do a little something in that line. There
-is a secret order or two, but they are not strong
-and not recognized by the orders in other
-countries. Frenchmen do not seem to care for
-athletics of any kind. The nearest approach
-to it is fencing, and the young Frenchman
-learns to use the sword so he can fight duels.
-The popular Hero is not a ball-player nor a
-prize-fighter, but a man who has invented
-something new or who has run off with the
-wife of a friend. They are venturesome and
-personally brave, but they can’t stand for
-team work. The attempt has been made to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-introduce a mild form of football, but every
-man on the team wanted to be the star. I
-suppose if the French should organize a baseball
-club every one of them would insist on
-being pitcher. They will go up in balloons or
-airships with dashing recklessness and are
-brave enough, if that trait is not merely the
-absence of caution and calculation. French
-aviators are numerous and successful, though
-the fatalities are still many. They have shown
-themselves good fighters but not good losers.
-They will quarrel over a trifle and then forgive
-and kiss each other in a manner that
-makes an American seasick. They are polite
-in a veneer, for they will lift their hats and
-make goo-goo eyes at every pretty woman,
-and they will let an old woman stand up in a
-street car. They are industrious, thrifty, temperate,
-and cheerful. Just because they look
-at some things from a different viewpoint is no
-reason why we should criticize them, and yet
-they are so different from the neighbors that
-I can’t help mentioning a few things that are
-very noticeable.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The French Government has a president,
-whose name few people know, and a senate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-which has little power, and therefore the main
-factor is the lower house. This kind of government
-is a mistake, for the large legislative
-body rushes from one extreme to another;
-whenever its majority changes, the cabinet
-resigns, and the result is inconstancy and instability.
-Public sentiment is the controlling
-factor, and it takes an acrobat to be a statesman
-in France. Sometimes the flippety-flop
-is popular in America, but on the long run he
-loses. In France he is succeeded by another
-just as good.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The French are great lovers of art, and in the
-Louvre they claim the largest collection of
-pictures in the world. They looted Italy to
-get them, but they have them. No living
-artist has a picture in the Louvre. The fellows
-now on earth have to hang their pictures in the
-Salon or the Luxembourg or some other
-gallery, a sort of artistic tryout, with the judging
-done after they are no longer able to exert
-any personal influence. I think modern art
-is as good as ancient art, or better, except that
-every modern picture is not art. And I may
-add that in the Paris Salon the pictures<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-painted by the artists of today have just as
-good color, better drawing and just as few
-clothes as the works of the old masters in the
-Louvre. I get along right well with the old
-masters until they paint Mary de Medici and
-Mary the mother of Christ sitting and talking
-together, and then I want to go outside and
-say a few things.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But while Paris is important in the world,
-politically, historically, and artistically, its
-great distinction nowadays is in millinery and
-dressmaking. The women go to Paris to shop,
-and the men go on account of the women.
-The men of Paris are about the worst dressers
-in the world. The women are the best. The
-Parisienne has the natural ability to take a
-hat and stick a feather in it so the effect is
-brilliant. She can wear a dress that costs
-much less than the gown of an English woman
-or an American woman, and she can look
-stylish when the other women have hard
-work to look decent. The American woman is
-second, and in a few respects, like shoes and
-gloves, she can beat the French; but take it
-all around, and the world removes its hat to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-the French milliner. Of course the milliner
-is often a man, but he has to have his Parisian
-model or he would fail. Let M. Worth or
-any of the other Monsieurs who dictate styles
-in feminine attire go to London and he would
-be a second-rater at once. This is true,
-whether you want to believe it or not, and the
-doubter need only spend a few days on the
-Paris boulevards to be convinced.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There may be some who think that the
-latest development in costumes, the hobble
-skirt, has reached America. They are mistaken.
-No real French hobble skirt could go
-down the street of an American city without
-starting a riot. When one does get to the
-territory of the Stars and Stripes the railroads
-will run excursion trains. The first day or
-two in Paris I was nervous about this style
-of gown. When I saw a saucy French lady
-in a dress which looked as if it was put on by
-a glove-fitter, I felt that I ought to blush and
-look at the statuary. I was told by the best
-feminine authority with me that in order to
-wear one of those skirts it was necessary to
-discard any wearing apparel which is usually<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-beneath the female skirt. The poor, pretty
-things would go along the street like boys in a
-sack-race trying to walk, and by a slit up one
-side which was not buttoned for several feet
-from the bottom, a little motion was secured.
-But when the lady crossed the street, or when
-she climbed to the top of a bus or even stepped
-into a cab, it was necessary in order that she
-maintain appearances that there be not even
-a hole in her stocking above the knee. Of
-course I do not speak from personal observation.
-Far be it from me to watch a lady cross
-the street or climb into a vehicle. But I
-knew how it must be from a careless study of
-the environment, and my theory was confirmed
-by the evidence of all those who did
-not hide their eyes or observe the scenery.
-And I will add that it is extremely difficult
-to keep the blinders on while seeing the sights.</p>
-
-<p>I only speak of these matters because they
-are much more in evidence in Paris than are
-the Statue of Liberty, or the Column of Vendôme,
-or any of the great places that the
-guide-books tell about.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The French are delightfully “natural”
-about many things. It is quite the proper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-thing for a man and woman to hug and kiss
-each other in public. At first this startled
-me and I felt that perhaps they were excited.
-But no, it is just the proper way to manifest
-their feelings at the time. Just imagine how
-it would be if the Frenchman across the table
-from you put his arm around the lady next to
-him and she snuggled up to him and patted
-his cheek with her unengaged hand. I felt like
-getting right up and saying, “Excuse me. Am
-I intruding?” But I soon learned that they
-didn’t mind us at all. Their idea of love is to
-let go all holds and l-o-v-e. Their theory of
-matrimony is that it is an arrangement based
-on family position, business and prospects.
-No young woman can get a husband unless
-she has a dot, so much capital. The parents
-arrange the matches, and usually do so carefully
-and thoughtfully. The girl, who has
-not even been allowed to go to school with the
-boys, has no idea of any other arrangement;
-and the man, who has never thought of
-matrimony in another way, considers it a
-part of his “career.”</p>
-
-<p>A man in France cannot marry without
-the consent of his parents until he is 25 and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-woman not till she is 21. This law is strictly
-obeyed, and there is no running off to some
-other state where the rule is different. I suppose
-French marriages arranged in this apparently
-cold-blooded manner by the parents
-turn out on the average as well as they would
-if they let the young people rush in and
-“marry for love.” But it doesn’t seem right
-to us, any more than our ways seem good to
-them. Of course a Frenchman does not insist
-that his “sweetheart” shall have a “dot,”
-so that kind of an arrangement is made by
-the parties themselves. All of which seems
-very wrong to English and Americans; and
-yet the French prove it is the best way by
-using the divorce figures, for divorce is practically
-unknown in France. The French
-woman is the business partner of her husband,
-and necessity makes them pull together just
-as they were taught to do from their youth up.
-She doesn’t belong to clubs any more than
-her husband does. She has a great deal of
-liberty, and in fact is often the head of the
-firm.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="In_Dover_Town">In Dover Town</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Dover, England</span>, August 22.</p>
-
-<p>One of the strange things in this old world
-is a boundary line. You are on a railway in
-Germany, hearing no language but German.
-The train crosses the imaginary line and you
-hear an entirely different language, and if you
-try to use the words which were understood
-ten minutes before, the people do not understand
-you. They are French, and they not
-only speak a different language but they differ
-in custom, tastes and looks. It would be just
-like a traveler from Hutchinson to Kansas
-City being able to speak and understand what
-people said at Argentine, but on arrival at
-the union depot in Kansas City finding a
-different looking and different talking lot, who
-could not understand a word he said. And
-arriving in the Kansas City depot neither understanding
-nor being understood, would be
-something of an ordeal, especially if you were
-trying to change trains and make a sharp
-connection. It is no wonder that an ordinary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-Kansan traveling in this European land puts
-in much of his time figuring out his route and
-a lot more doing it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of course it is a joy to arrive in England
-and be able to talk and to understand everything
-that is said. Two hours after we left
-the fish-smelly Boulogne I was quarreling in
-right fair English with a railroad official because
-a train was late. In France we would
-have had to stand around and look pleasant,
-for the official would not have known whether
-we were cross about the train or the reciprocity
-treaty. It often relieves your mind to tell a
-Frenchman or a German what you think of
-him or his country in English, but it doesn’t
-cause him any discomfort.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Dover is a most interesting town, with a
-castle, a harbor, a garrison, and a history.
-It is the closest English port to France, and
-on a clear day with good eyes and a vivid imagination
-you can see Calais in France, 21
-miles away. Ever since William the Conqueror
-came over and did his conquering, the
-English have kept Dover fortified in such a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-way that it would be difficult for another
-conqueror to follow his example. The town
-lies along the shore and back into a small
-river valley. The hills, about 300 feet high,
-begin at the water’s edge and go up very
-rapidly. The biggest hill is on the east, and
-rises straight up from the sea 375 feet. The
-face of the cliff is white, for the rock formation
-is chalk, and, topped with green trees and
-a big stone castle, makes a fine appearance
-from the water or from the beach. There is
-not only this old castle, which is a fort with a
-regiment of soldiers, but the cliff is mined and
-tunneled, and big cannon are at the opening
-in the earth, ready to shoot the stuffing out of
-any hostile fleet or army which comes this
-way. The only time the castle was ever
-captured was when Cromwell worked some
-strategem and got it away from the Royalists.
-After looking it all over I don’t see how any
-army could possibly capture Dover castle so
-long as the defenders stayed awake.</p>
-
-<p>The Romans first built a fort here, and the
-remains of the old Roman walls are still a
-small part of the present fortifications. The
-Saxons built some, then the Normans, and
-after that various generations of English,&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>so
-that the castle contains specimens of a lot
-of different styles of architecture. On the
-whole it is one of the most imposing castles in
-Europe, both by location and by construction.</p>
-
-<p>This castle business is peculiar. Sometimes
-a little runt of a building with a tower and a
-high fence is famous in history and story because
-of a great fight, or a brilliant robber
-who lived there. To the tourist it is a disappointment.
-I suppose every one gets his
-idea of what a castle looks like from the reading
-done in his youth. When I was a boy I
-thought a castle must be a good deal like the
-court-house at Cottonwood Falls, which is 80
-feet high, with a mansard roof and a jail with
-barred windows in the rear. Then I got a
-larger idea, something like the Reformatory
-at Hutchinson. And when I came to personally
-see these ancient castles I have frequently
-had to back up to my early theories.
-Now I am an expert in castles, and can talk
-of them without admitting to myself it is all
-guess-work. When we started up the Rhine
-from Bonn I occupied an unquestioned place
-as an authority, for I had been in the great
-castle country before. But this time my trip
-was reversed. To an admiring company of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-boat acquaintances I pointed out in the distance
-a magnificent castle we were approaching.
-I started to tell the legend of the castle,
-when it became apparent that the structure
-was a cement plant. Then I was more careful,
-but soon located another, a really splendid
-castle standing off a little from the river. I
-would have gotten through all right if some
-smart aleck had not butted in with the uncalled
-for information that the building was a
-brewery. But that is what a real castle looks
-like, the Hutchinson Reformatory, a cement
-plant, or a brewery, whichever comparison
-comes easiest for you to understand.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Dover was one of the “Cinque Ports.”
-Five little towns along the coast of the channel
-had a sort of organization which was given
-recognition by the government under the
-early Norman kings. The towns were granted
-privileges and relieved from burdens of taxation
-in consideration of furnishing ships in
-time of war. The principal work of a navy
-at that time was to capture merchant vessels,
-slug the crews and keep the cargoes; so the
-towns prospered under the arrangement. It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-has been only a couple of hundred years since
-there was a standing army or a royal navy.
-When the king declared war he issued a call
-and the lords and knights responded with
-their men, and the army was formed for the
-campaign. If any of the nobles got sore on the
-king, they took their troops and went home.
-A navy was raised in the same way, only by
-the towns along the coast instead of by individuals.
-Such an army and navy was not
-satisfactory, but the English parliament refused
-to furnish money for a standing army
-until after the days of good Queen Anne, about
-200 years ago. Now the English army is not
-near as large as the armies on the continent,
-but the English navy is kept twice the size
-of any other navy in the world. Germany is
-the country that England suspects as a possible
-enemy. Germany and France are crossways
-right now over which shall get the most
-of Morocco, and England is bound to stand
-by France in case of trouble. Morocco isn’t
-worth anything to anybody, but it may cause
-a terrible war between the most highly civilized
-nations of Europe. And yet some people
-are opposed to arbitration because of “na<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>tional
-honor.” The opponents of arbitration
-ought to come over to these poor countries
-laboring under the weight of big armies and
-navies, and see how people are suffering because
-of the foolish feudal notion that the
-way to decide which is right is to fight it out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We ate our lunch today in a restaurant
-which proudly boasts that its steps were the
-place where David Copperfield rested during
-his search for his aunt, Betsey Trotwood.
-Little Dorrit lived at Dover, and the men and
-women of Dickens land often visited or made
-their homes in this quaint old seaport or in its
-vicinity. Shut your eyes to the big cliff and
-its imposing fortress, forget the harbor with
-its ships and men of war, quit observing the
-narrow streets and crooked lanes which run
-up and down the side of the hill, and live with
-the people that Dickens made so real that to
-most of us they surely existed. That is Dover,
-a different Dover from the red-coated, fish-smelling,
-quaintly architectured place in which
-people are buying and selling, and a Dover
-which will live as long as the English language
-is read.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Old_Canterbury_Today">Old Canterbury Today</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Canterbury, England</span>, August 24.</p>
-
-<p>This little city of 25,000 inhabitants is the
-ecclesiastical capital of England, and has been
-for over a thousand years. Some time before
-the year 600 Queen Bertha, wife of the Saxon
-king, became a Christian and built a small
-church in Canterbury. Then when St. Augustine
-came in 597 and took the king and all
-his army into the church at one big baptizing,
-the king gave him the palace and the
-heathen church, and they were converted into
-a cathedral and monastery. St. Augustine
-and succeeding archbishops were the heads
-of the church in England, and when the Normans
-came in 1066 they continued the rule.
-The first Norman archbishop began the construction
-of the present cathedral, and as
-money was plenty and labor cheap, it was
-built magnificently. The Archbishop of Canterbury
-received the title of Primate of All
-England, and he wears it to this day. The
-English Church is a government institution,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-the archbishop is a member of the House of
-Lords, and the position is easily the greatest
-in the Protestant world.</p>
-
-<p>The murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket,
-in 1170, was the greatest thing that ever happened
-for Canterbury. He was in a controversy
-with King Henry, and made life so uncomfortable
-for the king that Henry remarked
-to some of his followers that if he
-had a few real friends there would be no
-Thomas Becket to worry him. Henry was
-probably drunk when he made this talk, although
-it doubtless was an expression of his
-real feelings. Four of his knights took him
-at his word, hiked to Canterbury, and killed
-the archbishop right in the cathedral. The
-murder was a shock to Christendom. The
-dead archbishop was canonized as a saint,
-and the people generally refused to believe
-Henry’s statement that he didn’t mean what
-he said. Everything went wrong with Henry,
-and the sacrilegious act was held responsible.
-Two years later the king went to Canterbury
-and took a whipping on his bare back as a
-penance for his remarks, and for years pilgrims
-came to Canterbury, miracles were re<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>ported
-wrought by the relics, and the cathedral
-and Canterbury got rich from the pilgrim
-business and the valuable gifts showered
-upon the shrine of St. Thomas.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is customary to consider Thomas Becket
-a martyr to the cause of liberty and to indulge
-in great eulogy of him as a saint. But
-he was really a plain man like the rest of us.
-His trouble with the king came because Henry
-wanted to recognize some other bishops, and
-Thomas, who was proud and stubborn,
-claimed that he alone had the power. It
-was really a conflict of authority between
-the church and the state, and a good deal to
-be said on both sides. Thomas abused the
-king viciously and had several bishops excommunicated
-because they agreed with
-Henry. He also threatened the king, and
-the disagreement was all over jobs and money.
-Those were tough times, and the usual way
-to get rid of an enemy was to kill him if you
-could. Unfortunately for Henry, his self-appointed
-friends did a bungling job, Thomas
-became a saint, and the king had to concede
-to the church all the privileges that had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-claimed. Three hundred years later King
-Henry the Eighth, in order to secure a divorce
-and a new queen, overthrew the authority of
-the church, made himself the head of it, and
-incidentally sent to Canterbury, took all the
-valuables that had been placed on the shrine
-of St. Thomas, and put them in the national
-treasury, that is, his own pocket.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But during that 300 years the supremacy
-of Canterbury as the religious head of the
-nation became fixed. The archbishops generally
-had to go into politics, many of them
-achieved greatness, and some were executed
-publicly. The cathedral was added to, “restored,”
-improved, and is now one of the very
-finest cathedrals in Europe. To an Englishman
-or an American it is more interesting
-than any other church in England, except
-perhaps Westminster Abbey. It has specimens
-of all kinds of architecture in its different
-parts, but they have been so harmoniously
-put together that the edifice is imposing on
-the outside and most impressive on the inside.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span></p>
-
-<p>Canterbury itself is a sleepy old town, very
-full of quaint houses and with plenty of tradition
-to make things interesting. Chaucer,
-Dickens, Thackeray and other English writers
-have woven Canterbury into their stories,
-and on every side you are shown the places
-where heroes and heroines of fiction made
-their homes. But this week Canterbury is
-busy. The last game of the cricket season
-is being played, and Canterbury is as crazy
-over cricket as Hutchinson was over baseball
-when in the Western Association. The cricket
-association of England is made up of the counties,
-and I had the opportunity of seeing the
-game between Kent and Yorkshire. Fully
-ten thousand people attended, and I suppose
-they enjoyed the game, though English cricket
-is as tame to an American as the moo of a
-cow would seem to a roaring lion, or as spring-water
-lemonade would taste to a colonel from
-Kentucky. The game began at 10 o’clock
-in the morning, with Yorkshire, the visiting
-team, at the bat. At one o’clock the
-Yorks were put out after making 75 runs.
-Then there was lunch, and the crowd stayed
-on the field and under the trees for what<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-looked to me like a harvest home picnic in
-Kansas. At 2 o’clock play was resumed, and
-continued till 4 o’clock, when the game
-stopped for the players and spectators to
-have tea. Yes, tea! Imagine an American
-ball game suspended for a half-hour while
-the ball-players enjoyed tea and sandwiches!
-It was too much for me. I saw the last half
-of the first inning would not be ended in one
-day, so I quit the cricketers and their tea
-and went off to look at an old church, which
-was more exciting.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There are some peculiarities about cricket
-when viewed from an American standpoint.
-The association or league corresponds very
-well to our National or American League.
-A club of eleven men may be all professionals,
-or, as is usually the case, some may be amateurs.
-A professional is a player who is paid,
-and on the score his name appears without
-prefix, just “Brown.” But if he is an amateur
-and plays without pay, his name is on
-the score card “J. M. Brown, Esq.” He is
-then called a “gentleman player.” The game
-usually lasts two days. The side that is in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-stays in until ten men are put out. The
-pitcher or bowler tries to hit the wicket, three
-little posts that stand like our baseball home
-plate, and if he does, the batter is out. The
-batter, or in English the batsman, defends
-the “wicket,” and when he hits the ball far
-enough runs to the other wicket, which is
-located at the pitcher’s box. If he knocks a
-fly and it is caught he is out, or if a fielder
-gets the ball and hits the wicket while he is
-running, he is out. Two batsmen are up at
-a time, and a man may make a lot of runs.
-I saw Woolley, the pride of Kent, score 56
-runs, and players often exceed the hundred
-mark. If the game is not finished in three
-days it is declared off.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The crowd was quiet and ladylike. Occasionally
-they would applaud and say “Well
-bowled, sir,” but they did not tell the umpire
-he was rotten and they never urged the visiting
-club to warm up another pitcher. Not a
-word was said by the players, not a pop-bottle
-was thrown, nobody was benched and
-there was never a thought of such a thing.
-The English are better sportsmen than we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-are, and they applaud a good play by a visitor.
-A man who tried to rattle the bowler
-by screaming that his arm was glass, would
-be arrested and probably hung.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Besides the cathedral, the quaint buildings
-and the cricket, Canterbury also offered an
-opportunity to see the moving pictures of the
-Jeffries-Johnson prize fight in a theater next
-to the church. Of course I did not go. I
-told several Englishmen that in America we
-considered these pictures degrading, and as
-between the fight pictures and the cathedral
-I preferred the cathedral. Besides, I had seen
-the fight pictures before.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another very interesting church in Canterbury
-is St. Martin’s, a little one, but considered
-the mother church of England. It
-is said to be the one erected for Queen Bertha
-before her Saxon husband, Ethelbert, was
-converted. This was prior to 600. It is on
-a foundation which was used for a Roman
-temple. Within the church is a big stone
-font said to have been used for the baptizing
-of Ethelbert. There is little doubt but that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-the history of St. Martin’s is clear and it is
-the oldest Christian church in all England.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Associating with old cathedrals and Saxon
-churches makes one feel a few thrills. Even
-the inn where Chaucer put up his pilgrims
-seems modern. But cricket and the prize-fight
-pictures make up a sort of balance, and
-second-hand shops with wonderful salesmen
-bring one back to the 20th century. Canterbury
-has a famous brewery which is better
-patronized locally than is the cathedral, and
-farmers are in town trying to get hop-pickers
-just like Kansas farmers after hands in harvest-time.
-If St. Thomas could come back
-and see the automobiles running around his
-old monastery, notice the electric lights in
-the cathedral crypt, observe the American
-tourists with their guide-books and their gall,
-he would probably have some thrills himself.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_English_Strike">The English Strike</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">London</span>, August 28.</p>
-
-<p>There was a great strike of railway men in
-England last week, the news of which was
-sent over the world. As a subject of conversation
-and discussion it has taken the
-place of ordinary sights and tourist stunts.
-A very large per cent of the railway employés
-went out, there was rioting in several places,
-the soldiers were called upon, there was almost
-war in spots, and several people, innocent by-standers
-usually, were killed. The government
-secured a cessation of the strike by
-getting men and managers to agree to submit
-the differences to a national commission
-and be bound by it&mdash;an agreement both sides
-will break if it does not suit them. A railroad
-strike is a most serious thing in England,
-for in London and the manufacturing centers
-the people depend on the railroads to bring
-in their provisions, and as ice is almost unknown
-very few shops have more than a day’s
-supply of meats, fish and fresh eatables on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-hand. So the strike was pinching millions of
-people who had no personal interest in its
-result.</p>
-
-<p>If I were a railroad employé in England
-I would strike, or at least I’d strike out for
-America or some other land where a man has
-a show. Railroad men are not well paid in
-England, rather worse than other working-men.
-Engineers, or drivers as they are called,
-rarely get to exceed 30 to 35 shillings a week
-(seven to nine dollars). Firemen, switch-men,
-baggagemen, station-men, operators,
-conductors and brakemen get from 20 shillings
-to 35 shillings a week (five to nine dollars).
-And yet both passenger fares and
-freight charges are higher in England than in
-Kansas. In discussing the subject with an
-educated Englishman I complained that a
-man with a family could not live on these
-wages. “Yes, but they do,” he said; “but
-the family doesn’t get meat every day&mdash;and
-the family doesn’t need meat every day.” I
-argued on, that a man can’t buy a home, or
-save anything for trouble or old age. “That’s
-true,” he said, “and it is unfortunate. But
-his children won’t let him starve, and there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-is some light job he can do to help out. The
-government is now preparing a plan for the
-pensioning of old people. When that law is
-working, a man won’t have to worry about
-the future.”</p>
-
-<p>Which is a rotten theory. It merely means
-that with the prospect of a pension of less
-than two dollars a week an English laborer
-can be kept working at the present low standard.
-I am for the old-age pension, but I am
-for the proper payment of a workingman while
-he is at the age to enjoy life. This beautiful
-England with its castles and palaces and picture
-galleries and great history is far behind
-every other nation in its treatment of the
-workingman, and consequently England is
-now sitting on a keg of dynamite which is
-likely to explode. Once get it out of the
-heads of the English workmen that they have
-to submit to these things and these wages
-because their fathers did, and that it is a
-great blessing to have a king and lords, and
-the English working-men will raise Hades
-with the present political and social conditions
-in merry England. It seems to me that the
-time is not far distant when the explosion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-will take place. Only very skillful management
-on the part of the English statesmen
-and the very conservative habits of thought
-of the English people prevented most serious
-trouble last week.</p>
-
-<p>An English workman usually has a large
-family, and the only way they can keep from
-going hungry or to the poorhouse is for the
-whole family to work and mother and children
-earn money to put into the common treasury.
-Meat, vegetables, fruit, everything to eat,
-costs more in England than it does in Kansas.
-Rent is less, but our workmen wouldn’t live
-as these have to. Clothing is cheaper in
-some respects and dearer in others. But the
-item is small with an English workman. You
-can see that after he pays rent and buys food
-he has very little left for wearing apparel, so
-father wears his suit until it is worn out,
-mother gets along on second-hand clothing,
-which is generally used, and the children have
-a cheaper grade and little of it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I am not knocking on the English. This
-condition which seems so distressing to me is
-a product of their conditions and is not the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-deliberate purpose of the people. I think it
-comes from the conservatism of the English
-character, and also from the fact that the
-English workman competes against the world.
-English manufactures and commerce have
-been built up because in England labor is intelligent,
-high-class, and cheap. I can have
-a tailor-made suit of clothes for twelve dollars
-in London. That’s fine for me, but how
-is it for the tailor? And it doesn’t help the
-other English workingman, for he does not
-have the twelve. On the other hand, the
-ability of the American workman to buy has
-brought it to pass that he can get just as good
-a suit, better fitted and better looking, at a
-Hutchinson clothing store for twelve to fifteen
-dollars,&mdash;and he has the money and buys!
-There is going to be some discussion of clothing
-and the woolen schedule in the United
-States, and I want to put in this testimony.
-Before I left home I bought a suit in Hutchinson
-for fifteen dollars. No English tailor-made
-suit for that price looks near so well,
-and the way it fits and hangs is complimented
-by the English. The only kind of stuff that
-is cheaper in England than with us is that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-in which hand labor is employed. Women
-buy laces because they are made by intelligent
-working-women who are paid 25 to 50
-cents a day. Silk hats are cheaper, but the
-same quality hat I buy at home cost me just
-as much in London, and shirts, underwear,
-sox, etc., are as expensive here as in Hutchinson.
-I am told the same rule applies to
-women’s clothes. Americans who come to
-England and continue to live on the same
-standard they do in America say that living
-is more expensive here. Of course they can
-have three or four servants for the same price
-they paid the one hired girl at home, and can
-pose as being “upper class.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I went to a barber shop, a first-class one.
-I was shaved for a “tuppence” (four American
-cents) and had my hair cut for a “trippence”
-(six American cents). I gave the barber
-a tip of a penny, for which he was very
-thankful, and then I went out of the shop
-growling at a country where I could get
-shaved so cheaply and where a tailor-made
-suit cost only $12. In this world of ours we
-are so dependent on one another that you can’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-cheapen one man without cheapening all the
-rest. I asked the street-car conductor and
-he told me he was paid five dollars a week&mdash;and
-he has a family of six. The chamber-maid
-at the hotel works for a dollar a week
-and board. A good coachman or a house-man
-gets one to two dollars a week and board.
-A clerk in a store does well to beat five dollars
-a week. How do they live? I don’t
-know, but they do; but they have all heard
-of America and Canada and Australia, and
-would go there if they could raise the fare, or
-if it were not for leaving family and home.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I am getting away from the strike subject.
-I make myself unpopular with some of the
-English, the wealthier people and their foot-men,
-by insisting that the railroad men ought
-to strike and ought to have their wages
-doubled, when I have to pay more than two
-cents a mile for a second-class fare, and about
-twice as much for shipping freight as I would
-in Kansas. And I always compare with Kansas,
-a place most of them never heard of,
-and I suppose they think I am describing a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-fictitious land where the millennium has already
-arrived.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We spent an afternoon at Richmond, where
-high hills rise from the valley of the Thames
-and the view of English farm and village,
-river and forest, is one of the finest in the
-world. Far away in the distance is Windsor
-Castle, the favorite royal dwelling-place, the
-Thames like a silver streak dotted with boats
-and wooded islands, quaint towns with old
-churches, and winding roads white with the
-macadam of chalky stone, occasional tram-ways,
-busses with the passengers on top, gardens
-and orchards, little strips of pasture
-with sheep and cows, fences of hedges and
-ivy-covered walls,&mdash;all of these things are a
-panorama which make the breath come fast,
-the heart beat more rapidly. The ground
-is historic, for it has been the living-place
-and fighting-place of great men from the time
-of the Saxons, and every town and hill is
-like a page of English history. Beautiful
-homes adorn the hillside and comfortable
-inns offer entertainment to the traveler and
-the visitor. It is a great picture, and artists<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-have copied it onto their canvases. Turner
-and Gainsborough lived here, and their pictures
-of English scenery are more beautiful
-than their conceptions of saints and their
-portraits of sinners. Here is where good King
-Edward, the most popular monarch England
-has had in many years, came for a view and
-a night out. In the road-house on the height
-is the place where Lilly Langtry achieved fame
-by slipping a chunk of ice down the back of
-Edward’s princely neck.</p>
-
-<p>We had lunch at The Boar’s Head and took
-tea at The Red Dog, two of the many taverns
-which show the English taste in names
-is just the same now as it was when Pickwick
-traveled and motor cars were unknown.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Englishman_the_Great">Englishman the Great</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">London</span>, August 31.</p>
-
-<p>London is easily the capital of the world.
-As much as every other large nation might
-argue the question, there is general acceptance
-of the fact that Great Britain is the
-greatest force politically. The English navy,
-superior in size and quality to any other two
-navies, the English commerce which goes under
-the English flag to the furthermost parts,
-the great English colonies (almost independent
-states) Canada and Australia, the rich
-English possessions like India and South
-Africa, the English “spheres of influence”
-like Egypt and Persia, and the supremacy of
-English capital and banking methods,&mdash;all of
-these and the capable, self-possessed, educated
-English manhood and womanhood have
-made the power of Great Britain foremost
-among the nations. And London is not only
-the political capital of England and its dependencies,
-but it is the capital in business,
-books, art, fashion, science, and money. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-wealth and the literature and the commerce
-of the world depend on the judgment of London.
-The very thought of the power thus
-included is impressive. I walked down
-Threadneedle street and Lombard street, each
-about as large as an alley in Hutchinson, and
-thought of the millions and millions of money
-and capital which those plain buildings contained,
-and of the power which the men within
-them possessed. Then I thought of the eight
-million people of London, moving around like
-ants in a hill, and the size, the activity, and
-the never-ending motion, brought most forcibly
-to mind how insignificant is one man,
-especially if he is from Kansas and doesn’t
-know a soul in all that aggregation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_fp188.jpg" alt="" width="407" height="550" />
-<p class="caption center"><span class="smcap">SEEING LONDON FROM THE OLD ENGLISH BUS</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But there is one part of London in which
-all English-speaking people have a part&mdash;the
-London of history, of Dickens, Thackeray,
-Johnson, Shakespeare and those men whose
-names are living long after the money-lender
-and the broker are forgotten. A little way
-from the Bank and the bankers is the old
-Curiosity Shop, the Cheshire Cheese, the
-Cock, the Temple Courts, and hundreds of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>names familiar to every reader of English
-literature, and instead of being lonesome and
-oppressed by the weight of the millions of
-people and money, I felt that I had met old
-friends, and that Little Dorrit, or David Copperfield,
-or Samuel Johnson, or Pendennis,
-or Oliver Twist or some other acquaintance
-whom I knew very well was expected every
-minute. That is the great beauty of being
-an American in London, for all of the history
-and literature that have centered here is ours
-as well as our English cousins’.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The hansom cab and the old omnibus are
-disappearing before the taxi and the motor-bus.
-It is a shame, but the world will move
-on. Every Englishman or traveler remembers
-the London cab, with its two wheels and
-hood-shaped carriage, and the driver up behind.
-There are still a few, but the taxis are
-faster, and the London cab horse will soon
-be freed. So it is with the old bus, drawn by
-two good horses and driven by an expert
-driver who knew all of the history and romance
-of the buildings along the route, and
-who would impart said information with dec<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>orations
-and embellishments to the traveler
-with a sixpence. All of this so-called progress,
-the motor cars and the wider streets, are
-doubtless more efficient and more sanitary,
-but they are not near so picturesque or interesting.
-The taxicabs go through the London
-crowds, the jam of vehicles and the congestion
-of traffic at a speed that would not
-be tolerated in a small town in Kansas. The
-policeman stands on the corner and regulates
-the moving mass, but apparently there is no
-speed limit, only punishment for bad driving.
-The motor-driver who runs over a man is
-severely punished, and that makes him careful.
-The rule works well, but not quite so
-well as the one in Paris, which punishes the
-pedestrian who gets in the way of the motor
-car.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Next to the wages problem is the land problem
-in England. Three or four men own half
-the real estate in London. Their ancestors
-got it in a fairly legitimate way when it was
-outlying country, and now it is the heart of
-a great city. The English law of heredity
-keeps the estate together. The English land<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-conditions are the worst I know of in any
-nation in the world. The rich old dukes who
-own so much of London cannot be pried loose
-from their holdings, and the actual residents
-cannot buy their homes or their business
-houses. The proprietor usually leases for 99
-years, but every improvement goes to him
-eventually; he will do nothing himself, and
-the renter pays the taxes. On Piccadilly
-street, in the center of the fashionable residence
-and shop district, the Marquis of Landsup,
-or some such title, has a park of twenty
-acres which is surrounded by a high stone
-wall. It is a pretty park, but the owner’s
-family is there only a couple of months in
-the year when the weather is cold and the
-park is not usable. The rest of the time no
-one but servants and caretakers occupy that
-beautiful tract, with the city all around it.
-And thousands and tens of thousands of
-people are walking the streets or living in
-miserable tenements. I suspect I’d be a Socialist
-if I stayed long in London and thought
-much about such things as this. With all
-their brain and intellect the English statesmen
-have not solved the land problem in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
-England, and they never will solve it until
-they upset the table.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is a great thing to be able to speak the
-language and not have to rely so much on
-holding up your fingers and making faces.
-We have been for so many weeks among the
-Dutch and the French that it is a positive
-pleasure to just listen to the conversation
-around us and know that we can understand.
-A little knowledge of a foreign tongue leads
-to many mistakes. I heard a Frenchman in
-a London hotel giving an account of his day’s
-experience to an English lady. Among other
-things he said he went to a linen store and
-left an order for table linen, and added, “and
-I will have my entrails on it.” Of course he
-meant his initials, but he had been careless
-with his dictionary. And yet it is very hard
-for us to understand the ordinary London
-cab-driver or workman. His accent is so
-different that it is almost like another language.
-And even an educated Englishman
-will give you a direction like this: <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>“Go to
-the next turning on the left, bear a bit to the
-right until you get to the top of the street.”
-Which means in American go to the next
-corner, turn to the left, then a little to the
-right to the end of the street. I never can
-understand why the English people generally
-murder their language as they do. But perhaps
-I am like the little American girl I met
-in Germany. She had learned German at
-home, and I asked her how she got along in
-Berlin. “Not very well,” she said, “they
-talk such bad German.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The transportation in the center of London
-is confined entirely to busses and cabs. There
-is too much traffic and the streets are too
-narrow for street railways. In the outer parts
-of the city a number of street cars, or “trams”
-as they are called, are operated. Every bus
-and every tram has seats on the roof, and they
-are the choice seats on the vehicle. From one
-of these top seats is the place to see London,
-and the traveler has the advantage of not
-only being able to note the sights on the pavement
-and the walks, but he can look in the
-second-story windows and see how people live.
-There are no great skyscrapers in London, the
-business houses usually being six stories or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-less in height. The residences are nearly always
-three or four stories, and either built
-flush to the street, with a garden or court in
-the rear, or back from the street and the yard
-inclosed by a high stone wall. The Englishman
-goes on the old principle that an Englishman’s
-house is his castle, and puts up
-high walls between himself and his neighbors.
-A front porch, or an open lawn in front of a
-private house, would be regarded as freakish
-or an evidence of insanity. On the other
-hand, there are many public parks and pretty
-green squares in London which are breathing-spots
-for the congestion of humanity within
-this great city.</p>
-
-<p>The “City of London” which has a Lord
-Mayor is the little old city which is the hub
-of the whole business. It is the section of the
-banks and the great institutions of finance,
-and is about the size of Hutchinson, but a
-solid mass of stone structures and narrow
-streets. Only about 30,000 people reside
-there. The London of the present is London
-County, covers about 900 square miles and
-is therefore about the size of Reno county.
-That is the area in which 8,000,000 people<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-live. It is governed by a County Council,
-elected by the taxpayers, which is a very
-active body and is doing much to improve
-the conditions. London has fine water and
-visitors are even urged to drink it&mdash;something
-new in Europe. Taxes, or “rates” as
-they are called, are high, and include everything
-from real estate and personal to income
-tax and a stamp tax on receipts and drafts.
-The great problem of improving a city is to
-get the money without distressing the people.
-It requires large sums to make and care for
-parks, streets, schools, paving, water-works,
-light, and the other things that the city must
-have in order to be modern, healthful, and
-comfortable. The citizens everywhere groan
-under the weight of taxation, and yet they
-should not if the money is properly spent.
-These streets, police, schools, fire departments
-and such are as necessary as the walls of our
-homes, which also require money to build
-and maintain. The certainty of death and
-taxes is proverbial. There is no way to avoid
-the former and the only way to dodge taxes
-is to go to an uninhabited island and live
-by yourself. And then if some other indi<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>vidual
-comes along, the first thing the original
-tax-dodger will do is to tax the other
-fellow.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ordinary English home has the front
-room of the house for the dining-room. The
-“drawing-room” is at the rear and the
-kitchen quite a distance from the dining-room.
-The drawing-room is used only on special
-occasions and the dining-room is the family
-living-room. The English are great home-makers,
-and their houses are always well furnished
-and look as if folks lived there. On the
-continent the fashion is to go out for the evening
-meal to restaurant or café, but the Englishman
-comes home and stays there. The
-table is spread with the family and intimate
-friends around, and supper is served at 8
-o’clock or later. You see the Englishman has
-already had three meals&mdash;breakfast, luncheon,
-and tea; so the evening meal is late. To me
-the most attractive part of English life is
-that in the home. The Englishman gathers
-his family about him, pulls down the blinds,
-reads his newspaper and is in his castle, which
-no lord or duke can enter without his consent.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-This simple virtue of home-living is rare in
-Europe, and in the family circle which gathers
-at the table and at the altar the young Englishman
-gets the habit of thought and manner
-which marks him wherever he goes, and
-which has made his country the greatest of
-all the nations.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_North_of_Ireland">The North of Ireland</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Londonderry, Ireland</span>, September 8.</p>
-
-<p>Crossing the Irish Sea from Fishguard in
-southern Wales to Rosslare in southern Ireland,
-I met a jolly Irishman from Cork. When
-I told him I was going to the North of Ireland
-he remonstrated. “Don’t do it, mon. Every
-Irishman up there is a Scotchman!” But I
-had seen the beautiful South of Ireland and
-we had to come to Londonderry to take the
-ship for home, so the warning of the Corker
-was in vain. I found that he was right. Soon
-after we left Dublin we came upon linen
-factories and distilleries and Presbyterian
-churches, people too busy to jolly a stranger,
-and cannily seeking the surest way to a sixpence.
-In the South of Ireland no one is too
-busy to talk with the stranger and to tell him
-all the legendary lore of the country, while
-in the North one shrinks from stopping the
-busy worker, even to ask him which way is
-straight up. The people of both ends of Ireland
-are pleasant and the American dollar is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-greatly admired, but the process of extracting
-it is painless, even pleasant, in Cork, while it
-hurts enough to notice in Belfast. The South
-is almost entirely agricultural and is social,
-while the North is filled with factories and
-notices not to allow your heads to stick out of
-the windows. The people of the South are
-poorer but happier; the people of the North
-are busier and more worried in their looks.
-The Irishman in the South smiles pleasantly
-without an apparent thought of the money he
-is going to make, the Irishman in the North
-smiles after he gets the money.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>All of this Emerald isle is green, and picturesque
-scenery with lakes and falls, glens
-and fields, rugged coasts and beautiful beaches
-is to be found from Queenstown to Portrush.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We stopped a day in Dublin, which is an
-Irish city with a large tinge of English. It
-was the capital of Ireland prior to the consolidation
-of the Irish Parliament with that of
-Great Britain, and may still be called so because
-the Lord-Lieutenant Governor lives here
-and has a sort of a court. There are about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-400,000 people, packed in too tightly and
-with not enough work to keep many of them
-in decent living and style. That is the trouble
-in Ireland&mdash;one of their troubles, the lack of
-opportunity for work. There is not much for
-the energetic young Irishman to do but to
-emigrate, and he goes to America or Canada
-or Australia, or even to England, to get a job
-and a chance. The land is nearly all owned by
-men who do not live in Ireland, and is rented
-to farmers who find that when they improve
-their places it means a raise in rent. The new
-land law which gives a man a sort of title to
-his leased land, and makes a court of arbitration
-as to rent and purchase, is improving
-conditions in Ireland and they are better off
-now in respect to land than they are in England,
-except for the blight of absentee landlordism,
-the system which takes the rent-money
-and spends it in London or in Paris.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Dublin is perking up some on the prospect
-of home rule, which would bring an Irish
-legislature to Dublin and make the city a real
-capital. But the prospect for home rule is
-dubious. The Irish party holds the balance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-of power in the English Parliament and has
-been allied with the Liberals in their reforms
-and the dehorning of the House of Lords.
-The Liberals have promised the Irish home
-rule, and the leaders will try to fulfill the
-promise, but they may find it hard work to
-line up their followers, and let it go until another
-general election. There are so many
-other questions involved in English politics
-that home rule may be lost in the shuffle, but
-as the Irish are the best politicians in the
-world they are looking forward to success after
-a lovely fight.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The city of Belfast, a hundred miles north
-of Dublin, is the center of the linen trade.
-The English Parliament a couple of hundred
-years ago prohibited the manufacture of wool
-in Ireland because it competed with English
-trade, but promoted the spinning of linen.
-The climate is just right, labor is cheap, and
-Irish linen is the best in the world. We visited
-a linen mill, and also a cottage where the hand
-looms were at work. The wages paid to good
-hands are 50 to 75 cents a day. This would
-be fair wages in Europe, but the work is not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-always steady and many days are lost in
-setting the patterns and fixing the looms.
-The manager of the factory said that most of
-his best men went to America&mdash;he himself
-had two sons in New York. The wages here
-will keep soul and body together if the body
-is willing to get along on fish and potatoes.
-But there is no outcome, no prospect of a
-future which shall include a beefsteak once a
-week. The manager had been in America and
-he knew the difference. “Our workmen are all
-right because they don’t know the luxuries
-the American workman has, except by hearsay.
-Of course if they once get the appetite
-for meat and a new suit of clothes every year
-they have to leave us. But a two-eyed beefsteak
-makes a good meal.” A two-eyed beefsteak
-is an Irish name for a herring.</p>
-
-<p>Belfast has great ship-building yards, next
-to Glasgow the greatest in the world. It also
-has large distilleries which supply England
-and America. I am told that the consumption
-of liquor is on the decrease in Ireland. I hope
-so. But the distilleries keep building additions
-and enlarging their plants.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>Which recalls the old story of the Illinois
-statesman who was a great drinker and was
-ruining the prospect of a useful life. His
-family and friends tried to stop him, but the
-habit or disease could not be overcome. One
-night a friend had him out for a walk, trying
-to sober him up for important business the
-next day. They passed a distillery and the
-friend said: “John, what a fool you are to
-try to drink all the whisky that is made. You
-can’t do it. See that busy distillery with its
-bright lights and throbbing engines. You
-can’t beat it.” John looked, and then with
-drunken dignity replied: “Perhaps you’re
-right. But don you shee I’m making ’em
-work nights?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The drink problem is the hardest to solve
-in Great Britain, England, Ireland and Scotland.
-It is worse than the wage problem or
-the land problem. In no other countries that
-I have visited are the evils of booze so plainly
-in evidence as in the British Isles. In Germany
-the sight of the family in the beer garden
-with their mugs of creamy liquid, their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-good-nature and their temperance, does not
-make an unpleasant impression. In France
-and the southern countries, where wine is the
-common beverage, one does not worry about
-this custom. But in England, Ireland and
-Scotland, where you see men and women
-drunk in the streets and in the gutters, where
-you see children ragged and barefooted, homes
-cheerless and pauperism prevalent, all plainly
-because of the drink, the sensibility of even
-the most seasoned is shocked. Public-houses
-with women behind the bars, open seven days
-in the week and handing out the whisky which
-temporarily exhilarates and then stupefies and
-degrades, are one of the companion pictures
-to the great buildings, wonderful achievements
-and artistic developments which one
-sees in every British town. The temperance
-societies work hard, the government would
-help if it dared, but the drinking, the suffering
-and the pauperizing process goes on.
-The distilleries are enlarging, and working
-nights.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I talked this matter over with an intelligent
-Irishman, and he agreed with me that if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-the drinking of liquor could be abolished it
-would do away with nine-tenths of the poverty.
-“But see these poor fellows and how
-they work,” he said. “Saturday night comes,
-and who can blame them for having a few
-pleasant hours even if it is all imagination,
-and even if they do go to work on blue Monday
-with aching heads and a little tremble.”</p>
-
-<p>Which is very poor argument, for it does
-not take in the dependent wives and children.
-And the Saturday night drunk makes a poor
-workman on Monday.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the northern coast of Ireland, near
-Portrush and a number of beautiful summer
-resorts, is the Giant’s Causeway. The origin
-of this really wonderful freak of nature is
-said by archæologists to be volcanic, and that
-the Causeway, the adjoining cliffs and several
-islands are products that came from a volcano
-in the shape of burning lava, and were
-then thrown into shape by later explosions
-as the molten mass was cooling. The Causeway
-is a formation like a pier extending into
-the ocean and made up of 40,000 pillars (by
-Irish count), each a separate column and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-usually five-or six-sided. They are about
-twenty feet long, twenty inches in diameter
-and jointed like mason-work, or more like
-a bamboo rod. The theory is that as the
-lava cooled it cracked and shrunk. Perhaps
-so. Nobody saw it.</p>
-
-<p>I prefer the Irish version, which is simpler
-and easy to understand.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Fin MacCoul, the giant, was the champion
-of Ireland. He had knocked out all rivals
-and no one could stand in front of him for
-a second round. He was as great a man in
-Ireland as John L. Sullivan used to be in
-Boston. Over in Scotland a certain Caledonia
-giant boasted that he could lick any
-man on earth, Irish preferred. He gave out
-an interview to the newspapers, saying that
-if it were not for the wetting he would cross
-over and take the Irish championship from
-Fin. After much of the usual mouth-work
-between the champions, Fin got permission
-from the king, constructed the Causeway
-from Ireland to Scotland, and dared the Caledonian
-to come across. The Scot was game,
-and the match was pulled off without police<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-interference, resulting in a victory for Fin,
-who kindly allowed his beaten rival to settle
-in Ireland and open a saloon. Ireland was
-then, as it is now, the finest country in the
-world, so the Scotchman lived happily ever
-afterward. The Causeway gradually sank
-into the sea, and all that is now in sight is
-the Irish end and a few islands between it and
-the Scottish coast.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The formation of the coast for several
-miles each side of the Causeway is the same
-volcanic rock, and it rises abruptly hundreds
-of feet high from the sea. Caves and caverns
-with arches and vaults and echoes, and
-natural amphitheatres with the pipe organ
-Fin used to play and the bathtub which he
-used, are visited by the visitors who go out
-upon the Atlantic in a row-boat. I have
-seen Niagara and the Falls of the Rhine, and
-the Garden of the Gods in Colorado, and a
-few hundred more wonderful works of Nature
-or of giants, and the Causeway is not
-second to any of them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Our last stop in Ireland is this town of
-Londonderry, known in Ireland as <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>“Derry.”
-The London end of the name was put on by
-King James the First, who was so devoted
-to his religion that he killed or exiled the
-Catholic Irish in Ulster and Derry and gave
-their lands to Protestant emigrants from England.
-A few years later Cromwell finished
-the job and got the name of “Thorough,”
-because of his theory that the only good Irishman
-was a dead Irishman. There were terrible
-religious wars in Ireland for years, each
-side getting even for outrages committed by
-the other. One great event in the series
-was the siege of Londonderry by an Irish
-army under James the Second, who had been
-run out of England by William of Orange.
-James was about to enter the city with the
-consent of the governor, when thirteen apprentice
-boys banged down the portcullis,
-closing the entrance. That started the fight,
-and the people of Londonderry decided to
-stand the siege. They repulsed the soldiers
-and James tried to starve ’em out. The siege,
-which began with no preparation for defense,
-lasted seven months, and half the population
-died of starvation. The people ate dogs and
-cats and rats, a rat selling for three shillings.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-At last an English fleet broke through the obstruction
-in the river, and the remnant of the
-people of Londonderry was saved.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Those were “good old times.” The Protestants
-of Londonderry knew if they surrendered
-they would meet the same fate that they had
-accorded to the Catholics on the capture of
-Irish towns, and there is hardly a town in
-Ireland which cannot duplicate the story of
-the siege of Londonderry. Those days are
-gone, Irish and English have laid aside their
-weapons, and except for St. Patrick’s Day or
-the 12th of July, which is the anniversary of
-the battle of the Boyne in which William defeated
-James, there is hardly a broken head
-in the country from religious causes.</p>
-
-<p>The walls still stand in Londonderry, and
-some of the cannon of 1689 are mounted at
-the old stand. But the walls are now a
-promenade and the cannon are only relics.
-A Protestant cathedral and a Catholic cathedral,
-a Presbyterian college and a Catholic
-college, are doing business side by side, and
-all are doing good. Two steamship lines have
-made Derry a regular stop on their way from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-Glasgow to America. The principal business
-of the town is the manufacture of linen
-and whisky, most of which is exported to the
-United States. And Irishmen from the North
-of the isle, who want an opportunity and a
-chance, come to Derry on their way to the
-best land of all, discovered by the Spanish,
-developed by the English, and ruled generally
-by the Irish, known and loved as home
-now by more Irish than are in Ireland, the
-U. S. A.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Scotland_and_the_Scotch">Scotland and the Scotch</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Glasgow, Scotland</span>, September 7.</p>
-
-<p>Scotland is one of the oldest countries of the
-civilized world. Although it is now united
-with England and is a part of Great Britain,
-up to two hundred years ago it had nothing
-to do with the English except to fight
-them. The original inhabitants were Celts,
-and came into history as Picts and Scots, who
-held possession of the northern part of the
-country when the Romans conquered England.
-After the Romans went away the
-Saxons arrived and practically wiped out all
-the old Britons in England, but made no headway
-against the Caledonians or “people of
-the hills,” as they called the residents of the
-north. About the ninth century the various
-tribes were gotten together under one chief
-or king, and from that time until the union of
-England and Scotland in 1706 the chief occupation
-of the Scotch was to fight the English,
-who were always trying to conquer Scotland,
-but never succeeding. The Scotch and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-the English were of different race, language,
-customs and habits. Much of Scotland, the
-Highlands, has little room for agriculture, and
-the people lived a roving life, raising a few
-sheep and oats, and, whenever they felt like
-it, making a raid into the Lowlands and into
-England and bringing back cattle and supplies
-to last them until the next raid. They were
-converted to Christianity, but their idea of
-morality never included an injunction against
-killing the Lowlander and running off his
-herd. War was the name under which nations
-concealed their crimes of robbery, and the
-Highlanders of Scotland had war all the
-time; so they were officially justified. When
-you analyze their romantic history and the
-great deeds of their heroes you will always
-find that no matter how strict their character
-and honor among themselves, they never considered
-it anything but a praiseworthy action
-to kill and rob an Englishman. The reformation
-by John Knox and his contemporaries
-filled the Scottish heads with religious enthusiasm
-and devotion, but it did not interfere
-with the Scottish theory that the English
-were the natural enemy who must always be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-fought. And the English, on their side, reciprocated
-the regard in which they were held
-by the Scotch, and every king of England who
-had a chance put in his time trying to conquer
-the clansmen. Often the English would defeat
-the Scotch armies and capture their
-chiefs, but they couldn’t any more hold the
-Scotch territory than they could hold the red-hot
-end of a poker.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When Elizabeth, Queen of England, died,
-the next heir to the English throne was the
-son of Mary, Queen of Scots, then reigning as
-James the Sixth, King of Scotland. He was
-not only the heir, but he was a Protestant,
-and was, therefore, acceptable, and he was
-duly crowned as James the First of England.
-Of course, he went to London to reside, and
-from that time to the present England and
-Scotland have had the same king, although it
-was 100 years later before there was any union
-of the two governments. In 1706 the Scottish
-Parliament adopted the act of union, the majority
-being secured by shameful and open
-bribery and against the protests of the Scottish
-people, who did not want to be the tail<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-of the English kite. But the union resulted
-very beneficially to Scotland, as it changed
-the occupation from war to commerce and
-from raising hell to raising sheep. The natural
-shrewdness of the Celt was stimulated by the
-industry required in a country where hard
-work is necessary, and all over the world
-Scotchmen are known for their ability, their
-keenness in argument, their thrift and their
-success. Scotland is as far north as Labrador
-and Hudson Bay. It has a short growing
-season and very little fertile soil. I am
-wearing an overcoat and shivering with cold.
-That kind of a country raises sturdy and
-energetic people.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It has rained every day and nearly all the
-time since we arrived. The Scotch do not
-seem to mind the wet, but go about their
-business, clad in rough, warm clothing. I had
-quite a talk with a bright old Scotchman, and,
-after I had admitted&mdash;just as well give in to a
-Scotchman without argument&mdash;that Scotland
-was the most beautiful country on earth, I
-started a diversion by asking him if it rained
-all the time in Scotland. In very broad dia<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>lect
-he said he would tell us a story that would
-answer the question. A ship arrived off the
-Scotch coast, and, as it was raining, the captain
-decided to delay landing until the storm
-was over. He waited three weeks before the
-rain stopped, but finally the sun came out
-and he put for the shore. Just as he climbed
-onto the land the sky darkened and the rain
-began to fall again. Of a Scotch lad standing
-by, the captain asked: “Does it rain all the
-time in Scotland?”</p>
-
-<p>“Naw,” said the lad; “sometimes it
-snaws.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The agricultural products of Scotland are
-oats, grass, barley, and a little wheat. The
-farms are generally small and the soil poor,
-and the great industry is the raising of sheep.
-In the manufacturing towns the wool is made
-into cloth. The chief industry, aside from
-this, is the distillery, and a great deal of the
-product is consumed at home. The people
-are poor, and there is little chance for them to
-improve their condition and stay in Scotland.
-The land is owned by big landlords, and hundreds
-of square miles are kept for hunting by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-the proprietors of the estates. Work as hard
-as he may, the Scotch tenant farmer has very
-little ahead of him except poverty and heaven.
-The tourists bring a good deal of money to the
-country, and are separated from it in every
-way the canny Scot can devise. But in spite
-of poverty and notwithstanding the evil of
-intemperance, there is no doubt of the natural
-brightness of the Scotch.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I had heard all my life of the Scotch heather,
-and it is one thing in which I was not disappointed.
-The Scotch moor, which is something
-between a barren field and a swamp, will raise
-nothing else, and most of Scotland is moor.
-Heather is like a weed cedar, if there could be
-such a thing, and at this season, when it is in
-bloom, covers the ground with a mat of blue.
-There is also a white heather, which is rare
-and to find which is good luck. I was very
-fortunate, for I picked a bunch of white
-heather the first attempt. I picked it from
-a lad for a penny, and I recommend that way
-of hunting for the white kind. But the blue
-heather is everywhere, as buffalo-grass used
-to be on western prairies. Heather is good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-for nothing, except as a flower, and it will not
-grow anywhere but in Scotland. It is like
-the hills and woods and lakes of this country-fair
-to look upon but not convertible into
-cash. It is worn by the people, and a man is
-hardly dressed up unless he has a bunch in his
-cap or his button-hole. The shamrock will
-not grow except in Ireland and the heather
-only in Scotland, and each is held in loving
-affection by the people of the country because
-of its constancy and patriotism.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Scotch have a way of making oatmeal
-porridge that justifies its reputation. But I
-tried the “haggis,” and once was enough. I
-do not know what the component elements of
-Scotch “haggis” may be, but I suspect that
-they are the remnants of the last meal minced
-together, with oatmeal and sheep-blood added
-to make them palatable. The Scotch people
-are not high livers. Whatever cannot be
-made out of oats and mutton is too high-priced
-for the ordinary citizen. The farm-house
-is generally divided by a solid wall, the
-family on one side and the cows and sheep
-on the other. The people of Scotland always<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-have been poor, and they are not ashamed of
-it; but they consider it disgraceful to be
-ignorant or irreligious, so they have as good
-schools and churches as can be found anywhere
-outside of America. The men no
-longer go around with guns and plaids, calling
-themselves by the names of their clans, but
-there is much family pride, and the traditions
-of the good old times of murder and robbery
-are kept in mind. The English language has
-taken the place of the old Gaelic for general
-use, but the English as spoken in Scotland is
-only about second cousin to the English
-language as known in Kansas.</p>
-
-<p>Walter Scott wrote the history of Scotland
-for the world, and it is very fortunate for the
-clansmen that he did. Scott had a picturesque
-way of dressing up the costume and character
-of a dirty highwayman so that he would appear
-to be the soul of honor and the pride of
-chivalry. He has given some of the kings
-and dukes, who committed every crime from
-arson to murder, the reputation and standing
-of good and respectable citizens. His historical
-novels, in so far as their description
-of royal character is concerned, have the merit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-of beauty and interest, but not of truth. The
-Scots were fierce fighters, and in the days
-when war meant conquest and conquest
-meant pillage the Scots were unexcelled in all
-lines. Now that the world is putting up a
-different standard for success we find the
-Scotchmen adapting themselves to modern
-ideas; and in science, invention, law and commerce
-they can show down with any lot of
-people twice their size on earth. They are
-proud of their country, and can recite its
-legends and its poems of Burns even if they
-are so poor that they don’t have a square meal
-a day. They love to argue, state their views
-positively, contradict flatly, and do not object
-to taking as good as they send. They are not
-polite like the Germans, insinuating like the
-French, or reserved like the English. They
-are abrupt and inconsiderate, though kind-hearted
-and helpful, proud and poor, quick-witted
-and industrious. If they had any
-other country’s natural advantages they would
-own the earth.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Land_of_Burns">The Land of Burns</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Ayr, Scotland</span>, September 9.</p>
-
-<p>Today we have spent in Ayr, the village
-which bases a claim on fame because in a
-humble little cottage, just outside its limits,
-Robert Burns, the great Scottish poet, was
-born. I call Burns “the great Scottish poet”
-because it is right that his beloved country
-should be linked with his name, but, as a
-matter of fact, Burns is the poet of humanity
-in every land and every clime. His writings
-jingle like a familiar song, his thoughts are
-the thoughts we all think but cannot express,
-and his music touches the heartstrings like
-recollections of childhood, a letter from home,
-or the memory of those who are dear and
-away. Burns wrote in rhyme the thoughts
-that came themselves and not thoughts he
-had worked up for the occasion. A child of
-poverty himself, he was neither blinded to its
-troubles nor overcome by its restrictions, and
-he tells us of the joys and pleasures, the griefs
-and sorrows of the people. He puts epigrams<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-into verse and he tells of things as they are,
-looking through the shams and deceits and
-making good-natured fun of weakness and
-folly. He never gets away from the human
-interest and he never fails in knowledge of
-human nature.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Burns’s father was a farmer, and not a very
-successful one. He spelled his name Burness,
-but for some unknown reason the poet shortened
-it. The father was an honest and religious
-man who was highly respected, but
-never made good in a business way. His
-mother was brighter, and used to sing Scotch
-songs and ballads, and if there is anything in
-heredity Robert got his poetic instincts from
-that side of the house. They were trying to
-make a nursery pay when Robert was born,
-and I visited the cottage where that event
-took place. One end of the shanty with three
-rooms was for the family and the other with
-two rooms was for the cattle. The Burnses
-failed in the nursery business, and rented a
-small farm near by, on which Robert spent
-his boyhood days, not far from the taverns
-in Ayr and Irvine, where he learned how to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-a “good fellow” and thus shortened his life.
-He was 15 years old when he wrote his first
-verses, and was helping on the farm and going
-to school. After the father died Robert and
-his brother tried to run the farm, but the poet
-got discouraged, and decided to emigrate to
-Jamaica. A publisher printed his poems, and
-he intended to take the money he received for
-them to pay his passage. But the book made
-a hit from the start, a second edition was
-called for, and Burns at once attained great
-popularity. He gave up the idea of leaving
-Scotland, and put in most of the remainder of
-his days writing, besides holding a small job
-which his friends got for him, in the revenue
-service. He bought a farm near Dumfries,
-and lived there and in the town the rest of his
-short life, for he died in 1796, when he was
-only 37 years of age.</p>
-
-<p>Burns not only enjoyed popularity in his
-own generation, but in the more than a
-century since he wrote his fame has grown
-steadily and his genius and talent are appreciated
-in every part of the world. There
-are statues and monuments to Burns all over
-Scotland, but the greatest memorial is in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-hearts of the people of his own country and
-of all others into which his songs have gone.
-Wherever there is a son or daughter of Scotland
-there is a lover of “Bobby Burns.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was a little thrilling to be shown the inn
-where “Tam O’Shanter” loitered that stormy
-night in Ayr&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Auld Ayr, wham ne’er a town surpasses,</div>
- <div class="verse">For honest men and bonnie lasses.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that Tam and his
-crony, Souter Johnny, (both honored by
-statues now,) had spent the evening most
-merrily, and it came time for Tam to go home
-to his wife, who had frequently told Tam
-what would happen to him after one of those
-sprees. And the poet philosophizes:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Ah, gentle dames! it gars me greet</div>
- <div class="verse">To think how mony counsels sweet,</div>
- <div class="verse">How mony lengthen’d sage advices,</div>
- <div class="verse">The husband frae the wife despises!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Tam started for home on his good gray
-mare, Meg, but when he reached old Alloway
-Church he saw lights, and, made brave by the
-Scotch whisky, he boldly looked in. He saw
-the witches dancing, the devil playing the
-fifes, and a young woman he knew was in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-carousal. Tam foolishly called, the lights
-went out, and it was up to Meg to get away
-from the swarm of witches who came in hot
-pursuit. The leading lady of the gang was
-right upon poor Tam when he came to the
-bridge, his hope of escape, for witches cannot
-cross running water. With one great jump
-Meg saved her master.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Ane spring brought off her master, hale,</div>
- <div class="verse">But left behind her ain grey tail;</div>
- <div class="verse">The carlin claught her by the rump,</div>
- <div class="verse">And left poor Maggie scarce a stump.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I have seen the tavern, the church, the
-bridge, the statue of Tam, but a grateful
-public has forgotten to properly commemorate
-the services of Meg and the sacrifice of the
-tail.</p>
-
-<p>Across the river Ayr are “the auld brig”
-and “the new brig” which held a joint debate
-as reported by Burns’s muse. The city
-council was recently about to take down the
-auld brig because it was unsafe, but a general
-howl went up, and the bridge is to be preserved.
-All of the relics of Burns are being
-taken care of, and so far as possible the old
-cottage and other places connected with his
-life are restored to the condition they were in
-when Burns was plowing and quit work to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-write poetry to a mouse he had stirred out of
-its nest. I can readily understand why Burns
-did not make a success as a farmer, for like
-other poets he did not like to work. However,
-the dislike for work is not confined to poets,
-who have more of an excuse for this fault than
-the rest of us.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have not yet found a Scotchman who cannot
-quote Burns’s poetry by the yard. It is
-all I can do to read most of Burns’s lines, and
-the words I skip often look rough and jagged.
-But when a Scotchman recites Burns, the
-dialect and the broad accent make the rhymes
-sound like music. The strange syllables fit
-together in harmony so that one can understand
-that Burns knew what he was about
-when he used the local phrases and words in so
-much of his writing. Burns was a good
-scholar, and could and did write the purest of
-English, but he took the homely phrases of
-the Scottish life to make the common things
-he writes about ring clear and right.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Ayr is about forty miles from Glasgow. As
-soon as you leave the Burns neighborhood you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-get into a country of coal mines, factories, and
-golf links. There are miles of golf grounds on
-the moors along the road. Most of the land
-is only fit to raise heather and lose golf balls.
-No wonder Burns’s father failed and Robert
-was going to emigrate. The more I see of
-Scottish soil the more I take off my hat to
-the Scotch farmers, who must be the bravest
-men in the world.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>About fifty years ago Andrew Carnegie,
-then a lad of a half-dozen years, took his
-father by the hand and led him onto the ship
-at Glasgow which brought them to America.
-In all the Scotch towns there are Carnegie
-libraries and other benefactions from the
-Scotch boy. His shrewdness and industry
-are the result of Scotch character when given
-full play in an open field. On the other hand,
-Burns with his talent and his weakness exhibits
-another result of the sentimental yet
-canny Scot who sees through humanity and
-analyzes it.</p>
-
-<p>To read the poetry of Robert Burns is to
-be wiser, better and happier. The day spent
-in this little nook in which he began his life<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-has brought much of Burns’s surroundings
-vividly to my mind. The little hovel in
-which he was born contrasts with the great
-monument reared by a grateful country, and
-proves his words if they needed proof:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">“A king can make a belted knight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A marquis, duke, and a’ that,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But an honest man’s aboon his might,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Guid faith, he mauna fa’ that.</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">For a’ that and a’ that,</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">Their dignities and a’ that,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The pith of sense and pride o’ worth,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Are higher rank, than a’ that.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="The_Journeys_End">The Journey’s End</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Steamship Cameronia</span>, September 21.</p>
-
-<p>For some unexplainable reason the ship
-homeward-bound is always slow. When one
-leaves his own country on a journey to other
-lands he is in no hurry. The new pictures
-that constantly present themselves, the new
-objects and the talk that suggests new ideas,
-hopes and plans, make the days go swiftly
-by and the voyage is never too long or tiresome.
-But when months of travel have exhausted
-the appetite for sights, and the occurrence
-of the strange no longer starts a
-thrill, the thoughts of the traveler far exceed
-the speed of the ship and the fastest boat that
-crosses the Atlantic is too slow. This is the
-only excuse I can find for the Cameronia,
-which sailed four days later than scheduled,
-and has developed no traits which will be
-affectionately remembered by the present passengers.
-She is a new ship, and not finished.
-I suppose the Anchor line needed the money
-or it would not have started a vessel across<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-the ocean with so many things not completed
-and untried. And then the Cameronia
-has shown great ability as a pitcher,
-also as a roller, and if a contest is begun as
-to what ship can pitch and roll, kick and
-buck and snort the best, I will back the
-Cameronia against the field.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ocean along the northern coast of Ireland
-has a habit of being busy. The currents
-from the south and the Arctic meet the turbulent
-waves from the Irish Sea, and a watery
-Donnybrook fair is the result. The Cameronia
-enjoyed the opportunity, and although
-the passengers generally took their evening
-meal a majority of them went dinnerless to
-bed, and they went early and with much haste.
-There is no known remedy for seasickness.
-The Rockefeller foundation which is discovering
-wonderful germs, on which every other
-ill can be laid, has not found the bacillus
-which started the trouble on the Cameronia.
-The ship’s doctor calmly advises you to put
-your finger down your throat and aid nature
-in her work. He assures you that the disease
-is not fatal, although you may wish it were,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-and he encourages you in the faith that every
-minute will be your next. The seasick ones
-lose temporarily any other trouble or ailments,
-and often forget their own names,
-imagining probably that these have gone with
-the rest. The story is told of a time like the
-one in question, that a sympathizing officer
-came to a man and woman who were leaning
-against each other with a common misery.
-“Is your husband very sick?” he inquired
-of the evidently cultured and modest lady.
-“He’s not my husband,” she faintly answered,
-as she leaned on her companion once again.
-“Your brother?” continued the butter-in.
-“I never saw him before,” she murmured,
-clasping again at the wobbly supporter under
-discussion.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This is a Scotch boat, and she has some
-Scotch traits. The Scotch people are wonderful.
-In a land which is nearly all poor
-pasture and good golf links, they have developed
-a citizenship which intellectually leads
-the world. But they are not given to covering
-up unpleasant spots and they do not go
-too strong for things of mere beauty or com<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>fort.
-There is no blarney-stone in the Highlands.
-The Scotch are probably the poorest
-hotel managers in the world. The graces and
-the pleasantry of the continent are despised,
-and everything coming to a Scotchman is
-expected on the day it is due. This habit
-of thrift is necessary in a land where it has
-always been a fight for man to get a result
-in the way of bread or meat or porridge.
-There is little humor in the Scotch nature,
-and every action is based on serious thought.
-The Cameronia is getting us across just as
-was promised, but with no frills or furbelows
-in the way of personal attention or entertainment.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of course there is a great deal in their viewpoint,
-and what seems right and proper in
-one country is often looked upon with horror
-in another. Sunday on the Cameronia was
-Sunday as it is in Glasgow. The Anchor line
-would no more sail a ship without divine
-service than it would without a rudder. It
-would no more permit the pianist to play
-secular music like “America” or “Swanee
-River” on Sunday than it would allow a pas<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>senger
-to take the captain’s place. But all
-the Sabbath Day the Anchor line sells booze
-openly and without a compunction of conscience.
-A compulsorily closed piano and an
-open bar look strange from the viewpoint of
-a traveler from Kansas.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I do not want to seem to be faultfinding,
-so I will only say that the grand concert on
-the Cameronia was not much worse than is
-usual on shipboard. Everybody knows that
-during a voyage some night is designated as
-concert night, a program is given by the passengers,
-and a collection taken for the benefit
-of the Sailors’ Home or some such charitable
-object. But only those who have actually
-made the trip and attended a concert realize
-the painful nature of the operation. A notice
-is posted on the bulletin board asking
-for volunteers for the program, and aspiring
-genius directly or through friends offers itself
-for the entertainment. A dignified gentleman
-who can’t tell a funny story but thinks
-he can is selected for chairman. Sometimes
-a really good musician or entertainer is inadvertently
-included in the program, but this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-is not often. No mistake is made in the choice
-of pretty girls who take up the collection.
-Our concert was opened by a bass solo, the
-guilty party being a man with his name
-parted in the middle and old enough to know
-better. He rendered (that’s the proper word)
-the old Roman favorite, “Only a Pansy Blossom.”
-When he came to the chorus about
-a faded flower he waved a yellow chrysanthemum
-in the air to a tremulo accompaniment.
-This was not a comic song, but a serious,
-sentimental selection, and the singer was an
-Englishman. The Scotch and English in the
-room heaved sighs and said to each other,
-“How beautiful!” The Americans poked
-each other in the ribs and almost wept in the
-effort to restrain their laughter. Of course
-he was encored, and he rendered again.
-This time it was a ballad about the golden
-tress of my darling, and in the touchiest of
-the touching lines he drew forth from his
-vest a piece of female switch, peroxide in
-color and horsetailish in effect. It was a
-great effort, and the serious fellow-country-men
-heaved more sighs of appreciation, while
-an American girl at my right whispered out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
-of her handerchief, “I know I’m going to
-scream!” Then a Scotchman sang an Irish
-song. Now a Scotchman can’t get the Irish
-brogue any more than he can understand an
-American joke. He was enthusiastically encored,
-and responded with a French dialect
-story, in broad Scotch. It was funnier than
-he knew. An amateur violinist contributed
-an execution of a sonata or a nocturne or a
-cordial of some kind. A famous story-teller
-recited a few choice bits from the column of
-some London magazine, on which the American
-copyright expired many years ago. The
-chairman in a few touching words then explained
-the object of the charity for which
-the fund was to be collected, and the touching
-was completed by the young ladies with
-pleasant smiles.</p>
-
-<p>Such is a ship’s concert, and with slight variations
-it is one of the features of every
-ocean voyage.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_fp234.jpg" alt="" width="411" height="550" />
-<p class="caption center"><span class="smcap">INTRODUCING A JOKE TO OUR BRITISH COUSINS</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I have alluded to the lack of humor in
-Great Britain, from the American viewpoint.
-I heard a good joke on the Scotch, and told
-it to a small crowd in the smoking-room.
-The story was of the boy who asked his father
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>why there was such a coin as a farthing, the
-fourth part of a penny. The father replied
-that it was to enable the Scotch to be charitable.
-Nobody laughed, and I resumed a
-discussion of the weather. About five minutes
-afterward an Englishman roared with
-mirth, and shouted to me, “I follow you! I
-follow you!” I didn’t understand why he
-was following me until he began my story,
-which he repeated with explanations and reminders
-of the proverbial Scotch thrift. Then
-he told it again and laughed loudly. The
-others smiled courteously and then face after
-face broadened, they all “followed,” and nobody
-appreciated the joke more than the
-Scotchmen. They told the story to each
-other and laughed, then hunted up friends
-and told it until the friends “followed,” and
-I was pointed out as a humorist. But it
-was a long and painful operation, and I did
-not have the courage to try it again. These
-British cousins are not devoid of humor but
-their speed limit is far below ours.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The harbor of New York is in sight and the
-pilot just came aboard. I witnessed an affect<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>ing
-scene. A fellow-passenger shouted vigorously
-to get the attention of a man who was
-sitting in the pilot boat. The man looked
-up, and I could tell the passenger was nervously
-preparing to ask for important news,
-perhaps of the strike, or the English elections.
-He called, “Who’s ahead in the National
-League?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>No coast looks as beautiful as the shore of
-home. Even New Jersey looms magnificently
-at such a time. The passengers are
-all on deck except those who are hiding articles
-from the customs officer. The returning
-Americans are full of enthusiasm. They have
-seen enough of other lands to know that there
-is none to compare with the United States,
-none which comes nearer to giving a man a
-chance. The foreigners in the first cabin
-watch the approaching scene with quiet interest.
-Over in the steerage hundreds of
-would-be Americans gaze eagerly at the land
-of hope and promise. Soon they will be
-welcomed by the Statue of Liberty which holds
-out the torch of citizenship to every alien with
-ten dollars in cash and a certificate of health.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-The American flag appears on passing boats,
-and it is the most beautiful as it is the most
-meaning of all the ensigns of all the nations.
-A man with a German accent tells me how
-forty years ago, when a mere boy, he came
-from the fatherland to try his fortune in the
-New World. This year he went back for a
-visit, but he had a stateroom and was not
-in the steerage. He saw the struggle and the
-lack of opportunity in the country of his
-birth. Now he is homeward-bound, satisfied
-that in spite of trusts and politics and
-coon songs, this is really the land of the free,
-the nation of opportunity; and as the pilot
-took charge and the American flag went to
-the top of the Cameronia’s mast, a tear
-trickled down his cheek, telling of the joy
-in his heart.</p>
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="chap1" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
- <h2 id="end_note" class="nopagebreak" title="">Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>Hyphenation has been standardised.</p>
-<p>A Table of Illustrations has been created by the Transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-<p>Because some of the illustration borders are not square they do not
- show as even.</p>
-<p><a href="#Page_61" title="">Page 61</a>&mdash; protraying changed to portraying.</p>
-<p><a href="#Page_113" title="">Page 113</a>&mdash; commerical changed to commercial.</p>
-<p><a href="#Page_121" title="">Page 121</a>&mdash; slipping changed to sipping.</p>
-<p><a href="#Page_141" title="">Page 141</a>&mdash; langauges changed to languages.</p>
-<p><a href="#Page_163" title="">Page 163</a>&mdash; Boulougne changed to Boulogne.</p>
-<p><a href="#Page_169" title="">Page 169</a>&mdash; 1060 changed to 1066.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
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