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+Project Gutenberg's Punch, 1917.07.04, Vol. 153, Issue No. 1, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch, 1917.07.04, Vol. 153, Issue No. 1
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: January 18, 2013 [EBook #8643]
+Release Date: August, 2005
+First Posted: July 29, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, 1917.07.04, VOL. 153 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jon Ingram, Punch, or the London Charivari,
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Vol. 153.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Punch 1917.07.04
+
+[Illustration: VOL. CLIII]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MENTIONED IN DESPATCHES.
+
+The oldest inhabitant sat on a bench in the sun, the day's newspaper
+spread across his knees, and the newest visitor sat beside him.
+
+"He do be mentioned in despatches, do our Billy, by Sir DOUGLAS HAIG
+himself. If it hadn't a-been for him, where'd the Army been? he says. I
+knowed him ever since I come to these parts, and that weren't yesterday.
+He'd come round that there bend a-whistling, not sort o' cockahoop, like
+some does, but just a cheery sort o' 'Here I am again;' and he'd always
+stop most anywhere, if so be as you held up your hand.
+
+"I've seed ladies with their golf-clubs runnin' up from the club-house,
+and he'd just sort of whistle to show as he seed them, and wait for them
+as perlite as any gentleman. For it do be powerful hot to walk back home
+with your golf-clubs after two rounds; I was a caddy, I was, 'fore I
+went on the line, so I knows what I'm telling you.
+
+"It didn't make no difference if they was champions or duffers what
+couldn't carry the burn not if they tried all day. Or if it were an old
+woman a-goin' back from market with all her cabbages and live ducks and
+eggs and onions--it were all just the same to little Billy.
+
+"Then I mind the day he was took. George he come up and tells me as they
+have took Billy because the Army wants all it can get. I was fair
+knocked over, and him so little and all.
+
+"Then the Captain, what was the best golfer here, come back for leave.
+
+"'Grandpa,' says he, same as he always call me--'Grandpa,' he says,
+'I've been thinking about Billy all the time I've been out, and longing
+to hear him whistle again, and now I'm home and he's gone. I shall have
+to get back to France again to see him.'
+
+"So he will, Sir, and if Billy was going up right under the German guns
+it's my belief as Captain would get out of his trench to go and see him.
+
+"What regiment is Billy in, did you say, Sir? Why, he got no regiment.
+Ain't I been telling you, Sir, 'Puffing Billy' is what our golfers here
+call the little train what used to run six times a day from the town to
+the links. Just see what the paper says, Sir. I don't be much of a
+reader, but hark ye to this: 'I wish also to place on record here the
+fact that the successful solution of the problem of railway transport
+would have been impossible had it not been for the patriotism of the
+railway companies at home. They did not hesitate to give up their
+locomotives and rolling stock.'
+
+"That's 'Puffing Billy,' Sir, him what I've put the signal down for
+hundreds an' hundreds of times. I miss him powerful bad, but the Army
+wanted him, and we've been and got some thanks too. I'm proud to think
+my Billy's in the paper."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MELTING-POT.
+
+["The municipality of Rothausen has decided to present to the collection
+of metal which is being made in Germany its monument of Kaiser WILLIAM
+THE FIRST."--_Reuter_.]
+
+ Heavy is Armageddon's price
+ And loud the call to sacrifice;
+ All stuff composed of likely metals--
+ Door-knockers, hairpins, cans and kettles--
+ Into the War's insatiate melting-pot
+ Has to be shot.
+
+ That was a hard and bitter blow
+ When first your church-bells had to go--
+ Those saintly bells that rang carillons
+ While in the maw of happy millions
+ Pure joy and gratitude to Heaven thrilled
+ For babies killed.
+
+ It hurt your Christian hearts to melt
+ A source of faith so keenly felt;
+ And now (worse sacrilege than that) you
+ Propose to take yon regal statue,
+ That godlike effigy, and make a gun
+ Of WILLIAM ONE!
+
+ What will _He_ say when you reduce
+ His Relative to cannon-juice?
+ The prospect must be pretty rotten
+ If thus the Never-To-Be-Forgotten
+ Is treated, like the corpses of your friends,
+ For useful ends.
+
+ I hear the ALL-HIGHEST mutter, "Ha!
+ They're liquefying Grandpapa!
+ The nation's needs, that grow acuter,
+ Count sacred things as so much pewter;
+ Even my holy crown may go some day
+ Down the red way!"
+
+O.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LE SENEGALAIS.
+
+Samedou Kieta sat up in bed with a child's primer open before him.
+"M--A," he spelled. Then, after an incredibly long time of patient
+puzzling, "M--A--MA. Oui, MA. Y a bon!" and embraced the whole ward in
+one wide white grin before turning to the next syllable, "M--A--N." Once
+more the puzzled frown on the black face, once more the whispered hints
+from neighbouring beds, once more the triumph of perseverance,
+"M--A--N--MAN!" He was just enjoying his success and chanting his
+pidgin-French paean of happiness, "Y a bon! Y a bon!" when Soeur
+Antoinette paused by his bed. "Tres bien, Sidi," she said, "mais il faut
+les mettre ensemble," and with her white finger she guided his black one
+back to the first syllable.
+
+Here was difficulty indeed! He knew all right that M--A--N was MAN, but
+what was M--A? And when, after intense effort, he re-discovered that
+M--A spelled MA, it was only to find that he had forgotten what M--A--N
+spelled. At last the other wounded could contain themselves no longer,
+and the ward was filled with laughing shouts of "Maman!" in which
+Samedou joined most happily.
+
+Presently the English nurse passed the negro's bed, and he at once
+turned to another branch of learning. "Good morning," he said, and, when
+she smiled back a greeting to him, he added, "T'ank you," and looked
+proudly round him at his fellow-patients as who should say, "See how we
+understand one another, she and I!"
+
+During a sojourn of many months in the hospital Samedou invariably met
+the sufferings he was called upon to endure with an uncomplaining
+fortitude, which might have seemed due to insensibility had not the
+staff had ample proof that his silence was the silence of a fine
+courage. On one occasion a set of photographs of the hospital was in
+preparation, and when the _salle de pansements_ had to be taken the
+photographer decided that the best lay figure for his _mise-en-scene_
+would be a black man, as a striking contrast to the white raiment of the
+staff. So Samedou was carried in on a stretcher and laid upon the table.
+Unfortunately the surgeons and nurses were so occupied with the business
+of placing things in the best light that no one realised that the poor
+Senegalese did not understand the purpose of the preparations, and when
+the English nurse was called to take up her position she noticed the
+hands of Samedou Kieta clutching the sides of the table and his black
+eyes rolling in a sea of white.
+
+She at once ran to the nearest ward. "Quelqu'un voudrait bien me preter
+une photographie?" she asked, and a dozen eager hands offered her the
+treasured groups of _la famille_. Taking one at random she returned to
+Samedou and held it before his eyes. "Nous aussi," she said, "toi, moi,
+le Major, l'infirmier."
+
+Samedou looked, and a heavenly relief chased the tension from his face.
+"Y a bon," he said happily. "Toi, bon camarade!"
+
+When his wounds began to be less painful the problem was how to keep the
+Sidi in bed. No one cared to be very severe with him, so the staff
+resorted to the usual weak method of confiscating all his clothes save a
+shirt, and hoping for the best. But one day the English nurse, going
+unexpectedly into a distant ward, came upon Samedou Kieta, simply
+dressed in a single shirt and a bandage, visiting the freshly-arrived
+wounded and scattering wide grins around him. At her horrified
+exclamation he began to shrivel away towards the door, ushering himself
+out with the propitiatory words, "Good morning. Good night. T'ank you.
+Water!" A most effectual method of disarming reproof.
+
+Poor Samedou has since passed on to another hospital for electric
+treatment, but the staff still treasures his first and only letter:--
+
+"Moi, Samedou Kieta, arrive a l'autre hopital. Y a bon. Mais moi,
+Samedou Kieta, toi pas oublie. Merci, Monsieur le Major deux
+galons. Merci, Soeur Antoinette. Merci, Madame l'Anglaise. Y a bon.
+Y a bon. Y a bon."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The Germans have suffered 100,000 casualties in 10 days on the
+ western front, and their losses will increase rapidly. They must
+ shorten their lives wherever possible in order to save
+ men."--_Ceylon Morning Leader._
+
+In this laudable endeavour they may count upon receiving the hearty
+assistance of the Allies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Young gentleman (21), good family, strong, healthy, public school,
+ O.T.C., Varsity education, speaks English, French, Spanish
+ perfectly, engineering training, efficient car driver and mechanic,
+ horseman, is open to any sporting job connected with war; willing
+ undertake any risks; no salary, but expenses paid."
+
+If the advertiser will apply to the nearest recruiting-station he will
+hear of something that will just suit him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The inhabitants of the Peak district are in a state of great alarm
+ at the invasion of a great part of their beautiful country by what
+ some of them describe as a plague of locusts, and yesterday
+ considerable numbers of people visited the district where the hosts
+ are still advancing. Many from Sheffield and Manchester alighted at
+ Chinley, Edale, and Hope, among them some eminent etymologists,
+ anxious to be of assistance in ridding the country of a serious
+ menace to the field and garden crops."--_Yorkshire Paper_.
+
+It is understood that the etymologists are chiefly concerned for
+the roots.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE NATION DEMANDS.]
+
+MR. PUNCH (_to the PRIME MINISTER_). "IF YOU _MUST_ HAVE DIRTY LINEN
+WASHED IN PUBLIC DURING THE WAR, FOR GOD'S SAKE, SIR, WASH IT CLEAN."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_Civilian model (posing for latest war picture)_. "MUS' SAY I'LL BE GLAD
+WHEN PEACE IS DECLARED. THIS CLEARING HUNS OUT OF TRENCHES IS FAIR
+TELLIN' ON ME."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ABSENTEE.
+
+(_Embodying divers quotations from the poems of G.K.C._)
+
+ Methinks at last the time has come to speak ...
+ Since good old Russia up and revoluted
+ I have been waiting, week by weary week,
+ To hear the news--the obvious item--bruited;
+ But now I give it up; it will not come;
+ Or anyway I can no more be dumb.
+
+ Where were you, GILBERT, when the great release--
+ "Freedom in arms, the riding and the routing,"
+ Demos superbly potting at police,
+ And actual swords getting an actual outing--
+ Came at the last, the things wherein you shone,
+ Or let us think you'd shine in, CHESTERTON?
+
+ You were not there! Damme, you were not _there_!
+ Alas for us whose faith refused to doubt you!
+ "All that lost riot that you did not share"
+ Managed, somehow, to get along without you;
+ When Russia "went to battle for the creed"
+ GILBERT sat tight and did not even bleed!
+
+ CHESTERTON! Dash it all, my dear old chap!
+ Why, weren't you always eloquent on "Valmy,"
+ "Death and the splendour of the scarlet cap"?
+ Here were the days you looked upon as palmy.
+ Just think of all your poems! Why, good Lord,
+ There is no word you work so hard as "sword."
+
+ We looked to see you there, the stout and staunch,
+ "Red flag" in one hand and "ten swords" in t'other;
+ Saw the strong sword-belt bursting from your paunch;
+ Pitied the foes you'd fall upon and smother;
+ Heard you make droves of pale policemen bleat,
+ Running amok to "slay them in the street."
+
+ Strong athwart Heav'n ran the high barricades,
+ And giant Bastilles reeled, impossibly smitten,
+ And men with broken hands swung thunderous blades
+ In "Russia's wrath"--just as you've often written;
+ Yea, the terrific tyrants really reeled,
+ While CHESTERTON sat safe at Beaconsfield.
+
+ And yet--I understand; I don't impute
+ That only in your poems do you bicker;
+ You would abstain, when people revolute,
+ No more, I'm sure, than you'd abstain from liquor;
+ And here we have it--here's the reason why:
+ _This was a revolution that was "dry."_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Eagle's Plume.
+
+ "The bride, who is an American by birth, was given away by her
+ feather."--_Liverpool Daily Post_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Mr., Mrs. and Miss ----, who were in their bungalow at Sidbar, had
+ a lucky escape from the earthquake recently, for no sooner had they
+ ot out than gpractically the whole house cae mdown."--_Pioneer
+ (Allahabad)_.
+
+On this occasion, contrary to the usual rule, Nature appears to have
+been more careful of the individual than of the type.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "You, too, reader, if you have not already visited ----'s, have a
+ pleasant, bright happy experience before you. Why not visit this
+ modern Forum to-morrow?"--_"Callisthenes" in the evening papers,
+ June 23rd._
+
+One of our reasons for not taking this well-meant advice was that June
+24th was a Sunday.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Great fires continue in Germany. The latest include gutting of the
+ Moabit Goods Station in Berlin wherein tanks of petrol, hydrogen,
+ _et cetera_, exploded, resulting in the destruction of a part of
+ Vilna and the township of Osjory near the Grodno conflagration
+ station and a basket factory at Happe."--_Ceylon Independent_.
+
+The effect of this remarkably extensive explosion seems to have been
+felt even in Colombo.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WOMAN AS USUAL.
+
+(_In the manner of some of our own evening papers_.)
+
+It was with a real pang that I tore myself away from the Frugality
+Exhibition, where the culinary demonstrations were most enthralling.
+Just before leaving, however, I watched a wonderfully tasty hash being
+compounded with oddments of rabbit and banana flour. It exhaled an aroma
+which I hated to leave--even for luncheon at the Fitz.
+
+AT THE FITZ.
+
+By a strange coincidence I made the acquaintance of an admirable rabbit
+_goulash_, which was, I believe, identical with that which I saw being
+prepared at the Frugality Exhibition. Thus extremes meet, and the fusion
+of classes is happily illustrated in the common use of the same
+comestibles.
+
+There are always a number of people lunching in the great hotels in
+these war-time days, and I was glad to see Lady Allchin, looking
+remarkably well-nourished in a mauve Graeco-Roman dress and Gainsborough
+hat; Lady Waterstock, Lord Hilary Sprockett and Sir Peter Frye-Smith.
+
+YESTERDAY'S WEDDING.
+
+Lady Carmilla Dunstable made a lovely bride at St. Mungo's, Belgravia,
+yesterday, on her marriage to Prince Wurra-Wurra, of Tierra-del-Fuego.
+The story of the engagement is wildly romantic. Lady Carmilla was
+returning from Peru, where she had been hunting armadillos; the ship in
+which she was travelling was wrecked in the Straits of Magellan, and she
+was rescued by Prince Wurra-Wurra, who was casually cruising about in
+his catamaran. Her family were for some time hostile to the match, but
+all objections were soon removed, as the Prince has abjured cannibalism
+and is now an uncompromising vegetarian. The bridegroom, who is a
+fine-looking man of the prognathous type, was loudly cheered by the
+crowd on leaving the church.
+
+A CHARMING CONCERT.
+
+All true melomaniacs will rejoice to hear that the Signora Balmi-Dotti
+has decided to give another vocal recital at the Dorian Hall. Her
+programme as usual reflects her catholic and cosmopolitan taste, for she
+will sing not only Welsh and Cornish folk-songs, but works by
+PALESTRINA, Gasolini, Larranaga, Sparafucile, and the young American
+composer, Ploffskin Jee, so that both classical and modern masters will
+be represented.
+
+TWO RECIPES FOR TEA CAKES.
+
+The FOOD CONTROLLER looks askance at teas in these days, but in hot
+weather, when luncheon is reduced to the lowest common denominator and
+dinner resolves itself into a cold collation in the cool of the evening,
+some refreshment between our second and third meals is indispensable. I
+accordingly give two recipes which need no wheaten flour and are very
+quickly made.
+
+Take half-a-pound of sugar, a quarter of caviare, a quarter of calipash,
+a quarter of millet and six peaches. Beat the caviare to a cream and
+pound the peaches to a pulp; then add the sugar and millet and stir
+vigorously with a mirliton. Put into patty-pans and bake gently for
+about thirty minutes in an electric silo-oven. About thirty cakes should
+result; but more will materialize if you increase the ingredients
+proportionately.
+
+Take two kilowatts of ammoniated quinine and beat up with one very large
+egg--a swan's for choice. Add gradually ten ounces of piperazine, a pint
+of Harrogate water and inhale leisurely through a zoetrope.
+
+MELISANDE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_Extract from Hun airman's report_. "WE DROPPED BOMBS ON A BRITISH
+FORMATION, CAUSING THE TROOPS TO DISPERSE AND RUN ABOUT IN A
+PANIC-STRICKEN MANNER."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The New Plutocracy.
+
+ "Munition Lady wants to buy Piano and Wardrobe; cash."--_North
+ Star._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Goats' cheese is tasty and nourishing and more easily made than
+ butter; and in winter time the humblest of sheds will suffice for
+ its sleeping place."--_Daily Mail._
+
+The cheese should however be carefully tethered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CHARIVARIA.
+
+According to an Italian report the conviction of the master-spy, VON
+GERLACH, was effected by the aid of "the two most notorious burglars in
+Europe." Another slight for LITTLE WILLIE.
+
+***
+
+Reporting on a Glasgow subway railway accident, Colonel PRINGLE advises
+that "the use of ambiguous phraseology on telephones should not be
+permitted." Abbreviations now dear to the London subscriber, such as
+"Grrrrrrr-kuk-kuk-kuk-bbbzzzzz--are you--ping! phut! grrrrr!" etc.,
+etc., will no longer be allowed.
+
+***
+
+The Sinn Feiners are proposing to send a mission to the United States to
+explain their attitude. An upward tendency in plate-glass insurance is
+already manifesting itself in New York and elsewhere.
+
+***
+
+Owing, we understand, to other distractions, no actress last week
+obtained a divorce.
+
+***
+
+A trade union for funeral workers has just been formed, the members of
+which are pledged to oppose Sunday burials. It is considered very
+unlucky to be buried on a Sunday.
+
+***
+
+No, "Thespian," it is no longer considered correct to wear a straw hat
+with a fur coat. Why not run the lawnmower over the astrachan collar?
+
+***
+
+A medical correspondent points out that wasps, gnats and midges can
+be kept at a distance by using preparations of certain obnoxious
+plants. There is also much to be said for the plan of making a noise
+like a German.
+
+***
+
+The death of the "Old Lady of Charing Cross" is announced. The Old Lady
+of Threadneedle Street, on the other hand, is still able to sit up and
+take a note or two.
+
+***
+
+Internal matters are not being neglected by the House of Commons. Lord
+RHONDDA on Bread and High Military Officers on Toast were the features
+last week.
+
+***
+
+"What is a copper's 'mark'?" asked a Metropolitan magistrate the other
+day, just as if he were a High Court Judge.
+
+***
+
+An hotel fire occurred in Brook Street last week, and we are told that
+the guests left the hotel and hurried into the street. Nothing is said
+as to how this happy idea originated.
+
+***
+
+Mexico, it appears, has arranged that future revolutions shall be held
+between Saturday and Monday, the week-end being selected as the most
+suitable time for business men who are assisting America in war-work.
+
+***
+
+At a North of England police-court last week a seven-pound piece of
+cheese was alleged to have made away with a conscientious objector.
+
+***
+
+We are informed that the fish landed in Great Britain in 1916 weighed
+8,173,639 hundredweight. The angler who killed it still sticks to the
+story that he thought it was much larger than this.
+
+***
+
+Two brass wedding-rings have been found inside a salmon caught on the
+Wye. As the fish looked extremely worried it is thought that it must
+have been leading a double, or even treble, life.
+
+***
+
+Some consternation has been caused among food-profiteers in this country
+by a recent dictum of Mr. SCHWAB, the American millionaire, to the
+effect that "Honesty is the best policy."
+
+***
+
+In connection with the food-economy campaign a notable example has been
+set by the python at the Zoo, who has decided to give up his
+mid-monthly lunch.
+
+***
+
+Among the prisoners recently captured on the Carso is a Major who bears
+a remarkable likeness to Marshal VON HINDENBURG. The unfortunate Major,
+it appears, explains that it is no fault of his, being due to a terrible
+accident he had when a boy.
+
+***
+
+A correspondent in _Folk Lore_ declares that the hedgehog is, after all,
+a very lovable animal. We do not profess to be expert, but in any
+comparison with other animals we imagine that the hedgehog ought to win
+on points.
+
+***
+
+Lord NORTHCLIFFE has informed the Washington Red Cross Committee that
+the War has only just begun. The United States regard it as a happy
+coincidence that their entry into the War synchronises with the initial
+operations.
+
+***
+
+The POSTMASTER-GENERAL has issued a recommendation that all eggs sent in
+parcels to troops should be hard-boiled. Some difficulty has been
+experienced, it is pointed out, in securing prompt delivery of portions
+of uncooked eggs that may have escaped from the parcels in which they
+were confined.
+
+***
+
+"Two privates in the Royal Welsh Fusiliers," says a news item, "cannot
+speak a word of English, and their platoon-commander knows no Welsh."
+Probably the platoon-sergeant knows some words that sound sufficiently
+like Welsh.
+
+***
+
+The question of transport is officially stated to be one of the main
+difficulties in connection with the beer supply. This however is
+questioned by many patriotic consumers, who affirm that they are very
+rarely able to get as much as they can carry.
+
+***
+
+The appointment of a Riot Controller for Cork and District is said to be
+under consideration. Following the Indian Government's precedent as
+exposed in the Mesopotamia Report, he will conduct his official business
+from the Isle of Wight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RUINED RAPTURE.
+
+ Through many a busy year of peace
+ I hoped some day, by way of beano,
+ To give myself a jaunt in Greece,
+ Famed land of HOMER (also TINO).
+ Full oft I dreamed how, blest by Fate,
+ I'd loll within some leafy hollow
+ With Aphrodite _tete-a-tete_
+ Or barter back-chat with Apollo.
+
+ Around Olympus' foot I'd roam
+ (Not being really fond of climbing),
+ Absorb romance and carry home
+ Increased facility at rhyming;
+ Those hallowed haunts of many a god
+ That nowadays we only read of
+ Would give my Pegasus the prod
+ He not unseldom stood in need of.
+
+ That was in Peace. And then the War
+ Sent me to learn within a hutment
+ What martial duties held in store
+ And what a sergeant-major's "Tut" meant;
+
+ Thence to the trenches, thence a rest,
+ A route-march to a wayside station,
+ With (every single soldier guessed)
+ Greece as our "unknown destination."
+
+ I saw Olympus wrapped in snow,
+ The clouds at rest upon its summit,
+ But did I thrill or long to throw
+ My hands athwart the lyre and strum it?
+ Gazing, I felt no soulful throb,
+ I only felt the body's inner
+ Cravings and said, "I 'll bet a bob
+ It's bully once again for dinner."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Ex-King Constantino has bought a magnificent chateau called
+ Chartreuse, situated near Thun Castle. It belonged to Baron von
+ Zadlitz, a German officer, who is now in the field, and has been
+ empty since the beginning of the war."--_Evening Paper_.
+
+Well, he will be able to fill himself up on the proceeds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LEAVE-WANGLER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_Father._ "WHAT CLASS DID THEY PUT YOU IN COMING ACROSS?"
+
+_Tommy._ "C 6."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HAY FEVER.
+
+ That is the twenty-seventh time to-day!
+ What is the use of Nobbs's Nasal Spray?
+ What use my aunt's "unfailing" recipes?
+ There _is_ no anodyne for this disease--
+ Thirty, I think! Another hanky, please--
+ A-tish-oo!
+
+ The world is gay; the bee bestrides the rose;
+ But I blaspheme and madly blow my nose.
+ For shame, O world! for shame, the heartless bee!
+ Your sweetest blooms are misery to me;
+ And as for that condemned acacia-tree--
+ A-tish-oo!
+
+ Oh, could I roam, contented like the sheep,
+ In sunlit fields where, as it is, I weep;
+ Oh, to be fashioned like the lower classes,
+ Who simply revel in the longest grasses,
+ While I sit lachrymose with coloured glasses--
+ A-tish-oo!
+
+ Fain would I spend my summers high in air;
+ At least there are no privet-hedges there.
+ But even then I have no doubt the smell
+ From slopes celestial of asphodel
+ Would fill the firmament and give me hell--
+ A-tish-oo!
+
+ They tell me 'tis the man of intellect
+ The baneful seeds especially affect;
+ And I that sneeze one million times a year--
+ I ought to have a notable career,
+ Though, at the price, an earldom would be dear--
+ A-tish-oo!
+
+ Gladly, indeed, to some less gifted swain
+ Would I concede my fine but fatal brain,
+ Could I like him but sniff the jasmine spray
+ Or couch unmoved within a mile of hay,
+ And not explode in this exhausting way--
+ A-tish-oo!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Wanted, a Faith-healer.
+
+ Dear Madam,--We have received your enquiry for Sergeant ----, and
+ wish to inform you that he was transferred to ---- Hospital,
+ suffering from a slightly sceptic toe. Trusting this information
+ may be of some value,
+
+ Yours faithfully, ----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "It scarcely seems as if the Premiership of Graf Moritz Esterhazy,
+ with all his Oxford education and the vigour of his thirty-six
+ years, will be able to bruise the serpent's heel."--_Observer_.
+
+The serpent is so beastly cunning; he always sits on it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "MARRIAGES.--All contemplating Marriage consult Proprietors ----
+ Matrimonial Bureau, Melbourne, opposite Old Cemetery. Specially
+ erected for the purpose."--_The Age_ (_Melbourne_).
+
+This recalls the description of a famous football-ground in Dublin,
+"conveniently situated between the Mater Misericordiae Hospital and
+Glasnevin Cemetery."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Margaret was clinging to Dick's arm as she walked, looking up
+ adoringly into his handsome, tanned face, with her blue eyes.
+
+ A week later Dick led Margaret into Suburban Garden, where he had
+ wooed and won her so long ago.
+
+ Dick's voice was very tender as he looked down into two grey
+ eyes."--_Manchester Evening Chronicle_.
+
+If Margaret is not careful to be a little more consistent she will
+finish with two black eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE SAVING OF THE RACE.]
+
+["National Baby Week" is being celebrated during the current week. The
+object of the movement is to educate the Mothers of the Nation in the
+care of their children's health and their own. Universal sympathy will
+be felt for a cause to which our heavy losses in the War have given an
+added urgency. Those who desire to give practical help towards the cost
+of the scheme will kindly address their gifts to the Hon. Treasurer,
+National Baby Week Council, 6, Holles Street, Oxford Street, W.I.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+_Monday, June 25th_.--Mr. LYNCH is beginning to pine for the return of
+Lord ROBERT CECIL. He does not quite know what to make of Mr. BALFOUR,
+who politely represses his honest endeavours to elucidate the situation
+in Greece, and actually declared to-day that the difficulties of the
+Allies would only be increased by the hon. Member's attempts to deal
+with them piecemeal. Mr. LYNCH was not entirely done with, however. "Is
+that reply," he asked in a "got-him-this-time" manner, "given by reason
+of freedom of choice or ineludible necessity?" "Sir," replied the
+apologist of philosophic doubt with Johnsonian authority, "questions of
+freewill and necessity have perplexed mankind for ages."
+
+The House will be delighted to welcome back to its fold Sir ROBERT
+HERMAN-HODGE, whose flowing moustaches, once described as "the best
+definition of infinity," have been, at intervals, its pride and joy for
+over thirty years. But it will have to wait a while, for--strange lapse
+on the part of a hero of half-a-dozen contests!--Sir ROBERT had omitted
+to bring with him the returning-officer's certificate. Lord HALSBURY,
+delayed by a similar accident on his first appearance in the House forty
+years ago, systematically turned out the contents of seemingly endless
+pockets and eventually discovered the missing document in his hat.
+
+At this crisis in Ireland's affairs you might suppose that all good
+Nationalists would remain in their country, doing their best to make the
+Convention a success. Mr. DILLON prefers to attack the Government at
+Westminster, because it proposes to set up a Conference to consider the
+future composition and powers of the Second Chamber. Was it not, he
+asked, a breach of privilege to do this without the express consent of
+the House of Commons? The SPEAKER thought not, and referred his
+questioner to the preamble of the Parliament Act of 1911, in which such
+action was distinctly contemplated. Mr. DILLON, thus suddenly
+transported to the dear dead days before the War, when he was
+hand-in-glove with the present PRIME MINISTER, considers that Mr.
+LOWTHER is open to censure for possessing a memory of such indecent
+length and accuracy.
+
+_Tuesday, June 26th_.--A gentle creature at ordinary times, Lord
+STRACHIE has been roused to unexpected ferocity by the German air-raids,
+and advocates a policy of unmitigated reprisals upon the enemy's cities.
+Had his appeal been successful he would have been recorded in history as
+the mildest-mannered man that ever bombed a German baby. But Lord DERBY
+would have none of it. British aeroplanes--of which, like every nation
+engaged in the War, we have none too many--shall only be employed in
+bombing when some distinctly military object is to be achieved.
+
+[Illustration: THE RIVALS. MR. BRACE. SIR ROBERT HERMAN-HODGE.]
+
+After much consultation with the military authorities the Government has
+decided that to issue general warnings on the occasion of an air-raid
+would tend to do more harm than good; and the LORD MAYOR (_teste_ Mr.
+CATHCART WASON) has announced that he will not ring the great bell of
+St. Paul's. The DEAN and Chapter, while regretting that Sir WILLIAM DUNN
+should be deprived of a health-giving exercise, had, as a point of fact,
+declined to countenance his contemplated invasion of their belfry.
+
+[Illustration: A FIRM CHIN IN ANNIE'S DEFENCE. COMMANDER WEDGWOOD.]
+
+Commander WEDGWOOD, I am sorry to observe, has almost exhausted the
+store of commonsense that he brought back with him from the trenches at
+Gallipoli. Otherwise he would hardly have championed the cause of Mrs.
+ANNIE BESANT, upon whose activities the Government of Madras have
+imposed certain salutary restrictions. What India wants, I understand,
+is less Besant and more Rice.
+
+Now that young soldiers are to have votes as a reward for fighting there
+is logically a strong argument for taking away the franchise from those
+who have refused to fight. It was well expressed by Mr. RONALD MCNEILL
+and others, but, apart from the objections urged on high religious
+grounds by Lord HUGH CECIL, the Government was probably right in
+resisting the proposal. Parliament made a mistake in ever giving a
+statutory exemption to the conscientious objector. The most that person
+could claim was that he should not be called upon to take other people's
+lives; he had no right to be excused from risking his own. But having
+deliberately provided a loophole it is hardly fair for Parliament to
+inflict a penalty upon those who creep through it. And so the House
+thought, for it rejected the proposal by a two-to-one majority.
+
+_Wednesday, June 27th_.--There is a general impression that
+membership of the House of Commons is in itself a sufficient excuse
+for the avoidance of military service. This, it appears, is
+erroneous. Only those are exempt whom a Medical Board has declared
+unfit for general service; and even these, according to Mr. FORSTER,
+may now be re-examined. This ought to prove a great comfort to
+certain potential heroes.
+
+_Thursday, June 28th_.--Mr. JOSEPH KING'S chief concern at the moment is
+to get Lord HARDINGE removed from the Foreign Office, where he suspects
+him of concocting the devastating answers with which Mr. BALFOUR
+represses impertinent curiosity. Accordingly he raked up the old story
+of Lord HARDINGE'S letter to Sir G. BUCHANAN, and inquired what action
+the FOREIGN SECRETARY proposed to take. Mr. BALFOUR proposed to take no
+action. The letter was a private communication, which would never have
+been heard of but for its capture by a German submarine. Even Mr. KING'S
+own correspondence, he suggested, could hardly be so dull that
+everything in it would bear publication.
+
+Mr. KING justly resented this imputation. Dull? Why, only this week his
+letter-bag brought him news of the great reception accorded in Petrograd
+to one TROTSKY, on his release from internment; and would the HOME
+SECRETARY be more careful, please, about interning alien friends without
+trial? Sir George Cave was sorry, but he had never heard of TROTSKY.
+There was a certain KAUTSKY, who had been interned--by the Germans.
+Perhaps Mr. King would address himself to them.
+
+The MINISTER OF MUNITIONS had a good audience for his review of the
+wonderful work of his department. Who could refuse the chance of
+listening to ADDISON on Steel? I cannot honestly say that the result of
+this combination was quite so sparkling as it should have been, for the
+orator stuck closely to his manuscript and allowed himself few flights
+of fancy. But the facts spoke for themselves, and the House readily
+endorsed the verdict already given by Vimy Ridge and Messines.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"DOES GOD MAKE LIONS, MOTHER?"
+
+"YES, DEAR."
+
+"BUT ISN'T HE FRIGHTENED TO?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "You remember that lachrymose elegiac of Tom Moore, The
+ Exile's Lament,
+ 'I'm sitting on the stile, Mary,
+ Where we sat side by side.'"
+ --_Canadian Courier._
+
+No, frankly, we don't. But we seem to have a dim recollection that Lady
+DUFFERIN wrote something very like it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A RESOLUTION.
+
+ I'll tell you what I mean to do
+ When these our wars shall cease to rage:
+ I'll go where Summer skies are blue
+ And Spring enjoys her heritage;
+ I shall not work for fame or wage,
+ But wear a large black silk cravat,
+ A velvet coat that's grey with age
+ Beneath a high-crowned broad-brimmed hat.
+
+ I'll journey to some Tuscan town
+ And rent a palace for a song,
+ And all the walls I'll whitewash down
+ Some day when I am feeling strong;
+ And there I'll pass my days among
+ My books, and, when my reading palls
+ And Summer days are overlong,
+ I'll daub up frescoes on the walls.
+
+ The world may go her divers ways
+ The while I draw or write or smoke,
+ Happy to live laborious days
+ There among simple painter folk;
+ To wed the olive and the oak,
+ Most patiently to woo the Muse,
+ And wear a great big Tuscan cloak
+ To guard against the heavy dews.
+
+ Between the olive and the vine
+ I'll make heroic mock of Mars,
+ And drink at even golden wine
+ Kept cool in terra-cotta jars;
+ And afterwards harangue the stars
+ In little gems of fervid speech,
+ And smoke impossible cigars
+ Which cost at least three _soldi_ each.
+
+ Let more ambitious spirits spin
+ The web of life for weal or woe,
+ Whilst I above my violin
+ Shall sit and watch the vale below
+ All crimson in the afterglow;
+ And when the patient stars grow bright
+ I'll draw across the strings my bow
+ Till Chopin ushers in the night.
+
+ Such things as these I mean to do
+ When Peace once more resumes her sway;
+ To walk barefooted through the dew
+ And while the sunlit hours away,
+ If haply I may find some gay
+ Conceit to light a sombre mind,
+ As gracious as a Summer day,
+ As wayward as an April wind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Legitimate Inference.
+
+ "FOUND, Brown Dog, very clever begging, great pet, believed property
+ clergyman."--_Belfast Evening Telegraph_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The Molahiz of the district ordered to arrest the criminals and
+ hand them to the Dilitary Authorities for trial has been able to
+ seize the materials stolen. Enquiry is still going
+ on."--_Egyptian Mail_.
+
+The authorities seem to be living up to their title.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TWO MISSING NUMBERS.
+
+A CONTRAST.
+
+I.
+
+My friend X. is normally the mildest of men. His temper is under perfect
+control; and in his favourite part of the angels' advocate he finds
+palliations and makes allowances for all those defections in the
+servants of the public which goad men to fury and which, since the War
+came in to supply incompetence with a cloak and a pretext, have been
+exasperatingly on the increase. Thus, serene and considerate, has X.
+gone his uncomplaining way for years.
+
+But yesterday I found him on the kerb in the Strand inarticulate and
+purple with rage. His face was hardly recognisable, so distorted
+were those ordinarily placid features. His eyes were fixed on a
+receding taxi.
+
+Fearing that he might be ill I took his arm; but he flung himself free.
+"Don't touch me," he said; "I can't bear it." Having reached a point in
+life when tact is second nature, I waited silently near him until the
+storm should have passed.
+
+His eyes were still fixed.
+
+After a short time he recovered sufficiently to turn to me and explain.
+
+"I could have killed that fellow," he said.
+
+"What fellow?"
+
+"That taxi-driver. He went by slowly with his flag up and wouldn't look
+at me. I hailed him, and I know he heard, but he wouldn't look at me.
+Now I don't mind when they point, or make any kind of sign that they
+don't want to be hired, or say that they have no petrol, even if I don't
+believe it; but when they won't turn their heads or pay any attention
+whatever I could kill them. And there's such a lot of them like that. I
+swear," he went on, beginning to go purple again--"I swear that, if I
+had had a revolver just now, I should have shot him. When one man hails
+another, the man who is hailed must give some kind of an indication.
+It's only human. Society would fall to pieces if we all behaved like
+that chap. It's awful, awful! If I'd only thought of taking his number
+I'd run him in, and I'd carry it to the House of Lords if necessary.
+Such men--ugh!"
+
+He broke down, smothered by righteous anger.
+
+"Good heavens!" he exclaimed as I was leaving, "if I'd only taken
+his number!"
+
+II.
+
+The same night a miracle happened. It was very late, and the _debris_ of
+a little charity performance at an assembly-room had to be cleared away.
+The last guests had gone--in this or that conveyance, or on our best
+friends in war-time, the feet--and that hunt for a taxi, which has now
+taken the place of all other sport, was being prosecuted with more or
+less energy by a policeman, a loafer and two or three amateurs, all of
+whom returned at intervals while the packing-up was in progress, to say
+how hopeless the case was and how independent the men had become.
+
+One passing cab I hailed myself, but he did no more than laugh a loud
+laugh of mere incivility and ironically remark, "Ter-morrer!"
+signifying, as I understood it, that nothing on earth should interfere
+with his homeward journey that night, since he had done enough and was
+tired, but that on the succeeding day, if I still required his services,
+he was at my disposal.
+
+The various bags and parcels being now all ready, we waited patiently in
+the hall, and from time to time received reports as to the progress of
+the chase.
+
+At last, when things seemed really hopeless, a taxi arrived, driven by a
+young man in spectacles, which were, I am convinced, part of a disguise
+covering one of the noblest personalities in the land--some Haroun al
+Raschid, filled with pity for lost Londoners, who is devoting his life
+to redressing the wrongs inflicted upon poor humanity by taxi
+tyrants--for he said nothing about having no petrol, nothing about the
+lateness of the hour, nothing about the direction in which we wished to
+go, but quietly and efficiently helped to get the things in and on the
+cab; and then drove swiftly away, and when we got to the other end
+insisted on carrying some of the bundles up three flights of stairs, and
+had no objection to make when asked to wait a little longer and go on
+elsewhere.
+
+All this time I was, I need hardly say, in a dream. Could it be
+true? Could it?
+
+And when he was at last paid off he said both "Good night" and "Thank
+you," although it was I in whom gratitude should have thus vocally
+burned. Perhaps it did; I was too dazed to remember.
+
+How I wish I had taken his number, that all the world might know it and
+look for it, assured of a gentleman on the box!
+
+III.
+
+So you see there are both kinds of taxi-drivers still--only the bad ones
+are more difficult to get hold of.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"SMART GIRL, THAT NEW GOVERNESS--GOT ME TO LOOK AT THE
+TAPESTRY WHILE SHE PINCHED MY BREAD!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Caveat Emptor.
+
+ "Leopard for Sale.--A full grown animal, about 6-1/2 feet.
+ Purchaser will have to make his own arrangements for
+ removal."--_The Statesman (India)._
+
+This species of animal being notoriously unable of its own accord to
+change its spot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "There are ninety million tons of tea in bond in the United Kingdom.
+ This is sufficient to supply our needs for about fifteen
+ weeks."--_Greenock Telegraph._
+
+May we suggest that our contemporary should spare a few tons for the
+staffs of other journals?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "One Royal Family Member, who has rendered services to 4 big
+ states as also the Government (and yet in service) and obtained a
+ great deal of experience is entirely willing to accept a
+ respectable post either of a Companion or a Household Controller
+ or A.D.C."--_Indian Paper._
+
+Can this be TINO?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Mr. Herbert Samuel asked if the Government would give an
+ undertaking that nothing would be done to expend public money in
+ this connection before the House had had the opportunity of
+ discussing the question?"--_Provincial Paper._
+
+Fie, fie, Mr. SAMUEL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "It is the new magistrates who have broken the ice, and the
+ supporters of both camps are curiously watching to see if they will
+ now find themselves in hot water."--_Liverpool Echo._
+
+We thought this sort of thing only happened in the geyser-region.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Home offered delicate person on small farm; partner pig, poultry,
+ dairy."--_Observer._
+
+This ought to cure any delicacy he might start with.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO LORD RHONDDA.
+
+DEAR LORD RHONDDA,--When you were an unassuming undergraduate at Caius
+College, spending your leisure-time in an eight-or a pair-oar, and
+stirring up the muddy shallows of the Cam, as you did to some purpose, I
+cannot believe that any premonitions of the heights of celebrity to
+which you would some day attain disturbed your mind. And yet here you
+are, a survivor from the foul and murderous shattering of the
+_Lusitania_, a coal-owner, a member of the Government, a peer, and the
+Food-Controller of a whole nation at war.
+
+Your predecessor, Lord DEVONPORT, had no very happy experience of the
+post you now hold, and I can well understand that his life during his
+tenure of it cannot have been a pleasant one. Every crank with an
+infallible recipe for catching sunbeams in cucumber-frames and turning
+them into potatoes, or whatever might be the fashionable food at the
+moment; every grumbler who imagined that every rise in prices must be
+entirely due to the malignity of men and not to the scarcity of the
+article; every politician with a grudge to satisfy or an axe to
+grind--all these pounced upon Lord DEVONPORT as a victim made ready to
+their hands, and gave him a time which can only be described as a very
+bad one. Add to this the mistakes almost necessarily made by an office
+which was entirely new and dealt with unexampled conditions, and it is
+not on the whole surprising that difficulties were encountered and that
+the right way for overcoming them was not always taken. Indeed there was
+or there seemed to be at one time a lively controversy between Lord
+DEVONPORT and Mr. PROTHERO about the true meaning of the words _maximum_
+and _minimum_ as applied to prices, and we were left to infer that these
+Latin monsters are virtually indistinguishable from one another.
+
+However, all that is now over; Lord RHONDDA reigns in Lord DEVONPORT'S
+place and can profit by his experience. I don't want to delude you into
+the belief that all is plain sailing for you. You couldn't be made to
+believe that if I tried for a month of Sundays, and I don't mean to
+spend my time to no purpose. But I think the great body of the nation is
+determined that you shall have fair play and will support you through
+thick and thin in any policy, no matter how drastic, that you may
+recommend to their reason and their patriotism. This business of
+food-controlling is new to us as well as to you, but we are willing to
+be led, we are even willing to be driven, and we are grateful to you for
+having engaged your reputation and your skill and your firmness in the
+task of leading or driving us. And if in the course of your duty you
+encounter any genuine rascal endeavouring to grind the faces of the poor
+or to find his own profit in the misery of his fellow-men we look to you
+to give him short shrift.
+
+I am, my Lord, with all goodwill, your Lordship's obliged and
+faithful Servant,
+
+THE GATE OF HUMILITY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_Officer (having pulled up recruit for not saluting)._ "NOW THEN, MY
+MAN, DON'T THEY TAKE ANY NOTICE OF OFFICERS IN YOUR BATTALION?"
+
+_Recruit_. "WELL, SIR, IT AIN'T THAT EXACTLY; BUT I'VE ALWAYS BEEN ONE,
+AS YOU MIGHT SAY, TO KEEP MESELF TO MESELF."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "WANTED, Second-hand Invalid's Chair (tired
+ wheels)."--_Kentish Mercury_.
+
+Just the thing for a second-hand invalid; even the wheels show a
+sympathetic fatigue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Delirant Reges."
+
+ The Kaiser, prodigal of verbal boons,
+ Congratulates his brave Bayreuth Dragoons
+ Upon their prowess, which, he tells them, yields
+ Joy "to old Fritz up in Elysian fields."
+ Perhaps; but what if he is down below?
+ In any case what we should like to know
+ Is how his modern namesake, Private Fritz,
+ Enjoys the fun of being blown to bits
+ Because his Emperor has lost his wits.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the "Illuminate."
+
+ "Unfurnished room wanted by elderly lady with gas
+ connections."--_Montreal Daily Star_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AT THE PLAY.
+
+THE ROYALTY TRIPLE BILL.
+
+First a quite charming and, what is not so usual, a quite intelligible
+fantasy in mime--_The Magic Pipe_: Pierrot, faithless mistress, despair,
+sympathetic friend, adoring midinette, and so on. But Mr. JULES DELACRE,
+who played his own part, _Pierrot_, with a fine sincerity and a sense of
+the great tradition in this _genre_, got his effect across to us with an
+admirable directness. Miss PHYLLIS PINSON looking charming in a
+mid-Victorian Latin-Quarterly sort of way (which is a very nice way),
+danced seriously, fantastically, delightfully, and with quite
+astonishing command of her technique--the sort of thing that nine
+infallible managers out of ten who know what the public wants would
+condemn out of hand as impossible. The intelligent tenth must have been
+consoled by the enthusiastic applause which greeted the little piece. I
+have a fancy that mime would go far to restore sanity and tradition to
+the English stage, and every creditable essay in a delightful art
+deserves the fullest support.
+
+It is amusing to see our solemn Mr. JOHN GALSWORTHY in labour for three
+Acts over a rude joke. I frankly confess I enjoyed the joke. Cisterns
+(its theme) have no terrors for me even in mixed company. But the joke
+was not the really serious thing about _The Foundations_, a play that
+starts (some years hence) with a mob of starving people yelling outside
+the house--dear, stupid, kindly _Lord William Dromondy's_ house. _Lord
+William_ was a god of an infantry captain in the great War, and his four
+footmen--particularly _James_, the first of them--though revolutionaries
+at heart, are ready to stand between their master and any other
+revolutionaries in London town. Well, a bomb is found in the foundations
+of _Lord William's_ Park Lane palace, and explodes to embarrassed
+laughter of shocked stall-holders in the Third Act.
+
+The plot's nothing, and the main joke, as I say, nothing to get excited
+over. But the whole effect of the tremendous trifle, admirably cast as
+it was, was diverting in the extreme.
+
+Of course it is like our Mr. GALSWORTHY to assume that things will be as
+black as ever a few years hence. 'Tis, no doubt, what encourages us to
+keep our end up in the great War. But we know the customs of leopards,
+and can forgive our pessimist for his creations (for all the world as if
+he were a milliner) of _Poulder, Lord William's_ butler, rounded pillar
+of the eternal old order of things; of _James_, revolutionary but
+faithful (of course _James_ never would in fact have kept this absurd
+job); of a light yellow pressman; of a feckless, torrentially eloquent
+plumber, whose solution of the class war was loving-kindness and the
+letting of the blood of all who were not kind.
+
+Mr. EADIE was a beloved vagabond of a plumber doing a fine part on his
+head, as is his way nowadays. But the thing is so good that it is
+perhaps ungracious to remind him he could make it better. Mr. SIDNEY
+PAXTON'S triumph with _Poulder_ was his admirable restraint--rarest of
+accomplishments among comic stage butlers. The effect of everything was
+heightened by this excellent economy. It was a lesson in artistic
+reticence. An even more notable feat in the same kind was _The Press_
+of Mr. LAWRENCE HANRAY. Obviously he could have collected a good deal
+more of the laughter of the house if he had played less subtly. I
+should put it as quite the best piece of playing in a well-played
+piece. Mr. DAWSON MILWARD has made a deserved reputation as the strong
+silly ass. He sustained it--with something in hand. Mr. STEPHEN EWART'S
+_James_ was a quite excellent performance, not very coherent and
+consistent in conception on the author's part, perhaps, and on that
+account all the more difficult. Miss ESME HUBBARD gave us pathos
+skilfully reserved in her clever study of an old, old countrywoman
+turned trousers-maker; and little DINKA STARACE showed quite
+astonishing aptitude (or the most wonderful training) in the part of
+her granddaughter. Miss BABS FARREN also did well with her rather
+intrusive part of _Lord William's_ daughter.
+
+_Box B_, by Mr. COSMO GORDON LENNOX, was just a gay trifle to send us
+home easy-minded to bed. _Bobby Stroud_, Zepp-strafer, kisses a pretty
+(oh, ever such a pretty!) widow by mistake. And continues by
+arrangement. Miss IRIS HOEY was really perfectly irresistible--something
+ought to be done about it. She would have reduced the whole Flying Corps
+to dereliction of duty. Mr. FRANK BAYLY had just that air of awkward
+modesty which is so much more effective than plain swank as an
+advertisement of gallantry, and Miss MURIEL POPE played a programme-girl
+with all the skill that an artist thinks is worth putting into little
+things.
+
+The best evening that I've had in the stalls since the War began ever
+so long ago.
+
+T.
+
+[Illustration: The Press (Mr. LAWRENCE HANRAY) invites The Nobility (Mr.
+DAWSON MILWARD) to give its views on things in general.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THERE USED TO BE--
+
+ There used to be fairies in Germany--
+ I know, for I've seen them there
+ In a great cool wood where the tall trees stood
+ With their heads high up in the air;
+ They scrambled about in the forest
+ And nobody seemed to mind;
+ They were dear little things (tho' they didn't have wings)
+ And they smiled and their eyes were kind.
+
+ What, and oh what were they doing
+ To let things happen like this?
+ How could it be? And didn't they see
+ That folk were going amiss?
+ Were they too busy playing,
+ Or can they perhaps have slept,
+ That never they heard an ominous word
+ That stealthily crept and crept?
+
+ There used to be fairies in Germany--
+ The children will look for them still;
+ They will search all about till the sunlight slips out
+ And the trees stand frowning and chill.
+ "The flowers," they will say, "have all vanished,
+ And where can the fairies be fled
+ That played in the fern?"--The flowers will return,
+ But I fear that the fairies are dead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Kaiser Lands in England.
+
+ "A disturbance of rates (when it tends to raise them) is never
+ popular. Father Barry remarked yesterday that Mr. Underhill, as
+ chairman of the Assessment Committee, was the most unpopular man in
+ Plymouth except one, and the other one was the Kaiser."--_Western
+ Daily Mercury_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Letter addressed to local Tribunal:--
+
+ "Dear Sirs,--The reason for my exemption has been removed and I
+ shall be glad to join your army if there is still a vacancy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Lady (to doctor, who has volunteered to treat her pet). "AND IF YOU FIND
+YOU CAN'T CURE HIM, DOCTOR, WILL YOU PLEASE PUT HIM OUT OF PAIN?--AND OF
+COURSE YOU MUST CHARGE ME JUST AS FOR AN ORDINARY PATIENT."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks_.)
+
+I should like to commend with extraordinarily little reserve Mr.
+FIELDING-HALL'S _The Way of Peace_ (HURST AND BLACKETT) to the kind of
+reader that is drawing plans in his head for a New England. No wonder
+that in these great days the impatient idealist rushes forth with his
+bag of dreams. The author of _The Soul of a People_ is extreme but
+sane--an extremist in common sense, say. He stakes on the fact of human
+solidarity as the cure for the bitternesses and crookednesses of
+politics; declares life and men to be good, not evil (how right he is!);
+wants an England rescued from the Puritans on the one hand and the mere
+musical comedians on the other; an England chaste because freer, less
+ignorant; good beer in easeful inns; the village or township as the unit
+of government and of fellowship; a return to music and the dance, not as
+a plasmon-fed high-brow proposition but as the natural expression of a
+joy of life returned; a clear fount of honour; a representative House of
+Commons; justice, respect, common sense and responsibility instead of
+charity; some place other than the streets for our young men and maidens
+to make love in; a recognition of crime as mainly a social, not an
+individual, disease; a law simplified and scales of justice not weighted
+against the poor; and a host of other good and wise and nearly possible
+things. Here is not the barren politics of manipulation but an ideal of
+living citizenship. I commend it to all believers in new days and all
+honourable disgruntlers; not perhaps as a programme but as a tonic.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Do not, please, run away with the idea that _The Nursery_ (HEINEMANN)
+presents us with Mr. EDEN PHILLPOTTS' views on baby culture. The
+background of his story, the scenes of which are laid in and around
+Colchester a year or so ago, is composed of gardens and oyster-beds. On
+these he gives a lot of information, and, as he could not be pedantic
+even if he tried to be, I browsed pleasantly upon the store of knowledge
+set before me. Also I liked the restraint he shows in dealing with the
+War, and commend his exemplary method to some of our more blatant
+novelists. When, however, I came to the inhabitants of _The Nursery_ I
+failed to find in them that rare and delightful quality with which Mr.
+PHILLPOTTS usually succeeds in endowing his characters. Readers of his
+novels must know by this time that he is not exactly in love with _Mrs.
+Grundy_, but here he seems to be insurgent against something, and for
+the life of me I don't know quite what it is. Perhaps it is insincerity,
+which is a very good thing to be in rebellion against. There is one very
+amusing and delightful character, a bibulous old sinner who defied law
+and order and almost at the last gasp ladled out what he considered
+justice in a most dramatic manner. His name is _William Ambrose_, and it
+is worth your while to make his disreputable acqaintance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One fact at once awakened in me a fellow-feeling for Mr. BERTRAM
+SMITH--the discovery of his appreciation (shared by myself, the elder
+STEVENSON, and other persons of discernment) for the romantic
+possibilities of the map. There is an excellent map in the beginning of
+Days of Discovery (CONSTABLE), showing the peculiar domain of
+childhood, the garden, in terms that will hardly fail to win your
+sympathy. But not in this alone does Mr. SMITH show that he has the
+heart of the matter in him; every page of these reminiscences of
+nursery life proclaims a genuine memory, not a make-believe childhood
+faked up for literary ends. Who that has once been young can read
+unstirred by envy the chapter on "Devices and Contrivances," with its
+entrancing triumph of the chain of mirrors arranged (during the
+providential absence of those in authority) from the night nursery,
+down two flights of stairs, to the store-room in the basement? I know a
+reviewer whom nothing, but moral cowardice restrained from testing the
+possibility of this delightful plan by personal experiment. Fireworks
+too--Mr. SMITH has remembered them with a proper regard that is, of
+course, wholly different from that of those who understand them only in
+their pyrotechnic aspect, not as objects loved for themselves alone,
+for their shape and feel, and the glamour of weeks of hoarding and
+barter. In short, a real nursery book for the study; not one perhaps
+that actual children would care for (quite possibly they might resent
+it as betrayal), but one that for the less fortunate will reopen a door
+of which too many of us have long lost the key.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What I found strangest in the _Transactions of Lord Louis Lewis_
+(MURRAY) is that it is a story, or rather series of stories, about
+rogues, in which trickery is invariably vanquished--a refreshing
+contrast to the methods of most of our romanticists, who are given to a
+certain courtier-like attitude towards the lawbreaker. Certainly that
+various artist, Mr. ROLAND PERTWEE, has contrived to put together a
+highly entertaining collection of diamond-cut-diamond yarns, adventure
+tales that have the great advantage (for these days) of being concerned,
+not with bloodshed and mysterious murders, but with the wiles of dealers
+in the spurious antique and the exploits of _Lord Louis_ in defeating
+them. This _Lord Louis_ is indeed a very pleasant as well as a very
+ingenious gentleman. From the rotundity of his conversational periods
+and a certain general suavity of demeanour I suspect him of having made
+a careful study of the methods of his distinguished predecessor in
+rogue-reducing, _Prince Florizel of Bohemia._ But he is, of course, none
+the worse company for that. Once, however, he shocked me badly, when, in
+perusing an eighteenth-century MS., he--I can hardly bring myself to
+quote the passage!--he "moistened his fingers and turned over three
+pages." And this of a nobleman and a connoisseur! Oh, Mr. PERTWEE!
+Having said so much, it is only fair that I should call your special
+attention to one of the stories, "The House in Bath," an exquisite
+little gem of considerably higher art than is usually associated with
+such "Exploits of the Event."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You might perhaps allow yourself to be put off by such a title as _Home
+Truths about the War_ (ALLEN), because it, or something like it, has so
+often been used as the preliminary to alarming or disagreeable
+statements that we have grown excusably suspicious. But to avoid on this
+account the letters that the Rev. HUGH CHAPMAN has here brought together
+would be to miss a very original and inspiring little book. Let me say
+once that Mr. CHAPMAN (whom you may know is energetic and popular
+chaplain of the Savoy; also as already, under a pseudonym, an author)
+has deliberately essayed the impossible. Self-revelation, especially in
+letters, can hardly ever be made convincing. But putting this on one
+side, and accepting these, not as the letters that would be written from
+one man to another, but rather (to speak without irreverence) such as
+the human heart might address to its Creator, you will find them full of
+interest and encouragement. All sorts and conditions of men and women
+are here shown, in their varied reaction to the great acid that for
+these three years past has been biting into the life of the world. The
+priest, the actor, the profiteer, the society-woman, even the
+conscientious objector, are all touched lightly, tactfully, and with a
+kindly humour that saves the book from its very obvious danger of
+becoming pedantic. In his brief preface Mr. CHAPMAN has crystallised
+very happily into a couple of words his ideal for the British attitude
+towards the War--buoyant sternness. It is the reflection of that quality
+in its pages that gives this little book its tonic value.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. ARNOLD WRIGHT'S main work in _Early English Adventurers in the East_
+(MELROSE) has been that of making good. Most of us know something, at
+any rate, of the men who brought our Eastern Empire into actual
+existence, but I tell myself hopefully that my ignorance of those daring
+pioneers, whom Mr. WRIGHT describes as humble adventurers of the
+seventeenth century, is not exceptional. It has now been satisfactorily
+removed, and, after reading this excellently written history of stirring
+deeds, I must believe that even men of learning will thank him for
+rescuing many good names from the oblivion which threatened them. And
+Mr. WRIGHT is not only to be congratulated on this act of salvage, but
+also on the admirable way in which he has performed it. A restrained
+style and a temperate judgment are equally at his command. I cannot
+better commend his book to Imperialists than by saying that all Little
+Englanders will detest it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On internal evidence I had set down _Root and Branch_ (ALLEN AND UNWIN),
+by R. ALLATINI, as the very clever first book of a very clever and
+observant writer of the (alleged) weaker sex. But I find the title-page
+gives two previous novels to her pen--I still guess a woman's hand. And
+I by no means withdraw the "clever." The characterisation of the various
+members of the _Arenski_ family--the branches are better done than the
+root, old _Paul Arenski, K.C._, idealist and orator--is uncannily good.
+There's wit and humour and diversity of gifts. What suggested the "first
+book" idea was an uncertainty of method, a hesitation between the new
+realism and the older romanticism. In both moods the author is
+successful, but the joints show something clumsily. This, however, is
+technical merely. I commend the book to all who are interested,
+approvingly or critically, in the Jew. A dramatic theme runs through the
+book, the ethical question as to whether a man may be justified in
+killing, at her passionate request, a woman dearly loved who is slowly
+dying of a terrible disease.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_Angry Customer (who has been induced by an advertisement to purchase a
+portrait enlargement)._ "YOUR ADVERTISEMENT SAYS, 'MONEY RETURNED IF NOT
+SATISFIED.' I'M _NOT_ SATISFIED, AND I WANT MY MONEY BACK."
+
+_The Eureka Portrait Company (placidly)_ "I'M SORRY YOU DON'T LIKE
+IT, MADAM; BUT IF YOU WILL READ THE ADVERTISEMENT CAREFULLY YOU WILL
+NOTE THAT IT DOES NOT SPECIFY _WHO_ IS TO BE SATISFIED--AND I ASSURE
+YOU I _AM_."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, 1917.07.04, Vol. 153, Issue No.
+1, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, 1917.07.04, VOL. 153 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 8643.txt or 8643.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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