summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/66829-h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-22 10:41:58 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-22 10:41:58 -0800
commitf371947d86979f38bb12d32912f5eca4dec2ff69 (patch)
treea0f203fb9a9017da76d7412ff8655a6ee0247ed1 /66829-h
Initial content from April 5, 2022
Diffstat (limited to '66829-h')
-rw-r--r--66829-h/66829-h.htm4467
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/back.jpgbin0 -> 316359 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 319860 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/frontispiece.jpgbin0 -> 365792 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p013.jpgbin0 -> 212440 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p021.jpgbin0 -> 210224 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p022.jpgbin0 -> 159032 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p032.jpgbin0 -> 211500 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p033.jpgbin0 -> 197156 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p034.jpgbin0 -> 211816 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p042.jpgbin0 -> 207228 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p044.jpgbin0 -> 201644 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p046.jpgbin0 -> 194704 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p049.jpgbin0 -> 201048 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p053.jpgbin0 -> 190830 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p057.jpgbin0 -> 448652 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p065.jpgbin0 -> 392534 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p070.jpgbin0 -> 198078 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p073.jpgbin0 -> 367306 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p079.jpgbin0 -> 186509 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p081.jpgbin0 -> 208906 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p087.jpgbin0 -> 207258 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p095.jpgbin0 -> 203387 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p096.jpgbin0 -> 180041 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p101.jpgbin0 -> 376741 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p104.jpgbin0 -> 173121 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p119.jpgbin0 -> 373702 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p125.jpgbin0 -> 170308 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p131.jpgbin0 -> 201842 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p147.jpgbin0 -> 365088 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p157.jpgbin0 -> 356774 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p164.jpgbin0 -> 186105 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p178.jpgbin0 -> 205392 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p190.jpgbin0 -> 200551 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p195.jpgbin0 -> 197353 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/p199.jpgbin0 -> 204143 bytes
-rw-r--r--66829-h/images/titlepage.pngbin0 -> 48661 bytes
37 files changed, 4467 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/66829-h/66829-h.htm b/66829-h/66829-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5ebafd3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/66829-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,4467 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html
+PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<!-- This HTML file has been automatically generated from an XML source on 2021-11-27T19:40:44Z using SAXON HE 9.9.1.8 . -->
+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
+<title>“Gentlemen prefer blondes”: the illuminating diary of a professional lady</title>
+<meta name="generator" content="tei2html.xsl, see https://github.com/jhellingman/tei2html">
+<meta name="author" content="Anita Loos (1889–1981)">
+<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg">
+<link rel="schema.DC" href="http://dublincore.org/documents/1998/09/dces/">
+<meta name="DC.Creator" content="Anita Loos (1889–1981)">
+<meta name="DC.Title" content="“Gentlemen prefer blondes”: the illuminating diary of a professional lady">
+<meta name="DC.Language" content="en">
+<meta name="DC.Format" content="text/html">
+<meta name="DC.Publisher" content="Project Gutenberg">
+<style type="text/css"> /* <![CDATA[ */
+html {
+line-height: 1.3;
+}
+body {
+margin: 0;
+}
+main {
+display: block;
+}
+h1 {
+font-size: 2em;
+margin: 0.67em 0;
+}
+hr {
+height: 0;
+overflow: visible;
+}
+pre {
+font-family: monospace, monospace;
+font-size: 1em;
+}
+a {
+background-color: transparent;
+}
+abbr[title] {
+border-bottom: none;
+text-decoration: underline;
+text-decoration: underline dotted;
+}
+b, strong {
+font-weight: bolder;
+}
+code, kbd, samp {
+font-family: monospace, monospace;
+font-size: 1em;
+}
+small {
+font-size: 80%;
+}
+sub, sup {
+font-size: 67%;
+line-height: 0;
+position: relative;
+vertical-align: baseline;
+}
+sub {
+bottom: -0.25em;
+}
+sup {
+top: -0.5em;
+}
+img {
+border-style: none;
+}
+body {
+font-family: serif;
+font-size: 100%;
+text-align: left;
+margin-top: 2.4em;
+}
+div.front, div.body {
+margin-bottom: 7.2em;
+}
+div.back {
+margin-bottom: 2.4em;
+}
+.div0 {
+margin-top: 7.2em;
+margin-bottom: 7.2em;
+}
+.div1 {
+margin-top: 5.6em;
+margin-bottom: 5.6em;
+}
+.div2 {
+margin-top: 4.8em;
+margin-bottom: 4.8em;
+}
+.div3 {
+margin-top: 3.6em;
+margin-bottom: 3.6em;
+}
+.div4 {
+margin-top: 2.4em;
+margin-bottom: 2.4em;
+}
+.div5, .div6, .div7 {
+margin-top: 1.44em;
+margin-bottom: 1.44em;
+}
+.div0:last-child, .div1:last-child, .div2:last-child, .div3:last-child,
+.div4:last-child, .div5:last-child, .div6:last-child, .div7:last-child {
+margin-bottom: 0;
+}
+blockquote div.front, blockquote div.body, blockquote div.back {
+margin-top: 0;
+margin-bottom: 0;
+}
+.divBody .div1:first-child, .divBody .div2:first-child, .divBody .div3:first-child, .divBody .div4:first-child,
+.divBody .div5:first-child, .divBody .div6:first-child, .divBody .div7:first-child {
+margin-top: 0;
+}
+h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, .h1, .h2, .h3, .h4, .h5, .h6 {
+clear: both;
+font-style: normal;
+text-transform: none;
+}
+h3, .h3 {
+font-size: 1.2em;
+}
+h3.label {
+font-size: 1em;
+margin-bottom: 0;
+}
+h4, .h4 {
+font-size: 1em;
+}
+.alignleft {
+text-align: left;
+}
+.alignright {
+text-align: right;
+}
+.alignblock {
+text-align: justify;
+}
+p.tb, hr.tb, .par.tb {
+margin: 1.6em auto;
+text-align: center;
+}
+p.argument, p.note, p.tocArgument, .par.argument, .par.note, .par.tocArgument {
+font-size: 0.9em;
+text-indent: 0;
+}
+p.argument, p.tocArgument, .par.argument, .par.tocArgument {
+margin: 1.58em 10%;
+}
+td.tocDivNum {
+vertical-align: top;
+}
+td.tocPageNum {
+vertical-align: bottom;
+}
+.opener, .address {
+margin-top: 1.6em;
+margin-bottom: 1.6em;
+}
+.addrline {
+margin-top: 0;
+margin-bottom: 0;
+}
+.dateline {
+margin-top: 1.6em;
+margin-bottom: 1.6em;
+text-align: right;
+}
+.salute {
+margin-top: 1.6em;
+margin-left: 3.58em;
+text-indent: -2em;
+}
+.signed {
+margin-top: 1.6em;
+margin-left: 3.58em;
+text-indent: -2em;
+}
+.epigraph {
+font-size: 0.9em;
+width: 60%;
+margin-left: auto;
+}
+.epigraph span.bibl {
+display: block;
+text-align: right;
+}
+.trailer {
+clear: both;
+margin-top: 3.6em;
+}
+span.abbr, abbr {
+white-space: nowrap;
+}
+span.parnum {
+font-weight: bold;
+}
+span.corr, span.gap {
+border-bottom: 1px dotted red;
+}
+span.num, span.trans, span.trans {
+border-bottom: 1px dotted gray;
+}
+span.measure {
+border-bottom: 1px dotted green;
+}
+.ex {
+letter-spacing: 0.2em;
+}
+.sc {
+font-variant: small-caps;
+}
+.asc {
+font-variant: small-caps;
+text-transform: lowercase;
+}
+.uc {
+text-transform: uppercase;
+}
+.tt {
+font-family: monospace;
+}
+.underline {
+text-decoration: underline;
+}
+.overline, .overtilde {
+text-decoration: overline;
+}
+.rm {
+font-style: normal;
+}
+.red {
+color: red;
+}
+hr {
+clear: both;
+border: none;
+border-bottom: 1px solid black;
+width: 45%;
+margin-left: auto;
+margin-right: auto;
+margin-top: 1em;
+text-align: center;
+}
+hr.dotted {
+border-bottom: 2px dotted black;
+}
+hr.dashed {
+border-bottom: 2px dashed black;
+}
+.aligncenter {
+text-align: center;
+}
+h1, h2, .h1, .h2 {
+font-size: 1.44em;
+line-height: 1.5;
+}
+h1.label, h2.label {
+font-size: 1.2em;
+margin-bottom: 0;
+}
+h5, h6 {
+font-size: 1em;
+font-style: italic;
+}
+p, .par {
+text-indent: 0;
+}
+p.firstlinecaps:first-line, .par.firstlinecaps:first-line {
+text-transform: uppercase;
+}
+.hangq {
+text-indent: -0.32em;
+}
+.hangqq {
+text-indent: -0.42em;
+}
+.hangqqq {
+text-indent: -0.84em;
+}
+p.dropcap:first-letter, .par.dropcap:first-letter {
+float: left;
+clear: left;
+margin: 0 0.05em 0 0;
+padding: 0;
+line-height: 0.8;
+font-size: 420%;
+vertical-align: super;
+}
+blockquote, p.quote, div.blockquote, div.argument, .par.quote {
+font-size: 0.9em;
+margin: 1.58em 5%;
+}
+.pageNum a, a.noteRef:hover, a.pseudoNoteRef:hover, a.hidden:hover, a.hidden {
+text-decoration: none;
+}
+.advertisement, .advertisements {
+background-color: #FFFEE0;
+border: black 1px dotted;
+color: #000;
+margin: 2em 5%;
+padding: 1em;
+}
+.footnotes .body, .footnotes .div1 {
+padding: 0;
+}
+.fnarrow {
+color: #AAAAAA;
+font-weight: bold;
+text-decoration: none;
+}
+.fnarrow:hover, .fnreturn:hover {
+color: #660000;
+}
+.fnreturn {
+color: #AAAAAA;
+font-size: 80%;
+font-weight: bold;
+text-decoration: none;
+vertical-align: 0.25em;
+}
+a {
+text-decoration: none;
+}
+a:hover {
+text-decoration: underline;
+background-color: #e9f5ff;
+}
+a.noteRef, a.pseudoNoteRef {
+font-size: 67%;
+line-height: 0;
+position: relative;
+vertical-align: baseline;
+top: -0.5em;
+text-decoration: none;
+margin-left: 0.1em;
+}
+.displayfootnote {
+display: none;
+}
+div.footnotes {
+font-size: 80%;
+margin-top: 1em;
+padding: 0;
+}
+hr.fnsep {
+margin-left: 0;
+margin-right: 0;
+text-align: left;
+width: 25%;
+}
+p.footnote, .par.footnote {
+margin-bottom: 0.5em;
+margin-top: 0.5em;
+}
+p.footnote .fnlabel, .par.footnote .fnlabel {
+float: left;
+min-width: 1.0em;
+margin-left: -0.1em;
+padding-top: 0.9em;
+padding-right: 0.4em;
+}
+.apparatusnote {
+text-decoration: none;
+}
+.apparatusnote:target, .fndiv:target {
+background-color: #eaf3ff;
+}
+table.tocList {
+width: 100%;
+margin-left: auto;
+margin-right: auto;
+border-width: 0;
+border-collapse: collapse;
+}
+td.tocPageNum, td.tocDivNum {
+text-align: right;
+min-width: 10%;
+border-width: 0;
+white-space: nowrap;
+}
+td.tocDivNum {
+padding-left: 0;
+padding-right: 0.5em;
+}
+td.tocPageNum {
+padding-left: 0.5em;
+padding-right: 0;
+}
+td.tocDivTitle {
+width: auto;
+}
+p.tocPart, .par.tocPart {
+margin: 1.58em 0;
+font-variant: small-caps;
+}
+p.tocChapter, .par.tocChapter {
+margin: 1.58em 0;
+}
+p.tocSection, .par.tocSection {
+margin: 0.7em 5%;
+}
+table.tocList td {
+vertical-align: top;
+}
+table.tocList td.tocPageNum {
+vertical-align: bottom;
+}
+table.inner {
+display: inline-table;
+border-collapse: collapse;
+width: 100%;
+}
+td.itemNum {
+text-align: right;
+min-width: 5%;
+padding-right: 0.8em;
+}
+td.innerContainer {
+padding: 0;
+margin: 0;
+}
+.index {
+font-size: 80%;
+}
+.index p {
+text-indent: -1em;
+margin-left: 1em;
+}
+.indexToc {
+text-align: center;
+}
+.transcriberNote {
+background-color: #DDE;
+border: black 1px dotted;
+color: #000;
+font-family: sans-serif;
+font-size: 80%;
+margin: 2em 5%;
+padding: 1em;
+}
+.missingTarget {
+text-decoration: line-through;
+color: red;
+}
+.correctionTable {
+width: 75%;
+}
+.width20 {
+width: 20%;
+}
+.width40 {
+width: 40%;
+}
+p.smallprint, li.smallprint, .par.smallprint {
+color: #666666;
+font-size: 80%;
+}
+span.musictime {
+vertical-align: middle;
+display: inline-block;
+text-align: center;
+}
+span.musictime, span.musictime span.top, span.musictime span.bottom {
+padding: 1px 0.5px;
+font-size: xx-small;
+font-weight: bold;
+line-height: 0.7em;
+}
+span.musictime span.bottom {
+display: block;
+}
+ul {
+list-style-type: none;
+}
+.splitListTable {
+margin-left: 0;
+}
+.numberedItem {
+text-indent: -3em;
+margin-left: 3em;
+}
+.numberedItem .itemNumber {
+float: left;
+position: relative;
+left: -3.5em;
+width: 3em;
+display: inline-block;
+text-align: right;
+}
+.itemGroupTable {
+border-collapse: collapse;
+margin-left: 0;
+}
+.itemGroupTable td {
+padding: 0;
+margin: 0;
+vertical-align: middle;
+}
+.itemGroupBrace {
+padding: 0 0.5em !important;
+}
+.titlePage {
+border: #DDDDDD 2px solid;
+margin: 3em 0 7em 0;
+padding: 5em 10% 6em 10%;
+text-align: center;
+}
+.titlePage .docTitle {
+line-height: 1.7;
+margin: 2em 0 2em 0;
+font-weight: bold;
+}
+.titlePage .docTitle .mainTitle {
+font-size: 1.8em;
+}
+.titlePage .docTitle .subTitle, .titlePage .docTitle .seriesTitle,
+.titlePage .docTitle .volumeTitle {
+font-size: 1.44em;
+}
+.titlePage .byline {
+margin: 2em 0 2em 0;
+font-size: 1.2em;
+line-height: 1.5;
+}
+.titlePage .byline .docAuthor {
+font-size: 1.2em;
+font-weight: bold;
+}
+.titlePage .figure {
+margin: 2em auto;
+}
+.titlePage .docImprint {
+margin: 4em 0 0 0;
+font-size: 1.2em;
+line-height: 1.5;
+}
+.titlePage .docImprint .docDate {
+font-size: 1.2em;
+font-weight: bold;
+}
+div.figure {
+text-align: center;
+}
+.figure {
+margin-left: auto;
+margin-right: auto;
+}
+.floatLeft {
+float: left;
+margin: 10px 10px 10px 0;
+}
+.floatRight {
+float: right;
+margin: 10px 0 10px 10px;
+}
+p.figureHead, .par.figureHead {
+font-size: 100%;
+text-align: center;
+}
+.figAnnotation {
+font-size: 80%;
+position: relative;
+margin: 0 auto;
+}
+.figTopLeft, .figBottomLeft {
+float: left;
+}
+.figTopRight, .figBottomRight {
+float: right;
+}
+.figure p, .figure .par {
+font-size: 80%;
+margin-top: 0;
+text-align: center;
+}
+img {
+border-width: 0;
+}
+td.galleryFigure {
+text-align: center;
+vertical-align: middle;
+}
+td.galleryCaption {
+text-align: center;
+vertical-align: top;
+}
+tr, td, th {
+vertical-align: top;
+}
+tr.bottom, td.bottom, th.bottom {
+vertical-align: bottom;
+}
+td.label, tr.label td {
+font-weight: bold;
+}
+td.unit, tr.unit td {
+font-style: italic;
+}
+td.leftbrace, td.rightbrace {
+vertical-align: middle;
+}
+span.sum {
+padding-top: 2px;
+border-top: solid black 1px;
+}
+table.inlinetable {
+display: inline-table;
+}
+table.borderOutside {
+border-collapse: collapse;
+}
+table.borderOutside td {
+padding-left: 4px;
+padding-right: 4px;
+}
+table.borderOutside .cellHeadTop, table.borderOutside .cellTop {
+border-top: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.borderOutside .cellHeadBottom {
+border-bottom: 1px solid black;
+}
+table.borderOutside .cellBottom {
+border-bottom: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.borderOutside .cellLeft, table.borderOutside .cellHeadLeft {
+border-left: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.borderOutside .cellRight, table.borderOutside .cellHeadRight {
+border-right: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.verticalBorderInside {
+border-collapse: collapse;
+}
+table.verticalBorderInside td {
+padding-left: 4px;
+padding-right: 4px;
+border-left: 1px solid black;
+}
+table.verticalBorderInside .cellHeadTop, table.verticalBorderInside .cellTop {
+border-top: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.verticalBorderInside .cellHeadBottom {
+border-bottom: 1px solid black;
+}
+table.verticalBorderInside .cellBottom {
+border-bottom: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.verticalBorderInside .cellLeft, table.verticalBorderInside .cellHeadLeft {
+border-left: 0 solid black;
+}
+table.borderAll {
+border-collapse: collapse;
+}
+table.borderAll td {
+padding-left: 4px;
+padding-right: 4px;
+border: 1px solid black;
+}
+table.borderAll .cellHeadTop, table.borderAll .cellTop {
+border-top: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.borderAll .cellHeadBottom {
+border-bottom: 1px solid black;
+}
+table.borderAll .cellBottom {
+border-bottom: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.borderAll .cellLeft, table.borderAll .cellHeadLeft {
+border-left: 2px solid black;
+}
+table.borderAll .cellRight, table.borderAll .cellHeadRight {
+border-right: 2px solid black;
+}
+tr.borderTop td, tr.borderTop th, th.borderTop, td.borderTop {
+border-top: 1px solid black !important;
+}
+tr.borderRight td, tr.borderRight th, th.borderRight, td.borderRight {
+border-right: 1px solid black !important;
+}
+tr.borderLeft td, tr.borderLeft th, th.borderLeft, td.borderLeft {
+border-left: 1px solid black !important;
+}
+tr.borderBottom td, tr.borderBottom th, th.borderBottom, td.borderBottom {
+border-bottom: 1px solid black !important;
+}
+tr.borderHorizontal td, tr.borderHorizontal th, th.borderHorizontal, td.borderHorizontal {
+border-top: 1px solid black !important;
+border-bottom: 1px solid black !important;
+}
+tr.borderVertical td, tr.borderVertical th, th.borderVertical, td.borderVertical {
+border-right: 1px solid black !important;
+border-left: 1px solid black !important;
+}
+tr.borderAll td, tr.borderAll th, th.borderAll, td.borderAll {
+border: 1px solid black !important;
+}
+tr.noBorderTop td, tr.noBorderTop th, th.noBorderTop, td.noBorderTop {
+border-top: none !important;
+}
+tr.noBorderRight td, tr.noBorderRight th, th.noBorderRight, td.noBorderRight {
+border-right: none !important;
+}
+tr.noBorderLeft td, tr.noBorderLeft th, th.noBorderLeft, td.noBorderLeft {
+border-left: none !important;
+}
+tr.noBorderBottom td, tr.noBorderBottom th, th.noBorderBottom, td.noBorderBottom {
+border-bottom: none !important;
+}
+tr.noBorderHorizontal td, tr.noBorderHorizontal th, th.noBorderHorizontal, td.noBorderHorizontal {
+border-top: none !important;
+border-bottom: none !important;
+}
+tr.noBorderVertical td, tr.noBorderVertical th, th.noBorderVertical, td.noBorderVertical {
+border-right: none !important;
+border-left: none !important;
+}
+tr.borderAll td, tr.borderAll th, th.borderAll, td.noBorderAll {
+border: none !important;
+}
+.cellDoubleUp {
+border: 0 solid black !important;
+width: 1em;
+}
+td.alignDecimalIntegerPart {
+text-align: right;
+border-right: none !important;
+padding-right: 0 !important;
+margin-right: 0 !important;
+}
+td.alignDecimalFractionPart {
+text-align: left;
+border-left: none !important;
+padding-left: 0 !important;
+margin-left: 0 !important;
+}
+td.alignDecimalNotNumber {
+text-align: center;
+}
+body {
+padding: 1.58em 16%;
+}
+.pageNum {
+display: inline;
+font-size: 8.4pt;
+font-style: normal;
+margin: 0;
+padding: 0;
+position: absolute;
+right: 1%;
+text-align: right;
+letter-spacing: normal;
+}
+.marginnote {
+font-size: 0.8em;
+height: 0;
+left: 1%;
+position: absolute;
+text-indent: 0;
+width: 14%;
+text-align: left;
+}
+.right-marginnote {
+font-size: 0.8em;
+height: 0;
+right: 3%;
+position: absolute;
+text-indent: 0;
+text-align: right;
+width: 11%
+}
+.cut-in-left-note {
+font-size: 0.8em;
+left: 1%;
+float: left;
+text-indent: 0;
+width: 14%;
+text-align: left;
+padding: 0.8em 0.8em 0.8em 0;
+}
+.cut-in-right-note {
+font-size: 0.8em;
+left: 1%;
+float: right;
+text-indent: 0;
+width: 14%;
+text-align: right;
+padding: 0.8em 0 0.8em 0.8em;
+}
+span.tocPageNum, span.flushright {
+position: absolute;
+right: 16%;
+top: auto;
+text-indent: 0;
+}
+.pglink::after {
+content: "\0000A0\01F4D8";
+font-size: 80%;
+font-style: normal;
+font-weight: normal;
+}
+.catlink::after {
+content: "\0000A0\01F4C7";
+font-size: 80%;
+font-style: normal;
+font-weight: normal;
+}
+.exlink::after, .wplink::after, .biblink::after, .qurlink::after, .seclink::after {
+content: "\0000A0\002197\00FE0F";
+color: blue;
+font-size: 80%;
+font-style: normal;
+font-weight: normal;
+}
+.pglink:hover {
+background-color: #DCFFDC;
+}
+.catlink:hover {
+background-color: #FFFFDC;
+}
+.exlink:hover, .wplink:hover, .biblink:hover, .qurlink:hover, .seclin:hover {
+background-color: #FFDCDC;
+}
+body {
+background: #FFFFFF;
+font-family: serif;
+}
+body, a.hidden {
+color: black;
+}
+h1, h2, .h1, .h2 {
+text-align: center;
+font-variant: small-caps;
+font-weight: normal;
+}
+p.byline {
+text-align: center;
+font-style: italic;
+margin-bottom: 2em;
+}
+.div2 p.byline, .div3 p.byline, .div4 p.byline, .div5 p.byline, .div6 p.byline, .div7 p.byline {
+text-align: left;
+}
+.figureHead, .noteRef, .pseudoNoteRef, .marginnote, .right-marginnote, p.legend, .verseNum {
+color: #660000;
+}
+.rightnote, .pageNum, .lineNum, .pageNum a {
+color: #AAAAAA;
+}
+a.hidden:hover, a.noteRef:hover, a.pseudoNoteRef:hover {
+color: red;
+}
+h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
+font-weight: normal;
+}
+table {
+margin-left: auto;
+margin-right: auto;
+}
+.tablecaption {
+text-align: center;
+}
+.arab { font-family: Scheherazade, serif; }
+.aran { font-family: 'Awami Nastaliq', serif; }
+.grek { font-family: 'Charis SIL', serif; }
+.hebr { font-family: Shlomo, 'Ezra SIL', serif; }
+.syrc { font-family: 'Serto Jerusalem', serif; }
+/* CSS rules generated from rendition elements in TEI file */
+.dateentry {
+padding-top: 2em;
+}
+/* CSS rules generated from @rend attributes in TEI file */
+.cover-imagewidth {
+width:492px;
+}
+.xd31e95 {
+text-align:center; font-size:large;
+}
+.frontispiecewidth {
+width:369px;
+}
+.titlepage-imagewidth {
+width:420px;
+}
+.xd31e143 {
+text-align:center;
+}
+.xd31e229 {
+text-align:center; font-size:large; line-height:200%;
+}
+.xd31e237 {
+font-size:x-small;
+}
+.p013width {
+width:280px;
+}
+.p021width {
+width:542px;
+}
+.p022width {
+width:541px;
+}
+.p032width {
+width:537px;
+}
+.p033width {
+width:541px;
+}
+.p034width {
+width:277px;
+}
+.p042width {
+width:277px;
+}
+.p044width {
+width:540px;
+}
+.p046width {
+width:540px;
+}
+.p049width {
+width:536px;
+}
+.p053width {
+width:531px;
+}
+.p057width {
+width:370px;
+}
+.p065width {
+width:367px;
+}
+.p070width {
+width:538px;
+}
+.p073width {
+width:368px;
+}
+.p079width {
+width:538px;
+}
+.p081width {
+width:540px;
+}
+.p087width {
+width:539px;
+}
+.p095width {
+width:537px;
+}
+.p096width {
+width:535px;
+}
+.p101width {
+width:370px;
+}
+.p104width {
+width:544px;
+}
+.p119width {
+width:368px;
+}
+.p125width {
+width:535px;
+}
+.p131width {
+width:543px;
+}
+.p147width {
+width:370px;
+}
+.p157width {
+width:370px;
+}
+.p164width {
+width:538px;
+}
+.p178width {
+width:541px;
+}
+.p190width {
+width:274px;
+}
+.p195width {
+width:539px;
+}
+.p199width {
+width:537px;
+}
+.xd31e1957 {
+text-align:center;
+}
+.backwidth {
+width:469px;
+}
+@media handheld {
+}
+/* ]]> */ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes", by Anita Loos</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+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 will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+
+<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes"</p>
+<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0;'>The Illuminating Diary of a Professional Lady</p>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Anita Loos</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 27, 2021 [eBook #66829]</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</div>
+
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK "GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES" ***</div>
+<div class="front">
+<div class="div1 cover"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
+<p class="first"></p>
+<div class="figure cover-imagewidth"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Original Front Cover." width="492" height="720"></div><p>
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1 frenchtitle"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
+<p class="first xd31e95">“<i>Gentlemen Prefer Blondes</i>”
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1 frontispiece"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
+<p class="first"></p>
+<div class="figure frontispiecewidth"><img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt="“Kissing your hand may make you feel very good but a diamond bracelet lasts forever.”" width="369" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>Kissing your hand may make you feel very good but a diamond bracelet lasts forever.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1 titlepage"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
+<p class="first"></p>
+<div class="figure titlepage-imagewidth"><img src="images/titlepage.png" alt="Original Title Page." width="420" height="720"></div><p>
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="titlePage">
+<div class="docTitle">
+<div class="mainTitle">“<i>Gentlemen Prefer Blondes</i>”</div>
+<div class="subTitle"><i>The Illuminating Diary of a Professional Lady</i></div>
+</div>
+<div class="byline"><i>By</i><br>
+<span class="docAuthor">Anita Loos</span>
+<br>
+<i>Intimately Illustrated by</i><br>
+<span class="docAuthor">RALPH BARTON</span></div>
+<div class="docImprint"><i>NEW YORK</i><br>
+BONI &amp; LIVERIGHT<br>
+<span class="docDate">1925</span></div>
+</div>
+<p></p>
+<div class="div1 copyright"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
+<p class="first xd31e143"><i>Copyright, 1925, by</i><br>
+<span class="sc">The International Magazine Co., Inc.</span><br>
+(<span class="sc">Harper’s <span class="sic">Bazar</span></span>)
+</p>
+<p class="xd31e143"><i>Copyright, 1925, by</i> <span class="sc">Anita Loos</span>
+</p>
+<p class="xd31e143"><i>Printed in the United States of America</i>
+</p>
+<div class="table">
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft cellTop">First printing, November, </td>
+<td class="cellRight cellTop">1925</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Second printing, November, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1925</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Third printing, December, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1925</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Fourth printing, December, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1925</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Fifth printing, January, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1926</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Sixth printing, January, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1926</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Seventh printing, January, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1926</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Eighth printing, February, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1926</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Ninth printing, March, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1926</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Tenth printing, March, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1926</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft">Eleventh printing, April, </td>
+<td class="cellRight">1926</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cellLeft cellBottom">Twelfth printing, April, </td>
+<td class="cellRight cellBottom">1926</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1 dedication"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
+<p class="first xd31e229">To<br>
+JOHN EMERSON
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="toc" class="div1 contents"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">CONTENTS</h2>
+<table class="tocList">
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">CHAPTER</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7">
+</td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">I.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch1" id="xd31e249">Gentlemen Prefer Blondes</a></span> </td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">11</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">II.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch2" id="xd31e259">Fate Keeps on Happening</a></span> </td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">39</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">III.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch3" id="xd31e269">London Is Really Nothing</a></span> </td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">63</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">IV.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch4" id="xd31e279">Paris Is Devine</a></span> </td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">93</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">V.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch5" id="xd31e289">The Central of Europe</a></span> </td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">131</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">VI.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> <span class="sc"><a href="#ch6" id="xd31e299">Brains Are Really Everything</a></span> </td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">175</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb11">[<a href="#pb11">11</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="body">
+<div id="ch1" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e249">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="super">GENTLEMEN<br>
+PREFER BLONDES</h2>
+<h2 class="label">CHAPTER ONE</h2>
+<h2 class="main">GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES</h2>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first dateentry"><i>March 16th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>A gentleman friend and I were dining at the Ritz last evening and he said that if
+I took a pencil and a paper and put down all of my thoughts it would make a book.
+This almost made me smile as what it would really make would be a whole row of <span class="sic" title="Correction: encyclopedias">encyclopediacs</span>. I mean I seem to be thinking practically all of the time. I mean it is my favorite
+recreation and sometimes I sit for hours and do not seem to do anything else but think.
+So this gentleman said a girl with brains ought to do something else with them besides
+think. And he said he ought to know brains when he sees them, because he is in the
+senate and he spends quite a great deal of time in Washington, <span class="sic" title="Correction: D.C.">d. c.</span>, and when he comes into <span class="sic" title="Correction: contact">contract</span> with <span class="pageNum" id="pb12">[<a href="#pb12">12</a>]</span>brains he always notices it. So it might have all blown over but this morning he sent
+me a book. And so when my maid brought it to me, I said to her, “Well, Lulu, here
+is another book and we have not read half the ones we have got yet.” But when I opened
+it and saw that it was all a blank I remembered what my gentleman acquaintance said,
+and so then I realized that it was a diary. So here I am writing a book instead of
+reading one.
+</p>
+<p>But now it is the 16th of March and of course it is <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> late to begin with January, but it does not matter as my gentleman friend, Mr. Eisman,
+was in town practically all of January and February, and when he is in town one day
+seems to be practically the same as the next day.
+</p>
+<p>I mean Mr. Eisman is in the wholesale button profession in Chicago and he is the gentleman
+who is known practically all over Chicago as Gus Eisman the Button King. And he is
+the gentleman who is interested in educating me, so of course he is always coming
+down to New York to see how my brains have improved since the last time. But when
+Mr. Eisman is in New York we always seem to do the same thing and if I wrote down
+one <span class="pageNum" id="pb13">[<a href="#pb13">13</a>]</span>day in my diary, all I would have to do would be to put quotation marks for all other
+days. I mean we always seem to have dinner at the Colony and see a show and go to
+the Trocadero and then Mr. Eisman shows me to my apartment. So of course when a gentleman
+is interested in educating a girl, he likes to stay and talk about the topics of the
+day until quite late, so I am quite fatigued the next day and I do not really get
+up until it is time to dress for dinner at the Colony.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure floatRight p013width"><img src="images/p013.jpg" alt="“It would be strange if I turn out to be an authoress.”" width="280" height="537"><p class="figureHead">“<i>It would be strange if I turn out to be an authoress.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>It would be strange if I turn out to be an authoress. I mean at my home near Little
+Rock, Arkansas, my family all wanted me to do something about my music. Because all
+of my friends said I had talent and they all kept after me and kept after me about
+practising. <span class="pageNum" id="pb14">[<a href="#pb14">14</a>]</span>But some way I never seemed to care so much about practising. I mean I simply could
+not sit for hours and hours at a time practising just for the sake of a career. So
+one day I got quite tempermental and threw the old mandolin clear across the room
+and I have really never touched it since. But writing is different because you do
+not have to learn or practise and it is more <span class="sic" title="Correction: temperamental">tempermental</span> because practising seems to take all the <span class="sic" title="Correction: temperament">temperment</span> out of me. So now I really almost have to smile because I have just noticed that
+I have written clear across two pages onto March 18th, so this will do for today and
+tomorrow. And it just shows how tempermental I am when I get started.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>March 19th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well last evening Dorothy called up and Dorothy said she has met a gentleman who gave
+himself an introduction to her in the lobby of the Ritz. So then they went to luncheon
+and tea and dinner and then they went to a show and then they went to the Trocadero.
+So Dorothy said his name was Lord Cooksleigh but what she really calls him is Coocoo.
+So Dorothy said why don’t you <span class="pageNum" id="pb15">[<a href="#pb15">15</a>]</span>and I and Coocoo go to the Follies tonight and bring Gus along if he is in town? So
+then Dorothy and I had quite a little quarrel because every time that Dorothy mentions
+the subject of Mr. Eisman she calls Mr. Eisman by his first name, and she does not
+seem to realize that when a gentleman who is as important as Mr. Eisman, spends quite
+a lot of money educating a girl, it really does not show reverance to call a gentleman
+by his first name. I mean I never even think of calling Mr. Eisman by his first name,
+but if I want to call him anything at all, I call him “Daddy” and I do not even call
+him “Daddy” if a place seems to be public. So I told Dorothy that Mr. Eisman would
+not be in town until day after tomorrow. So then Dorothy and Coocoo came up and we
+went to the Follies.
+</p>
+<p>So this morning Coocoo called up and he wanted me to luncheon at the Ritz. I mean
+these foreigners really have quite a nerve. Just because Coocoo is an Englishman and
+a Lord he thinks a girl can waste hours on him just for a luncheon at the Ritz, when
+all he does is talk about some exposition he went on to a place called Tibet and after
+talking for hours I found out that all they were was a lot <span class="pageNum" id="pb16">[<a href="#pb16">16</a>]</span>of Chinamen. So I will be quite glad to see Mr. Eisman when he gets in. Because he
+always has something quite interesting to talk about, as for instants the last time
+he was here he presented me with quite a beautiful emerald bracelet. So next week
+is my birthday and he always has some delightful surprise on holidays.
+</p>
+<p>I did intend to luncheon at the Ritz with Dorothy today and of course Coocoo had to
+spoil it, as I told him that I could not luncheon with him today, because my brother
+was in town on business and had the mumps, so I really could not leave him alone.
+Because of course if I went to the Ritz now I would bump into Coocoo. But I sometimes
+almost have to smile at my own imagination, because of course I have not got any brother
+and I have not even thought of the mumps for years. I mean it is no wonder that I
+can write.
+</p>
+<p>So the reason I thought I would take luncheon at the Ritz was because Mr. Chaplin
+is at the Ritz and I always like to renew old acquaintances, because I met Mr. Chaplin
+once when we were both working on the same lot in Hollywood and I am sure he would
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb17">[<a href="#pb17">17</a>]</span>remember me. Gentlemen always seem to remember blondes. I mean the only career I would
+like to be besides an authoress is a cinema star and I was doing quite well in the
+cinema when Mr. Eisman made me give it all up. Because of course when a gentleman
+takes such a friendly interest in educating a girl as Mr. Eisman does, you like to
+show that you appreciate it, and he is against a girl being in the cinema because
+his mother is authrodox.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>March 20th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Mr. Eisman gets in tomorrow to be here in time for my birthday. So I thought it would
+really be delightful to have at least one good time before Mr. Eisman got in, so last
+evening I had some literary gentlemen in to spend the evening because Mr. Eisman always
+likes me to have literary people in and out of the apartment. I mean he is quite anxious
+for a girl to improve her mind and his greatest interest in me is because I always
+seem to want to improve my mind and not waste any time. And Mr. Eisman likes me to
+have what the French people call a “salo” which means that people all get together
+in <span class="pageNum" id="pb18">[<a href="#pb18">18</a>]</span>the evening and improve their minds. So I invited all of the brainy gentlemen I could
+think up. So I thought up a gentleman who is the proffessor of all of the economics
+up at Columbia College, and the editor who is the famous editor of the New York Transcript
+and another gentleman who is a famous playright who writes very, very famous plays
+that are all about Life. I mean anybody would recognize his name but it always seems
+to slip my memory because all of we real friends of his only call him Sam. So Sam
+asked if he could bring a gentleman who writes novels from England, so I said yes,
+so he brought him. And then we all got together and I called up Gloria and Dorothy
+and the gentleman brought their own liquor. So of course the place was a wreck this
+morning and Lulu and I worked like proverbial dogs to get it cleaned up, but Heaven
+knows how long it will take to get the chandelier fixed.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>March 22nd</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well my birthday has come and gone but it was really quite depressing. I mean it seems
+to me a gentleman who has a friendly interest in educating a girl like Gus Eisman,
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb19">[<a href="#pb19">19</a>]</span>would want her to have the biggest square cut diamond in New York. I mean I must say
+I was quite disappointed when he came to the apartment with a little thing you could
+hardly see. So I told him I thought it was quite cute, but I had quite a headache
+and I had better stay in a dark room all day and I told him I would see him the next
+day, perhaps. Because even Lulu thought it was quite small and she said, if she was
+I, she really would do something definite and she said she always believed in the
+old addage, “Leave them while you’re looking good.” But he came in at dinner time
+with really a very very beautiful bracelet of square cut diamonds so I was quite cheered
+up. So then we had dinner at the Colony and we went to a show and supper at the Trocadero
+as usual whenever he is in town. But I will give him credit that he realized how small
+it was. I mean he kept talking about how bad business was and the button profession
+was full of bolshevicks who make nothing but trouble. Because Mr. Eisman feels that
+the country is really on the verge of the bolshevicks and I become quite worried.
+I mean if the bolshevicks do get in, there is only one gentleman who could handle
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb20">[<a href="#pb20">20</a>]</span>them and that is Mr. D.&nbsp;W. Griffith. Because I will never forget when Mr. Griffith
+was directing Intolerance. I mean it was my last cinema just before Mr. Eisman made
+me give up my career and I was playing one of the girls that fainted at the battle
+when all of the gentlemen fell off the tower. And when I saw how Mr. Griffith handled
+all of those mobs in Intolerance I realized that he could do anything, and I really
+think that the government of America ought to tell Mr. Griffith to get all ready if
+the bolshevicks start to do it.
+</p>
+<p>Well I forgot to mention that the English gentleman who writes novels seems to have
+taken quite an interest in me, as soon as he found out that I was literary. I mean
+he has called up every day and I went to tea twice with him. So he has sent me a whole
+complete set of books for my birthday by a gentleman called Mr. Conrad. They all seem
+to be about ocean travel although I have not had time to more than glance through
+them. I have always liked novels about ocean travel ever since I posed for Mr. Christie
+for the front cover of a novel about ocean travel by McGrath because I always say
+that a girl <span class="pageNum" id="pb21">[<a href="#pb21">21</a>]</span>never really looks as well as she does on board a steamship, or even a yacht.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p021width"><img src="images/p021.jpg" alt="“He sent me a set of books by a gentleman called Mr. Conrad. They all seem to be about ocean travel.”" width="542" height="275"><p class="figureHead">“<i>He sent me a set of books by a gentleman called Mr. Conrad. They all seem to be about
+ocean travel.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So the English gentleman’s name is Mr. Gerald Lamson as those who have read his novels
+would know. And he also sent me some of his own novels and they all seem to be about
+middle age English gentlemen who live in the country over in London and seem to ride
+bicycles, which seems quite different from America, except at Palm Beach. So I told
+Mr. Lamson how I write down all of my thoughts and he said he knew I had something
+to me from the first minute he saw me and when we become better acquainted I am going
+to let him read my diary. I mean I even <span class="pageNum" id="pb22">[<a href="#pb22">22</a>]</span>told Mr. Eisman about him and he is quite pleased. Because of course Mr. Lamson is
+quite famous and it seems Mr. Eisman has read all of his novels going to and fro on
+the trains and Mr. Eisman is always anxious to meet famous people and take them to
+the Ritz to dinner on Saturday night. But of course I did not tell Mr. Eisman that
+I am really getting quite a little crush on Mr. Lamson, which I really believe I am,
+but Mr. Eisman thinks my interest in him is more literary.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p022width"><img src="images/p022.jpg" alt="“I am really getting quite a little crush on Mr. Lamson but Mr. Eisman thinks my interest in him is more literary.”" width="541" height="274"><p class="figureHead">“<i>I am really getting quite a little crush on Mr. Lamson but Mr. Eisman thinks my interest
+in him is more literary.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>March 30th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>At last Mr. Eisman has left on the 20th Century and I must say I am quite fatigued
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb23">[<a href="#pb23">23</a>]</span>and a little rest will be quite welcome. I mean I do not mind staying out late every
+night if I dance, but Mr. Eisman is really not such a good dancer so most of the time
+we just sit and drink some champagne or have a bite to eat and of course I do not
+dance with anyone else when I am out with Mr. Eisman. But Mr. Eisman and Gerry, as
+Mr. Lamson wants me to call him, became quite good friends and we had several evenings,
+all three together. So now that Mr. Eisman is out of town at last, Gerry and I are
+going out together this evening and Gerry said not to dress up, because Gerry seems
+to like me more for my soul. So I really had to tell Gerry that if all the gentlemen
+were like he seems to be, Madame Frances’ whole dress making establishment would have
+to go out of business. But Gerry does not like a girl to be nothing else but a doll,
+but he likes her to bring in her husband’s slippers every evening and make him forget
+what he has gone through.
+</p>
+<p>But before Mr. Eisman went to Chicago he told me that he is going to Paris this summer
+on professional business and I think he intends to present me with a trip to Paris
+as <span class="pageNum" id="pb24">[<a href="#pb24">24</a>]</span>he says there is nothing so educational as traveling. I mean it did worlds of good
+to Dorothy when she went abroad last spring and I never get tired of hearing her telling
+how the merry-go-rounds in Paris have pigs instead of horses. But I really do not
+know whether to be thrilled or not because, of course, if I go to Paris I will have
+to leave Gerry and both Gerry and I have made up our minds not to be separated from
+one another from now on.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>March 31st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Last night Gerry and I had dinner at quite a quaint place where we had roast beef
+and baked potato. I mean he always wants me to have food which is what he calls “nourishing”
+which most gentlemen never seem to think about. So then we took a hansom cab and drove
+for hours around the park because Gerry said the air would be good for me. It is really
+very sweet to have some one think of all those things that gentlemen hardly ever seem
+to think about. So then we talked quite a lot. I mean Gerry knows how to draw a girl
+out and I told him things that I really would not even put in my diary. So when <span class="pageNum" id="pb25">[<a href="#pb25">25</a>]</span>he heard all about my life he became quite depressed and we both had tears in our
+eyes. Because he said he never dreamed a girl could go through so much as I, and come
+out so sweet and not made bitter by it all. I mean Gerry thinks that most gentlemen
+are brutes and hardly ever think about a girl’s soul.
+</p>
+<p>So it seems that Gerry has had quite a lot of trouble himself and he can not even
+get married on account of his wife. He and she have never been in love with each other
+but she was a suffragette and asked him to marry her, so what could he do? So we rode
+all around the park until quite late talking and philosophizing quite a lot and I
+finally told him that I thought, after all, that bird life was the highest form of
+civilization. So Gerry calls me his little thinker and I really would not be surprised
+if all of my thoughts will give him quite a few ideas for his novels. Because Gerry
+says he has never seen a girl of my personal appearance with so many brains. And he
+had almost given up looking for his ideal when our paths seemed to cross each other
+and I told him I really thought a thing like that was nearly always the result of
+fate.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb26">[<a href="#pb26">26</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So Gerry says that I remind him quite a lot of Helen of Troy, who was of Greek extraction.
+But the only Greek I know is a Greek gentleman by the name of Mr. Georgopolis who
+is really quite wealthy and he is what Dorothy and I call a “Shopper” because you
+can always call him up at any hour and ask him to go shopping and he is always quite
+delighted, which very few gentlemen seem to be. And he never seems to care how much
+anything costs. I mean Mr. Georgopolis is also quite cultured, as I know quite a few
+gentlemen who can speak to a waiter in French but Mr. Georgopolis can also speak to
+a waiter in Greek which very few gentlemen seem to be able to do.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 1st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>I am taking special pains with my diary from now on as I am really writing it for
+Gerry. I mean he and I are going to read it together some evening in front of the
+fireplace. But Gerry leaves this evening for Boston as he has to lecture about all
+of his works at Boston, but he will rush right back as soon as possible. So I am going
+to spend all of my time improving myself while he is <span class="pageNum" id="pb27">[<a href="#pb27">27</a>]</span>gone. And this afternoon we are both going to a museum on 5th Avenue, because Gerry
+wants to show me a very very beautiful cup made by an antique jeweler called Mr. Cellini
+and he wants me to read Mr. Cellini’s life which is a very very fine book and not
+dull while he is in Boston.
+</p>
+<p>So the famous playright friend of mine who is called Sam called up this morning and
+he wanted me to go to a literary party tonight that he and some other literary gentlemen
+are giving to Florence Mills in Harlem but Gerry does not want me to go with Sam as
+Sam always insists on telling riskay stories. But personally I am quite broad minded
+and I always say that I do not mind a riskay story as long as it is really funny.
+I mean I have a great sense of humor. But Gerry says Sam does not always select and
+choose his stories and he just as soon I did not go out with him. So I am going to
+stay home and read the book by Mr. Cellini instead, because, after all, the only thing
+I am really interested in, is improving my mind. So I am going to do nothing else
+but improve my mind while Gerry is in Boston. I mean I just received a cable from
+Willie Gwynn <span class="pageNum" id="pb28">[<a href="#pb28">28</a>]</span>who arrives from Europe tomorrow, but I am not even going to bother to see him. He
+is a sweet boy but he never gets anywhere and I am not going to waste my time on such
+as him, after meeting a gentleman like Gerry.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 2nd</i>:
+</p>
+<p>I seem to be quite depressed this morning as I always am when there is nothing to
+put my mind to. Because I decided not to read the book by Mr. Cellini. I mean it was
+quite amuseing in spots because it was really quite riskay but the spots were not
+so close together and I never seem to like to always be hunting clear through a book
+for the spots I am looking for, especially when there are really not so many spots
+that seem to be so amuseing after all. So I did not waste my time on it but this morning
+I told Lulu to let all of the house work go and spend the day reading a book entitled
+“Lord Jim” and then tell me all about it, so that I would improve my mind while Gerry
+is away. But when I got her the book I nearly made a mistake and gave her a book by
+the title of “The Nigger of the Narcissus” which really would have hurt her feelings.
+I mean I do not know why authors <span class="pageNum" id="pb29">[<a href="#pb29">29</a>]</span>cannot say “Negro” instead of “Nigger” as they have their feelings just the same as
+we have.
+</p>
+<p>Well I just got a telegram from Gerry that he will not be back until tomorrow and
+also some orchids from Willie Gwynn, so I may as well go to the theatre with Willie
+tonight to keep from getting depressed, as he really is a sweet boy after all. I mean
+he never really does anything obnoxious. And it is quite depressing to stay at home
+and do nothing but read, unless you really have a book that is worth bothering about.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 3rd</i>:
+</p>
+<p>I was really so depressed this morning that I was even glad to get a letter from Mr.
+Eisman. Because last night Willie Gwynn came to take me to the Follies, but he was
+so intoxicated that I had to telephone his club to send around a taxi to take him
+home. So that left me alone with Lulu at nine o’clock with nothing to do, so I put
+in a telephone call for Boston to talk to Gerry but it never went through. So Lulu
+tried to teach me how to play mah jong, but I really could not keep my mind on it
+because I was so depressed. <span class="pageNum" id="pb30">[<a href="#pb30">30</a>]</span>So today I think I had better go over to Madame Frances and order some new evening
+gowns to cheer me up.
+</p>
+<p>Well Lulu just brought me a telegram from Gerry that he will be in this afternoon,
+but I must not meet him at the station on account of all of the reporters who always
+meet him at the station wherever he comes from. But he says he will come right up
+to see me as he has something to talk about.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 4th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>What an evening we had last evening. I mean it seems that Gerry is madly in love with
+me. Because all of the time he was in Boston lecturing to the womens clubs he said,
+as he looked over the faces of all those club women in Boston, he never realized I
+was so beautiful. And he said that there was only one in all the world and that was
+me. But it seems that Gerry thinks that Mr. Eisman is terrible and that no good can
+come of our friendship. I mean I was quite surprised, as they both seemed to get along
+quite well together, but it seems that Gerry never wants me to see Mr. Eisman again.
+And he wants me to give up everything and <span class="pageNum" id="pb31">[<a href="#pb31">31</a>]</span>study French and he will get a divorce and we will be married. Because Gerry does
+not seem to like the kind of life all of us lead in New York and he wants me to go
+home to papa in Arkansas and he will send me books to read so that I will not get
+lonesome there. And he gave me his uncle’s Masonic ring, which came down from the
+time of Soloman and which he never even lets his wife wear, for our engagement ring,
+and this afternoon a lady friend of his is going to bring me a new system she thought
+up of how to learn French. But some way I still seem to be depressed. I mean I could
+not sleep all night thinking of the terrible things Gerry said about New York and
+about Mr. Eisman. Of course I can understand Gerry being jealous of any gentleman
+friend of mine and of course I never really thought that Mr. Eisman was Rudolph Valentino,
+but Gerry said it made him cringe to think of a sweet girl like I having a friendship
+with Mr. Eisman. So it really made me feel quite depressed. I mean Gerry likes to
+talk quite a lot and I always think a lot of talk is depressing and worries your brains
+with things you never even think of when you are busy. But so <span class="pageNum" id="pb32">[<a href="#pb32">32</a>]</span>long as Gerry does not mind me going out with other gentlemen when they have something
+to give you mentally, I am going to luncheon with Eddie Goldmark of the Goldmark Films
+who is always wanting me to sign a contract to go into the cinema. Because Mr. Goldmark
+is madly in love with Dorothy and Dorothy is always wanting me to go back in the cinema
+because Dorothy says that she will go if I will go.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p032width"><img src="images/p032.jpg" alt="“He said it made him cringe to think of a sweet girl like I having a friendship with Mr. Eisman.”" width="537" height="274"><p class="figureHead">“<i>He said it made him cringe to think of a sweet girl like I having a friendship with
+Mr. Eisman.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 6th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well I finally wrote Mr. Eisman that I was going to get married and it seems that
+he is coming on at once as he would probably <span class="pageNum" id="pb33">[<a href="#pb33">33</a>]</span>like to give me his advice. Getting married is really quite serious and Gerry talks
+to me for hours and hours about it. I mean he never seems to get tired of talking
+and he does not seem to even want to go to shows or dance or do anything else but
+talk, and if I don’t really have something definite to put my mind on soon I will
+scream.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 7th</i>:
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p033width"><img src="images/p033.jpg" alt="“He said I would be dragged into the scandal of a divorce court and get my name smirched.”" width="541" height="275"><p class="figureHead">“<i>He said I would be dragged into the scandal of a divorce court and get my name smirched.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure floatLeft p034width"><img src="images/p034.jpg" alt="“So I am sailing for France and London on Tuesday and taking Dorothy with me and Mr. Eisman will see us there later.”" width="277" height="535"><p class="figureHead">“<i>So I am sailing for France and London on Tuesday and taking Dorothy with me and Mr.
+Eisman will see us there later.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>Well Mr. Eisman arrived this morning and he and I had quite a long talk, and after
+all I think he is right. Because here is the first real opportunity I have ever really
+had. I mean to go to Paris and broaden out and <span class="pageNum" id="pb34">[<a href="#pb34">34</a>]</span>improve my writing, and why should I give it up to marry an author, where he is the
+whole thing and all I would be would be the wife of Gerald Lamson? And on top of that
+I would have to be dragged into the scandal of a divorce court and get my name smirched.
+So Mr. Eisman said that opportunities come <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> seldom in a girls life for me to give up the first one I have really ever had. So
+I am sailing for France and London on Tuesday and taking Dorothy with me and Mr. Eisman
+says that he will see us there later. So Dorothy knows all of the ropes and she can
+get along in Paris just as though she knew French and besides she knows a French gentleman
+who was born and raised there, who <span class="pageNum" id="pb35">[<a href="#pb35">35</a>]</span>speaks it like a native and knows Paris like a book. And Dorothy says that when we
+get to London nearly everybody speaks English anyway. So it is quite lucky that Mr.
+Lamson is out lecturing in Cincinnati and he will not be back until Wednesday and
+I can send him a letter and tell him that I have to go to Europe now but I will see
+him later perhaps. So anyway I will be spared listening to any more of his depressing
+conversation. So Mr. Eisman gave me quite a nice string of pearls and he gave Dorothy
+a diamond pin and we all went to the Colony for dinner and we all went to a show and
+supper at the Trocadero and we all spent quite a pleasant evening.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb39">[<a href="#pb39">39</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch2" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e259">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="label">CHAPTER TWO</h2>
+<h2 class="main">FATE KEEPS ON HAPPENING</h2>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first dateentry"><i>April 11th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well Dorothy and I are really on the ship sailing to Europe as anyone could tell by
+looking at the ocean. I always love the ocean. I mean I always love a ship and I really
+love the <i>Majestic</i> because you would not know it was a ship because it is just like being at the Ritz,
+and the steward says the ocean is not so obnoxious this month as it generally is.
+So Mr. Eisman is going to meet us next month in Paris because he has to be there on
+business. I mean he always says that there is really no place to see the latest styles
+in buttons like Paris.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy is out taking a walk up and down the deck with a gentleman she met on the
+steps, but I am not going to waste my time going around with gentlemen because if
+I did nothing but go around I would not finish my diary or read good books which I
+am always reading to improve my mind. But Dorothy really does not care about her <span class="pageNum" id="pb40">[<a href="#pb40">40</a>]</span>mind and I always scold her because she does nothing but waste her time by going around
+with gentlemen who do not have anything, when Eddie Goldmark of the Goldmark Films
+is really quite wealthy and can make a girl delightful presents. But she does nothing
+but waste her time and yesterday, which was really the day before we sailed, she would
+not go to luncheon with Mr. Goldmark but she went to luncheon to meet a gentleman
+called Mr. Mencken from Baltimore who really only prints a green magazine which has
+not even got any pictures in it. But Mr. Eisman is always saying that every girl does
+not want to get ahead and get educated like me.
+</p>
+<p>So Mr. Eisman and Lulu come down to the boat to see me off and Lulu cried quite a
+lot. I mean I really believe she could not care any more for me if she was light and
+not colored. Lulu has had a very sad life because when she was quite young a pullman
+porter fell madly in love with her. So she believed him and he lured her away from
+her home to Ashtabula and deceived her there. So she finally found out that she had
+been deceived and she really was broken hearted and when she <span class="pageNum" id="pb41">[<a href="#pb41">41</a>]</span>tried to go back home she found out that it was <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> late because her best girl friend, who she had always trusted, had stolen her husband
+and he would not take Lulu back. So I have always said to her she could always work
+for me and she is going to take care of the apartment until I get back, because I
+would not sublet the apartment because Dorothy sublet her apartment when she went
+to Europe last year and the gentleman who sublet the apartment allowed girls to pay
+calls on him who were not nice.
+</p>
+<p>Mr. Eisman has litereally filled our room with flowers and the steward has had quite
+a hard time to find enough vases to put them into. I mean the steward said he knew
+as soon as he saw Dorothy and I that he would have quite a heavy run on vases. And
+of course Mr. Eisman has sent me quite a lot of good books as he always does, because
+he always knows that good books are always welcome. So he has sent me quite a large
+book of Etiquette as he says there is quite a lot of Etiquette in England and London
+and it would be a good thing for a girl to learn. So I am going to take it on the
+deck after luncheon and read it, because I would <span class="pageNum" id="pb42">[<a href="#pb42">42</a>]</span>often like to know what a girl ought to do when a gentleman she has just met, says
+something to her in a taxi. Of course I always become quite vexed but I always believe
+in giving a gentleman another chance.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure floatLeft p042width"><img src="images/p042.jpg" alt="“The steward said he knew as soon as he saw Dorothy and I that he would have quite a heavy run on vases.”" width="277" height="535"><p class="figureHead">“<i>The steward said he knew as soon as he saw Dorothy and I that he would have quite
+a heavy run on vases.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So now the steward tells me it is luncheon time, so I will go upstairs as the gentleman
+Dorothy met on the steps has invited us to luncheon in the Ritz, which is a special
+dining room on the ship where you can spend quite a lot of money because they really
+give away the food in the other dining room.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 12th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>I am going to stay in bed this morning as I am quite upset as I saw a gentleman <span class="pageNum" id="pb43">[<a href="#pb43">43</a>]</span>who quite upset me. I am not really sure it was the gentleman, as I saw him at quite
+a distants in the bar, but if it really is the gentleman it shows that when a girl
+has a lot of fate in her life it is sure to keep on happening. So when I thought I
+saw this gentleman I was with Dorothy and Major Falcon, who is the gentleman Dorothy
+met on the steps, and Major Falcon noticed that I became upset, so he wanted me to
+tell him what was the matter, but it is really so terrible that I would not want to
+tell anyone. So I said good night to Major Falcon and I left him with Dorothy and
+I went down to our room and did nothing but cry and send the steward for some champagne
+to cheer me up. I mean champagne always makes me feel philosophical because it makes
+me realize that when a girl’s life is as full of fate as mine seems to be, there is
+nothing else to do about it. So this morning the steward brought me my coffee and
+quite a large pitcher of ice water so I will stay in bed and not have any more champagne
+until luncheon time.
+</p>
+<p>Dorothy never has any fate in her life and she does nothing but waste her time and
+I really wonder if I did right to bring her with <span class="pageNum" id="pb44">[<a href="#pb44">44</a>]</span>me and not Lulu. I mean she really gives gentlemen a bad impression as she talks quite
+a lot of slang. Because when I went up yesterday to meet she and Major Falcon for
+luncheon, I overheard her say to Major Falcon that she really liked to become intoxicated
+once in a “dirty” while. Only she did not say intoxicated, but she really said a slang
+word that means intoxicated and I am always having to tell her that “dirty” is a slang
+word and she really should not say “dirty.”
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p044width"><img src="images/p044.jpg" alt="“I overheard Dorothy tell Major Falcon that she liked to become intoxicated once in a dirty while.”" width="540" height="271"><p class="figureHead">“<i>I overheard Dorothy tell Major Falcon that she liked to become intoxicated once in
+a dirty while.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>Major Falcon is really quite a delightful gentleman for an Englishman. I mean he really
+spends quite a lot of money and we had quite a delightful luncheon and dinner in the
+Ritz until I thought I saw the gentleman who <span class="pageNum" id="pb45">[<a href="#pb45">45</a>]</span>upset me and I am so upset I think I will get dressed and go up on the deck and see
+if it really is the one I think it is. I mean there is nothing else for me to do as
+I have finished writing in my diary for today and I have decided not to read the book
+of Ettiquette as I glanced through it and it does not seem to have anything in it
+that I would care to know because it wastes quite a lot of time telling you what to
+call a Lord and all the Lords I have met have told me what to call them and it is
+generally some quite cute name like Coocoo whose real name is really Lord Cooksleigh.
+So I will not waste my time on such a book. But I wish I did not feel so upset about
+the gentleman I think I saw.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p046width"><img src="images/p046.jpg" alt="“So Mr. Ginsberg changed his name to Mr. Mountginz which he really thinks is more aristocratic.”" width="540" height="271"><p class="figureHead">“<i>So Mr. Ginsberg changed his name to Mr. Mountginz which he really thinks is more aristocratic.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 13th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>It really is the gentleman I thought I saw. I mean when I found out it was the gentleman
+my heart really stopped. Because it all brought back things that anybody does not
+like to remember, no matter who they are. So yesterday when I went up on the deck
+to see if I could see the gentleman and see if it really was him, I met quite a delightful
+gentleman who I met once at a party called <span class="pageNum" id="pb46">[<a href="#pb46">46</a>]</span>Mr. Ginzberg. Only his name is not Mr. Ginzberg any more because a gentleman in London
+called Mr. Battenburg, who is some relation to some king, changed his name to Mr.
+Mountbatten which Mr. Ginzberg says really means the same thing after all. So Mr.
+Ginsberg changed his name to Mr. Mountginz which he really thinks is more aristocratic.
+So we walked around the deck and we met the gentleman face to face and I really saw
+it was him and he really saw it was me. I mean his face became so red it was almost
+a picture. So I was so upset I said good-bye to Mr. Mountginz and I started to rush
+right down to my room and cry. But when I was going down the steps, I bumped right
+into Major Falcon <span class="pageNum" id="pb47">[<a href="#pb47">47</a>]</span>who noticed that I was upset. So Major Falcon made me go to the Ritz and have some
+champagne and tell him all about it.
+</p>
+<p>So then I told Major Falcon about the time in Arkansas when Papa sent me to Little
+Rock to study how to become a stenographer. I mean Papa and I had quite a little quarrel
+because Papa did not like a gentleman who used to pay calls on me in the park and
+Papa thought it would do me good to get away for awhile. So I was in the business
+colledge in Little Rock for about a week when a gentleman called Mr. Jennings paid
+a call on the business colledge because he wanted to have a new stenographer. So he
+looked over all we colledge girls and he picked me out. So he told our teacher that
+he would help me finish my course in his office because he was only a lawyer and I
+really did not have to know so much. So Mr. Jennings helped me quite a lot and I stayed
+in his office about a year when I found out that he was not the kind of a gentleman
+that a young girl is safe with. I mean one evening when I went to pay a call on him
+at his apartment, I found a girl there who really was famous all over Little Rock
+for not <span class="pageNum" id="pb48">[<a href="#pb48">48</a>]</span>being nice. So when I found out that girls like that paid calls on Mr. Jennings I
+had quite a bad case of histerics and my mind was really a blank and when I came out
+of it, it seems that I had a revolver in my hand and it seems that the revolver had
+shot Mr. Jennings.
+</p>
+<p>So this gentleman on the boat was really the District Attorney who was at the trial
+and he really was quite harsh at the trial and he called me names that I would not
+even put in my diary. Because everyone at the trial except the District Attorney was
+really lovely to me and all the gentlemen in the jury all cried when my lawyer pointed
+at me and told them that they practically all had had either a mother or a sister.
+So the jury was only out three minutes and then they came back and acquitted me and
+they were all so lovely that I really had to kiss all of them and when I kissed the
+judge he had tears in his eyes and he took me right home to his sister. I mean it
+was when Mr. Jennings became shot that I got the idea to go into the cinema, so Judge
+Hibbard got me a ticket to Hollywood. So it was Judge Hibbard who really gave me my
+name because <span class="pageNum" id="pb49">[<a href="#pb49">49</a>]</span>he did not like the name I had because he said a girl ought to have a name that ought
+to express her personality. So he said my name ought to be Lorelei which is the name
+of a girl who became famous for sitting on a rock in Germany, So I was in Hollywood
+in the cinema when I met Mr. Eisman and he said that a girl with my brains ought not
+to be in the cinema but she ought to be educated, so he took me out of the cinema
+so he could educate me.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p049width"><img src="images/p049.jpg" alt="“So when they acquitted me I kissed the judge and they all had tears in their eyes.”" width="536" height="273"><p class="figureHead">“<i>So when they acquitted me I kissed the judge and they all had tears in their eyes.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So Major Falcon was really quite interested in everything I talked about, because
+he said it was quite a co-instance because this District Attorney, who is called Mr.
+Bartlett, is now working for the government of America <span class="pageNum" id="pb50">[<a href="#pb50">50</a>]</span>and he is on his way to a place called Vienna on some business for Uncle Sam that
+is quite a great secret and Mr. Falcon would like very much to know what the secret
+is, because the Government in London sent him to America especially to find out what
+it was. Only of course Mr. Bartlett does not know who Major Falcon is, because it
+is such a great secret, but Major Falcon can tell me, because he knows who he can
+trust. So Major Falcon says he thinks a girl like I ought to forgive and forget what
+Mr. Bartlett called me and he wants to bring us together and he says he thinks Mr.
+Bartlett would talk to me quite a lot when he really gets to know me and I forgive
+him for that time in Little Rock. Because it would be quite romantic for Mr. Bartlett
+and I to become friendly, and gentlemen who work for Uncle Sam generally like to become
+romantic with girls. So he is going to bring us together on the deck after dinner
+tonight and I am going to forgive him and talk with him quite a lot, because why should
+a girl hold a grudge against a gentleman who had to do it. So Major Falcon brought
+me quite a large bottle of perfume and a quite cute <span class="pageNum" id="pb51">[<a href="#pb51">51</a>]</span>imitation of quite a large size dog in the little shop which is on board the boat.
+I mean Major Falcon really knows how to cheer a girl up quite a lot and so tonight
+I am going to make it all up with Mr. Bartlett.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 14th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well Mr. Bartlett and I made it all up last night and we are going to be the best
+of friends and talk quite a lot. So when I went down to my room quite late Major Falcon
+came down to see if I and Mr. Bartlett were really going to be friends because he
+said a girl with brains like I ought to have lots to talk about with a gentleman with
+brains like Mr. Bartlett who knows all of Uncle Sam’s secrets.
+</p>
+<p>So I told Major Falcon how Mr. Bartlett thinks that he and I seem to be like a play,
+because all the time he was calling me all those names in Little Rock he really thought
+I was. So when he found out that I turned out not to be, he said he always thought
+that I only used my brains against gentlemen and really had quite a cold heart. But
+now he thinks I ought to write a play about how he called me all those names in Little
+Rock and <span class="pageNum" id="pb52">[<a href="#pb52">52</a>]</span>then, after seven years, we became friendly.
+</p>
+<p>So I told Major Falcon that I told Mr. Bartlett I would like to write the play but
+I really did not have time as it takes quite a lot of time to write my diary and read
+good books. So Mr. Bartlett did not know that I read books which is quite a co-instance
+because he reads them to. So he is going to bring me a book of philosophy this afternoon
+called “Smile, Smile, Smile” which all the brainy senators in Washington are reading
+which cheers you up quite a lot.
+</p>
+<p>So I told Major Falcon that having a friendship with Mr. <span class="sic" title="Correction: Bartlett">Barlett</span> was really quite enervating because Mr. Bartlett does not drink anything and the
+less anybody says about his dancing the better. But he did ask me to dine at his table,
+which is not in the Ritz and I told him I could not, but Major Falcon told me I ought
+to, but I told Major Falcon that there was a limit to almost everything. So I am going
+to stay in my room until luncheon and I am going to luncheon in the Ritz with Mr.
+Mountginz who really knows how to treat a girl.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p053width"><img src="images/p053.jpg" alt="“The steward has had quite a sad life and he likes to tell me all about himself.”" width="531" height="267"><p class="figureHead">“<i>The steward has had quite a sad life and he likes to tell me all about himself.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>Dorothy is up on the deck wasting quite a lot of time with a gentleman who is <span class="pageNum" id="pb53">[<a href="#pb53">53</a>]</span>only a tennis champion. So I am going to ring for the steward and have some champagne
+which is quite good for a person on a boat. The steward is really quite a nice boy
+and he has had quite a sad life and he likes to tell me all about himself. I mean
+it seems that he was arrested in Flatbush because he promised a gentleman that he
+would bring him some very very good scotch and they mistook him for a bootlegger.
+So it seems they put him in a prison and they put him in a cell with two other gentlemen
+who were very, very famous burglars. I mean they really had their pictures in all
+the newspapers and everybody was talking about them. So my steward, whose real name
+is Fred, was <span class="pageNum" id="pb54">[<a href="#pb54">54</a>]</span>very very proud to be in the same cell with such famous burglars. So when they asked
+him what he was in for, he did not like to tell them that he was only a bootlegger,
+so he told them that he set fire to a house and burned up quite a large family in
+Oklahoma. So everything would have gone alright except that the police had put a dictaphone
+in the cell and used it all against him and he could not get out until they had investigated
+all the fires in Oklahoma. So I always think that it is much more educational to talk
+to a boy like Fred who has been through a lot and really suffered than it is to talk
+to a gentleman like Mr. Bartlett. But I will have to talk to Mr. Bartlett all afternoon
+as Major Falcon has made an appointment for me to spend the whole afternoon with him.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 15th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Last night there was quite a maskerade ball on the ship which was really all for the
+sake of charity because most of the sailors seem to have orphans which they get from
+going on the ocean when the sea is very rough. So they took up quite a collection
+and Mr. Bartlett made quite a long speech in favor of <span class="pageNum" id="pb55">[<a href="#pb55">55</a>]</span>orphans especially when their parents are sailors. Mr. Bartlett really likes to make
+speeches quite a lot. I mean he even likes to make speeches when he is all alone with
+a girl when they are walking up and down a deck. But the maskerade ball was quite
+cute and one gentleman really looked almost like an imitation of Mr. Chaplin. So Dorothy
+and I really did not want to go to the ball but Mr. Bartlett bought us two scarfs
+at the little store which is on the ship so we tied them around our hips and everyone
+said we made quite a cute Carmen. So Mr. Bartlett and Major Falcon and the tennis
+champion were the Judges. So Dorothy and I won the prizes. I mean I really hope I
+do not get any more large size imitations of a dog as I have three now and I do not
+see why the Captain does not ask Mr. Cartier to have a jewelry store on the ship as
+it is really not much fun to go shopping on a ship with gentlemen, and buy nothing
+but imitations of dogs.
+</p>
+<p>So after we won the prizes I had an engagement to go up on the top of the deck with
+Mr. Bartlett as it seems he likes to look at the moonlight quite a lot. So I told
+him <span class="pageNum" id="pb56">[<a href="#pb56">56</a>]</span>to go up and wait for me and I would be up later as I promised a dance to Mr. Mountginz.
+So he asked me how long I would be dancing till, but I told him to wait up there and
+he would find out. So Mr. Mountginz and I had quite a delightful dance and champagne
+until Major Falcon found us. Because he was looking for me and he said I really should
+not keep Mr. Bartlett waiting. So I went up on the deck and Mr. Bartlett was up there
+waiting for me and it seems that he really is madly in love with me because he did
+not sleep a wink since we became friendly. Because he never thought that I really
+had brains but now that he knows it, it seems that he has been looking for a girl
+like me for years, and he said that really the place for me when he got back home
+was Washington d. c. where he lives. So I told him I thought a thing like that was
+nearly always the result of fate. So he wanted me to get off the ship tomorrow at
+France and take the same trip that he is taking to Vienna as it seems that Vienna
+is in France and if you go on to England you go to far. But I told him that I could
+not because I thought that if he was really madly in love with me he would take <span class="pageNum" id="pb58">[<a href="#pb58">58</a>]</span>a trip to London instead. But he told me that he had serious business in Vienna that
+was a very, very great secret. But I told him I did not believe it was business but
+that it really was some girl, because what business could be so important? So he said
+it was business for the United States government at Washington and he could not tell
+anybody what it was. So then we looked at the moonlight quite a lot. So I told him
+I would go to Vienna if I really knew it was business and not some girl, because I
+could not see how business could be so important. So then he told me all about it.
+So it seems that Uncle Sam wants some new aeroplanes that everybody else seems to
+want, especially England, and Uncle Sam has quite a clever way to get them which is
+to long to put in my diary. So we sat up and saw the sun rise and I became quite stiff
+and told him I would have to go down to my room because, after all, the ship lands
+at France today and I said if I got off the boat at France to go to Vienna with him
+I would have to pack up.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p057width"><img src="images/p057.jpg" alt="“Mr. Bartlett said he did not sleep a wink since we became friendly.”" width="370" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>Mr. Bartlett said he did not sleep a wink since we became friendly.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So I went down to my room and went to bed. So then Dorothy came in and she was up
+on the deck with the tennis champion but <span class="pageNum" id="pb59">[<a href="#pb59">59</a>]</span>she did not notice the sun rise as she really does not love nature but always wastes
+her time and ruins her clothes even though I always tell her not to drink champagne
+out of a bottle on the deck of the ship as it lurches quite a lot. So I am going to
+have luncheon in my room and I will send a note to Mr. Bartlett to tell him I will
+not be able to get off the boat at France to go to Vienna with him as I have quite
+a headache, but I will see him sometime somewhere else. So Major Falcon is going to
+come down at 12 and I have got to thinking over what Mr. Bartlett called me at Little
+Rock and I am quite upset. I mean a gentleman never pays for those things but a girl
+always pays. So I think I will tell Major Falcon all about the airoplane business
+as he really wants to know. And, after all I do not think Mr. Bartlett is a gentleman
+to call me all those names in Little Rock even if it was seven years ago. I mean Major
+Falcon is always a gentleman and he really wants to do quite a lot for us in London.
+Because he knows the Prince of Wales and he thinks that Dorothy and I would like the
+Prince of Wales once we had really got to meet him. So I am going to stay in my <span class="pageNum" id="pb60">[<a href="#pb60">60</a>]</span>room until Mr. Bartlett gets off the ship at France, because I really do not seem
+to care if I never see Mr. Bartlett again.
+</p>
+<p>So tomorrow we will be at England bright and early. And I really feel quite thrilled
+because Mr. Eisman sent me a cable this morning, as he does every morning, and he
+says to take advantage of everybody we meet as traveling is the highest form of education.
+I mean Mr. Eisman is always right and Major Falcon knows all the sights in London
+including the Prince of Wales so it really looks like Dorothy and I would have quite
+a delightful time in London.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb63">[<a href="#pb63">63</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch3" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e269">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="label">CHAPTER THREE</h2>
+<h2 class="main">LONDON IS REALLY NOTHING</h2>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first dateentry"><i>April 17th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, Dorothy and I are really at London. I mean we got to London on the train yesterday
+as the boat does not come clear up to London but it stops on the beach and you have
+to take a train. I mean everything is much better in New York, because the boat comes
+right up to New York and I am really beginning to think that London is not so educational
+after all. But I did not tell Mr. Eisman when I cabled him last night because Mr.
+Eisman really sent me to London to get educated and I would hate to tell him that
+London is a failure because we know more in New York.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy and I came to the Ritz and it is delightfully full of Americans. I mean
+you would really think it was New York because I always think that the most delightful
+thing about traveling is to always be running into Americans and to always feel at
+home.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb64">[<a href="#pb64">64</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So yesterday Dorothy and I went down to luncheon at the Ritz and we saw a quite cute
+little blond girl at the next table and I nudged Dorothy under the table, because
+I do not think it is nice to nudge a person on top of the table as I am trying to
+teach good manners to Dorothy. So I said “That is quite a cute little girl so she
+must be an American girl.” And sure enough she called the head-waiter with quite
+an American accent and she was quite angry and she said to him, I have been coming
+to this hotel for 35 years and this is the first time I have been kept waiting. So
+I recognized her voice because it was really Fanny Ward. So we asked her to come over
+to our table and we were all three delighted to see each other. Because I and Fanny
+have known each other for about five years but I really feel as if I knew her better
+because mama knew her 45 years ago when she and mama used to go to school together
+and mama used to always follow all her weddings in all the newspapers. So now Fanny
+lives in London and is famous for being one of the cutest girls in London. I mean
+Fanny is almost historical, because when a girl is cute for 50 years it really begins
+to get historical.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb65">[<a href="#pb65">65</a>]</span>
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p065width"><img src="images/p065.jpg" alt="“So I recognized her voice because it was really Fanny Ward.”" width="367" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>So I recognized her voice because it was really Fanny Ward.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb66">[<a href="#pb66">66</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So if mama did not die of hardening of the arterys she and Fanny and I could have
+quite a delightful time in London as Fanny loves to shop. So we went shopping for
+hats and instead of going to the regular shop we went to the childrens department
+and Fanny and I bought some quite cute hats as childrens hats only cost half as much
+and Fanny does it all the time. I mean Fanny really loves hats and she buys some in
+the children’s department every week, so she really saves quite a lot of money.
+</p>
+<p>So we came back to the Ritz to meet Major Falcon because Major Falcon invited us to
+go to tea with him at a girls house called Lady Shelton. So Major Falcon invited Fanny
+to go with us <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span>, but she was sorry because she had to go to her music lesson.
+</p>
+<p>So at Lady Sheltons house we met quite a few people who seemed to be English. I mean
+some of the girls in London seem to be Ladies which seems to be the opposite of a
+Lord. And some who are not Ladies are honorable. But quite a few are not Ladies or
+honorable either, but are just like us, so all you have to call them is “Miss.” So
+Lady Shelton was really delighted to have we <span class="pageNum" id="pb67">[<a href="#pb67">67</a>]</span>Americans come to her house. I mean she took Dorothy and I into the back parlor and
+tried to sell us some shell flowers she seems to make out of sea shells for 25 pounds.
+So we asked her how much it was in money and it seems it is 125 dollars. I mean I
+am really going to have a quite hard time in London with Dorothy because she really
+should not say to an English lady what she said. I mean she should not say to an English
+lady that in America we use shells the same way only we put a dry pea under one of
+them and we call it a game. But I told Lady Shelton we really did not need any shell
+flowers. So Lady Shelton said she knew we Americans loved dogs so she would love us
+to meet her mother.
+</p>
+<p>So then she took Dorothy and Major Falcon and I to her mother’s house which was just
+around the corner from her house. Because her mother seems to be called a Countess
+and raise dogs. So her mother was having a party too, and she seemed to have quite
+red hair and quite a lot of paint for such an elderly lady. So the first thing she
+asked us was she asked us if we bought some shell flowers from her daughter. So we
+told her no. But she did not seem to act like a Countess <span class="pageNum" id="pb68">[<a href="#pb68">68</a>]</span>of her elderly age should act. Because she said, “You were right my dears—don’t let
+my daughter stick you—they fall apart in less than a week.” So then she asked us if
+we would like to buy a dog. I mean I could not stop Dorothy but she said “How long
+before the dogs fall apart?” But I do not think the Countess acted like a Countess
+ought to act because she laughed very, very loud and she said that Dorothy was really
+priceless and she grabbed Dorothy and kissed her and held her arm around her all the
+time. I mean I really think that a Countess should not <span class="sic" title="Correction: encourage">encouradge</span> Dorothy or else she is just as unrefined as Dorothy seems to be. But I told the Countess
+that we did not need any dog.
+</p>
+<p>So then I met quite a delightful English lady who had a very, very beautiful diamond
+tiara in her hand bag because she said that she thought some Americans would be at
+the party and it was really a very, very great bargain. I mean I think a diamond tiara
+is delightful because it is a place where I really never thought of wearing diamonds
+before, and I thought I had almost one of everything until I saw a diamond tiara.
+The English lady who is called Mrs. Weeks said it was in <span class="pageNum" id="pb69">[<a href="#pb69">69</a>]</span>her family for years but the good thing about diamonds is they always look new. So
+I was really very intreeged and I asked her how much it cost in money and it seems
+it was $7,500.
+</p>
+<p>So then I looked around the room and I noticed a gentleman who seemed to be quite
+well groomed. So I asked Major Falcon who he was and he said he was called Sir Francis
+Beekman and it seems he is very, very wealthy. So then I asked Major Falcon to give
+us an introduction to one another and we met one another and I asked Sir Francis Beekman
+if he would hold my hat while I could try on the diamond tiara because I could wear
+it backwards with a ribbon, on account of my hair being hobbed, and I told Sir Francis
+Beekman that I really thought it looked quite cute. So he thought it did to, but he
+seemed to have another engagement. So the Countess came up to me and she is really
+very unrefined because she said to me “Do not waste your time on him” because she
+said that whenever Sir Francis Beekman spent a haypenny the statue of a gentleman
+called Mr. Nelson took off his hat and bowed. I mean some people are so unrefined
+they <span class="pageNum" id="pb70">[<a href="#pb70">70</a>]</span>seem to have unrefined thoughts about everything.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p070width"><img src="images/p070.jpg" alt="“I told Sir Francis Beekman that I really thought it looked quite cute.”" width="538" height="273"><p class="figureHead">“<i>I told Sir Francis Beekman that I really thought it looked quite cute.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So I really have my heart set on the diamond tiara and I became quite worried because
+Mrs. Weeks said she was going to a delightful party last night that would be full
+of delightful Americans and it would be snaped up. So I was so worried that I gave
+her 100 dollars and she is going to hold the diamond tiara for me. Because what is
+the use of traveling if you do not take advantadge of oportunities and it really is
+quite unusual to get a bargain from an English lady. So last night I cabled Mr. Eisman
+and I told Mr. Eisman that he does not seem to <span class="sic" title="Correction: know how">how know</span> much it costs to get educated by <span class="pageNum" id="pb71">[<a href="#pb71">71</a>]</span>traveling and I said I really would have to have $10,000 and I said I hoped I would
+not have to borrow the money from some strange English gentleman, even if he might
+be very very good looking. So I really could not sleep all night because of all of
+my worrying because if I do not get the money to buy the diamond tiara it may be a
+quite hard thing to get back $100 from an English lady.
+</p>
+<p>So now I must really get dressed as Major Falcon is going to take Dorothy and I to
+look at all the sights in London. But I really think if I do not get the diamond tiara
+my whole trip to London will be quite a failure.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 18th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Yesterday was quite a day and night. I mean Major Falcon came to take Dorothy and
+I to see all the sights in London. So I thought it would be delightful if we had another
+gentleman and I made Major Falcon call up Sir Francis Beekman. I mean I had a cable
+from Mr. Eisman which told me he could not send me 10,000 dollars but he would send
+me 1000 dollars which really would not be a drop in the bucket for the diamond tiara.
+So Sir Francis Beekman said that he could <span class="pageNum" id="pb72">[<a href="#pb72">72</a>]</span>not come but I teased him and teased him over the telephone so he finally said he
+would come.
+</p>
+<p>So Major Falcon drives his own car so Dorothy sat with him and I sat with Sir Francis
+Beekman but I told him that I was not going to call him Sir Francis Beekman but I
+was really going to call him Piggie.
+</p>
+<p>In London they make a very, very great fuss over nothing at all. I mean London is
+really nothing at all. For instants, they make a great fuss over a tower that really
+is not even as tall as the Hickox building in Little Rock Arkansas and it would only
+make a chimney on one of our towers in New York. So Sir Francis Beekman wanted us
+to get out and look at the tower because he said that quite a famous Queen had her
+head cut off there one morning and Dorothy said “What a fool she was to get up that
+morning” and that is really the only sensible thing that Dorothy has said in London.
+So we did not bother to get out.
+</p>
+<p>So we did not go to any more sights because they really have delicious champagne cocktails
+at a very very smart new restaurant called the Cafe de Paris that you could not <span class="pageNum" id="pb74">[<a href="#pb74">74</a>]</span>get in New York for neither love or money and I told Piggie that when you are travelling
+you really ought to take advantadges of what you can not do at home.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p073width"><img src="images/p073.jpg" alt="“In London they make a fuss over a tower that is not as tall as the Hickox Building in Little Rock.”" width="368" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>In London they make a fuss over a tower that is not as tall as the Hickox Building
+in Little Rock.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So while Dorothy and I were in the Cafe de Paris powdering our nose in the lady’s
+dressing room we met an American girl who Dorothy knew in the Follies, but now she
+is living in London. So she told us all about London. So it seems the gentlemen in
+London have quite a quaint custom of not giving a girl many presents. I mean the English
+girls really seem to be satisfied with a gold cigaret holder or else what they call
+a ‘bangle’ which means a bracelet in English which is only gold and does not have
+any stones in it which American girls would really give to their maid. So she said
+you could tell what English gentlemen were like when you realize that not even English
+ladys could get anything out of them. So she said Sir Francis Beekman was really famous
+all over London for not spending so much money as most English gentlemen. So then
+Dorothy and I said goodbye to Dorothy’s girl friend and Dorothy said, “Lets tell our
+two boy friends that we have a headache and go back to the <span class="pageNum" id="pb75">[<a href="#pb75">75</a>]</span>Ritz, where men are Americans.” Because Dorothy said that the society of a gentleman
+like Sir Francis Beekman was to great a price to pay for a couple of rounds of champagne
+cocktails. But I told Dorothy that I always believe that there is nothing like trying
+and I think it would be nice for an American girl like I to educate an English gentleman
+like Piggie, as I call Sir Francis Beekman.
+</p>
+<p>So then we went back to the table and I almost have to admit that Dorothy is in the
+right about Piggie because he really likes to talk quite a lot and he is always talking
+about a friend of his who was quite a famous King in London called King Edward. So
+Piggie said he would never never forget the jokes King Edward was always saying and
+he would never forget one time they were all on a yacht and they were all sitting
+at a table and King Edward got up and said “I don’t care what you gentlemen do—I’m
+going to smoke a cigar.” So then Piggie laughed very, very loud. So of course I laughed
+very, very loud and I told Piggie he was wonderful the way he could tell jokes. I
+mean you can always tell when to laugh because Piggie always laughs first.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb76">[<a href="#pb76">76</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So in the afternoon a lot of lady friends of Mrs. Weeks heard about me buying the
+diamond tiara and called us up and asked us to their house to tea so Dorothy and I
+went and we took a gentleman Dorothy met in the lobby who is very, very good looking
+but he is only an English ballroom dancer in a cafe when he has a job.
+</p>
+<p>So we went to tea to a lady’s house called Lady Elmsworth and what she has to sell
+we Americans seems to be a picture of her father painted in oil paint who she said
+was a whistler. But I told her my own father was a whistler and used to whistle all
+of the time and I did not even have a picture of him but every time he used to go
+to Little Rock I asked him to go to the photographers but he did not go.
+</p>
+<p>So then we met a lady called Lady Chizzleby that wanted us to go to her house to tea
+but we told her that we really did not want to buy anything. But she said that she
+did not have anything to sell but she wanted to borrow five pounds. So we did not
+go and I am really glad that Mr. Eisman did not come to London as all the English
+ladys would ask him to tea and he would have a <span class="pageNum" id="pb77">[<a href="#pb77">77</a>]</span>whole ship load of shell flowers and dogs and anteek pictures that do nobody any good.
+</p>
+<p>So last night Piggie and I and Dorothy and the dancer who is called Gerald went to
+the Kit Kat Club as Gerald had nothing better to do because he is out of a job. So
+Dorothy and I had quite a little quarrel because I told Dorothy that she was wasting
+quite a lot of time going with any gentleman who is out of a job but Dorothy is always
+getting to really like somebody and she will never learn how to act. I mean I always
+seem to think that when a girl really enjoys being with a gentleman, it puts her to
+quite a disadvantage and no real good can come of it.
+</p>
+<p>Well tonight is going to be quite a night because Major Falcon is going to take Dorothy
+and I to a dance at a lady’s house tonight to meet the Prince of Wales. And now I
+must get ready to see Piggie because he and I seem to be getting to be quite good
+friends even if he has not sent me any flowers yet.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 19th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Last night we really met the Prince of Wales. I mean Major Falcon called for <span class="pageNum" id="pb78">[<a href="#pb78">78</a>]</span>Dorothy and I at eleven and took us to a ladys house where the lady was having a party.
+The Prince of Wales is really wonderful. I mean even if he was not a prince he would
+be wonderful, because even if he was not a prince, he would be able to make his living
+playing the ukelele, if he had a little more practice. So the lady came up to me and
+told me that the Prince of Wales would like to meet me, so she gave us an introduction
+to one another and I was very very thrilled when he asked me for a dance. So I decided
+I would write down every word he said to me in my diary so I could always go back
+and read it over and over when I am really old. So then we started to dance and I
+asked him if he was still able to be fond of horses, and he said he was. So after
+our dance was all over he asked Dorothy for a dance but Dorothy will never learn how
+to act in front of a prince. Because she handed me her fan and she said “Hold this
+while I slip a new page into English <span class="sic" title="Correction: history">histry</span>,” right in front of the Prince of Wales. So I was very very worried while Dorothy
+was dancing with the Prince of Wales because she talked to the Prince of Wales all
+the time and when she <span class="pageNum" id="pb79">[<a href="#pb79">79</a>]</span>got through the Prince of Wales wrote some of the slang words she is always saying
+on his cuff, so if he tells the Queen some day to be ‘a good Elk’ or some other slang
+word Dorothy is always saying, the Queen will really blame me for bringing such a
+girl into English society. So when Dorothy came back we had quite a little quarrel
+because Dorothy said that since I met the Prince of Wales I was becoming too English.
+But really, I mean to say, I often remember papa back in Arkansas and he often used
+to say that his grandpa came from a place in England called Australia, so really,
+I mean to say, it is no wonder that the English seems to come out of me sometimes.
+Because if a girl seems to <span class="pageNum" id="pb80">[<a href="#pb80">80</a>]</span>have an English accent I really think it is quite jolly.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p079width"><img src="images/p079.jpg" alt="“So I asked the prince if he was still able to be fond of horses.”" width="538" height="274"><p class="figureHead">“<i>So I asked the prince if he was still able to be fond of horses.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 20th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Yesterday afternoon I really thought I ought to begin to educate Piggie how to act
+with a girl like American gentlemen act with a girl. So I asked him to come up to
+have tea in our sitting room in the hotel because I had quite a headache. I mean I
+really look quite cute in my pink negligay. So I sent out a <span class="sic" title="Correction: bellhop">bell hop</span> friend of Dorothy and I who is quite a nice boy who is called Harry and who we talk
+to quite a lot. So I gave Harry ten pounds of English money and I told him to go to
+the most expensive florist and to buy some very very expensive orchids for 10 pounds
+and to bring them to our sitting room at fifteen minutes past five and not to say
+a word but to say they were for me. So Piggie came to tea and we were having tea when
+Harry came in and he did not say a word but he gave me a quite large box and he said
+it was for me. So I opened the box and sure enough they were a dozen very very beautiful
+orchids. So I looked for a card, but of course there was no card so I grabbed <span class="pageNum" id="pb81">[<a href="#pb81">81</a>]</span>Piggie and I said I would have to give him quite a large hug because it must have
+been him. But he said it was not him. But I said it must be him because I said that
+there was only one gentleman in London who was so sweet and generous and had such
+a large heart to send a girl one dozen orchids like him. So he still said it was not
+him. But I said I knew it was him, because there was not a gentleman in London so
+really marvelous and so wonderful and such a marvelous gentleman to send a girl one
+dozen orchids every day as him. So I really had to apologize for giving him such a
+large hug but I told him I was so full of impulses that when I knew he was going to
+send me one dozen orchids every day I became so impulsive I could not help it!
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p081width"><img src="images/p081.jpg" alt="“I said I would have to give him quite a large hug.”" width="540" height="275"><p class="figureHead">“<i>I said I would have to give him quite a large hug.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb82">[<a href="#pb82">82</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So then Dorothy and Gerald came in and I told them all about what a wonderful gentleman
+Piggie turned out to be and I told them when a gentleman sent a girl one dozen orchids
+every day he really reminded me of a prince. So Piggie blushed quite a lot and he
+was really very very pleased and he did not say any more that it was not him. So then
+I started to make a fuss over him and I told him he would have to look out because
+he was really so good looking and I was so full of impulses that I might even lose
+my mind some time and give him a kiss. So Piggie really felt very very good to be
+such a good looking gentleman. So he could not help blushing all the time and he could
+not help grinning all the time from one ear to another. So he asked us all to dinner
+and then he and Gerald went to change their clothes for dinner. So Dorothy and I had
+quite a little quarrel after they went because Dorothy asked me which one of the Jesse
+James brothers was my father. But I told her I was not so unrefined that I would waste
+my time with any gentleman who was only a ballroom dancer when he had a job. So Dorothy
+said Gerald was a gentleman because he wrote <span class="pageNum" id="pb83">[<a href="#pb83">83</a>]</span>her a note and it had a crest. So I told her to try and eat it. So then we had to
+get dressed.
+</p>
+<p>So this morning Harry, the boy friend of ours who is the bell hop, waked me up at
+ten o’clock because he had a box of one dozen orchids from Piggie. So by the time
+Piggie pays for a few dozen orchids, the diamond tiara will really seem like quite
+a bargain. Because I always think that spending money is only just a habit and if
+you get a gentleman started on buying one dozen orchids at a time he really gets very
+good habits.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 21st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, yesterday afternoon I took Piggie shopping on a street called Bond Street. So
+I took him to a <span class="sic" title="Correction: jewelry">jewelery</span> store because I told him I had to have a silver picture frame because I had to have
+a picture of him to go in it. Because I told Piggie that when a girl gets to know
+such a good looking gentleman as him she really wants to have a picture of him on
+her dressing table where she can look at it a lot. So Piggie became quite <span class="sic" title="Correction: intrigued">intreeged</span>. So we looked at all the silver picture frames. But then I told him that I really
+did not think <span class="pageNum" id="pb84">[<a href="#pb84">84</a>]</span>a silver picture frame was good enough for a picture of him because I forgot that
+they had gold picture frames until I saw them. So then we started to look at the gold
+picture frames. So then it came out that his picture was taken in his <span class="sic" title="Correction: uniform">unaform</span>. So I said he must be so good looking in his <span class="sic" title="Correction: uniform">unaform</span> that I really did not think even the gold picture frames were good enough but they
+did not have any platinum picture frames so we had to buy the best one we could.
+</p>
+<p>So then I asked him if he could put on his <span class="sic" title="Correction: uniform">unaform</span> tomorrow because I would love to see him in his <span class="sic" title="Correction: uniform">unaform</span> and we could go to tea at Mrs. Weeks. So he really became very pleased because he
+grinned quite a lot and he said that he would. So then I said that poor little I would
+really look like nothing at all to be going out with him in his <span class="sic" title="Correction: gorgeous">georgous</span> <span class="sic" title="Correction: uniform">unaform</span>. So then we started to look at some bracelets but a lady friend of his who is quite
+friendly with his wife, who is in their country house in the country, came in to the
+store, so Piggie became quite nervous to be caught in a <span class="sic" title="Correction: jewelry">jewelery</span> store where he has not been for years and years, so we had to go out.
+</p>
+<p>This morning Gerald called up Dorothy <span class="pageNum" id="pb85">[<a href="#pb85">85</a>]</span>and he said that day after tomorrow they are having a theatrical garden party to sell
+things to people for charity so he asked if Dorothy and I would be one of the ones
+who sells things to people for charity. So we said we would.
+</p>
+<p>So now I must telephone Mrs. Weeks and say I will bring Sir Francis Beekman to tea
+tomorrow and I hope it all comes out all right. But I really wish Piggie would not
+tell so many <span class="sic" title="Correction: stories">storys</span>. I mean I do not mind a gentleman when he tells a great many <span class="sic" title="Correction: stories">storys</span> if they are new, but a gentleman who tells a great many <span class="sic" title="Correction: stories">storys</span> and they are all the same <span class="sic" title="Correction: stories">storys</span> is quite enervating. I mean London is really so uneducational that all I seem to
+be learning is some of <span class="sic" title="Correction: Piggie’s">Piggies</span> <span class="sic" title="Correction: stories">storys</span> and I even want to forget them. So I am really becoming jolly well fed up with London.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 22nd</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Yesterday Piggie came in his <span class="sic" title="Correction: uniform">unaform</span> but he was really quite upset because he had a letter. I mean his wife is coming
+to London because she always comes to London every year to get her old clothes made
+over as she has a girl who does it very very cheap. <span class="pageNum" id="pb86">[<a href="#pb86">86</a>]</span>So she is going to stay with the lady who saw us in the <span class="sic" title="Correction: jewelry">jewelery</span> store, because it always saves money to stay with a friend. So I wanted to cheer
+Piggie up so I told him that I did not think the lady saw us and if she did see us,
+she really could not believe her eyes to see him in a <span class="sic" title="Correction: jewelry">jewelery</span> store. But I did not tell him that I think that Dorothy and I had better go to Paris
+soon. Because, after all, Piggie’s society is beginning to tell on a girls nerves.
+But I really made Piggie feel quite good about his <span class="sic" title="Correction: uniform">unaform</span> because I told him I only felt fit to be with him in a diamond tiara. So then I told
+him that, even if his wife was in London, we could still be friends, because I could
+not help but admire him even if his wife was in London and I told him I really thought
+a thing like that was nearly always the result of fate. So then we went to tea at
+Mrs. Weeks. So Piggie arranged with Mrs. Weeks to pay her for the diamond tiara and
+she nearly fell dead but she will keep it a secret because no one would believe it
+anyway. So now I have the diamond tiara and I have to admit that everything always
+turns out for the best. But I promised Piggie that I would always stay in <span class="pageNum" id="pb87">[<a href="#pb87">87</a>]</span>London and we would always be friendly. Because Piggie always says that I am the only
+one who admires him for what he really is.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p087width"><img src="images/p087.jpg" alt="“So I promised Piggie that I would always stay in London.”" width="539" height="272"><p class="figureHead">“<i>So I promised Piggie that I would always stay in London.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 25th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, we were so busy the last days I did not have time to write in my diary because
+now we are on a ship that seems to be quite a small ship to be sailing to Paris and
+we will be at Paris this afternoon. Because it does not take nearly so long to come
+to Paris as it does to come to London. I mean it seems quite unusual to think that
+it takes 6 days to come to London and only one day to come to Paris.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb88">[<a href="#pb88">88</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So Dorothy is quite upset because she did not want to come as she is madly in love
+with Gerald and Gerald said that we really ought not to leave London without going
+to see England while we happened to be here. But I told him that if England was the
+same kind of a place that London seems to be, I really know <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> much to bother with such a place. I mean we had quite a little quarrel because Gerald
+showed up at the station with a bangle for Dorothy so I told Dorothy she was well
+rid of such a person. So Dorothy had to come with me because Mr. Eisman is paying
+her expenses because he wants Dorothy to be my chaperone.
+</p>
+<p>So the last thing in London was the garden party. I sold quite a lot of red <span class="sic" title="Correction: balloons">baloons</span> and I sold a red <span class="sic" title="Correction: balloons">baloon</span> to Harry Lauder the famous Scotch gentleman who is the famous Scotch tenor for 20
+pounds. So Dorothy said I did not need to buy any ticket to Paris on the boat because
+if I could do that, I could walk across the channel.
+</p>
+<p>So Piggy does not know that we have gone but I sent him a letter and told him I would
+see him some time again some time. And I was really glad to get out of our rooms at
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb89">[<a href="#pb89">89</a>]</span>the Ritz—I mean 50 or 60 orchids really make a girl think of a funeral. So I cabled
+Mr. Eisman and I told him we could not learn anything in London because we knew to
+much, so if we went to Paris at least we could learn French, if we made up our mind
+to it.
+</p>
+<p>So I am really very very <span class="sic" title="Correction: intrigued">intreeged</span> as I have heard so much about Paris and I feel that it must be much more educational
+than London and I can hardly wait to see the Ritz hotel in Paris.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb93">[<a href="#pb93">93</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch4" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e279">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="label">CHAPTER FOUR</h2>
+<h2 class="main">PARIS IS DEVINE</h2>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first dateentry"><i>April 27th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Paris is devine. I mean Dorothy and I got to Paris yesterday, and it really is devine.
+Because the French are devine. Because when we were coming off the boat, and we were
+coming through the customs, it was quite hot and it seemed to smell quite a lot and
+all the French gentlemen in the customs, were squealing quite a lot. So I looked around
+and I picked out a French gentleman who was really in a very gorgeous uniform and
+he seemed to be a very, very important gentleman and I gave him twenty francs worth
+of French money and he was very very gallant and he knocked everybody else down and
+took our bags right through the custom. Because I really think that twenty Francs
+is quite cheap for a gentleman that has got on at least $100 worth of gold braid on
+his coat alone, to speak nothing of his trousers.
+</p>
+<p>I mean the French gentlemen always seem <span class="pageNum" id="pb94">[<a href="#pb94">94</a>]</span>to be squealing quite a lot, especially taxi drivers when they only get a small size
+yellow dime called a ‘fifty santeems’ for a tip. But the good thing about French gentlemen
+is that every time a French gentleman starts in to squeal, you can always stop him
+with five francs, no matter who he is. I mean it is so refreshing to listen to a French
+gentleman stop squeaking, that it would really be quite a bargain even for ten francs.
+</p>
+<p>So we came to the Ritz Hotel and the Ritz Hotel is devine. Because when a girl can
+sit in a delightful bar and have delicious champagne cocktails and look at all the
+important French people in Paris, I think it is devine. I mean when a girl can sit
+there and look at the Dolly sisters and Pearl White and Maybelle Gilman Corey, and
+Mrs. Nash, it is beyond worlds. Because when a girl looks at Mrs. Nash and realizes
+what Mrs. Nash has got out of gentlemen, it really makes a girl hold her breath.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p095width"><img src="images/p095.jpg" alt="“If you turn your back on a monument and look up, you can see none other than Coty’s sign!”" width="537" height="273"><p class="figureHead">“<i>If you turn your back on a monument and look up, you can see none other than Coty’s
+sign!</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>And when a girl walks around and reads all of the signs with all of the famous historical
+names it really makes you hold your breath. Because when Dorothy and I went on a walk,
+we only walked a few blocks <span class="pageNum" id="pb95">[<a href="#pb95">95</a>]</span>but in only a few blocks we read all of the famous historical names, like Coty and
+Cartier and I knew we were seeing something educational at last and our whole trip
+was not a failure. I mean I really try to make Dorothy get educated and have reverance.
+So when we stood at the corner of a place called the Place Vandome, if you turn your
+back on a monument they have in the middle and look up, you can see none other than
+Coty’s sign. So I said to Dorothy, does it not really give you a thrill to realize
+that that is the historical spot where Mr. Coty makes all the perfume? So then Dorothy
+said that she supposed Mr. Coty came to Paris and he smelled Paris and he realized
+that something had to <span class="pageNum" id="pb96">[<a href="#pb96">96</a>]</span>be done. So Dorothy will really never have any reverance.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p096width"><img src="images/p096.jpg" alt="“It really seemed to be a bargain but Dorothy and I do not seem to be mathematical enough to tell how much franks is in money.”" width="535" height="272"><p class="figureHead">“<i>It really seemed to be a bargain but Dorothy and I do not seem to be mathematical
+enough to tell how much franks is in money.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So then we saw a jewelry store and we saw some jewelry in the window and it really
+seemed to be a very very great bargain but the price marks all had francs on them
+and Dorothy and I do not seem to be mathematical enough to tell how much francs is
+in money. So we went in and asked and it seems it was only 20 dollars and it seems
+it is not diamonds but it is a thing called “paste” which is the name of a word which
+means imitations. So Dorothy said “paste” is the name of the word a girl ought to
+do to a gentleman that handed her one. I mean I <span class="pageNum" id="pb97">[<a href="#pb97">97</a>]</span>would really be embarrassed, but the gentleman did not seem to understand Dorothy’s
+english.
+</p>
+<p>So it really makes a girl feel depressed to think a girl could not tell that it was
+nothing but an imitation. I mean a gentleman could deceeve a girl because he could
+give her a present and it would only be worth 20 dollars. So when Mr. Eisman comes
+to Paris next week, if he wants to make me a present I will make him take me along
+with him because he is really quite an inveteran bargain hunter at heart. So the gentleman
+at the jewelry store said that quite a lot of famous girls in Paris had imitations
+of all their jewelry and they put the jewelry in the safe and they really wore the
+imitations, so they could wear it and have a good time. But I told him I thought that
+any girl who was a lady would not even think of having such a good time that she did
+not remember to hang on to her jewelry.
+</p>
+<p>So then we went back to the Ritz and unpacked our trunks with the aid of really a
+delightful waiter who brought us up some delicious luncheon and who is called Leon
+and who speaks english almost like an American <span class="pageNum" id="pb98">[<a href="#pb98">98</a>]</span>and who Dorothy and I talk to quite a lot. So Leon said that we ought not to stay
+around the Ritz all of the time, but we really ought to see Paris. So Dorothy said
+she would go down in the lobby and meet some gentleman to show us Paris. So in a couple
+of minutes she called up on the telephone from the lobby and she said “I have got
+a French bird down here who is a French title nobleman, who is called a veecount so
+come on down.” So I said “How did a Frenchman get into the Ritz.” So Dorothy said
+“He came in to get out of the rain and he has not noticed that it is stopped.” So
+I said “I suppose you have picked up something without taxi fare as usual. Why did
+you not get an American gentleman who always have money?” So Dorothy said she thought
+a French gentleman had ought to know Paris better. So I said “He does not even know
+it is not raining.” But I went down.
+</p>
+<p>So the veecount was really delightful after all. So then we rode around and we saw
+Paris and we saw how devine it really is. I mean the Eyefull Tower is devine and it
+is much more educational than the London Tower, because you can not even see the London
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb99">[<a href="#pb99">99</a>]</span>Tower if you happen to be two blocks away. But when a girl looks at the Eyefull Tower
+she really knows she is looking at something. And it would even be very difficult
+not to notice the Eyefull Tower.
+</p>
+<p>So then we went to a place called the Madrid to tea and it really was devine. I mean
+we saw the Dolley Sisters and Pearl White and Mrs. Corey and Mrs. Nash all over again.
+</p>
+<p>So then we went to dinner and then we went to Momart and it really was devine because
+we saw them all over again. I mean in Momart they have genuine American jazz bands
+and quite a lot of New York people which we knew and you really would think you were
+in New York and it was devine. So we came back to the Ritz quite late. So Dorothy
+and I had quite a little quarrel because Dorothy said that when we were looking at
+Paris I asked the French veecount what was the name of the unknown soldier who is
+buried under quite a large monument. So I said I really did not mean to ask him, if
+I did, because what I did mean to ask him was, what was the name of his mother <span class="pageNum" id="pb100">[<a href="#pb100">100</a>]</span>because it is always the mother of a dead soldier that I always seem to think about
+more than the dead soldier that has died.
+</p>
+<p>So the French veecount is going to call up in the morning but I am not going to see
+him again. Because French gentlemen are really quite deceeving. I mean they take you
+to quite cute places and they make you feel quite good about yourself and you really
+seem to have a delightful time but when you get home and come to think it all over,
+all you have got is a fan that only cost 20 francs and a doll that they gave you away
+for nothing in a restaurant. I mean a girl has to look out in Paris, or she would
+have such a good time in Paris that she would not get anywheres. So I really think
+that American gentlemen are the best after all, because kissing your hand may make
+you feel very very good but a diamond and safire bracelet lasts forever. Besides,
+I do not think that I ought to go out with any gentlemen in Paris because Mr. Eisman
+will be here next week and he told me that the only kind of gentlemen he wants me
+to go out with are intelectual gentlemen who are good for a girls brains. So I really
+do not seem to see many <span class="pageNum" id="pb102">[<a href="#pb102">102</a>]</span>gentlemen around the Ritz who seem to look like they would be good for a girl’s brains.
+So tomorrow we are going to go shopping and I suppose it would really be to much to
+expect to find a gentleman who would look to Mr. Eisman like he was good for a girls
+brains and at the same time he would like to take us shopping.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p101width"><img src="images/p101.jpg" alt="“Kissing your hand may make you feel very good but a diamond bracelet lasts forever.”" width="370" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>Kissing your hand may make you feel very good but a diamond bracelet lasts forever.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 29th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Yesterday was quite a day. I mean Dorothy and I were getting ready to go shopping
+and the telephone rang and they said that Lady Francis Beekman was down stairs and
+she wanted to come up stairs. So I really was quite surprised. I mean I did not know
+what to say, so I said all right. So then I told Dorothy and then we put our brains
+together. Because it seems that Lady Francis Beekman is the wife of the gentleman
+called Sir Francis Beekman who was the admirer of mine in London who seemed to admire
+me so much that he asked me if he could make me a present of a diamond tiara. So it
+seemed as if his wife must have heard about it, and it really seemed as if she must
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb103">[<a href="#pb103">103</a>]</span>have come clear over from London about it. So there was a very very loud knock at
+the door so we asked her to come in. So Lady Francis Beekman came in and she is a
+quite large size lady who seems to resemble Bill Hart quite a lot. I mean Dorothy
+thinks that Lady Francis Beeckman resembles Bill Hart quite a lot, only she really
+thinks she looks more like Bill Hart’s horse. So it seems that she said that if I
+did not give her back the diamond tiara right away, she would make quite a fuss and
+she would ruin my reputation. Because she said that something really must be wrong
+about the whole thing. Because it seems that Sir Francis Beekman and she have been
+married for 35 years and the last present he gave to her was a wedding ring. So Dorothy
+spoke up and she said “Lady you could no more ruin my girl friends reputation than
+you could sink the Jewish fleet.” I mean I was quite proud of Dorothy the way she
+stood up for my reputation. Because I really think that there is nothing so wonderful
+as two girls when they stand up for each other and help each other a lot. Because
+no matter how vigarous Lady Francis Beekman seems to be, she had to realize that she
+could not <span class="pageNum" id="pb104">[<a href="#pb104">104</a>]</span>sink a whole fleet full of ships. So she had to stop talking against my reputation.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p104width"><img src="images/p104.jpg" alt="“Dorothy said ‘You have got to be the Queen of England to get away with a hat like that.’”" width="544" height="276"><p class="figureHead">“<i>Dorothy said ‘You have got to be the Queen of England to get away with a hat like
+that.’</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So then she said she would drag it into the court and she would say that it was undue
+influence. So I said to her, “If you wear that hat into a court, we will see if the
+judge thinks it took an undue influence to make Sir Francis Beekman look at a girl.”
+So then Dorothy spoke up and Dorothy said “My girl friend is right, Lady. You have
+got to be the Queen of England to get away with a hat like that.” So Lady Francis
+Beekman seemed to get quite angry. So then she said she would send for Sir Francis
+Beekman where he suddenly went to Scotland, to go hunting when he found out that Lady
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb105">[<a href="#pb105">105</a>]</span>Francis Beekman had found out. So Dorothy said “Do you mean that you have left Sir
+Francis Beekman loose with all those spendthrifts down in Scotland?” So Dorothy said
+she would better look out or he would get together with the boys some night and simply
+massacre a haypenny. I mean I always encouradge Dorothy to talk quite a lot when we
+are talking to unrefined people like Lady Francis Beekman, because Dorothy speaks
+their own languadge to unrefined people better than a refined girl like I. So Dorothy
+said, “You had better not send for Sir Francis Beekman because if my girl friend really
+wanted to turn loose on Sir Francis Beekman, all he would have left would be his title.”
+So then I spoke right up and said Yes that I was an American girl and we American
+girls do not care about a title because we American girls always say that what is
+good enough for Washington is good enough for us. So Lady Francis Beekman really seemed
+to get more angry and more angry all of the time.
+</p>
+<p>So then she said that if it was necessary, she would tell the judge that Sir Francis
+Beekman went out of his mind when he gave <span class="pageNum" id="pb106">[<a href="#pb106">106</a>]</span>it to me. So Dorothy said “Lady, if you go into a court and if the judge gets a good
+look at you, he will think that Sir Francis Beekman was out of his mind 35 years ago.”
+So then Lady Francis Beekman said she knew what kind of a person she had to deal with
+and she would not deal with any such a person because she said it hurt her dignity.
+So Dorothy said “Lady, if we hurt your dignity like you hurt our eyesight I hope for
+your sake, you are a Christian science.” So that seemed to make Lady Francis Beekman
+angry. So she said she would turn it all over to her soliciter. So when she went out
+she tripped over quite a long train which she had on her skirt and she nearly fell
+down. So Dorothy leaned out of the door and Dorothy called down the hall and said,
+“Take a tuck in that skirt Isabel, its 1925.” So I really felt quite depressed because
+I felt as if our whole morning was really very unrefined just because we had to mix
+with such an unrefined lady as Lady Francis Beekman.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>April 30th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>So sure enough yesterday morning Lady Francis Beekman’s solicitor came. Only he <span class="pageNum" id="pb107">[<a href="#pb107">107</a>]</span>really was not a solicitor, but his name was on a card and it seems his name is Mons.
+Broussard and it seems that he is an advocat because an advocat is a lawyer in the
+French <span class="sic" title="Correction: language">landguage</span>. So Dorothy and I were getting dressed and we were in our <span class="sic" title="Correction: negligee">negligay</span> as usual when there was quite a loud knock on the door and before we could even say
+come in he jumped right into the room. So it seems that he is of French extraction.
+I mean Lady Francis Beekman’s solicitor can really squeal just like a taxi driver.
+I mean he was squealing quite loud when he jumped into the room and he kept right
+on squealing. So Dorothy and I rushed into the parlor and Dorothy looked at him and
+Dorothy said, “This town has got to stop playing jokes on us every morning” because
+our nerves could not stand it. So Mons. Broussard handed us his card and he squealed
+and squealed and he really waved his arms in the air quite a lot. So Dorothy said
+He gives quite a good imitation of the Moulan Rouge, which is really a red wind mill,
+only Dorothy said he makes more noise and he runs on his own wind. So we stood and
+watched him for quite a long while, but he seemed to get quite monotonous <span class="pageNum" id="pb108">[<a href="#pb108">108</a>]</span>after quite a long while because he was always talking in French, which really means
+nothing to us. So Dorothy said “Lets see if 25 francs will stop him, because if 5
+francs will stop a taxi driver, 25 francs ought to stop an advocat.” Because he was
+making about 5 times as much noise as a taxi driver and 5 times 5 is 25. So as soon
+as he heard us start in to talk about francs he seemed to calm down quite a little.
+So Dorothy got her pocket book and she gave him 25 francs. So then he stopped squealing
+and he put it in his pocket, but then he got out quite a large size handkerchief with
+purple elefants on it and he started in to cry. So Dorothy really got discouraged
+and she said<span class="corr" id="xd31e1033" title="Source: .">,</span> “Look here, you have given us a quite an amusing morning but if you keep that up
+much longer, wet or dry, out you go.”
+</p>
+<p>So then he started in to pointing at the telephone and he seemed to want to use the
+telephone and Dorothy said, “If you think you can get a number over that thing, go
+to it, but as far as we have found out, it is a wall bracket.” So then he started
+in to telephone so Dorothy and I went about our business to get dressed. So when he
+finished telephoning <span class="pageNum" id="pb109">[<a href="#pb109">109</a>]</span>he kept running to my door and then he kept running to Dorothy’s door, and he kept
+on crying and talking a lot, but he seemed to have lost all of his novelty to us so
+we paid no more attention to him.
+</p>
+<p>So finally there was another loud knock on the door so we heard him rush to the door
+so we both went in to the parlor to see what it was and it really was a sight. Because
+it was another Frenchman. So the new Frenchman rushed in and he yelled Papa and he
+kissed him. So it seems that it was his son because his son is really his papa’s partner
+in the advocat business. So then his papa talked quite a lot and then he pointed at
+I and Dorothy. So then his son looked at us and then his son let out quite a large
+size squeal, and he said in French “May papa, elles sont sharmant.” So it seems he
+was telling his papa in French that we were really charming. So then Mons. Broussard
+stopped crying and put on his glasses and took a good look at us. So then his son
+put up the window shade, so his papa could get a better look at us. So when his papa
+had finished looking at us he really became delighted. So he became all smiles and
+he pinched our cheeks <span class="pageNum" id="pb110">[<a href="#pb110">110</a>]</span>and he kept on saying Sharmant all of the time because Sharmant means charming in
+the French languadge. So then his son broke right out into english and he really speaks
+english as good as an American. So then he told us his papa telephoned for him to
+come over because we did not seem to understand what his papa was saying to us. So
+it seems that Mons. Broussard had been talking to us in english all of the time but
+we did not seem to understand his kind of english. So Dorothy said, “If what your
+papa was talking in was english, I could get a gold medal for my greek.” So then his
+son told his papa and his papa laughed very very loud and he pinched Dorothys cheek
+and he was very delighted even if the joke was on him. So then Dorothy and I asked
+his son what he was saying, when he was talking to us in english and his son said
+he was telling us all about his client, Lady Francis Beekman. So then we asked his
+son why his papa kept crying. So then his son said his papa kept crying because he
+was thinking about Lady Francis Beekman. So Dorothy said, “If he cries when he thinks
+about her, what does he do when he looks at her?” So <span class="pageNum" id="pb111">[<a href="#pb111">111</a>]</span>then his son explained to his papa what Dorothy said. So then Mons. Broussard laughed
+very very loud, so then he kissed Dorothy’s hand, so he said, after that, we would
+all really have to have a bottle of champagne. So he went to the telephone and ordered
+a bottle of champagne.
+</p>
+<p>So then his son said to his papa, “Why do we not ask the charming ladies to go out
+to Fountainblo to-day.” So his papa said it would be charming. So then I said, “How
+are we going to tell you gentlemen apart, because if it is the same in Paris as it
+is in America, you would both seem to be Monshure Broussard.<span class="corr" id="xd31e1048" title="Not in source">”</span> So then we got the idea to call them by their first name. So it seems that his son’s
+name is Louie so Dorothy spoke up and said, “I hear that they number all of you Louies
+over here in Paris.” Because a girl is always hearing some one talk about Louie the
+sixteenth who seemed to be in the anteek furniture business. I mean I was surprised
+to hear Dorothy get so historical so she may really be getting educated in spite of
+everything. But Dorothy told Louie he need not try to figure out his number because
+she got it the minute she looked at him. So it seems <span class="pageNum" id="pb112">[<a href="#pb112">112</a>]</span>his papa’s name is Robber, which means Robert in French. So Dorothy started in to
+think about her 25 francs and she said to Robber, “Your mother certainly knew her
+<span class="sic" title="Correction: grammar">grammer</span> when she called you that.”
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy said we might as well go out to Fountainblo with Louie and Robber if Louie
+would take off his yellow spats that were made out of yellow shammy skin with pink
+pearl buttons. Because Dorothy said, “Fun is fun but no girl wants to laugh all of
+the time.” So Louie is really always anxious to please, so he took off his spats but
+when he took off his spats, we saw his socks and when we saw his socks we saw that
+they were Scotch plaid with small size rainbows running through them. So Dorothy looked
+at them a little while and she really became quite discouraged and she said, “Well
+Louie, I think you had better put your spats back on.”
+</p>
+<p>So then Leon, our friend who is the waiter, came in with the bottle of champagne.
+So while he was opening the bottle of champagne Louie and Robber talked together in
+French quite a lot and I really think I had ought to find out what they said in French
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb113">[<a href="#pb113">113</a>]</span>because it might be about the diamond tiara. Because French gentlemen are very very
+gallant, but I really do not think a girl can trust one of them around a corner. So,
+when I get a chance, I am going to ask Leon what they said.
+</p>
+<p>So then we went to Fountainblo and then we went to Momart and we got home very late,
+and we really had quite a delightful day and night, even if we did not go out shopping
+and buy anything. But I really think we ought to do more shopping because shopping
+really seems to be what Paris is principaly for.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 1st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well this morning I sent for Leon, who is Dorothy and my waiter friend, and I asked
+him what Louie and Robber said in French. So it seems that they said in French that
+we seemed to attract them very very much because they really thought that we were
+very very charming, and they had not met girls that were so charming in quite a long
+time. So it seems that they said that they would ask us out a lot and that they would
+charge up <span class="pageNum" id="pb114">[<a href="#pb114">114</a>]</span>all the bills to Lady Francis Beekman because they would watch for their chance and
+they would steal the diamond tiara. So then they said that even if they could not
+steal it from us, we were really so charming that it would be delightful to go around
+with us, even if they could not steal from us. So no matter what happens they really
+could not lose. Because it seems that Lady Francis Beekman would be glad to pay all
+the bills when they told her they had to take us out a lot so they could watch for
+their chance and steal it. Because Lady Francis Beekman is the kind of a wealthy lady
+that does not spend money on anything else but she will always spend money on a law
+suit. And she really would not mind spending the money because it seems that something
+either I or Dorothy said to Lady Francis Beekman seemed to make her angry.
+</p>
+<p>So then I decided it was time to do some thinking and I really thought quite a lot.
+So I told Dorothy I thought I would put the real diamond tiara in the safe at the
+Ritz and then I would buy an imitation of a diamond tiara at the jewelry store that
+has the imitations that are called paste. So then I would <span class="pageNum" id="pb115">[<a href="#pb115">115</a>]</span>leave the imitation of the diamond tiara lying around, so Louie and Robber could see
+how careless I seem to be with it so then they would get full of encouradgement. So
+when we go out with Louie and Robber I could put it in my hand bag and I could take
+it with me so Louie and Robber could always feel that the diamond tiara was within
+reach. So then Dorothy and I could get them to go shopping and we could get them to
+spend quite a lot and every time they seemed to get discouradged, I could open my
+hand bag, and let them get a glimpse of the imitation of a diamond tiara and they
+would become more encouradged and then they would spend some more money. Because I
+even might let them steal it at the last, because they were really charming gentlemen
+after all and I really would like to help Louie and Robber. I mean it would be quite
+amusing for them to steal it for Lady Francis Beekman and she would have to pay them
+quite a lot and then she would find out it was only made out of paste after all. Because
+Lady Francis Beekman has never seen the real diamond tiara and the imitation of a
+diamond tiara would really deceive her, at least until Louie <span class="pageNum" id="pb116">[<a href="#pb116">116</a>]</span>and Robber got all of their money for all of the hard work they did. I mean the imitation
+of a diamond tiara would only cost about 65 dollars and what is 65 dollars if Dorothy
+and I could do some delightful shopping and get some delightful presents that would
+even seem more delightful when we stopped to realize that Lady Francis Beekman paid
+for them. And it would teach Lady Francis Beekman a lesson not to say what she said
+to two American girls like I and Dorothy, who were all alone in Paris and had no gentleman
+to protect them.
+</p>
+<p>So when I got through telling Dorothy what I thought up, Dorothy looked at me and
+looked at me and she really said she thought my brains were a miracle. I mean she
+said my brains reminded her of a radio because you listen to it for days and days
+and you get discouradged and just when you are getting ready to smash it, something
+comes out that is a masterpiece.
+</p>
+<p>So then Louie called us up so Dorothy told him that we thought it would be delightful
+if he and Robber would take us out shopping tomorrow morning. So then Louie asked
+his papa and his papa said they would. So then <span class="pageNum" id="pb117">[<a href="#pb117">117</a>]</span>they asked us if we would like to go to see a play called The Foley Bergere tonight.
+So he said that all of the French people who live in Paris are always delighted to
+have some Americans, so it will give them an excuse to go to the Foley Bergere. So
+we said we would go. So now Dorothy and I are going out shopping to buy the imitation
+of a diamond tiara and we are going out window shopping to pick out where we would
+like Louie and Robber to take us shopping tomorrow.
+</p>
+<p>So I really think that everything always works out for the best. Because after all,
+we really need some gentlemen to take us around until Mr. Eisman gets to Paris and
+we could not go around with any really attractive gentlemen because Mr. Eisman only
+wants me to go out with gentlemen that have brains. So I said to Dorothy that, even
+if Louie and Robber do not look so full of brains, we could tell Mr. Eisman that all
+we were learning from them was French. So even if I have not seemed to learn French
+yet, I have really almost learned to understand Robbers english so when Robber talks
+in front of Mr. Eisman and I seem to understand <span class="pageNum" id="pb118">[<a href="#pb118">118</a>]</span>what he is saying, Mr. Eisman will probably think I know French.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 2nd</i>:
+</p>
+<p>So last night we went to the Foley Bergere and it really was <span class="sic" title="Correction: divine">devine</span>. I mean it was very very artistic because it had girls in it that were in the nude.
+So one of the girls was a friend of Louie and he said that she was a very very nice
+girl, and that she was only 18 years of age. So Dorothy said, “She is slipping it
+over on you Louie, because how could a girl get such dirty knees in only 18 years?”
+So Louie and Robber really laughed very very loud. I mean Dorothy was very unrefined
+at the Foley Bergere. But I always think that when girls are in the nude it is very
+artistic and if you have artistic thoughts you think it is beautiful and I really
+would not laugh in an artistic place like the Foley Bergere.
+</p>
+<p>So I wore the imitation of a diamond tiara to the Foley Bergere. I mean it really
+would <span class="sic" title="Correction: deceive">deceeve</span> an expert and Louie and Robber could hardly take their eyes off of it. But they did
+not really annoy me because I had it tied on very very tight. I mean it would be <span class="pageNum" id="pb120">[<a href="#pb120">120</a>]</span>fatal if they got the diamond tiara before Dorothy and I took them shopping a lot.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p119width"><img src="images/p119.jpg" alt="“Dorothy was very unrefined at the Foley Bergere.”" width="368" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>Dorothy was very unrefined at the Foley Bergere.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So we are all ready to go shopping this morning and Robber was here bright and early
+and he is in the parlor with Dorothy and we are waiting for Louie. So I left the daimond
+tiara on the table in the parlor so Robber could see how careless I really am with
+everything but Dorothy is keeping her eye on Robber. So I just heard Louie come in
+because I heard him kissing Robber. I mean Louie is always kissing Robber and Dorothy
+told Louie that if he did not stop kissing Robber, people would think that he painted
+batiks.
+</p>
+<p>So now I must join the others and I will put the diamond tiara in my hand bag so that
+Louie and Robber will feel that it is always around and we will all go shopping. And
+I almost have to smile when I think of Lady Francis Beekman.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 3rd</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Yesterday was really delightful. I mean Louie and Robber bought Dorothy and I some
+delightful presents. But then they began to run out of all the franks they had with
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb121">[<a href="#pb121">121</a>]</span>them, so they began to get discouradged but just as soon as they began to get discouradged,
+I gave Robber my hand bag to hold while I went to the fitting room to try on a blouse.
+So he was cheered up quite a lot, but of course Dorothy stayed with them and kept
+her eye on Robber so he did not get a chance. But it really cheered him up quite a
+lot to even hold it.
+</p>
+<p>So after all their franks were gone, Robber said he would have to telephone to some
+one, so I suppose he telephoned to Lady Francis Beekman and she must have said All
+right because Robber left us at a place called the Cafe de la Paix because he had
+to go on an errand and when he came back from his errand he seemed to have quite a
+lot more franks. So then they took us to luncheon so that after luncheon we could
+go out shopping some more.
+</p>
+<p>But I am really learning quite a lot of French in spite of everything. I mean if you
+want delicious chicken and peas for luncheon all you have to say is “pettypas” and
+<span class="corr" id="xd31e1119" title="Source: ‘">“</span>pulle.” I mean French is really very easy, for instance the French use the word “sheik”
+for everything, while we only seem to use it <span class="pageNum" id="pb122">[<a href="#pb122">122</a>]</span>for gentlemen when they seem to resemble Rudolf Valentino.
+</p>
+<p>So while we were shopping in the afternoon I saw Louie get Dorothy off in a corner
+and whisper to her quite a lot. So then I saw Robber get her off in a corner and whisper
+to her quite a lot. So when we got back to the Ritz, Dorothy told me why they whispered
+to her. So it seems when Louie whispered to Dorothy, Louie told Dorothy that if she
+would steal the diamond tiara from me and give it to him and not let his papa know,
+he would give her 1000 franks. Because it seems that Lady Francis Beekman has got
+her heart set on it and she will pay quite a lot for it because she is quite angry
+and when she really gets as angry as she is, she is only a woman with one idea. So
+if Louie could get it and his papa would not find it out, he could keep all the money
+for himself. So it seems that later on, when Robber was whispering to Dorothy, he
+was making her the same proposition for 2000 franks so that Louie would not find out
+and Robber could keep all the money for himself. So I really think it would be delightful
+if Dorothy could make some money for herself because it might make <span class="pageNum" id="pb123">[<a href="#pb123">123</a>]</span>Dorothy get some ambishions. So tomorrow morning Dorothy is going to take the diamond
+tiara and she is going to tell Louie that she stole it and she is going to sell it
+to Louie. But she will make him hand over the money first and then, just as she is
+going to hand over the diamond tiara, I am going to walk in on them and say, “Oh there
+is my diamond tiara. I have been looking for it everywhere.” So then I will get it
+back. So then she will tell him that she might just as well keep the 1000 franks because
+she will steal it for him again in the afternoon. So in the afternoon she is going
+to sell it to Robber and I really think we will let Robber keep it. Because I am quite
+fond of Robber. I mean he is quite a sweet old gentleman and it is really refreshing
+the way he and his son love one another. Because even if it is unusual for an American
+to see a French gentleman always kissing his father, I really think it is refreshing
+and I think that we Americans would be better off if we American fathers and sons
+would love one another more like Louie and Robber.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy and I have quite a lot of delightful hand bags and stockings and handkerchiefs
+and scarfs and things and some <span class="pageNum" id="pb124">[<a href="#pb124">124</a>]</span>quite cute models of evening gowns that are all covered with imitations of diamonds,
+only they do not call them “paste” when they are on a dress but they call them “diamonteys”
+and I really think a girl looks quite cute when she is covered all over with “diamonteys.”
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 5th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>So yesterday morning Dorothy sold the imitation of a diamond tiara to Louie. So then
+we got it back. So in the afternoon we all went out to Versigh. I mean Louie and Robber
+were quite delighted not to go shopping any more so I suppose that Lady Francis Beekman
+really thinks that there is a limit to almost everything. So I took Louie for a walk
+at Versigh so that Dorothy would have a chance to sell it to Robber. So then she sold
+it to Robber. So then he put it in his pocket. But when we were coming home I got
+to thinking things over and I really got to thinking that an imitation of a diamond
+tiara was quite a good thing to have after all. I mean especially if a girl goes around
+a lot in Paris, with admirers who are of the French extraction. And after all, I really
+do not think a girl ought to encouradge Robber to <span class="pageNum" id="pb125">[<a href="#pb125">125</a>]</span>steal something from two American girls who are all alone in Paris and have no gentleman
+to protect them. So I asked Dorothy which pocket Robber put it in, so I sat next to
+him in the automobile coming home and I took it out.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p125width"><img src="images/p125.jpg" alt="“So then Robber started in to squeal once more.”" width="535" height="272"><p class="figureHead">“<i>So then Robber started in to squeal once more.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So we were in quite a quaint restaurant for dinner when Robber put his hand in his
+pocket and then he started in to squeal once more. So it seems he had lost something,
+so he and Louie had one of their regular squealing and shoulder shrugging matches.
+But Louie told his papa that he did not steal it out of his papa’s pocket. But then
+Robber started in to cry to think that his son would steal something out of his own
+papa’s pocket. <span class="pageNum" id="pb126">[<a href="#pb126">126</a>]</span>So after Dorothy and I had had about all we could stand, I told them all about it.
+I mean I really felt sorry for Robber so I told him not to cry any more because it
+was nothing but paste after all. So then I showed it to them. So then Louie and Robber
+looked at Dorothy and I and they really held their breath. So I suppose that most
+of the girls in Paris do not have such brains as we American girls.
+</p>
+<p>So after it was all over, Louie and Robber seemed to be so depressed that I really
+felt sorry for them. So I got an idea. So I told them that we would all go out tomorrow
+to the imitation of a jewelry store and they could buy another imitation of a diamond
+tiara to give to Lady Francis Beekman and they could get the man in the jewelry store
+to put on the bill that it was a hand bag and they could charge the bill to Lady Francis
+Beekman along with the other expenses. Because Lady Francis Beekman had never seen
+the real diamond tiara anyway. So Dorothy spoke up and Dorothy said that as far as
+Lady Francis Beekman would know about diamonds, you could nick off a piece of ice
+and give it to her, only it would melt. So <span class="pageNum" id="pb127">[<a href="#pb127">127</a>]</span>then Robber looked at me and looked at me, and he reached over and kissed me on the
+forehead in a way that was really full of reverance.
+</p>
+<p>So then we had quite a delightful evening. I mean because we all seem to understand
+one another because, after all, Dorothy and I could really have a platonick friendship
+with gentlemen like Louie and Robber. I mean there seems to be something common between
+us, especially when we all get to thinking about Lady Francis Beekman.
+</p>
+<p>So they are going to charge Lady Francis Beekman quite a lot of money when they give
+her the imitation of a diamond tiara and I told Robber if she seems to complane, to
+ask her, if she knew that Sir Francis Beekman sent me 10 pounds worth of orchids every
+day while we were in London. So that would make her so angry that she would be glad
+to pay almost anything to get the diamond tiara.
+</p>
+<p>So when Lady Francis Beekman pays them all the money, Louie and Robber are going to
+give us a dinner in our honor at Ciros. So when Mr. Eisman gets here on Saturday,
+Dorothy and I are going to make Mr. Eisman give Louie and Robber a dinner in their
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb128">[<a href="#pb128">128</a>]</span>honor at Ciros because of the way they helped us when we were two American girls all
+alone in Paris and could not even speak the French landguage.
+</p>
+<p>So Louie and Robber asked us to come to a party at their sister’s house today but
+Dorothy says we had better not go because it is raining and we both have brand new
+umbrellas that are quite cute and Dorothy says she would not think of leaving a brand
+new umbrella in a French lady’s hall and it is no fun to hang on to an umbrella all
+the time you are at a party. So we had better be on the safe side and stay away. So
+we called up Louie and told him we had a headache but we thanked him for all of his
+hospitality. Because it is the way all the French people like Louie and Robber are
+so hospitable to we Americans that really makes Paris so devine.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb131">[<a href="#pb131">131</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch5" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e289">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="label">CHAPTER FIVE</h2>
+<h2 class="main">THE CENTRAL OF EUROPE</h2>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first dateentry"><i>May 16th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>I really have not written in my diary for quite a long time, because Mr. Eisman arrived
+in Paris and when Mr. Eisman is in Paris we really do not seem to do practically anything
+else but the same thing.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p131width"><img src="images/p131.jpg" alt="“When Mr. Eisman is in Paris we do not do anything else but the same thing.”" width="543" height="275"><p class="figureHead">“<i>When Mr. Eisman is in Paris we do not do anything else but the same thing.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>I mean we go shopping and we go to a show and we go to Momart and when a girl is always
+going with Mr. Eisman nothing practically happens. And I did not even bother to learn
+any more French because I <span class="pageNum" id="pb132">[<a href="#pb132">132</a>]</span>always seem to think it is better to leave French to those that can not do anything
+else but talk French. So finally Mr. Eisman seemed to lose quite a lot of interest
+in all of my shopping. So he heard about a button factory that was for sale quite
+cheaply in Vienna and as Mr. Eisman is in the button profession, he thought it would
+be a quite good thing to have a button factory in Vienna so he went to Vienna and
+he said he did not care if he did not ever see the rue de la Paix again. So he said
+if he thought Vienna would be good for a girl’s brains, he would send for Dorothy
+and I and we could meet him at Vienna and learn something. Because Mr. Eisman really
+wants me to get educated more than anything else, especially shopping.
+</p>
+<p>So now we have a telegram, and Mr. Eisman says in the telegram for Dorothy and I to
+take an oriental express because we really ought to see the central of Europe because
+we American girls have quite a lot to learn in the central of Europe. So Dorothy says
+if Mr. Eisman wants us to see the central of Europe she bets there is not a rue de
+la Paix in the whole central of Europe.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy and I are going to take an <span class="pageNum" id="pb133">[<a href="#pb133">133</a>]</span>oriental express tomorrow and I really think it is quite unusual for two American
+girls like I and Dorothy to take an oriental express all alone, because it seems that
+in the Central of Europe they talk some other kinds of <span class="sic" title="Correction: languages">landguages</span> which we do not understand besides French. But I always think that there is nearly
+always some gentleman who will protect two American girls like I and Dorothy who are
+all alone and who are traveling in the Central of Europe to get educated.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 17th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>So now we are on an oriental express and everything seems to be quite unusual. I mean
+Dorothy and I got up this morning and we looked out of the window of our compartment
+and it was really quite unusual. Because it was farms, and we saw quite a lot of girls
+who seemed to be putting small size hay stacks onto large size hay stacks while their
+husbands seemed to sit at a table under quite a shady tree and drink beer. Or else
+their husbands seemed to sit on a fence and smoke their pipe and watch them. So Dorothy
+and I looked at two girls who seemed to be ploughing up all of the ground with only
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb134">[<a href="#pb134">134</a>]</span>the aid of a cow and Dorothy said, “I think we girls have gone one step <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> far away from New York, because it begins to look to me as if the Central of Europe
+is no country for we girls.” So we both became quite worried. I mean I became quite
+depressed because if this is what Mr. Eisman thinks we American girls ought to learn
+I really think it is quite depressing. So I do not think we care to meet any gentlemen
+who have been born and raised in the Central of Europe. I mean the more I travel and
+the more I seem to see other gentlemen the more I seem to think of American gentlemen.
+</p>
+<p>So now I am going to get dressed and go to the dining car and look for some American
+gentleman and hold a conversation, because I really feel so depressed. I mean Dorothy
+keeps trying to depress me because she keeps saying that I will probably end up in
+a farm in the Central of Europe doing a sister act with a plough. Because Dorothy’s
+jokes are really very unrefined and I think that I will feel much better if I go to
+the dining car and have some luncheon.
+</p>
+<hr class="tb"><p>
+</p>
+<p>Well I went to the dining car and I met a <span class="pageNum" id="pb135">[<a href="#pb135">135</a>]</span>gentleman who was quite a delightful American gentleman, I mean it was quite a co-instance,
+because we girls have always heard about Henry Spoffard and it was really nobody else
+but the famous Henry Spoffard, who is the famous Spoffard family, who is a very very
+fine old family who is very very wealthy. I mean Mr. Spoffard is one of the most famous
+familys in New York and he is not like most gentlemen who are wealthy, but he works
+all of the time for the good of the others. I mean he is the gentleman who always
+gets his picture in all of the newspapers because he is always senshuring all of the
+plays that are not good for peoples morals. And all of we girls remember the time
+when he was in the Ritz for luncheon and he met a gentleman friend of his and the
+gentleman friend had Peggy Hopkins Joyce to luncheon and he introduced Peggy Hopkins
+Joyce to Mr. Spoffard and Mr. Spoffard turned on his heels and walked away. Because
+Mr. Spoffard is a very very famous Prespyterian and he is really much to Prespyterian
+to meet Peggy Hopkins Joyce. I mean it is unusual to see a gentleman who is such a
+young gentleman as Mr. Spoffard be so Prespyterian, <span class="pageNum" id="pb136">[<a href="#pb136">136</a>]</span>because when most gentlemen are 35 years of age their minds nearly always seem to
+be on something else.
+</p>
+<p>So when I saw no one else but the famous Mr. Spoffard I really became quite thrilled.
+Because all of we girls have tried very hard to have an introduction to Henry Spoffard
+and it was quite unusual to be shut up on a train in the Central of Europe with him.
+So I thought it would be quite unusual for a girl like I to have a friendship with
+a gentleman like Mr. Spoffard, who really does not even look at a girl unless she
+at least looks like a <span class="sic" title="Correction: Presbyterian">Prespyterian</span>. And I mean our family in Little Rock were really not so <span class="sic" title="Correction: Presbyterian">Prespyterians</span>.
+</p>
+<p>So I thought I would sit at his table. So then I had to ask him about all of the money
+because all of the money they use in the Central of Europe has not even got so much
+sense to it as the kind of franks they use in Paris. Because it seems to be called
+kronens and it seems to take quite a lot of them because it takes 50,000 of them to
+even buy a small size package of cigarettes and Dorothy says if the cigarettes had
+tobacco in them, we couldn’t lift enough kronens over a counter to pay for <span class="pageNum" id="pb137">[<a href="#pb137">137</a>]</span>a package. So this morning Dorothy and I asked the porter to bring us a bottle of
+champagne and we really did not know what to give him for a tip. So Dorothy said for
+me to take one of the things called a one million kronens and she would take one of
+them called a one million kronens and I would give him mine first and if he gave me
+quite a dirty look, she would give him hers. So after we paid for the bottle of champagne
+I gave him my one million kronens and before we could do anything else he started
+in to grabbing my hand and kissing my hand and getting down on his knees. So we finally
+had to push him right out of the compartment. So one million kronens seemed to be
+enough. So I told Mr. Spoffard how we did not know what to give the porter when he
+brought us our bottle of minral water. So then I asked him to tell me all about all
+of the money because I told him I always seem to think that a penny earned was a penny
+saved. So it really was quite unusual because Mr. Spoffard said that that was his
+favorite motto.
+</p>
+<hr class="tb"><p>
+</p>
+<p>So then we got to talking quite a lot and I told him that I was traveling to get educated
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb138">[<a href="#pb138">138</a>]</span>and I told him I had a girl with me who I was trying to reform because I thought if
+she would put her mind more on getting educated, she would get more reformed. Because
+after all Mr. Spoffard will have to meet Dorothy sooner or later and he might wonder
+what a refined girl like I was doing with a girl like Dorothy. So Mr. Spoffard really
+became quite <span class="sic" title="Correction: intrigued">intreeged</span>. Because Mr. Spoffard loves to reform people and he loves to <span class="sic" title="Correction: censure">senshure</span> everything and he really came over to Europe to look at all the things that Americans
+come over to Europe to look at, when they really should not look at them but they
+should look at all of the museums instead. Because if that is all we Americans come
+to Europe to look at, we should stay home and look at America first. So Mr. Spoffard
+spends all of his time looking at things that spoil <span class="sic" title="Correction: people’s">peoples</span> morals. So Mr. Spoffard really must have very very strong morals or else all the
+things that spoil other <span class="sic" title="Correction: people’s">peoples</span> morals would spoil his morals. But they do not seem to spoil Mr. <span class="sic" title="Correction: Spoffard’s">Spoffards</span> morals and I really think it is wonderful to have such strong morals. So I told Mr.
+Spoffard that I thought that civilization is not what it ought to be and we <span class="pageNum" id="pb139">[<a href="#pb139">139</a>]</span>really ought to have something else to take its place.
+</p>
+<p>So Mr. Spoffard said that he would come to call on Dorothy and I in our compartment
+this afternoon and we would talk it all over, if his mother does not seem to need
+him in her compartment. Because Mr. Spoffards mother always travels with Mr. Spoffard
+and he never does anything unless he tells his mother all about it, and asks his mother
+if he ought to. So he told me that that is the reason he has never got married, because
+his mother does not think that all of the flappers we seem to have nowadays are what
+a young man ought to marry when a young man is full of so many morals as Mr. Spoffard
+seems to be full of. So I told Mr. Spoffard that I really felt just like his mother
+feels about all of the flappers because I am an old fashioned girl.
+</p>
+<p>So then I got to worrying about Dorothy quite a lot because Dorothy is really not
+so old-fashioned and she might say something in front of Mr. Spoffard that might make
+Mr. Spoffard wonder what such an old-fashioned girl as I was doing with such a girl
+as Dorothy. So I told him how I was having quite <span class="pageNum" id="pb140">[<a href="#pb140">140</a>]</span>a hard time reforming Dorothy and I would like to have him meet Dorothy so he could
+tell me if he really thinks I am wasting quite a lot of time trying to reform a girl
+like Dorothy. So then he had to go to his mother. So I really hope that Dorothy will
+act more reformed than she usually acts in front of Mr. Spoffard.
+</p>
+<p>Well Mr. Spoffard just left our compartment so he really came to pay a call on us
+after all. So Mr. Spoffard told us all about his mother and I was really very very
+intreeged because if Mr. Spoffard and I become friendly he is the kind of a gentleman
+that always wants a girl to meet his mother. I mean if a girl gets to know what kind
+of a mother a gentlemans mother is like, she really knows more what kind of a conversation
+to use on a gentleman’s mother when she meets her. Because a girl like I is really
+always on the verge of meeting gentlemen’s mothers. But such an unrefined girl as
+Dorothy is really not the kind of a girl that ever meets gentlemens mothers.
+</p>
+<hr class="tb"><p>
+</p>
+<p>So Mr. Spoffard says his mother has to have him take care of her quite a lot. Because
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb141">[<a href="#pb141">141</a>]</span>Mr. <span class="sic" title="Correction: Spoffard’s">Spoffards</span> <span class="sic" title="Correction: mother’s">mothers</span> brains have never really been so strong. Because it seems his mother came from such
+a very fine old family that even when she was quite a small size child she had to
+be sent to a school that was a special school for people of very fine old <span class="sic" title="Correction: families">familys</span> who had to have things very easy on their brain. So she still has to have things
+very easy on her brain, so she has a girl who is called her companion who goes with
+her everywhere who is called Miss Chapman. Because Mr. Spoffard says that there is
+always something new going on in the world which they did not get a chance to tell
+her about at the school. So now Miss Chapman keeps telling her instead. Because how
+would she know what to think about such a new thing as a radio, for instance, if she
+did not have Miss Chapman to tell her what it was, for instance. So Dorothy spoke
+up and Dorothy said, “What a responsibility that girl has got on her shoulders. For
+instance, what if Miss Chapman told her a radio was something to build a fire in,
+and she would get cold some day and stuff it full of papers and light it.” But Mr.
+Spoffard told Dorothy that Miss Chapman would never make such a <span class="pageNum" id="pb142">[<a href="#pb142">142</a>]</span>mistake. Because he said that Miss Chapman came from a very very fine old family herself
+and she really had a fine brain. So Dorothy said, “If she really has got such a fine
+brain I bet her fine old family once had an ice man who could not be trusted.” So
+Mr. Spoffard and I did not pay any more attention to Dorothy because Dorothy really
+does not know how to hold a conversation.
+</p>
+<hr class="tb"><p>
+</p>
+<p>So then I and Mr. Spoffard held a conversation all about morals and Mr. Spoffard says
+he really thinks the future of everything is between the hands of Mr. Blank the district
+attorney who is the famous district attorney who is closing up all the places in New
+York where they sell all of the liquor. So Mr. Spoffard said that a few months ago,
+when Mr. Blank decided he would try to get the job to be the district attorney, he
+put 1,000 dollars worth of liquor down his sink. So now Mr. Blank says that everybody
+else has got to put it down their sink. So Dorothy spoke up, and Dorothy said, “If
+he poured 1,000 dollars worth down his sink to get himself one million dollars worth
+of publicity and a good job—when we pour it down <span class="pageNum" id="pb143">[<a href="#pb143">143</a>]</span>our sink, what do we get?” But Mr. Spoffard is <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> brainy a gentleman to answer any such a foolish question. So he gave Dorothy a look
+that was full of dignity and he said he would have to go back to his Mother. So I
+was really quite angry at Dorothy. So I followed Mr. Spoffard down the hall of the
+railway train and I asked Mr. Spoffard if he thought I was wasting quite a lot of
+time reforming a girl like Dorothy. So Mr. Spoffard thinks I am, because he really
+thinks a girl like Dorothy will never have any <span class="sic" title="Correction: reverence">reverance</span>. So I told Mr. Spoffard I had wasted so much time on Dorothy it would really break
+my heart to be a failure. So then I had tears in my eyes. So Mr. Spoffard is really
+very very sympathetic because when he saw that I did not have any handkerchief, he
+took his own handkerchief and he dried up all of my tears. So then he said he would
+help me with Dorothy quite a lot and get her mind to running on things that are more
+educational.
+</p>
+<p>So then he said he thought that we ought to get off the train at a place called Munich
+because it was very full of art, which they call “kunst” in Munich, which is very,
+very <span class="pageNum" id="pb144">[<a href="#pb144">144</a>]</span>educational. So he said he and Dorothy and I would get off of the train in Munich
+because he could send his mother right on to Vienna with Miss Chapman, because every
+place always seems to look alike to his mother anyway. So we are all going to get
+off the train at Munich and I can send Mr. Eisman a telegram when nobody is looking.
+Because I really do not think I will tell Mr. Spoffard about Mr. Eisman, because,
+after all, their religions are different and when two gentlemen have such different
+religions they do not seem to have so much to get congeneal about. So I can telegraph
+Mr. Eisman that Dorothy and I thought we would get off the train at Munich to look
+at all of the art.
+</p>
+<p>So then I went back to Dorothy and I told Dorothy if she did not have anything to
+say in the future to not say it. Because even if Mr. Spoffard is a fine old family
+and even if he is very Prespyterian, I and he could really be friendly after all and
+talk together quite a lot. I mean Mr. Spoffard likes to talk about himself quite a
+lot, so I said to Dorothy it really shows that, after all, he is just like any other
+gentleman. But Dorothy said she would demand more proof than that. <span class="pageNum" id="pb145">[<a href="#pb145">145</a>]</span>So Dorothy says she thinks that maybe I might become quite friendly with Mr. Spoffard
+and especially with his mother because she thinks his mother and I have quite a lot
+that is common, but she says, if I ever bump into Miss Chapman, she thinks I will
+come to a kropper because Dorothy saw Miss Chapman when she was at luncheon and Dorothy
+says Miss Chapman is the kind of a girl that wears a collar and a tie even when she
+is not on horseback. And Dorothy said it was the look that Miss Chapman gave her at
+luncheon that really gave her the idea about the ice man. So Dorothy says she thinks
+Miss Chapman has got 3 thirds of the brains of that trio of Geegans, because Geegans
+is the slang word that Dorothy has thought up to use on people who are society people.
+Because Dorothy says she thinks any gentleman with Mr. <span class="sic" title="Correction: Spoffard’s">Spoffards</span> brains had ought to spend his time putting nickels into an electric piano, but I
+did not even bother to talk back at such a girl as Dorothy. So now we must get ready
+to get off the train when the train gets to Munich so that we can look at all of the
+kunst in Munich.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb146">[<a href="#pb146">146</a>]</span></p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 19th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well yesterday Mr. Spoffard and I and Dorothy got off the train at Munich to see all
+of the kunst in Munich, but you only call it Munich when you are on the train because
+as soon as you get off of the train they seem to call it Munchen. So you really would
+know that Munchen was full of kunst because in case you would not know it, they have
+painted the word “kunst” in large size black letters on everything in Munchen, and
+you can not even see a boot black’s stand in Munchen that is not full of kunst.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p147width"><img src="images/p147.jpg" alt="“The Germans stand in the lobby of the theatre and eat quite a lot of Bermudian onions and garlick sausage.”" width="370" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>The Germans stand in the lobby of the theatre and eat quite a lot of Bermudian onions
+and garlick sausage.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So Mr. Spoffard said that we really ought to go to the theater in Munchen because
+even the theater in Munchen was full of kunst. So we looked at all of the bills of
+all of the theaters, with the aid of quite an <span class="sic" title="Correction: intellectual">intelectual</span> hotel clerk who seemed to be able to read it and tell us what it said, because it
+really meant nothing to us. So it seems they were playing Kiki in Munchen, so I said,
+let us go and see Kiki because we have seen Lenore Ulric in New York and we would
+really know what it is all about even if they do not seem to talk the English <span class="sic" title="Correction: language">landguage</span>. So then we went to the Kunst theater. So it seems <span class="pageNum" id="pb148">[<a href="#pb148">148</a>]</span>that Munchen is practically full of Germans and the lobby of the Kunst theater was
+really full of Germans who stand in the lobby and drink beer and eat quite a lot of
+Bermudian onions and garlick sausage and hard boiled eggs and beer before all of the
+acts. So I really had to ask Mr. Spoffard if he thought we had come to the right theatre
+because the lobby seemed to smell such a lot. I mean when the smell of beer gets to
+be anteek it gets to smell quite a lot. But Mr. Spoffard seemed to think that the
+lobby of the Kunst theatre did not smell any worse than all of the other places in
+Munich. So then Dorothy spoke up and Dorothy said “You can say what you want about
+the Germans being full of ‘kunst,’ but what they are really full of is delicatessen.”
+</p>
+<p>So then we went into the Kunst theater. But the Kunst theater does not seem to smell
+so good as the lobby of the Kunst theater. And the Kunst theater seems to be decorated
+with quite a lot of what tripe would look like if it was pasted on the wall and gilded.
+Only you could not really see the gilding because it was covered with quite a lot
+of dust. So Dorothy looked around and Dorothy said, if <span class="pageNum" id="pb149">[<a href="#pb149">149</a>]</span>this is “kunst,” the art center of the world is Union Hill New Jersey.
+</p>
+<p>So then they started in to playing Kiki but it seems that it was not the same kind
+of a Kiki that we have in America, because it seemed to be all about a family of large
+size German people who seemed to keep getting in each others ways. I mean when a stage
+is completely full of 2 or 3 German people who are quite large size, they really cannot
+help it if they seem to get in each others ways. So then Dorothy got to talking with
+a young gentleman who seemed to be a German gentleman who sat back of her, who she
+thought was applauding. But what he was really doing was he was cracking a hard boiled
+egg on the back of her chair. So he talked English with quite an accent that seemed
+to be quite a German accent. So Dorothy asked him if Kiki had come out on the stage
+yet. So he said no, but she was really a beautiful german actress who came clear from
+Berlin and he said we should really wait until she came out, even if we did not seem
+to understand it. So finally she came out. I mean we knew it was her because Dorothy’s
+German gentleman friend nudged Dorothy with <span class="pageNum" id="pb150">[<a href="#pb150">150</a>]</span>a sausage. So we looked at her, and we looked at her and Dorothy said, “If Schuman
+Heinke still has a grandmother, we have dug her up in Munchen.” So we did not bother
+to see any more of Kiki because Dorothy said she would really have to know more about
+the foundations of that building before she would risk our lives to see Kiki do that
+famous scene where she faints in the last act. Because Dorothy said, if the foundations
+of that building were as anteek as the smell, there was going to be a catasterophy
+when Kiki hit the floor. So even Mr. Spoffard was quite discouradged, but he was really
+glad because he said he was 100 per cent. of an American and it served the Germans
+right for starting such a war against all we Americans.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 20th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well today Mr. Spoffard is going to take me all around to all of the museums in Munchen,
+which are full of kunst that I really ought to look at, but Dorothy said she had been
+punished for all of her sins last night, so now she is going to begin life all over
+again by going out with her German gentleman friend, who is going to take her to a
+house <span class="pageNum" id="pb151">[<a href="#pb151">151</a>]</span>called the Half Brow house which is the worlds largest size of a Beer Hall. So Dorothy
+said I could be a high brow and get full of kunst, but she is <span class="sic" title="Correction: satisfied">satisfide</span> to be a Half brow and get full of beer. But Dorothy will really never be full of
+anything else but unrefinement.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 21st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well Mr. Spoffard and I and Dorothy are on the train again and we are all going to
+Vienna. I mean Mr. Spoffard and I spent one whole day going through all of the museums
+in Munchen, but I am really not even going to think about it. Because when something
+terrible happens to me, I always try to be a Christian science and I simply do not
+even think about it, but I deny that it ever happened even if my feet do seem to hurt
+quite a lot. So even Dorothy had quite a hard day in Munchen because her German gentleman
+friend, who is called Rudolf, came for her at 11 oclock to take her to breakfast.
+But Dorothy told him that she had had her breakfast. But her gentleman friend said
+that he had had his first breakfast <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span>, but it was time for his second. So he took Dorothy <span class="pageNum" id="pb152">[<a href="#pb152">152</a>]</span>to the Half Brow house where everybody eats white sausages and pretzels and beer at
+11 oclock. So after they had their white sausages and beer he wanted to take her for
+a ride but they could only go a few blocks because by then it was time for luncheon.
+So they ate quite a lot of luncheon and then he bought her a large size box of chocolates
+that were full of liqueurs, and took her to the matinee. So after the first act Rudolf
+got hungry and they had to go and stand in the lobby and have some <span class="sic" title="Correction: sandwiches">sandwitches</span> and beer. But Dorothy did not enjoy the show very much and so after the second act
+Rudolf said they would leave because it was time for tea anyway. So after quite a
+heavy tea, Rudolph asked her to dinner and Dorothy was <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> overcome to say No. So after dinner they went to a beer garden for beer and pretzels.
+But finally Dorothy began to come to, and she asked him to take her back to the hotel.
+So Rudolf said he would, but they had better have a bite to eat first. So today Dorothy
+really feels just as <span class="sic" title="Correction: discouraged">discouradged</span> as I seem to feel, only Dorothy is not a Christian science and all she can do is
+suffer.
+</p>
+<p>But in spite of all of my Christian science, <span class="pageNum" id="pb153">[<a href="#pb153">153</a>]</span>I am really beginning to feel quite <span class="sic" title="Correction: discouraged">discouradged</span> about Vienna. I mean Mr. Eisman is in Vienna, and I do not see how I can spend quite
+a lot of time with Mr. Eisman and quite a lot of time with Mr. Spoffard and keep them
+from meeting one another. Because Mr. Spoffard might not seem to understand why Mr.
+Eisman seems to spend quite a lot of money to get me educated. And Dorothy keeps trying
+to depress me about Miss Chapman because she says she thinks that when Miss Chapman
+sees I and Mr. Spoffard together she thinks that Miss Chapman will cable for the <span class="sic" title="Correction: family’s">familys</span> favorite lunacy expert. So I have got to be as full of Christian science as I can
+and always hope for the best.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 25th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>So far everything has really worked out for the best. Because Mr. Eisman is very very
+busy all day with the button profession, and he tells me to run around with Dorothy
+all day. So I and Mr. Spoffard run around all day. So then I tell Mr. Spoffard that
+I really do not care to go to all of the places that you go to at night, but I will
+go to bed and get ready for tomorrow instead. So then <span class="pageNum" id="pb154">[<a href="#pb154">154</a>]</span>Dorothy and I go to dinner with Mr. Eisman and then we go to a show, and we stay up
+quite late at a cabaret called the Chapeau Rouge and I am able to keep it all up with
+the aid of champagne. So if we keep our eye out for Mr. Spoffard and do not all bump
+into one another when he is out looking at things that we Americans really should
+not look at, it will all work out for the best. I mean I have even stopped Mr. Spoffard
+looking at museums because I tell him that I like nature better, and when you look
+at nature you look at it in a horse and buggy in the park and it is much easier on
+the feet. So now he is beginning to talk about how he would like me to meet his mother,
+so everything really seems for the best after all.
+</p>
+<p>But I have quite a hard time with Mr. Eisman at night. I mean at night Mr. Eisman
+is in quite a state, because every time he makes an engagement about the button factory,
+it is time for all the gentlemen in Vienna to go to the coffee house and sit. Or else
+every time he makes an engagement about the button factory, some Viennese gentleman
+gets the idea to have a <span class="sic" title="Correction: picnic">picknick</span> and they all put on short pants and bare knees and they all put a <span class="pageNum" id="pb155">[<a href="#pb155">155</a>]</span>feather in their hat, and they all walk to the Tyrol. So it really <span class="sic" title="Correction: discourages">discouradges</span> Mr. Eisman quite a lot. But if anyone ought to get <span class="sic" title="Correction: discouraged">discouradged</span> I think that I ought to get <span class="sic" title="Correction: discouraged">discouradged</span> because after all when a girl has had no sleep for a week a girl can not help it
+if she seems to get <span class="sic" title="Correction: discouraged">discouradged</span>.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 27th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well <span class="sic" title="Correction: finally">finaly</span> I broke down and Mr. Spoffard said that he thought a little girl like I, who was
+trying to reform the whole world was trying to do <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> much, especially beginning on a girl like Dorothy. So he said there was a famous
+doctor in Vienna called Dr. Froyd who could stop all of my worrying because he does
+not give a girl medicine but he talks you out of it by psychoanalysis. So yesterday
+he took me to Dr. Froyd. So Dr. Froyd and I had quite a long talk in the english <span class="sic" title="Correction: language">landguage</span>. So it seems that everybody seems to have a thing called inhibitions, which is when
+you want to do a thing and you do not do it. So then you dream about it instead. So
+Dr. Froyd asked me, what I seemed to dream about. So I told him that I never really
+dream about anything. I mean <span class="pageNum" id="pb156">[<a href="#pb156">156</a>]</span>I use my brains so much in the day time that at night they do not seem to do anything
+else but rest. So Dr. Froyd was very very <span class="sic" title="Correction: surprised">surprized</span> at a girl who did not dream about anything. So then he asked me all about my life.
+I mean he is very very sympathetic, and he seems to know how to draw a girl out quite
+a lot. I mean I told him things that I really would not even put in my diary. So then
+he seemed very very <span class="sic" title="Correction: intrigued">intreeged</span> at a girl who always seemed to do everything she wanted to do. So he asked me if
+I really never wanted to do a thing that I did not do. For instance did I ever want
+to do a thing that was really <span class="sic" title="Correction: violent">vialent</span>, for instance, did I ever want to shoot someone for instance. So then I said I had,
+but the bullet only went in Mr. Jennings lung and came right out again. So then Dr.
+Froyd looked at me and looked at me and he said he did not really think it was possible.
+So then he called in his assistance and he pointed at me and talked to his assistance
+quite a lot in the Viennese <span class="sic" title="Correction: language">landguage</span>. So then his assistance looked at me and looked at me and it really seems as if I
+was quite a famous case. So then Dr. Froyd said that all <span class="pageNum" id="pb158">[<a href="#pb158">158</a>]</span>I needed was to cultivate a few inhibitions and get some sleep.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p157width"><img src="images/p157.jpg" alt="“Dr. Froyd seemed to think that I was quite a famous case.”" width="370" height="720"><p class="figureHead">“<i>Dr. Froyd seemed to think that I was quite a famous case.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 29th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Things are really getting to be quite a strain. Because yesterday Mr. Spoffard and
+Mr. Eisman were both in the lobby of the Bristol hotel and I had to pretend not to
+see both of them. I mean it is quite an easy thing to pretend not to see one gentleman,
+but it is a quite hard thing to pretend not to see two gentlemen. So something has
+really got to happen soon, or I will have to admit that things seem to be happening
+that are not for the best.
+</p>
+<p>So this afternoon Dorothy and I had an engagement to meet Count Salm for tea at four
+o’clock, only you do not call it tea at Vienna but you seem to call it “yowzer” and
+you do not drink tea at Vienna but you drink coffee instead. I mean it is quite unusual
+to see all of the gentlemen at Vienna stop work, to go to yowzer about one hour after
+they have all finished their luncheon, but time really does not seem to mean so much
+to Viennese gentlemen except time to get to the coffee house, which they all seem
+to know by <span class="pageNum" id="pb159">[<a href="#pb159">159</a>]</span>instincts, or else they really do not seem to mind if they make a mistake and get
+there <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> early. Because Mr. Eisman says that when it is time to attend to the button profession,
+they really seem to lose all of their interest until Mr. Eisman is getting so nervous
+he could scream.
+</p>
+<p>So we went to Deimels and met Count Salm. But while we were having yowzer with Count
+Salm, we saw Mr. Spoffard’s mother come in with her companion<span class="sic" title="Correction: ,"></span> Miss Chapman, and Miss Chapman seemed to look at me quite a lot and talk to Mr. Spoffards
+mother about me quite a lot. So I became quite nervous, because I really wished that
+we were not with Count Salm. I mean it has been quite a hard thing to make Mr. Spoffard
+think that I am trying to reform Dorothy, but if I had to try to make him think that
+I was trying to reform Count Salm, he might begin to think that there is a limit to
+almost everything. So Mr. <span class="sic" title="Correction: Spoffard’s">Spoffards</span> mother seems to be deaf, because she seems to use an ear trumpet and I really could
+not help over hearing quite a lot of words that Miss Chapman was using on me, even
+if it is not such good <span class="sic" title="Correction: etiquette">etiquet</span> to overhear people. So Miss <span class="pageNum" id="pb160">[<a href="#pb160">160</a>]</span>Chapman seemed to be telling Mr. Spoffards mother that I was a “creature,” and she
+seemed to be telling her that I was the real reason why her son seemed to be so full
+of nothing but neglect lately. So then Mr. Spoffards mother looked at me and looked
+at me, even if it was not such good etiquet to look at a person. And Miss Chapman
+kept right on talking to Mr. Spoffards mother and I heard her mention Willie Gwynn
+and I think that Miss Chapman has been making some inquiries about me and I really
+think that she has heard about the time when all of the family of Willie Gwynn had
+quite a long talk with me and persuaded me not to marry Willie Gwynn for $10,000.
+So I really wish Mr. Spoffard would introduce me to his mother before she gets to
+be full of quite a lot of prejudice. Because one thing seems to be piling up on top
+of another thing, until I am almost on the verge of getting nervous and I have not
+had any time yet to do what Dr. Froyd said a girl ought to do.
+</p>
+<p>So tonight I am going to tell Mr. Eisman that I have got to go to bed early, so then
+I can take quite a long ride with Mr. Spoffard and look at nature, and he may say
+something <span class="pageNum" id="pb161">[<a href="#pb161">161</a>]</span>definite, because nothing makes gentlemen get so definite as looking at nature when
+it is moonlight.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 30th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well last night Mr. Spoffard and I took quite a long ride in the park, but they do
+not call it a park in the Viennese <span class="sic" title="Correction: language">landguage</span> but they call it the Prater. So a prater is really <span class="sic" title="Correction: divine">devine</span> because it is just like Coney Island but at the same time it is in the woods and
+it is practically full of trees and it has quite a long road for people to take rides
+on in a horse and buggy. So I found out that Miss Chapman had been talking against
+me quite a lot. So it seems that she has been making inquiries about me, and I was
+really surprised to hear all of the things that Miss Chapman seemed to find out about
+me except that she did not find out about Mr. Eisman educating me. So then I had to
+tell Mr. Spoffard that I was not always so reformed as I am now, because the world
+was full of gentlemen who were nothing but wolfs in sheeps clothes, that did nothing
+but take <span class="sic" title="Correction: advantage">advantadge</span> of all we girls. So I really cried quite a lot. So then I told him how I was just
+a little girl from <span class="pageNum" id="pb162">[<a href="#pb162">162</a>]</span>Little Rock when I first left Little Rock and by that time even Mr. Spoffard had tears
+in his eyes. So I told him how I came from a very very good family because papa was
+very <span class="sic" title="Correction: intellectual">intelectual</span>, and he was a very very prominent Elk, and everybody always said that he was a very
+<span class="sic" title="Correction: intellectual">intelectual</span> Elk. So I told Mr. Spoffard that when I left Little Rock I thought that all of the
+gentlemen did not want to do anything but protect we girls and by the time I found
+out that they did not want to protect us so much, it was <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> late. So then he cried quite a lot. So then I told him how I <span class="sic" title="Correction: finally">finaly</span> got reformed by reading all about him in the newspapers and when I saw him in the
+oriental express it really seemed to be nothing but the result of fate. So I told
+Mr. Spoffard that I thought a girl was really more reformed if she knew what it was
+to be unreformed than if she was born reformed and never really knew that was the
+matter with her. So then Mr. Spoffard reached over and he kissed me on the forehead
+in a way that was full of <span class="sic" title="Correction: reverence">reverance</span> and he said I seemed to remind him quite a lot of a girl who got quite a write-up
+in the bible who was called Magdellen. So then he said that he used to be a <span class="pageNum" id="pb163">[<a href="#pb163">163</a>]</span>member of the choir himself, so who was he to cast the first rock at a girl like I.
+</p>
+<p>So we rode around in the Prater until it was quite late and it really was <span class="sic" title="Correction: divine">devine</span> because it was moonlight and we talked quite a lot about morals, and all the bands
+in the prater were all playing in the <span class="sic" title="Correction: distance">distants</span> “Mama love Papa”. Because “Mama love Papa” has just reached Vienna and they all seem
+to be crazy about “Mama love Papa” even if it is not so new in America. So then he
+took me home to the hotel.
+</p>
+<p>So everything always works out for the best, because this morning Mr. Spoffard called
+up and told me he wanted me to meet his mother. So I told him I would like to have
+luncheon alone with his mother because we could have quite a little tatatate if there
+was only two of us. So I told him to bring his mother to our room for luncheon because
+I thought that Miss Chapman could not walk into our room and spoil everything.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p164width"><img src="images/p164.jpg" alt="“I told Mr. Spoffard’s mother that I did not seem to like all of the flappers we seem to have nowadays.”" width="538" height="273"><p class="figureHead">“<i>I told Mr. Spoffard’s mother that I did not seem to like all of the flappers we seem
+to have nowadays.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So he brought his mother down to our sitting room and I put on quite a simple little
+organdy gown that I had ripped all of the trimming off of, and I had a pair of black
+lace mitts that Dorothy used to wear in the <span class="pageNum" id="pb164">[<a href="#pb164">164</a>]</span>Follies and I had a pair of shoes that did not have any heels on them. So when he
+introduced us to each other I dropped her a <span class="sic" title="Correction: curtsey">courtesy</span> because I always think it is quite quaint when a girl drops quite a lot of <span class="sic" title="Correction: curtsies">courtesys</span>. So then he left us alone and we had quite a little talk and I told her that I did
+not seem to like all of the flappers that we seem to have nowadays, because I was
+brought up to be more old fashioned. So then Mr. <span class="sic" title="Correction: Spoffard’s">Spoffards</span> mother told me that Miss Chapman said that she had heard that I was not so old fashioned.
+But I told her that I was so old fashioned that I was always full of respect for all
+of my elders and I would not dare to tell them everything they ought <span class="pageNum" id="pb165">[<a href="#pb165">165</a>]</span>to do, like Miss Chapman seems to tell her everything she ought to do, for instants.
+</p>
+<p>So then I ordered luncheon and I thought some champagne would make her feel quite
+good for luncheon so I asked her if she liked champagne. So she really likes champagne
+very very much but Miss Chapman thinks it is not so nice for a person to drink liquor.
+But I told her that I was a Christian science, and all of we Christian science seem
+to believe that there can not really be any harm in anything, so how can there be
+any harm in a small size bottle of champagne? So she never seemed to look at it in
+that kind of a light before, because she said that Miss Chapman believed in Christian
+science also, but what Miss Chapman believed about things that were good for you to
+drink seemed to apply more towards water. So then we had luncheon and she began to
+feel very very good. So I thought that we had better have another bottle of champagne
+because I told her that I was such an ardent Christian science that I did not even
+believe there could be any harm in two bottles of champagne. So we had another bottle
+of champagne and she became very intreeged about Christian science because <span class="pageNum" id="pb166">[<a href="#pb166">166</a>]</span>she said that she really thought it was a better religion than <span class="sic" title="Correction: Presbyterians">Prespyterians</span>. So she said Miss Chapman used to try to get her to use it on things, but Miss Chapman
+never seemed to have such a large size grasp of the Christian science religion as
+I seem to have.
+</p>
+<p>So then I told her that I thought Miss Chapman was jealous of her good looks. So then
+she said that that was true, because Miss Chapman would always make her wear hats
+that were made out of black horses hair because horses hair does not weigh so much
+on a persons brain. So I told her I was going to give her one of my hats that has
+got quite large size roses on it. So then I got it out, but we could not get it on
+her head because hats are quite small on account of hair being bobbed. So I thought
+I would get the <span class="sic" title="Correction: scissors">sissors</span> and bob her head, but then I thought I had done enough to her for one day.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry’s mother said that I was really the most sunshine that she ever had in all
+her life and when Henry came back to take his Mother up to her room, she did not want
+to go. But after he got her away he called me up on the telephone and he was <span class="sic" title="Correction: quite">qiute</span> excited and he said he wanted to ask me something <span class="pageNum" id="pb167">[<a href="#pb167">167</a>]</span>that was very very important. So I said I would see him tonight.
+</p>
+<p>But now I have got to see Mr. Eisman because I have an idea about doing something
+that is really very very important that has got to be done at once.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>May 31st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well I and Dorothy and Mr. Eisman are on a train going to a place called Buda Pest.
+So I did not see Henry again before I left, but I left him a letter. Because I thought
+it would be a quite good thing if what he wanted to ask me he would have to write
+down, instead of asking me, and he could not write it to me if I was in the same city
+that he is in. So I told him in my letter that I had to leave in five minute’s time
+because I found out that Dorothy was just on the verge of getting very unreformed,
+and if I did not get her away, all I had done for her would really go for nothing.
+So I told him to write down what he had to say to me, and mail it to me at the Ritz
+hotel in Buda Pest. Because I always seem to believe in the old <span class="sic" title="Correction: adage">addage</span>, Say it in writing.
+</p>
+<p>So it was really very easy to get Mr. Eisman <span class="pageNum" id="pb168">[<a href="#pb168">168</a>]</span>to leave Vienna, because yesterday he went out to see the button factory but it seems
+that all of the people at the button factory were not at work but they were giving
+a birthday party to some saint. So it seems that every time some saint has a birthday
+they all stop work so they can give it a birthday party. So Mr. Eisman looked at their
+calendar, and found out that some saint or other was born practically every week in
+the year. So he has decided that America is good enough for him.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry will not be able to follow me to Buda Pest because his mother is having treatments
+by Dr. Froyd and she seems to be a much more difficult case than I seem to be. I mean
+it is quite hard for Dr. Froyd, because she cannot seem to remember which is a dream
+and which really happened to her. So she tells him everything, and he has to use his
+judgement. I mean when she tells him that a very very handsome young gentleman tried
+to flirt with her on Fifth Avenue, he uses his judgement.
+</p>
+<p>So we will soon be at a Ritz hotel again and I must say it will be delightful to find
+a Ritz hotel right in the central of Europe.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb169">[<a href="#pb169">169</a>]</span></p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>June 1st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well yesterday <span class="sic" title="Correction: Henry’s">Henrys</span> letter came and it says in black and white that he and his mother have never met
+such a girl as I and he wants me to marry him. So I took <span class="sic" title="Correction: Henry’s">Henrys</span> letter to the photographers and I had quite a lot of photographs taken of it because
+a girl might lose <span class="sic" title="Correction: Henry’s">Henrys</span> letter and she would not have anything left to remember him by. But Dorothy says
+to hang on to Henry’s letter, because she really does not think the photographs do
+it justice.
+</p>
+<p>So this afternoon I got a telegram from Henry and the telegram says that Henry’s father
+is very, very ill in New York and they have got to leave for New York immediately
+and his heart is broken not to see me again and to send him my answer by telegraph
+so that his mind will be rested while he is going back to New York. So I sent him
+a telegram and I accepted his proposal. So tonight I got another telegram and Henry
+says that he and his mother are very very happy and <span class="sic" title="Correction: Henry’s">Henrys</span> mother can hardly bear Miss Chapman any more and Henry says he hopes I will decide
+to come right back to New York and keep his mother quite a lot of company, <span class="pageNum" id="pb170">[<a href="#pb170">170</a>]</span>because he thinks I can reform Dorothy more in New York anyway, where there is prohibition
+and nobody can get anything to drink.
+</p>
+<p>So now I have got to make up my mind whether I really want to marry Henry after all.
+Because I know to much to get married to any gentleman like Henry without thinking
+it all over. Because Henry is the kind of a gentleman who gets on a girls nerves quite
+a lot and when a gentleman has nothing else to do but get on a girls nerves, there
+really seems to be a limit to almost everything. Because when a gentleman has a business,
+he has an office and he has to be there, but when a gentlemans business is only looking
+into other peoples business, a gentleman is always on the verge of coming in and out
+of the house. And a girl could not really say that her time was her own. And when
+Henry was not in and out of the house, his mother would always be in and out of the
+house because she seems to think that I am so full of nothing but sunshine. So it
+is quite a problem and I seem to be in quite a quarandary, because it might really
+be better if Henry should happen to decide that he should not get married, and he
+should change his mind, and desert a <span class="pageNum" id="pb171">[<a href="#pb171">171</a>]</span>girl, and then it would only be right if a girl should sue him for a breach of promise.
+</p>
+<p>But I really think, whatever happens, that Dorothy and I had better get back to New
+York. So I will see if Mr. Eisman will send us back. I mean I really do not think
+that Mr. Eisman will mind us going back because if he does, I will start shopping
+again and that always seems to bring him to terms. But all the time I am going back
+to New York, I will have to try to make up my mind one way or another. Because we
+girls really can not help it, if we have ideals, and sometimes my mind seems to get
+to running on things that are romantic, and I seem to think that maybe there is some
+place in the world where there is a gentleman who knows how to look and act like Count
+Salm and who has got money besides. And when a <span class="sic" title="Correction: girl’s">girls</span> mind gets to thinking about such a romantic thing, a girls mind really does not seem
+to know whether to marry Henry or not.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb175">[<a href="#pb175">175</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch6" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e299">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="label">CHAPTER SIX</h2>
+<h2 class="main">BRAINS ARE REALLY EVERYTHING</h2>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first dateentry"><i>June 14th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, Dorothy and I arrived at New York yesterday because Mr. Eisman finally decided
+to send us home because he said that all of his button profession would not stand
+the strain of educating me much more in Europe. So we separated from Mr. Eisman in
+Buda Pest because Mr. Eisman had to go to Berlin to look up all of his starving relatives
+in Berlin, who have done nothing but starve since the War, so he wrote me just before
+we sailed and he said that he had dug up all his starving relatives and he had looked
+them all over, and decided not to bring them to America because there was not one
+of his starving relatives who could travel on a railroad ticket without paying excess
+fare for overweight.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy and I took the boat and all the way over on the boat I had to make up my
+mind whether I really wanted to marry the famous Henry H. Spoffard, or not, because
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb176">[<a href="#pb176">176</a>]</span>he was waiting for me to arrive at New York and he was so impatient that he could
+hardly wait for me to arrive at New York. But I have not wasted all of my time on
+Henry, even if I do not marry him, because I have some letters from Henry which would
+come in very, very handy if I did not marry Henry. So Dorothy seems to agree with
+me quite a lot, because Dorothy says the only thing she could stand being to Henry,
+would be to be his widow at the age of 18.
+</p>
+<p>So coming over on the boat I decided not to bother to meet any gentleman, because
+what good does it do to meet gentlemen when there is nothing to do on a boat but go
+shopping at a little shop where they do not have any thing that costs more than five
+dollars. And besides if I did meet any gentleman on the boat, he would want to see
+me off the boat, and then we would bump into Henry. But then I heard that there was
+a gentleman on the boat who was quite a dealer in unset diamonds from a town called
+Amsterdam. So I met the gentleman, and we went around together quite a lot, but we
+had quite a quarrel the night before we landed, so I did not even bother to look at
+him when I came down <span class="pageNum" id="pb177">[<a href="#pb177">177</a>]</span>the gangplank, and I put the unset diamonds in my handbag so I did not have to declare
+them at the customs.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry was waiting for me at the customs, because he had come up from Pennsylvania
+to meet me, because their country estate is at Pennsylvania, and Henry’s father is
+very, very ill at Pennsylvania, so Henry has to stay there practically all of the
+time. So all of the reporters were at the customs and they all heard about how Henry
+and I were engaged to one another and they wanted to know what I was before I became
+engaged to Henry, so I told them that I was nothing but a society girl from Little
+Rock, Arkansas. So then I became quite angry with Dorothy because one of the reporters
+asked Dorothy when I made my debut in society at Little Rock and Dorothy said I made
+my debut at the Elks annual street fair and carnival at the age of 15, I mean Dorothy
+never overlooks any chance to be unrefined, even when she is talking to literary gentlemen
+like reporters.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry brought me to the apartment in his Rolls Royce, and while we were coming
+to the apartment he said he wanted to give me my engagement ring and I really became
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb178">[<a href="#pb178">178</a>]</span>all thrills. So he said that he had gone to Cartiers and he had looked over all the
+engagement rings in Cartiers and after he had looked them all over he had decided
+that they were not half good enough for me. So then he took a box out of his pocket
+and I really became <span class="sic" title="Correction: intrigued">intreeged</span>. So then Henry said that when he looked at all of those large size diamonds he really
+felt that they did not have any sentiment, so he was going to give me his class ring
+from Amherst College <span class="sic" title="Correction: instead">insted</span>. So then I looked at him and looked at him, but I am to full of self <span class="sic" title="Correction: control">controle</span> to say anything at this stage of the game, so I said it was really very sweet of
+him to be so full of nothing but sentiment.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p178width"><img src="images/p178.jpg" alt="“I told him that it was really very sweet of him to be so full of nothing but sentiment.”" width="541" height="275"><p class="figureHead">“<i>I told him that it was really very sweet of him to be so full of nothing but sentiment.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb179">[<a href="#pb179">179</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So then Henry said that he would have to go back to Pennsylvania to talk to his father
+about us getting married, because his father has really got his heart set on us not
+getting married. So I told Henry that perhaps if I would meet his father, I would
+win him over, because I always seem to win gentlemen over. But Henry says that that
+is just the trouble, because some girl is always winning his father over, and they
+hardly dare to let him go out of their sight, and they hardly dare let him go to church
+alone. Because the last time he went to church alone some girl won him over on the
+street corner and he arrived back home with all of his pocket money gone, and they
+could not believe him when he said that he had put it in the plate, because he has
+not put more than a dime in the plate for the last fifty years.
+</p>
+<p>So it seems that the real reason why his father does not want Henry to marry me, is
+because his father says that Henry always has all of the fun, and every time Henry’s
+father wants to have some fun of his own, Henry always stops him and Henry will not
+even let him be sick at a hospital where he could have some fun of his own, but he
+keeps <span class="pageNum" id="pb180">[<a href="#pb180">180</a>]</span>him at home where he has to have a nurse Henry picked out for him who is a male nurse.
+So all of his objections seem to be nothing but the spirit of <span class="sic" title="Correction: reciprocity">resiprosity</span>. But Henry says that all his objections cannot last much longer because he is nearly
+90 years of age after all, and Nature must take its course sooner or later.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy says what a fool I am to waste my time on Henry, when I might manage to
+meet Henry’s father and the whole thing would be over in a few months and I would
+practically own the state of Pennsylvania. But I do not think I ought to take Dorothy’s
+<span class="sic" title="Correction: advice">advise</span> because Henry’s father is watched like a hawk and Henry himself is his Power of Attorney,
+so no good could really come of it after all. And, after all, why should I listen
+to the <span class="sic" title="Correction: advice">advise</span> of a girl like Dorothy who travelled all over Europe and all she came home with was
+a bangle!
+</p>
+<p>So Henry spent the evening at the apartment and then he had to go back to Pennsylvania
+to be there Thursday morning, because every Thursday morning he belongs to a society
+who do nothing but <span class="sic" title="Correction: censure">senshure</span> all of the photoplays. So they cut out all of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb181">[<a href="#pb181">181</a>]</span>pieces out of all the photoplays that show things that are riskay, that people ought
+not to look at. So then they put all of the riskay pieces together and they run them
+over and over again. So it would really be quite a hard thing to drag Henry away from
+one of his Thursday mornings and he can hardly wait from one Thursday morning to another.
+Because he really does not seem to enjoy anything so much as senshuring photoplays
+and after a photoplay has once been senshured he seems to lose all of his interest
+in it.
+</p>
+<p>So after Henry left I held quite a conversation with Lulu, who is my maid who looked
+out for my apartment while I was away. So Lulu really thinks I ought to marry Mr.
+Spoffard after all, because Lulu says that she kept studying Mr. Spoffard all of the
+time she was unpacking my trunks, and Lulu says she is sure that any time I feel as
+if I had to get away from Mr. Spoffard I could just set him down on the floor, and
+give him a packet of riskay french postcards to senshure and stay away as long as
+I like.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry is going to arrange for me to come down to Pennsylvania for a week-end and
+meet all of his family. But if all of <span class="pageNum" id="pb182">[<a href="#pb182">182</a>]</span>Henry’s family are as full of reforms as Henry seems to be, it will be quite an ordeal
+even for a girl like I.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>June 15th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Yesterday morning was quite an ordeal for a refined girl because all of the newspapers
+all printed the story of how Henry and I are engaged to one another, but they all
+seemed to leave out the part about me being a society girl except one newspaper, and
+that was the newspaper that quoted what Dorothy said about me being a debutant at
+the Elk’s Carnival. So I called up Dorothy at the Ritz and I told Dorothy that a girl
+like she ought to keep her mouth closed in the <span class="sic" title="Correction: presence">presents</span> of reporters.
+</p>
+<p>So it seems that quite a lot of reporters kept calling Dorothy up but Dorothy said
+she really did not say anything to any of them except one reporter asked her what
+I used for money and she told him buttons. But Dorothy really should not have said
+such a thing, because quite a few people seem to know that Mr. Eisman is educating
+me and that he is known all over Chicago as Gus Eisman the Button King, so one thing
+might <span class="pageNum" id="pb183">[<a href="#pb183">183</a>]</span>suggest another until people’s minds might begin to think something.
+</p>
+<p>But Dorothy said that she did not say anything more about me being a debutant at Little
+Rock, because after all Dorothy knows that I really did not make any debut in Little
+Rock, because just when it was time to make my debut, my gentleman friend Mr. Jennings
+became shot, and after the trial was over and all of the Jury had let me off, I was
+really much <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> fatigued to make any debut.
+</p>
+<p>So then Dorothy said, why don’t we throw a party now and you can become a debutant
+now and put them all in their place, because it seems that Dorothy is dying for a
+party. So that is really the first sensible suggestion that Dorothy has made yet,
+because I think that every girl who is engaged to a gentleman who has a fine old family
+like Henry, had really ought to be a debutant. So I told her to come right over and
+we would plan my debut but we would keep it very, very quiet and give it tomorrow
+night, because if Henry heard I was making my debut he would come up from Pennsylvania
+and he would practically spoil the party, because all Henry has to do to spoil a party
+is to arrive at it.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb184">[<a href="#pb184">184</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So Dorothy came over and we planned my debut. So first we decided to have some engraved
+invitations engraved, but it always takes quite a little time to have invitations
+engraved, and it would really be foolish because all of the gentlemen we were going
+to invite to my debut were all members of the Racquet Club, so I could just write
+out a notice that I was having a debut and give it to Willie Gwynn and have Willie
+Gwynn post it on the Racquet Club board.
+</p>
+<p>So Willie Gwynn posted it on the club board and then he called me up and he told me
+that he had never seen so much enthusiasm since the Dempsey-Firpo fight, and he said
+that the whole Racquet Club would be there in a body. So then we had to plan about
+what girls we would ask to my debut. Because I have not seemed to meet so many society
+women yet because of course a girl does not meet society women until her debut is
+all over, and then all the society women all come and call on a debutant. But I know
+practically all of the society men, because practically all of the society men belong
+to the Racquet club, so after I have the Racquet Club at my debut, all I have to do
+to take <span class="pageNum" id="pb185">[<a href="#pb185">185</a>]</span>my real place in society is to meet their mothers and sisters, because I know practically
+all of their sweethearts now.
+</p>
+<p>But I always seem to think that it is delightful to have quite a lot of girls at a
+party, if a girl has quite a lot of gentlemen at a party, and it is quite delightful
+to have all the girls from the Follies, but I really could not invite them because,
+after all, they are not in my set. So then I thought it all over and I thought that
+even if it was not etiquette to invite them to a party, it really would be etiquette
+to hire them to come to a party and be entertainers, and after they were entertainers
+they could mix in to the party and it really would not be a social error.
+</p>
+<p>So then the telephone rang and Dorothy answered it and it seems that it was Joe Sanguinetti,
+who is almost the official bootlegger for the whole Racquet Club, and Joe said he
+had heard about my debut and if he could come to my debut and bring his club which
+is the Silver Spray Social Club of Brooklyn, he would supply all of the liquor and
+he would guarantee to practically run the rum fleet up to the front door.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb186">[<a href="#pb186">186</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So Dorothy told him he could come, and she hung up the telephone before she told me
+his proposition, and I became quite angry with Dorothy because, after all, the Silver
+Spray Social Club is not even mentioned in the Social Register and it has no place
+at a girl’s debut. But Dorothy said by the time the party got into swing, anyone would
+have to be a genius if he could tell whether he belonged to the Racquet Club, the
+Silver Spray Social Club, or the Knights of Pythias. But I really was almost sorry
+that I asked Dorothy to help plan my debut, except that Dorothy is very good to have
+at a party if the police come in, because Dorothy always knows how to manage the police,
+and I never knew a policeman yet who did not finish up by being madly in love with
+Dorothy. So then Dorothy called up all of the reporters on all of the newspapers and
+invited them all to my debut, so they could see it with their own eyes.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy says that she is going to see to it that my debut lands on the front page
+of all of the newspapers, if we have to commit a murder to do it.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb187">[<a href="#pb187">187</a>]</span></p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>June 19th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, it has been three days since my debut party started but I finally got tired
+and left the party last night and went to bed because I always seem to lose all of
+my interest in a party after a few days, but Dorothy never loses her interest in a
+party and when I woke up this morning Dorothy was just saying goodbye to some of the
+guests. I mean Dorothy seems to have quite a lot of vitality, because the last guests
+of the party were guests we picked up when the party went to take a swim at Long Beach
+the day before yesterday, and they were practically fresh, but Dorothy had gone clear
+through the party from beginning to end without even stopping to go to a Turkish bath
+as most of the gentlemen had to do. So my debut has really been very novel, because
+quite a lot of the guests who finished up at my debut were not the same guests that
+started out at it, and it is really quite novel for a girl to have so many different
+kinds of gentlemen at her debut. So it has really been a very great success because
+all of the newspapers have quite a lot of write-ups about my debut and I really felt
+quite proud when I saw the front <span class="pageNum" id="pb188">[<a href="#pb188">188</a>]</span>page of the <i>Daily Views</i> and it said in large size headlines, “LORELEI’S DEBUT A WOW!” And <i>Zits’ Weekly</i> came right out and said that if this party marks my entrance into society, they only
+hope that they can live to see what I will spring once I have overcome my debutant
+reserve and taken my place in the world.
+</p>
+<p>So I really had to apologise to Dorothy about asking Joe Sanguinetti to my debut because
+it was wonderful the way he got all of the liquor to the party and he more than kept
+his word. I mean he had his bootleggers run up from the wharf in taxis, right to the
+apartment, and the only trouble he had was, that once the bootleggers delivered the
+liquor, he could not get them to leave the party. So finally there was quite a little
+quarrel because Willie Gwynn claimed that Joe’s bootleggers were snubbing the members
+of his club because they would not let the boys from the Racquet club sing in their
+quartet. But Joe’s bootleggers said that the Racquet club boys wanted to sing songs
+that were unrefined, while they wanted to sing songs about Mother. So then everybody
+started to take sides, but the girls from the Follies were all <span class="pageNum" id="pb189">[<a href="#pb189">189</a>]</span>with Joe’s bootleggers from the start because practically all we girls were listening
+to them with tears <span class="sic" title="Correction: streaming">steaming</span> from our eyes. So that made the Racquet club jealous and one thing led to another
+until somebody rang for an ambulants and then the police came in.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy, as usual, won over all of the police. So it seems that the police all
+have orders from Judge Schultzmeyer, who is the famous judge who tries all of the
+prohibition cases, that any time they break into a party that looks like it was going
+to be a good party, to call him up no matter what time of the day or night it is,
+because Judge Schultzmeyer dearly loves a party. So the Police called up Judge Schultzmeyer
+and he was down in less than no time. So during the party both Joe Sanguinetti and
+Judge Schultzmeyer fell madly in love with Dorothy. So Joe and the Judge had quite
+a little quarrel and the Judge told Joe that if his stuff was fit to drink he would
+set the Law after him and confiscate it, but his stuff was not worth the while of
+any gentleman to confiscate who had any respect for his stomach, and he would not
+lower himself to confiscate it. So along about nine o’clock <span class="pageNum" id="pb190">[<a href="#pb190">190</a>]</span>in the morning Judge Schultzmeyer had to leave the party and go to court to try all
+of the criminals who break all of the laws, so he had to leave Dorothy and Joe together
+and he was very very angry. And I really felt quite sorry for any person who went
+up before Judge Schultzmeyer that morning, because he gave everybody 90 days and was
+back at the party by twelve o’clock. So then he stuck to the party until we were all
+going down to Long Beach to take a swim day before yesterday when he seemed to become
+unconscious, so we dropped him off at a sanitorium in Garden City.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure floatLeft p190width"><img src="images/p190.jpg" alt="“My debut was the greatest success of the social season.”" width="274" height="534"><p class="figureHead">“<i>My debut was the greatest success of the social season.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So my debut party was really the greatest success of the social season, because the
+second night of my debut party was the night <span class="pageNum" id="pb191">[<a href="#pb191">191</a>]</span>when Willie Gwynn’s sister was having a dance at the Gwynn estate on Long Island,
+and Willie Gwynn said that all of the eligible gentlemen in New York were conspicuous
+by their <span class="sic" title="Correction: absence">absents</span> at his sister’s party, because they were all at my party. So it seems as if I am
+really going to be quite a famous hostess if I can just bring my mind to the point
+of being Mrs. Henry Spoffard Jr.
+</p>
+<p>Well Henry called up this morning and Henry said he had finally got his father’s mind
+so that he thought it was safe for me to meet him and he was coming up to get me this
+afternoon so that I can meet his family and see his famous old historical home at
+Pennsylvania. So then he asked about my debut party which some of the Philadelphia
+papers seemed to mention. But I told him that my debut was really not so much planned,
+as it was spontaneous, and I did not have the heart to call him up at a moments notice
+and take him away from his father at such a time for reasons which were nothing but
+social.
+</p>
+<p>So now I am getting ready to visit Henry’s family and I feel as if my whole future
+depends on it. Because if I can not stand <span class="pageNum" id="pb192">[<a href="#pb192">192</a>]</span>Henry’s family any more than I can stand Henry the whole thing will probly come to
+an end in the law court.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>June 21st</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, I am now spending the weekend with Henry’s family at his old family mansion
+outside of Philadelphia, and I am beginning to think, after all, that there is something
+else in the world besides family. And I am beginning to think that family life is
+only fit for those who can stand it. For instants, they always seem to get up very
+early in Henry’s family. I mean it really is not so bad to get up early when there
+is something to get up early about, but when a girl gets up early and there is nothing
+to get up early about, it really begins to seem as if there was no sense to it.
+</p>
+<p>So yesterday we all got up early and that was when I met all of Henry’s family, because
+Henry and I motored down to Pennsylvania and everybody was in bed when we arrived
+because it was after nine o’clock. So in the morning Henry’s mother came to my room
+to get me up in time for breakfast because Henry’s mother is very very fond of <span class="pageNum" id="pb193">[<a href="#pb193">193</a>]</span>me, and she always wants to copy all of my gowns and she always loves to look through
+all of my things to see what I have got. So she found a box of liqueur candies that
+are full of liqueurs and she was really very delighted. So I finally got dressed and
+she threw the empty box away and I helped her down stairs to the Dining room.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry was waiting in the dining room with his sister and that was when I met his
+sister. So it seems that Henry’s sister has never been the same since the war, because
+she never had on a man’s collar and a necktie until she drove an <span class="sic" title="Correction: ambulance">ambulants</span> in the war, and now they cannot get her to take them off. Because ever since the
+armistice Henry’s sister seems to have the idea that regular <span class="sic" title="Correction: womens’">womens</span> clothes are <span class="sic" title="Correction: effeminate">effiminate</span>. So Henry’s sister seems to think of nothing but either horses or automobiles and
+when she is not in a garage the only other place she is happy in is a stable. I mean
+she really pays very little attention to all of her family and she seems to pay less
+attention to Henry than anybody else because she seems to have the idea that Henry’s
+brains are not so <span class="sic" title="Correction: virile">viril</span>. So then we all waited for Henry’s father to come in so <span class="pageNum" id="pb194">[<a href="#pb194">194</a>]</span>that he could read the Bible out loud before breakfast.
+</p>
+<p>So then something happened that really was a miracle. Because it seems that Henry’s
+father has practically lived in a wheel chair for months and months and his male nurse
+has to wheel him everywhere. So his male nurse wheeled him into the dining room in
+his wheel chair and then Henry said “Father, this is going to be your little daughter
+in law,” and Henry’s father took one good look at me and got right out of his wheel
+chair and walked! So then everybody was very very surprised, but Henry was not so
+surprised because Henry knows his father like a book. So then they all tried to calm
+his father down, and his father tried to read out of the Bible but he could hardly
+keep his mind on the Bible and he could hardly eat a bite because when a gentleman
+is as feeble as Henry’s father is, he cannot keep one eye on a girl and the other
+eye on his cereal and cream without coming to grief. So Henry finally became quite
+discouradged and he told his father he would have to get back to his room or he would
+have a relapse. So then the male nurse wheeled him back to his room <span class="pageNum" id="pb195">[<a href="#pb195">195</a>]</span>and it really was pathetic because he cried like a baby. So I got to thinking over
+what Dorothy advised me about Henry’s father and I really got to thinking that if
+Henry’s father could only get away from everybody and have some time of his own, Dorothy’s
+<span class="sic" title="Correction: advice">advise</span> might not be so bad after all.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p195width"><img src="images/p195.jpg" alt="“Henry’s father cannot keep one eye on a girl and the other on his cereal without coming to grief.”" width="539" height="274"><p class="figureHead">“<i>Henry’s father cannot keep one eye on a girl and the other on his cereal without coming
+to grief.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>So after breakfast we all got ready to go to church, but Henry’s sister does not go
+to church because Henry’s sister always likes to spend every Sunday in the garage
+taking their Ford farm truck apart and putting it back together again, and Henry says
+that what the war did to a girl like his sister is really worse than the war itself.
+</p>
+<p>So then Henry and his mother and I all went to church. So we came home from <span class="pageNum" id="pb196">[<a href="#pb196">196</a>]</span>church and we had luncheon and it seems that luncheon is practically the same as breakfast
+except that Henry’s father could not come down to luncheon because after he met me
+he contracted such a vialent fever that they had to send for the Doctor.
+</p>
+<p>So in the afternoon Henry went to prayer meeting and I was left alone with Henry’s
+mother so that we could rest up so that we could go to church again after supper.
+So Henry’s mother thinks I am nothing but sunshine and she will hardly let me get
+out of her sight, because she hates to be by herself because, when she is by herself,
+her brains hardly seem to work at all. So she loves to try on all of my hats and she
+loves to tell me how all the boys in the choir can hardly keep their eyes off her.
+So of course a girl has to agree with her, and it is quite difficult to agree with
+a person when you have to do it through an ear trumpet because sooner or later your
+voice has to give out.
+</p>
+<p>So then supper turned out to be practically the same thing as luncheon only by supper
+time all of the novelty seemed to wear off. So then I told Henry that I had to much
+of a headache to go to church again, so Henry <span class="pageNum" id="pb197">[<a href="#pb197">197</a>]</span>and his mother went to church and I went to my room and I sat down and thought and
+I decided that life was really <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> short to spend it in being proud of your family, even if they did have a great deal
+of money. So the best thing for me to do is to think up some scheme to make Henry
+decide not to marry me and take what I can get out of it and be satisfied.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>June 22nd</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, yesterday I made Henry put me on the train at Philadelphia and I made him stay
+at Philadelphia so he could be near his father if his father seemed to take any more
+relapses. So I sat in my drawing room on the train and I decided that the time had
+come to get rid of Henry at any cost. So I decided that the thing that <span class="sic" title="Correction: discourages">discouradges</span> gentlemen more than anything else is shopping. Because even Mr. Eisman, who was practically
+born for we girls to shop on, and who knows just what to expect, often gets quite
+<span class="sic" title="Correction: discouraged">discouradged</span> over all of my shopping. So I decided I would get to New York and I would go to Cartiers
+and run up quite a large size bill on Henry’s credit, because after all <span class="pageNum" id="pb198">[<a href="#pb198">198</a>]</span>our engagement has been announced in all of the newspapers, and Henry’s credit is
+really my credit.
+</p>
+<p>So while I was thinking it all over there was a knock on the drawing room door, so
+I told him to come in and it was a gentleman who said he had seen me quite a lot in
+New York and he had always wanted to have an introduction to me, because we had quite
+a lot of friends who were common. So then he gave me his card and his name was on
+his card and it was Mr. Gilbertson Montrose and his profession is a senario writer.
+So then I asked him to sit down and we held a literary conversation.
+</p>
+<p>So I really feel as if yesterday was a turning point in my life, because at last I
+have met a gentleman who is not only an artist but who has got brains besides. I mean
+he is the kind of a gentleman that a girl could sit at his feet and listen to for
+days and days and nearly always learn something or other. Because, after all, there
+is nothing that gives a girl more of a thrill than brains in a gentleman, especially
+after a girl has been spending the week end with Henry. So Mr. Montrose talked and
+talked all of the way to New <span class="pageNum" id="pb199">[<a href="#pb199">199</a>]</span>York and I sat there and did nothing else but listen. So according to Mr. Montrose’s
+opinion <span class="sic" title="Correction: Shakespeare">Shakespear</span> is a very great <span class="sic" title="Correction: playwright">playwrite</span>, and he thinks that Hamlet is quite a famous tragedy and as far as novels are concerned
+he believes that nearly everybody had ought to read Dickens. And when we got on the
+subject of poetry he recited “The Shooting of Dan McGrew” until you could almost hear
+the gun go off.
+</p>
+<p></p>
+<div class="figure p199width"><img src="images/p199.jpg" alt="“When he recited ‘The Shooting of Dan McGrew’ you could almost hear the gun go off.”" width="537" height="275"><p class="figureHead">“<i>When he recited ‘The Shooting of Dan McGrew’ you could almost hear the gun go off.</i>”</p>
+</div><p>
+</p>
+<p>And then I asked Mr. Montrose to tell me all about himself. So it seems that Mr. Montrose
+was on his way home from Washington D. C., where he went to see the Bulgarian Ambassadore
+to see if he could get Bulgaria to finance a senario he has written which is <span class="pageNum" id="pb200">[<a href="#pb200">200</a>]</span>a great historical subject which is founded on the sex life of Dolly Madison. So it
+seems that Mr. Montrose has met quite a lot of Bulgarians in a Bulgarian restaurant
+on Lexington Avenue and that was what gave him the idea to get the money from Bulgaria.
+Because Mr. Montrose said that he could fill his senario full of Bulgarian propoganda,
+and he told the Bulgarian Ambassadore that every time he realised how ignorant all
+of the American film fans were on the subject of Bulgaria, it made him flinch.
+</p>
+<p>So I told Mr. Montrose that it made me feel very very small to talk to a gentleman
+like he, who knew so much about Bulgaria, because practically all I knew about Bulgaria
+was Zoolack. So Mr. Montrose said that the Bulgarian Ambassadore did not seem to think
+that Dolly Madison had so much about her that was pertinent to present day Bulgaria,
+but Mr. Montrose explained to him that that was because he knew practically nothing
+about dramatic construction. Because Mr. Montrose said he could fix his senario so
+that Dolly Madison would have one lover who was a Bulgarian, who wanted to marry her.
+So then Dolly Madison would get to wondering <span class="pageNum" id="pb201">[<a href="#pb201">201</a>]</span>what her great, great grandchildren would be like if she married a Bulgarian, and
+then she could sit down and have a vision of Bulgaria in 1925. So that was when Mr.
+Montrose would take a trip to Bulgaria to photograph the vision. But the Bulgarian
+Ambassadore turned down the whole proposition, but he gave Mr. Montrose quite a large
+size bottle of the Bulgarian national drink. So the Bulgarian national drink looks
+like nothing so much as water, and it really does not taste so strong, but about five
+minutes afterwards you begin to <span class="sic" title="Correction: realize">realise</span> your mistake. But I thought to myself that if realizing my mistake could make me
+forget what I went through in Pennsylvania, I really owed it to myself to forget everything.
+So then we had another drink.
+</p>
+<p>So then Mr. Montrose told me that he had quite a hard time getting along in the motion
+picture profession, because all of his <span class="sic" title="Correction: scenarios">senarios</span> are all over their head. Because when Mr. Montrose writes about sex, it is full of
+<span class="sic" title="Correction: psychology">sychology</span>, but when everybody else writes about it, it is full of nothing but transparent <span class="sic" title="Correction: negligees">negligays</span> and ornamental bath tubs. And Mr. Montrose says that there is no future in the <span class="pageNum" id="pb202">[<a href="#pb202">202</a>]</span>motion pictures until the motion pictures get their sex motives straightened out,
+and realize that a woman of 25 can have just as many sex problems as a flapper of
+16. Because Mr. Montrose likes to write about women of the world, and he refuses to
+have women of the world played by small size girls of 15 who know nothing about life
+and who have not even been in the detention home.
+</p>
+<p>So we both arrived in New York before we realized it, and I got to thinking how the
+same trip with Henry in his Rolls Royce seemed like about 24 hours, and that was what
+gave me the idea that money was not everything, because after all, it is only brains
+that count. So Mr. Montrose took me home and we are going to have luncheon together
+at the Primrose Tea room practically every day and keep right on holding literary
+conversations.
+</p>
+<p>So then I had to figure out how to get rid of Henry and at the same time not do anything
+that would make me any trouble later. So I sent for Dorothy because Dorothy is not
+so good at intreeging a gentleman with money, but she ought to be full of ideas on
+how to get rid of one.
+<span class="pageNum" id="pb203">[<a href="#pb203">203</a>]</span></p>
+<p>So at first Dorothy said, Why didn’t I take a chance and marry Henry because she had
+an idea that if Henry married me he would commit suicide about two weeks later. But
+I told her about my plan to do quite a lot of shopping, and I told her that I would
+send for Henry and I would manage it so that I would not be in the apartment when
+he came, but she could be there and start a conversation with him and she could tell
+him about all of my shopping and how extravagant I seemed to be and he would be in
+the poor house in less than a year if he married me.
+</p>
+<p>So Dorothy said for me to take one farewell look at Henry and leave him to her, because
+the next time I saw him would be in the witness box and I might not even recognize
+him because she would throw a scare into him that might change his whole physical
+appearance. So I decided to leave him in the hands of Dorothy and hope for the best.
+</p>
+<p class="dateentry"><i>July 10th</i>:
+</p>
+<p>Well, last month was really almost a diary in itself, and I have to begin to realize
+that I am one of the kind of girls that things happen <span class="pageNum" id="pb204">[<a href="#pb204">204</a>]</span>to. And I have to admit, after all, that life is really wonderful. Because so much
+has happened in the last few weeks that it almost makes a girl’s brains whirl.
+</p>
+<p>I mean in the first place I went shopping at Cartiers and bought quite a delightful
+square cut emerald and quite a long rope of pearls on Henry’s credit. So then I called
+up Henry on the long distants telephone and told him that I wanted to see him quite
+a lot, so he was very very pleased and he said that he would come right up to New
+York.
+</p>
+<p>So then I told Dorothy to come to the apartment and be there when Henry came, and
+to show Henry what I bought on his credit, and to tell him how extravagant I seem
+to be, and how I seem to keep on getting worse. So I told Dorothy to go as far as
+she liked, so long as she did not insinuate anything against my character, because
+the more spotless my character seems to be, the better things might turn out later.
+So Henry was due at the apartment about 1.20, so I had Lulu get some luncheon for
+he and Dorothy and I told Dorothy to tell him that I <span class="pageNum" id="pb205">[<a href="#pb205">205</a>]</span>had gone out to look at the Russian Crown Jewels that some Russian Grand Duchess or
+other had for sale at the Ritz.
+</p>
+<p>So then I went to the Primrose Tea Room to have luncheon with Mr. Montrose because
+Mr. Montrose loves to tell me of all his plans, and he says that I seem to remind
+him quite a lot of a girl called Madame Recamier who all the <span class="sic" title="Correction: intellectual">intelectual</span> gentlemen used to tell all of their plans to, even when there was a French revolution
+going on all around them.
+</p>
+<p>So Mr. Montrose and I had a delicious luncheon, except that I never seem to notice
+what I am eating when I am with Mr. Montrose because when Mr. Montrose talks a girl
+wants to do nothing but listen. But all of the time I was listening, I was thinking
+about Dorothy and I was worrying for fear Dorothy would go <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> far, and tell Henry something that would not be so good for me afterwards. So finally
+even Mr. Montrose seemed to notice it, and he said “What’s the matter little woman,
+a penny for your thoughts.”
+</p>
+<p>So then I told him everything. So he seemed to think quite a lot and finally he said
+to me “It is really to bad that you feel as <span class="pageNum" id="pb206">[<a href="#pb206">206</a>]</span>if the social life of Mr. Spoffard bored you, because Mr. Spoffard would be ideal
+to finance my senario.” So then Mr. Montrose said that he had been thinking from the
+very first how ideal I would be to play Dolly Madison. So that started me thinking
+and I told Mr. Montrose that I expected to have quite a large size ammount of money
+later on, and I would finance it myself. But Mr. Montrose said that would be to late,
+because all of the motion picture corporations were after it now, and it would be
+snaped up almost immediately.
+</p>
+<p>So then I became almost in a panick, because I suddenly decided that if I married
+Henry and worked in the motion pictures at the same time, society life with Henry
+would not really be so bad. Because if a girl was so busy as all that, it really would
+not seem to matter so much if she had to stand Henry when she was not busy. But then
+I realized what Dorothy was up to, and I told Mr. Montrose that I was almost afraid
+it was to late. So I hurried to the telephone and I called up Dorothy at the apartment
+and I asked her what she had said to Henry. So Dorothy said that she showed him the
+square <span class="pageNum" id="pb207">[<a href="#pb207">207</a>]</span>cut emerald and told him that I bought it as a knick-knack to go with a green dress,
+but I had got a spot on the dress, so I was going to give them both to Lulu. So she
+said she showed him the pearls and she said that after I had bought them, I was sorry
+I did not get pink ones because white ones were so common, so I was going to have
+Lulu unstring them and sew them on a negligay. So then she told him she was rather
+sorry I meant to buy the Russian Crown jewels because she had a feeling they were
+unlucky, but that I had said to her, that if I found out they were, I could toss them
+over my left shoulder into the Hudson river some night when there was a new moon,
+and it would take away the curse.
+</p>
+<p>So then she said that Henry began to get restless. So then she told him she was very
+glad I was going to get married at last because I had had such bad luck, that every
+time I became engaged something seemed to happen to my fiance. So Henry asked her
+what, for instance. So Dorothy said a couple were in the insane asylum, one had shot
+himself for debt, and the county farm was taking care of the remainder. So Henry <span class="pageNum" id="pb208">[<a href="#pb208">208</a>]</span>asked her how they got that way. So Dorothy told him it was nothing but my <span class="sic" title="Correction: extravagance">extravagants</span>, and she told him that she was surprised that he had never heard about it, because
+all I had to do was to take luncheon at the Ritz with some prominent broker and the
+next day the bottom would drop out of the market. And she told him that she did not
+want to insinuate anything, but that I had dined with a very, very prominent German
+the day before German marks started to <span class="sic" title="Correction: collapse">colapse</span>.
+</p>
+<p>So I became almost frantic and I told Dorothy to hold Henry at the apartment until
+I could get up there and explain. So I held the telephone while Dorothy went to see
+if Henry would wait. So Dorothy came back in a minute and she said that the parlor
+was empty, but that if I would hurry down to Broadway no doubt I would see a cloud
+of dust heading towards the Pennsylvania station, and that would be Henry.
+</p>
+<p>So then I went back to Mr. Montrose, and I told him that I must catch Henry at the
+Pennsylvania Station at any cost. And if anyone were to say that we left the Primrose
+tea room in a hurry, they would be putting it <span class="pageNum" id="pb209">[<a href="#pb209">209</a>]</span>quite mildly. So we got to the Pennsylvania station and I just had time to get on
+board the train to Philadelphia and I left Mr. Montrose standing at the train biting
+his finger nails in all of his anxiety. But I called out to him to go to his Hotel
+and I would telephone the result as soon as the train arrived.
+</p>
+<p>So then I went through the train, and there was Henry with a look on his face which
+I shall never forget. So when he saw me he really seemed to shrink to ½ his natural
+size. So I sat down beside him and I told him that I was really ashamed of how he
+acted, and if his love for me could not stand a little test that I and Dorothy had
+thought up, more in the spirit of fun than anything else, I never wanted to speak
+to such a gentleman again. And I told him that if he could not tell the difference
+between a real square cut emerald and one from the ten cent store, that he had ought
+to be ashamed of himself. And I told him that if he thought that every string of white
+beads were pearls, it was no wonder he could make such a mistake in judging the character
+of a girl. So then I began to cry because of all of Henry’s lack <span class="pageNum" id="pb210">[<a href="#pb210">210</a>]</span>of faith. So then he tried to cheer me up but I was <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> hurt to even give him a decent word until we were past Newark. But by the time we
+were past Newark, Henry was crying himself, and it always makes me feel so tender
+hearted to listen to a gentleman cry that I finally forgave him. So, of course, as
+soon as I got home I had to take them back to Cartiers.
+</p>
+<p>So then I explained to Henry how I wanted our life to mean something and I wanted
+to make the World a better place than it seemed to have been yet. And I told him that
+he knew so much about the film profession on account of <span class="sic" title="Correction: censuring">senshuring</span> all of the films that I thought he had ought to go into the film profession. Because
+I told him that a gentleman like he really owed it to the world to make pure films
+so that he could be an example to all of the other film corporations and show the
+world what pure films were like. So Henry became very, very <span class="sic" title="Correction: intrigued">intreeged</span> because he had never thought of the film profession before. So then I told him that
+we could get H. Gilbertson Montrose to write the <span class="sic" title="Correction: scenarios">senarios</span>, and he to <span class="sic" title="Correction: censor">senshure</span> them, and I could act in them and by the time we all got through, they would <span class="pageNum" id="pb211">[<a href="#pb211">211</a>]</span>be a work of art. But they would even be purer than most works of art seem to be.
+So by the time we got to Philadelphia Henry said that he would do it, but he really
+did not think I had ought to act in them. But I told him from what I had seen of society
+women trying to break into the films, I did not believe that it would be so declasée
+if one of them really landed. So I even talked him into that.
+</p>
+<p>So when we got to Henry’s country estate, we told all of Henry’s family and they were
+all delighted. Because it is the first time since the war that Henry’s family have
+had anything definite to put their minds on. I mean Henry’s sister really jumped at
+the idea because she said she would take charge of the studio trucks and keep them
+at a bed-rock figure. So I even promised Henry’s mother that she could act in the
+films. I mean I even believe that we could put in a close-up of her from time to time,
+because after all, nearly every photoplay has to have some comedy relief. And I promised
+Henry’s father that we would wheel him through the studio and let him look at all
+of the actresses and he <span class="pageNum" id="pb212">[<a href="#pb212">212</a>]</span>nearly had another relapse. So then I called up Mr. Montrose and made an appointment
+with him to meet Henry and talk it all over, and Mr. Montrose, said, “Bless you, little
+woman.”
+</p>
+<p>So I am almost beginning to believe it, when everybody says I am nothing but sunshine
+because everybody I come into contract with always seems to become happy. I mean with
+the exception of Mr. Eisman. Because when I got back to New York, I opened all of
+his cablegrams and I realized that he was due to arrive on the <i>Aquitania</i> the very next day. So I met him at the <i>Aquitania</i> and I took him to luncheon at the Ritz and I told him all about everything. So then
+he became very, very depressed because he said that just as soon as he had got me
+all educated, I had to go off and get married. But I told him that he really ought
+to be very proud of me, because in the future, when he would see me at luncheon at
+the Ritz as the wife of the famous Henry H. Spoffard, I would always bow to him, if
+I saw him, and he could point me out to all of his friends and tell them that it was
+he, Gus Eisman himself, who educated me <span class="pageNum" id="pb213">[<a href="#pb213">213</a>]</span>up to my station. So that cheered Mr. Eisman up a lot and I really do not care what
+he says to his friends, because, after all, his friends are not in my set, and whatever
+he says to them will not get around in my circle. So after our luncheon was all over,
+I really think that, even if Mr. Eisman was not so happy, he could not help having
+a sort of a feeling of relief, especially when he thinks of all my shopping.
+</p>
+<p>So after that came my wedding and all of the Society people in New York and Philadelphia
+came to my wedding and they were all so sweet to me, because practically every one
+of them has written a <span class="sic" title="Correction: scenario">senario</span>. And everybody says my wedding was very, very beautiful. I mean even Dorothy said
+it was very beautiful, only Dorothy said she had to concentrate her mind on the massacre
+of the Armenians to keep herself from laughing right out loud in everybody’s face.
+But that only shows that not even Matrimony is sacred to a girl like Dorothy. And
+after the wedding was over, I overheard Dorothy talking to Mr. Montrose and she was
+telling Mr. Montrose that she thought that I would be <span class="pageNum" id="pb214">[<a href="#pb214">214</a>]</span>great in the movies if he would write me a part that only had three expressions, Joy,
+Sorrow, and Indigestion. So I do not really believe that Dorothy is such a true friend
+after all.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry and I did not go on any honeymoon because I told Henry that it really would
+be selfish for us to go off alone together, when all of our activities seemed to need
+us so much. Because, after all, I have to spend quite a lot of time with Mr. Montrose
+going over the senario together because, Mr. Montrose says I am full of nothing so
+much as ideas.
+</p>
+<p>So, in order to give Henry something to do while Mr. Montrose and I are working on
+the senario I got Henry to organize a Welfare League among all of the extra girls
+and get them to tell him all of their problems so he can give them all of his spiritual
+aid. And it has really been a very, very great success, because there is not much
+work going on at the other studios at present so all of the extra girls have nothing
+better to do and they all know that Henry will not give them a job at our studio unless
+they belong. <span class="pageNum" id="pb215">[<a href="#pb215">215</a>]</span>So the worse they tell Henry they have been before they met him, the better he likes
+it and Dorothy says that she was at the studio yesterday and she says that if the
+senarios those extra girls have written around themselves to tell Henry could only
+be screened and gotten past the sensors, the movies would move right up out of their
+infancy.
+</p>
+<p>So Henry says that I have opened up a whole new world for him and he has never been
+so happy in his life. And it really seems as if everyone I know has never been so
+happy in their lives. Because I make Henry let his father come to the studio every
+day because, after all, every studio has to have somebody who seems to be a pest,
+and in our case it might just as well be Henry’s father. So I have given orders to
+all of the electricians not to drop any lights on him, but to let him have a good
+time because, after all, it is the first one he has had. And as far as Henry’s mother
+is concerned, she is having her hair bobbed and her face lifted and getting ready
+to play Carmen because she saw a girl called Madam Calve play it when she was on her
+honeymoon and she has always <span class="pageNum" id="pb216">[<a href="#pb216">216</a>]</span>really felt that she could do it better. So I do not <span class="sic" title="Correction: discourage">discouradge</span> her, but I let her go ahead and enjoy herself. But I am not going to bother to speak
+to the electricians about Henry’s mother. And Henry’s sister has never been so happy
+since the Battle of Verdun, because she has six trucks and 15 horses to look after
+and she says that the motion picture profession is the nearest thing to war that she
+has struck since the Armistice. And even Dorothy is very happy because Dorothy says
+that she has had more laughs this month than Eddie Cantor gets in a year. But when
+it comes to Mr. Montrose, I really believe that he is happier than anybody else, because
+of all of the understanding and sympathy he seems to get out of me.
+</p>
+<p>And so I am very happy myself because, after all, the greatest thing in life is to
+always be making everybody else happy. And so, while everybody is so happy, I really
+think it is a good time to finish my diary because after all, I am <span class="sic" title="Correction: too">to</span> busy going over my senarios with Mr. Montrose, to keep up any other kind of literary
+work. And I am so busy bringing sunshine into the life of Henry <span class="pageNum" id="pb217">[<a href="#pb217">217</a>]</span>that I really think, with everything else I seem to acomplish, it is all a girl had
+ought to try to do. And so I really think that I can say good-bye to my diary feeling
+that, after all, everything always turns out for the best.
+</p>
+<p class="trailer xd31e1957">THE END</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="back">
+<div class="div1 cover"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
+<p class="first"></p>
+<div class="figure backwidth"><img src="images/back.jpg" alt="Original Back Cover." width="469" height="720"></div><p>
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="transcriberNote">
+<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2>
+<h3 class="main">Availability</h3>
+<p class="first">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project
+Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at <a class="seclink xd31e44" title="External link" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/" rel="home">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
+</p>
+<p>This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at <a class="seclink xd31e44" title="External link" href="https://www.pgdp.net/">www.pgdp.net</a>.
+</p>
+<h3 class="main">Metadata</h3>
+<table class="colophonMetadata" summary="Metadata">
+<tr>
+<td><b>Title:</b></td>
+<td>“Gentlemen prefer blondes”: the illuminating diary of a professional lady</td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><b>Author:</b></td>
+<td>Anita Loos (1889–1981)</td>
+<td><a href="https://viaf.org/viaf/56711909/" class="seclink">Info</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><b>Illustrator:</b></td>
+<td>Ralph Barton (1891–1931)</td>
+<td><a href="https://viaf.org/viaf/47084514/" class="seclink">Info</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><b>Language:</b></td>
+<td>English</td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><b>Original publication date:</b></td>
+<td>1925</td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h3 class="main">Encoding</h3>
+<p class="first">The numerous spelling mistakes in this work are intentional, and have thus been retained.
+Extra pages that duplicate the chapter headings have been omitted.</p>
+<p>The reference in the copyright notice to <i>Harper’s Bazar</i> is correct. The name of that publication was changed to <i>Harper’s Bazaar</i> in 1930, after the publication of this book.</p>
+<h3 class="main">Revision History</h3>
+<ul>
+<li>2021-11-25 Started.
+</li>
+</ul>
+<h3 class="main">External References</h3>
+<p>This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work
+for you.</p>
+<h3 class="main">Corrections</h3>
+<p>The following corrections have been applied to the text:</p>
+<table class="correctionTable" summary="Overview of corrections applied to the text.">
+<tr>
+<th>Page</th>
+<th>Source</th>
+<th>Correction</th>
+<th>Edit distance</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e1033">108</a></td>
+<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
+<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
+<td class="bottom">1</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e1048">111</a></td>
+<td class="width40 bottom">
+[<i>Not in source</i>]
+</td>
+<td class="width40 bottom">”</td>
+<td class="bottom">1</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e1119">121</a></td>
+<td class="width40 bottom">‘</td>
+<td class="width40 bottom">“</td>
+<td class="bottom">1</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK "GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES" ***</div>
+<div style='text-align:left'>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
+be renamed.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
+the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
+of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
+copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
+easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
+of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
+Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
+do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
+by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
+license, especially commercial redistribution.
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin:0.83em 0; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE<br>
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br>
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</span>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
+or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
+Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country other than the United States.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
+on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
+phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+</div>
+
+<blockquote>
+ <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+ 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 will have to check the laws
+ of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
+ </div>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; License.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
+other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
+Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+provided that:
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &#8226; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &#8226; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ works.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &#8226; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &#8226; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
+the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
+forth in Section 3 below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
+of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
+Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
+to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
+and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
+public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
+visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
+facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+</div>
+
+</div>
diff --git a/66829-h/images/back.jpg b/66829-h/images/back.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..36a456a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/back.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/cover.jpg b/66829-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b9326e6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/frontispiece.jpg b/66829-h/images/frontispiece.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..60807e7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/frontispiece.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p013.jpg b/66829-h/images/p013.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0fbafa3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p013.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p021.jpg b/66829-h/images/p021.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cce611d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p021.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p022.jpg b/66829-h/images/p022.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9784a69
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p022.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p032.jpg b/66829-h/images/p032.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..587b5e4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p032.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p033.jpg b/66829-h/images/p033.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f78dbb1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p033.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p034.jpg b/66829-h/images/p034.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9f0cadf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p034.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p042.jpg b/66829-h/images/p042.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9fa030e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p042.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p044.jpg b/66829-h/images/p044.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7412461
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p044.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p046.jpg b/66829-h/images/p046.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a2a8c8b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p046.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p049.jpg b/66829-h/images/p049.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e14b86e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p049.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p053.jpg b/66829-h/images/p053.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c79a6fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p053.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p057.jpg b/66829-h/images/p057.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b44889a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p057.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p065.jpg b/66829-h/images/p065.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bc91a21
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p065.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p070.jpg b/66829-h/images/p070.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b50f6b1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p070.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p073.jpg b/66829-h/images/p073.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..40e6414
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p073.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p079.jpg b/66829-h/images/p079.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6cc897d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p079.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p081.jpg b/66829-h/images/p081.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ba64c88
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p081.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p087.jpg b/66829-h/images/p087.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4dcaed7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p087.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p095.jpg b/66829-h/images/p095.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bda21d4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p095.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p096.jpg b/66829-h/images/p096.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..089c452
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p096.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p101.jpg b/66829-h/images/p101.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a32de45
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p101.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p104.jpg b/66829-h/images/p104.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7726b41
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p104.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p119.jpg b/66829-h/images/p119.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cc55049
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p119.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p125.jpg b/66829-h/images/p125.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..614bb25
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p125.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p131.jpg b/66829-h/images/p131.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c87e719
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p131.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p147.jpg b/66829-h/images/p147.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3a37cef
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p147.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p157.jpg b/66829-h/images/p157.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f99836
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p157.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p164.jpg b/66829-h/images/p164.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0decf52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p164.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p178.jpg b/66829-h/images/p178.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7fa12cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p178.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p190.jpg b/66829-h/images/p190.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..845a698
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p190.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p195.jpg b/66829-h/images/p195.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..25eb63a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p195.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/p199.jpg b/66829-h/images/p199.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1f786ea
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/p199.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/66829-h/images/titlepage.png b/66829-h/images/titlepage.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1b7f717
--- /dev/null
+++ b/66829-h/images/titlepage.png
Binary files differ